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من منهاتن إلى بغداد

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بن لادن

Bin Laden

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Explanation

The text presents Bin Laden as an actor who rehistoricizes hostility toward the United States through a narrative of humiliation, the dismantling of the caliphate, and the Crusades. He is also a model of a discourse that fuses theology with violence and turns jihad into a sacred war with a global mobilizing horizon.

Referred to by

  • Afghanistan must be understood within a political network, not as an isolated target
  • Globalized Islam differs from true Islam
  • Jihad turns into a sacred war
  • Jihad is redefined as a sacred war that goes beyond defense
  • The Crusades symbolically direct the conflict
  • Modern hostility is understood through a long historical narrative and a symbolic construction of the enemy
  • The United States embodies the historical enemy
  • Less destructive alternatives
  • Bin Laden and the revolutionary Guevara
  • Bin Laden rehistoricizes hostility
  • Bin Laden is presented as a global theological revolutionary
  • The dismantling of the caliphate expands the conflict
  • Discourses of the enemy, jihad, and al-Qaeda produce transnational sacred violence
  • Linking Bin Laden to Mullah Omar
  • The rise of power after bipolarity
  • The necessity of disabling the network
  • An ideological reading of Islam
  • Bin Laden’s theological reference frame

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