M. K. NARAYANAN
APIraqi security forces launch rockets against Islamic State extremist positions in Tikrit.
Counterterrorism agencies should not be lulled into complacency by assertions that India is insulated from the growing virus of radical terrorism.
Like other viruses, this one too has several variants. The core theology remains the Saudi theologian, Abdul Wahab’s doctrinaire teachings, combined with the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood icon, Syed Qutub’s nihilistic fanaticism. Previously, a liberal dose of Salafism had contributed to the lethal violence that characterised 20th century terrorism. Now, it is the advent of a new radical Islamist breed that is committed to the supremacy of faith, and a belief in exclusionist Islamic puritanism, that is likely to result in 21st century terrorism being remembered for the savagery it practices.
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