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  • Nuclear holocaust: A risk too big even for martyrs?

    International Herald Tribune, France
    Oct 27 2006


    Nuclear holocaust: A risk too big even for martyrs?
    By Noah Feldman The New York Times

    Published: October 27, 2006


    For nearly 50 years, worries about a nuclear Middle East centered on
    Israel. Arab leaders resented the fact that Israel was the only
    atomic power in the region, a resentment heightened by America's
    tacit approval of the situation. But they were also pretty certain
    that Israel (which has never explicitly acknowledged having nuclear
    weapons) would not drop the bomb except as a very last resort. That
    is why Egypt and Syria were unafraid to attack Israel during the
    October 1973 Yom Kippur War. "Israel will not be the first country in
    the region to use nuclear weapons," went the Israelis' coy formula.
    "Nor will it be the second."

    Today the nuclear game in the region has changed. When the Arab
    League's secretary general, Amr Moussa, called for "a Middle East
    free of nuclear weapons" this past May, it wasn't Israel that
    prompted his remarks. He was worried about Iran, whose self-declared
    ambition to become a nuclear power has been steadily approaching
    realization.

    The anti-Israel statements of the Iranian president, Mahmoud
    Ahmadinejad, coupled with Iran's support for Hezbollah and Hamas,
    might lead you to think that the Arab states would welcome Iran's
    nuclear program. After all, the call to wipe the Zionist regime from
    the map is a longstanding cliché of Arab nationalist rhetoric. But
    the interests of Shiite non-Arab Iran do not always coincide with
    those of Arab leaders. A nuclear Iran means, at the very least, a
    realignment of power dynamics in the Persian Gulf. It could
    potentially mean much more: a historic shift in the position of the
    long-subordinated Shiite minority relative to the power and prestige
    of the Sunni majority, which traditionally dominated the Muslim
    world. Many Arab Sunnis fear that the moment is ripe for a Shiite
    rise. Iraq's Shiite majority has been asserting the right to govern,
    and the lesson has not been lost on the Shiite majority in Bahrain
    and the large minorities in Lebanon and Saudi Arabia. King Abdullah
    of Jordan has warned of a "Shiite crescent" of power stretching from
    Iran to Lebanon via Iraq and (by proxy) Syria.

    But geopolitics is not the only reason Sunni Arab leaders are rattled
    by the prospect of a nuclear Iran. They also seem to be worried that
    the Iranians might actually use nuclear weapons if they get them. A
    nuclear attack on Israel would engulf the whole region. But that is
    not the only danger: Sunnis in Saudi Arabia and elsewhere fear that
    the Iranians might just use a nuclear bomb against them. Even as
    Iran's defiance of the United States and Israel wins support among
    some Sunnis, extremist Sunnis have been engaging in the act of
    takfir, condemning all Shiites as infidels. On the ground in Iraq,
    Sunni takfiris are putting this theory into practice, aiming at
    Shiite civilians and killing them indiscriminately. Shiite militias
    have been responding in kind, and massacres of Sunni civilians are no
    longer isolated events.

    Adding the nuclear ingredient to this volatile mix will certainly
    produce an arms race. If Iran is going to get the bomb, its neighbors
    will have no choice but to keep up. North Korea, now protected by its
    own bomb, has threatened proliferation - and in the Middle East it
    would find a number of willing buyers. Small principalities with huge
    U.S. Air Force bases, like Qatar, might choose to rely on an American
    protective umbrella. But Saudi Arabia, which has always seen Iran as
    a threatening competitor, will not be willing to place its nuclear
    security entirely in American hands. Once the Saudis are in the hunt,
    Egypt will need nuclear weapons to keep it from becoming irrelevant
    to the regional power balance - and sure enough, last month Gamal
    Mubarak, President Mubarak's son and Egypt's heir apparent, very
    publicly announced that Egypt should pursue a nuclear program.

    Given the increasing instability of the Middle East, nuclear
    proliferation there is more worrisome than almost anywhere else on
    earth. As nuclear technology spreads, terrorists will enjoy
    increasing odds of getting their hands on nuclear weapons. States -
    including North Korea - might sell bombs or give them to favored
    proxy allies, the way Iran gave Hezbollah medium-range rockets that
    Hezbollah used this summer during its war with Israel. Bombing
    through an intermediary has its advantages: deniability is, after
    all, the name of the game for a government trying to avoid nuclear
    retaliation.

    Proliferation could also happen in other ways. Imagine a succession
    crisis in which the Saudi government fragments and control over
    nuclear weapons, should the Saudis have acquired them, falls into the
    hands of Saudi elites who are sympathetic to Osama bin Laden, or at
    least to his ideas. Or Al Qaeda itself could purchase ready-made
    bombs, a feat technically much less difficult than designing nuclear
    weapons from scratch. So far, there are few nuclear powers from whom
    such bombs can be directly bought: as of today, only nine nations in
    the world belong to the nuclear club. But as more countries get the
    bomb, tracing the seller will become harder and harder, and the
    incentive to make a sale will increase.

    II.

    The prospect of not just one Islamic bomb, but many, inevitably
    concentrates the mind on how Muslims - whether Shiite or Sunni -
    might use their nuclear weapons. In the mid-1980's, when Pakistan
    became the first Islamic state to go nuclear, it was still possible
    to avoid asking the awkward question of whether there was something
    distinctive about Islamic belief or practice that made possession of
    nuclear technology especially worrisome. Most observers assumed that
    Islamic states could be deterred from using nuclear force just like
    other states: by the threat of massive retaliation.

    During the last two decades, however, there has been a profound
    change in the way violence is discussed and deployed in the Muslim
    world. In particular, we have encountered the rise of suicide
    bombing. In historic terms, this development is new and unexpected.
    Suicide bombing has no traditional basis in Islam. As a technique, it
    was totally absent from the successful Afghan jihad against the
    Soviet Union. Although suicide bombing as a tool of stateless
    terrorists was dreamed up a hundred years ago by the European
    anarchists immortalized in Joseph Conrad's "Secret Agent," it became
    a tool of modern terrorist warfare only in 1983, when Shiite
    militants blew up the U.S. Marine barracks in Lebanon.

    Since then, suicide bombing has spread through the Muslim world with
    astonishing speed and on a surprising course. The vocabulary of
    martyrdom and sacrifice, the formal videotaped preconfession of
    faith, the technological tinkering to increase deadliness - all are
    now instantly recognizable to every Muslim. And as suicide bombing
    has penetrated Islamic cultural consciousness, its list of targets
    has steadily expanded. First the targets were American soldiers, then
    mostly Israelis, including women and children. From Lebanon and
    Israel, the technique of suicide bombing moved to Iraq, where the
    targets have included mosques and shrines, and the intended victims
    have mostly been Shiite Iraqis. The newest testing ground is
    Afghanistan, where both the perpetrators and the targets are orthodox
    Sunni Muslims. Not long ago, a bombing in Lashkar Gah, the capital of
    Helmand Province, killed Muslims, including women, who were applying
    to go on pilgrimage to Mecca. Overall, the trend is definitively in
    the direction of Muslim-on-Muslim violence. By a conservative
    accounting, more than three times as many Iraqis have been killed by
    suicide bombings in the last 3 years as have Israelis in the last 10.
    Suicide bombing has become the archetype of Muslim violence - not
    just to frightened Westerners but also to Muslims themselves.

    What makes suicide bombing especially relevant to the nuclear
    question is that, by design, it unsettles the theory of deterrence.
    When the suicide bomber dies in an attack, he means to send the
    message "You cannot stop me, because I am already willing to die." To
    make the challenge to deterrence even more stark, a suicide bomber
    who blows up a market or a funeral gathering in Iraq or Afghanistan
    is willing to kill innocent bystanders, including fellow Muslims.
    According to the prevailing ideology of suicide bombing, these
    victims are subjected to an involuntary martyrdom that is no less
    glorious for being unintentional.

    So far, the nonstate actors who favor suicide bombing have limited
    their collateral damage to those standing in the way of their own
    bombs. But the logic of sacrificing other Muslims against their own
    wills could be extended to the national level. If an Islamic state or
    Islamic terrorists used nuclear weapons against Israel, the United
    States or other Western targets, like London or Madrid, the
    guaranteed retaliation would cost the lives of thousands and maybe
    millions of Muslims. But following the logic of suicide bombing, the
    original bomber might reason that those Muslims would die in God's
    grace and that others would live on to fight the jihad. No state in
    the Muslim world has openly embraced such a view. But after 9/11, we
    can no longer treat the possibility as fanciful.

    Raising the question of Islamic belief and the bomb, however, is not
    a substitute for strategic analysis of the rational interests of
    Islamic governments. Like other states, Islamic states act on the
    basis of ordinary power politics as much as or more than on the basis
    of religious motivation. Pakistan, which tested a series of warheads
    in 1998, at the height of tensions with India, has not used its
    atomic power as a tool of the faithful in a global jihad. The
    proliferation operation spearheaded by the nuclear scientist - and
    sometime Pakistani national hero - Dr. Abdul Qadeer Khan appears to
    have been based on a combination of national interest and greed, not
    on religious fervor. Khan found buyers in Iran and Libya, but also in
    decidedly non-Islamic North Korea. (In a twist much stranger than
    fiction, Saddam Hussein apparently turned down the offer.)

    Some observers think that Iran, too, wants the bomb primarily to
    improve its regional position and protect itself against regime
    change - not to annihilate Israel. According to this view, Iran's
    nuclear push reflects a drive to what is sometimes called national
    greatness and might more accurately be defined as the ability of a
    country to thumb its nose at the United States without fear of major
    repercussions. A televised pageant hastily arranged to celebrate
    Iran's atomic program in April of this year featured traditional
    Persian dancing and colorful local garb intermixed with make-believe
    vials of enriched uranium. To an Iranian audience accustomed to
    decoding official symbols, these references were nationalist, not
    pan-Islamic. (They were also subtly subversive of the mullahs:
    singing and dancing are not favored forms of expression in the
    clerical enclave of Qom.)

    But at the same time, Ahmadinejad has emphasized Iran's pan-Islamic
    aspirations to act on behalf of Muslims everywhere. An emerging
    nuclear power needs friends. Right now Iran wants to reduce, not
    promote, division between Sunnis and Shiites - and promoting broader
    "Islamic" interests by going after Israel is one way to lessen Sunni
    fears about Iran's rise. Ahmadinejad has put his money where his
    mouth is, providing Hezbollah with medium-range missiles - though
    apparently not chemical warheads - to use against Israel. The
    nationalist language he has sometimes used at home may be a cover for
    sincerely held pan-Islamic ends - a version of the old revolutionary
    strategy of making nationalist claims in order to attract the support
    of those fellow Iranians who do not respond well to Islamist
    ideology. That it is convenient for Iran to emphasize Islamic unity
    does not mean that at least some of its leaders do not believe in it
    as a motivating goal.

    It is common among foreign-policy realists to suppose that a country
    acting on nationalist motives is easier to deter than a country moved
    by religious ones. There is no especially strong evidence for this
    assumption - plenty of nationalist regimes have done crazy things
    when they logically should have been deterred - but the claim has a
    common-sense ring to it. Nationalists care about peoples and states,
    which need to be alive to prosper. It is a basic tenet of nationalism
    that there is nothing higher than the nation-state itself, the
    pinnacle of a people's self-expression. Religious thinkers, on the
    other hand, believe almost by definition that there is something in
    heaven greater than government here on earth. Under the right
    circumstances, they might sacrifice lives - including their own - to
    serve the divine will as they interpret it.

    III.

    We urgently need to know, then, what Islam says about the bomb. Of
    course there is no single answer to this question. The world's
    billion-plus Muslims differ regarding many aspects of their
    1,400-year-old religious tradition. Furthermore, nuclear weapons are
    a relatively new technology, unforeseen by the Prophet and
    unmentioned in the Koran. Nevertheless, contemporary Muslims are
    engaged in interpreting their tradition to ascertain how and when
    nuclear power may be used. Their writings, contained in fatwas and
    treatises that can be found on the Web and in print, tell a
    fascinating and disturbing story.

    The Islamic discussion of nuclear weapons is profoundly intertwined
    with a parallel discussion of suicide bombing that is also taking
    place in the Muslim world. Suicide bombing and nuclear weapons
    typically kill without discrimination, murdering soldiers or
    civilians, men or women or children. And using nuclear force against
    another nuclear power can be suicidal, in the broad sense that
    retaliation may destroy the nation that attacked first. Beyond these
    commonalities is the fact that the rise of suicide bombing is driving
    a historic reconsideration of what might be called the Islamic ethics
    of violence. To consider Islam and the bomb today must thus
    inevitably draw us into the complex legal and political thinking of
    those Muslim authorities who justify the use of force.

    The story starts with traditional Islamic law. The Shariah never
    followed the Roman adage that in war the laws are silent. Because
    jihad is a pillar of Islam, and because in Islam God's word takes
    legal form, the classical scholars devoted considerable care to
    identifying the laws of jihad. In common with the just-war doctrine
    developed in Christian Europe, the law of jihad governed when it was
    permissible to fight and what means could lawfully be adopted once
    warfare had begun. There were basic ground rules about who was fair
    game. "A woman was found killed in one of the battles fought by the
    Messenger of God," runs a report about the Prophet Muhammad
    considered reliable and binding by the Muslim scholars. "So the
    Messenger of God forbade the killing of women and children." This
    report was universally understood to prohibit the deliberate killing
    of noncombatant women and children. Some scholars interpreted it to
    mean that anyone incapable of warfare should be protected and so
    extended the ban to the elderly, the infirm and even male peasants,
    who as a rule did not fight. Muslims living among the enemy were also
    out of bounds. These rather progressive principles were broadly
    accepted by the Islamic legal authorities, Sunni and Shiite alike.
    For well over a thousand years, no one seriously questioned them.

    Such black-and-white rules were well suited to the hand-to-hand or
    horse-to-horse combat characteristic of limited medieval wars. A few
    quirky challenges did arise, and the Muslim lawyers had to deal with
    them. The great theologian and jurist al-Ghazali, who wrote in the
    11th and 12th centuries and was widely noted for his revival of
    religious piety and his skepticism of secular philosophy, dealt with
    the problem of human shields. He ruled that if the enemy drove
    captured Muslims before him, the Muslim army could still fight back,
    even if it might mean killing some of those Muslims. The reason he
    gave was that "we know that the law intends minimizing killing."
    There was also the catapult - precursor of artillery and air power -
    which was capable of sending a burning projectile into a populated
    city, where the resulting fire might kill women or children.
    Authorities differed on whether that tactic was permissible. Some
    disallowed the catapult when children or Muslim captives were in the
    city. In support, they cited a verse from the Koran that reads, "Had
    they been separated clearly, then We would have chastised the
    unbelievers among them with a painful chastisement." According to
    this school of thought, the "separation" of permissible targets
    (i.e., non-Muslim men) from impermissible targets is the precondition
    for a general attack. Another school of thought, by contrast,
    permitted the use of the catapult regardless of collateral damage in
    order to serve the general interest of the Muslims.

    No law can exist for a millennium without being broken, and there are
    scattered historical reports, mostly from Christian chroniclers, of
    Muslim forces acting outside the bounds of lawful jihad, without the
    authorization of the scholars. Men were always considered legitimate
    targets, and Muslim armies sometimes slaughtered them just as Muslims
    could be slaughtered by their enemies. Remarkably enough, though, the
    legal principles of jihad protecting women, children and fellow
    Muslims survived well into the modern era, when the secular regimes
    of the Muslim world began to fight according to secular ideas. The
    World War I Armenian genocide, which took place in the last,
    secularizing gasp of the declining Ottoman Empire, was the first
    really substantial systematic violation of the ban on killing women
    and children in recorded Islamic history. In the bloody 20th century,
    when mass exterminations took place in Europe, Africa and Asia,
    Muslim states had a relatively better record, marred of course by
    Saddam Hussein's gassing of the Kurds. And there have been the
    genocidal killings in Darfur in this new century. Even these horrific
    events, however, were not dignified by the claim that they were
    permitted under the law of jihad.

    IV.

    The last two decades have seen a challenge to this Islamic tradition
    of warfare under law, a challenge driven mostly by the attempt to
    justify suicide bombing despite its evident inconsistency with
    Islamic tradition. On the subject of suicide, the Koran could hardly
    be clearer: "Do not kill yourselves; for surely God has been merciful
    to you." Faced with this explicit text, the solution of the militant
    Islamist ideologues has been to avoid the category of suicide
    altogether and to treat the bomber as a martyr rather than as one who
    has taken his own life. This interpretation is not very convincing in
    historical terms: martyrdom classically meant that another person
    killed the Muslim warrior, not that he pushed the button himself.
    Nevertheless, many Muslims now seem to find the argument convincing.
    Even among rather secular Muslims, it has become standard to refer to
    suicide bombers as martyrs.

    The killing of women, children and Muslim men, however, has proved
    harder to explain away as a permissible exercise of jihad. The
    reaction to 9/11, which has (so far) been the high-water mark of
    suicide bombing, illustrates the nature of the difficulty of
    reconciling suicide bombing with Islamic law. One problem concerns
    the offensive nature of the attack at a time when the United States
    was not at war with any Muslim entity. Offensive jihad requires the
    authorization of a legitimate Muslim leader, absent on 9/11. A more
    serious concern was the obvious reality that the 9/11 attacks were
    certain to kill - and did kill - women, children and Muslims, all in
    direct contravention of classical jihad principles. Since the whole
    point of 9/11 was to announce and embody jihad on the international
    stage, the attacks quickly became the centerpiece of a high-stakes
    debate about whether they did or did not qualify as legitimate acts
    of jihad.

    In the immediate aftermath of 9/11, it was sometimes asserted in the
    West that there were no Muslim voices condemning the attacks. This
    was never true. Prominent Muslim scholars expressed their
    disapprobation in public arenas like television and the Internet.
    These included senior Sunni scholars like the grand mufti of Saudi
    Arabia and the head of Al-Azhar, in Egypt, nominally the flagship
    institution of Sunni higher learning - who gave a news conference.
    More popular figures, like Al Jazeera's resident cleric, Sheik Yusuf
    al-Qaradawi, explained that Islam "considers the attack on innocent
    human beings a grave sin." Shiite scholars also spoke out, including
    Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the supreme leader of Iran.

    The position of the Muslim scholars and observers who condemned the
    9/11 attacks was simple and consistent across the Sunni-Shiite
    divide: this was not jihad but an unlawful use of violence. Offensive
    jihad was prohibited in the absence of formal authorization by a
    Muslim leader. But even if the attacks could somehow be construed as
    defensive, the perpetrators of 9/11 broke the rules with their
    willingness to kill women and children. In confident and insistent
    tones, these critics cited the classical scholars and insisted that
    nothing in Islamic law could justify the tactics used by Al Qaeda.
    Ayatollah Muhammad Husayn Fadlallah, the Lebanese cleric whose
    spiritual authority is recognized by Hezbollah, gave an interview to
    the Beirut newspaper Al Safir in which he asserted that given their
    impermissible choice of targets, the 9/11 bombers were not martyrs
    but "merely suicides."

    At the same time, it is important to note that in 2001 few prominent
    Muslim scholars - the Saudi grand mufti was the main exception -
    condemned the use of suicide bombings in all circumstances. Fadlallah
    approved the attack on the U.S. Marines in 1983 and, according to the
    United States, played a role in ordering it. Qaradawi, whose
    television presence gives him reason to stay within the Islamist
    mainstream, distinguished the 9/11 attacks from the permissible
    defensive jihad of the Palestinians. He was happy to praise a God who
    "through his infinite wisdom has given the weak a weapon the strong
    do not have, and that is their ability to turn their bodies into
    bombs as Palestinians do." Qaradawi has also repeated the common view
    that the killing of Israeli women is justified on the grounds that
    all Israelis must serve in the military, and so no Israeli is a true
    noncombatant: "An Israeli woman is not like women in our societies,
    because she is a soldier."

    The equivocation by Muslim scholars with respect to the technique of
    suicide bombing reflected the reality that throughout the Muslim
    world, Palestinian suicide bombers were by 2001 identified as martyrs
    dying in a just cause. This, in turn, was the natural outgrowth of
    the decades before suicide bombing, when Palestinian terrorists were
    applauded for killing Israeli civilians, including women and
    children. Given that embracing Palestinian suicide bombing had become
    a widespread social norm, it would have been essentially unthinkable
    for an important Muslim scholar to condemn the practice without
    losing his standing among Muslims worldwide. In the Islamic world, as
    in the U.S. Supreme Court, the legal authorities cannot get too far
    away from their public constituency without paying a price.

    What happened, in other words, is that without the scholars paying
    too much attention to the question, the killing of Israeli women and
    children had become a kind of exception to the ordinary laws of
    jihad. Opportunists like bin Laden then began to widen the loophole
    to include new victims. With respect to the unauthorized nature of
    his offensive jihad, bin Laden asserted that in fact the attacks were
    defensive, since in his mind the U.S. was occupying the sacred soil
    of Saudi Arabia - just as Israel was occupying the Muslim land of
    Palestine. Once all of Saudi Arabia was placed on a par with the holy
    cities of Mecca and Medina, traditionally closed to non-Muslims, the
    presence of American soldiers anywhere on the Arabian Peninsula (even
    if their presence was with the permission of the Saudi government)
    could be depicted as a profanation, a violation of the Prophet's
    deathbed directive to "banish the pagans from the Arabian Peninsula."

    Bin Laden was embroidering on the theories of his onetime mentor
    Abdullah Azzam, the intellectual godfather of Al Qaeda. Azzam was a
    Palestinian Islamist who made his way to Afghanistan via Saudi Arabia
    and established the so-called Bureau of Services to channel Arab
    youth into the Afghan jihad. As Azzam trod his personal path from
    Palestinian militancy to universal pan-Islamic jihadism, he wrote an
    influential treatise called "Defense of Muslim Lands." In it, Azzam
    argued that not a single hand span of Muslim territory anywhere could
    ever be ceded to the enemy "because the land belongs to Allah and to
    Islam." Though Azzam would never have acknowledged it, his account of
    the divine ownership of Muslim lands was probably influenced -
    unconsciously, to be sure - by religious-Zionist claims about the
    holiness of the Land of Israel.

    When it came to the killing of civilians, bin Laden's thought
    developed more gradually. In early pronouncements, before 9/11, he
    spoke as if the killing of women and children was inherently an
    atrocity. "Nor should one forget," he admonished an interviewer in
    1996, "the deliberate, premeditated dropping of the H bombs [sic] on
    cities with their entire populations of children, elderly and women,
    as was the case with Hiroshima and Nagasaki." After 9/11, however,
    the argument changed. Now bin Laden began to suggest that American
    civilians were fair game. He could not argue that like Israelis, all
    Americans were subject to mandatory military service. Instead he
    proposed that because "the American people are the ones who choose
    their government by their own free will," and because they "have the
    ability and choice to refuse the policies of their government,"
    attacks on American civilians were justified. Voting was now playing
    the role for Americans that military service played in the case of
    Israelis: the active step transforming civilians into fair game.

    Such an appeal to collective responsibility was, however, pretty weak
    in Islamic legal terms. It might suffice for bin Laden's videotaped
    self-justifications, and it might salve the consciences of potential
    jihadis hoping to join the rank and file of Al Qaeda. But it would
    never satisfy serious students of classical Islamic law, who found
    the 9/11 attacks problematic from an Islamic legal perspective.

    In Saudi Arabia in particular, radical Muslim scholars with much more
    learning than bin Laden have sought to develop legally persuasive
    justifications for civilian killings. Probably the most sophisticated
    effort from a legal standpoint is a document titled "A Treatise on
    the Law of the Use of Weapons of Mass Destruction Against the
    Unbelievers," written in 2003 by a brilliant Saudi dissident named
    Sheik Nasir bin Hamad al-Fahd. (Fahd, a theorist rather than an
    activist, is currently back in prison, as he has been off and on for
    almost a decade.) The treatise begins with the assumption that the
    world's Muslims are under attack. But how are today's Muslims
    supposed to defend themselves, given their military inferiority?
    Fahd's response is that, if they have no other choice, they may use
    any means necessary - including methods that would otherwise violate
    the laws of jihad. "If the unbelievers can be repelled . . . only by
    using" weapons of mass destruction, then "their use is permissible,
    even if you kill them without exception."

    Lest his argument prove too much, Fahd tempers it by the claim that
    the Muslims fighting the jihad may not inflict disproportionately
    more harm on the enemy than the enemy has inflicted on them. That
    raises the question of the extent of American guilt. "Some Brothers
    have added up the number of Muslims killed directly or indirectly by
    [American] weapons and come up with a figure of nearly ten million,"
    the treatise states. This total, Fahd concludes, would authorize the
    use of weapons of mass destruction to kill 10 million Americans:
    indeed, "it would be permissible with no need for further [legal]
    argument." (The number is never explained or analyzed, and you might
    assume that it was meant to correspond very roughly to the population
    of New York.)

    Fahd's arguments sit uneasily with the classical Islamic discussions
    of the laws of jihad. The classical Islamic law never explicitly says
    that women and children may be intentional targets if it is the only
    way to win the jihad. It does not allow violations of the law just
    because the enemy has broken the rules or killed many Muslims. So the
    treatise must fall back on whatever evidence it can muster from the
    classical sources that seems to modify the basic rules. The catapult
    rears its head and is cited as precedent for nonspecific killing. The
    right to fight even when Muslim hostages may be killed is brought out
    as proof of the permissibility of collateral damage when there is no
    other choice.

    The legal arguments in use here are stronger than bin Laden's
    makeweights, but they, too, would probably not be sufficient on their
    own to justify the deviation from the legal traditions of jihad
    wrought by today's jihadis. The notion that it's right because it's
    necessary is doing the real work, and old-fashioned legal arguments
    are following along. It is no accident that the argument from
    necessity has been so prominent in modern Western writing about
    modern warfare in general and the nuclear bomb in particular. If the
    technology of mass destruction can be exported, why not the
    justification that comes with it?

    Within the world of radical Islam, there are those who believe that
    the erosion of the laws of jihad has gone too far. There are reports
    of difficulty recruiting foreign candidates for suicide missions
    directed at Iraqi civilians. The debate about how jihad may be
    prosecuted is not over by any means. But it is an unavoidable fact
    that the classic restrictions on the killing of women, children and
    Muslims in jihad have been deeply undermined in the last decade.

    V.

    If the Islamic laws of war are under revision, or at least the
    subject of intense debate, what does that mean for the question of
    the Islamic bomb? The answer is that the expanding religious sanction
    for violence once thought unacceptable opens the way for new kinds of
    violence to be introduced and seen as legitimate in turn. First
    Israeli women and children became acceptable targets; then Americans;
    then Shiites; and now Sunnis of unstinting orthodoxy. It would seem
    that no one is out of bounds.

    It is therefore now possible to imagine that the classical Islamic
    principles governing war would not be applied even by a
    self-consciously Islamic regime deciding when and if to detonate a
    nuclear device. The traditional ban on killing women, children and
    fellow Muslims would have gone a long way toward banning most
    potential uses of nuclear power by a sincerely Islamic state actor.
    As those prohibitions have eroded, the reassurance that might be
    afforded by a state's Islamic commitments has waned.

    This means that a nuclear Islamic state would be at least as willing
    to use its weapons as a comparable non-Islamic state. But would an
    Islamic state be prepared to take the jihad to the enemy even if it
    would result in what amounts to collective suicide through the
    destruction of the state and its citizens? If the leaders of Iran or
    some future leaders of a radicalized, nuclear Saudi Arabia shared the
    aspiration to martyrdom of so many young jihadis around the world,
    might they be prepared to attack Israel or the United States, even if
    the inevitable result were the martyrdom of their entire people?

    The answer depends to a large degree on whether you consider Islam
    susceptible to the kind of apocalyptic, millennial thought that might
    lead whole peoples, rather than just individuals, into suicidal
    behavior. It is important to note that for all his talk of the war
    between civilizations, bin Laden has never spoken of the end of days.
    For him, the battle between the Muslims and the infidels is part of
    earthly human life, and has indeed been with us since the days of the
    Prophet himself. The war intensifies and lessens with time, but it is
    not something that occurs out of time or with the expectation that
    time itself will stop. Bin Laden and his sympathizers want to
    re-establish the caliphate and rule the Muslim world, but unlike some
    earlier revivalist movements within Sunni Islam, they do not declare
    their leader as the mahdi, or guided one, whose appearance will usher
    in a golden age of justice and peace to be followed by the Day of
    Judgment.

    >From this perspective, the utter destruction of civilization would be
    a mistake, not the fulfillment of the divine plan. Even the most
    radical Sunni theorists of jihad invoke a passage from the Koran
    according to which civilization itself - "the crops and the cattle" -
    must not and cannot be destroyed completely. Bin Laden might seem to
    have few qualms about killing millions of Americans or other
    Westerners. He might well use a nuclear device if he gambled that
    there would be no enemy for the United States to bomb in retaliation.
    But even he might not be prepared to unleash a global nuclear
    conflagration on the expectation that a better order would emerge
    once many millions of Muslims and infidels died. (Bin Laden has
    called for Muslims to acquire nuclear weapons, and in the 1990's
    reportedly tried to acquire them himself - but there is little hard
    evidence that he has made subsequent efforts in that direction.)

    With respect to Shiite eschatology, there is greater reason for
    concern. Iran's Shiism is of the "Twelver" variety, so called because
    the 12th imam in the line of succession from the Prophet disappeared
    into a state of occultation - or being hidden - from which he is
    expected to return as the mahdi. Ayatollah Khomeini played on the
    messianic overtones of this belief during the Iranian revolution, in
    which some of his followers went so far as to hint that he might be
    the returning imam. Moktada al-Sadr's Shiite militia in Iraq is
    called Army of the Mahdi. Recently, Iran's president, Mahmoud
    Ahmadinejad, contributed to renewed focus on the mahdi, by saying
    publicly that the mission of the Islamic revolution in Iran is to
    pave the way for the mahdi's return, and by visiting the mosque at
    Jamkaran, on the outskirts of Qom, where, according to one tradition,
    the vanished imam was last seen. Some reports suggest that youth
    religion in Iran in increasingly focused on veneration of the
    vanished imam.

    Islam has a vision of the end of days, with wars between the faithful
    and the tribes of Gog and Magog (Yuj and Majuj in their Arabic
    incarnation). Twelver Shiism is, at its core, an eschatological
    faith, focused on the ultimate return of the imam-mahdi, who will
    restore the Shiites to their rightful place and redeem their
    generations of suffering. Since the vanished imam is by tradition a
    human who has never died, but remains in occultation, he is also
    believed to affect the course of events even from his hidden place.
    And Shiite tradition fills in the picture of the mahdi's return with
    an elaborate account of signs that will herald the event, including
    advance messengers, earthquakes and bloodshed.

    But belief in redemption - even accompanied by wars and death and the
    defeat of the infidels - need not translate into a present impulse to
    create a violent crisis that would precipitate the messianic
    situation. Like their Jewish counterparts, Shiite religious
    authorities have traditionally sought to resist speculation about the
    imminence of a messianic return. Shiite messianic thought is less
    focused than its messianic Christian counterpart on generating global
    crisis and letting God sort things out. Khomeini himself believed
    that the mahdi's advent could be hastened - but by social justice,
    not by provoking war. This put him on the activist side of Shiite
    teaching about the mahdi, much as he was also an activist about the
    exercise of worldly power by the mullahs. A popular revolutionary
    slogan urged the imam's coming but asserted that Khomeini would
    govern alongside him.

    Other Shiite thinkers, by contrast, take a more fatalist stance, and
    prefer to believe that the mahdi's coming cannot be hastened by human
    activity - a view that corresponds loosely to Ayatollah Ali
    al-Sistani's belief, with regard to Iraq and elsewhere, that the
    clerics should not themselves govern. One small, semi-secret Iranian
    organization, the Hojjatiya Society, was banned and persecuted by
    Khomeini's government in part for its quiescent view that the mahdi's
    arrival could not be hastened.

    Ahmadinejad is not the only or even the most important player in
    Iran's nuclear game. The supreme leader, Ayatollah Khamenei, still
    makes the ultimate decisions on armaments and other matters, and
    there are numerous factions in the country with opposed interests and
    ideology and goals. Nevertheless, Ahmadinejad has in some respects
    succeeded in making the nuclear issue his own, and as a result his
    personal views about the end of days have been the subject of much
    speculation and innuendo, inside Iran and out. The Mideast scholar
    Bernard Lewis, in a recent Wall Street Journal column, hinted darkly
    and without much evidence that Ahmadinejad might be planning a
    nuclear attack on Israel for the Night of Power (this year it fell on
    Aug. 22), when the Prophet Muhammad made his mystical journey to the
    Furthest Mosque, associated in tradition with al-Aqsa in Jerusalem.
    Rumors, possibly spread by Ahmadinejad's enemies, have tied him to
    the outlawed Hojjatiya - a link mistakenly interpreted outside Iran
    as evidence that he might want to bring back the imam by violence,
    rather than that he might prefer to wait piously and prepare for the
    imam's eventual return on his own schedule. It is of course
    impossible to gauge the man's religious sensibilities perfectly. Yet
    the relative absence of a contemporary Shiite trend to messianic
    brinkmanship suggests that Ahmadinejad's recent emphasis on the mahdi
    may be interpreted more in terms of an attempt to summon Khomeini's
    legacy and Iran's revolutionary moment than as a desperate
    willingness to bring the nation to the edge of war. When Ahmadinejad
    invoked the mahdi in his now-famous letter to George Bush, he seemed
    to be using the doctrine in ecumenical terms, emphasizing the Islamic
    tradition that Jesus - revered as a prophet, though not as the Son of
    God - will return alongside the mahdi and govern in tandem with him.

    So although a renewed Shiite messianism does create some cause for
    concern about the potential uses of an Iranian bomb - in particular
    because it suggests that Ahmadinejad may be more a utopian than a
    realist - it is almost certainly a mistake to anticipate that Iran
    would use its nuclear power in a way that would provoke large-scale
    retaliation and assured self-destruction. Iranian leaders have been
    more than ready to sacrifice their own citizens in large numbers.
    During the Iran-Iraq war, major efforts went into recruiting young
    boys to the Basij militias, which were then sent to the front lines
    on what were essentially suicide missions. Religion played the
    central part in motivating the teenage soldiers, and it is reasonable
    to believe that religion helped salve the consciences of those who
    ordered these children into battle. Yet even this discounting of the
    value of human life - in a war started by Saddam Hussein, not by Iran
    - fell short of voluntarily putting an entire nation at risk.
    Ahmadinejad surely understands the consequences of using a nuclear
    bomb, and Shiite Islam, even in its messianic incarnation, still
    falls short of inviting nuclear retaliation and engendering
    collective suicide.

    VI.

    These worries about an Islamic bomb raise the question of why we
    trust any nation with the power that a nuclear capacity confers. Why,
    for instance, do we trust ourselves, given that we remain the only
    nation actually to have used nuclear weapons? The standard answer to
    why we keep our nuclear bombs - a response developed during the cold
    war - is that we must have the capability to deter anyone who might
    attack us first. The promise of mutually assured destruction was its
    own kind of collective suicide pact, albeit one supposed to scare
    both sides out of pushing the button. That is why, throughout the
    heyday of the unilateral disarmament movement, critics of this
    justification pointed out that our threat was only credible if we
    were, in fact, prepared to kill millions of civilians in a rapid act
    of retaliation. If this kind of killing was morally unjustified, went
    their argument, then the threat to use it was also immoral.

    The truth is that we hold on to our nuclear capability not only as a
    matter of deterrence but also to maintain our own global strategic
    position. If we do not want Islamic states - or anyone else for that
    matter - to have a nuclear capability, it is not necessarily because
    we consider them especially likely to bring on their own destruction
    by using it. It is, rather, that we do not want to cede some
    substantial chunk of our own global power to them. This principle -
    if it is a principle - lies behind the general strategy that is
    embedded in the international nuclear-nonproliferation treaty.
    Everybody involved understands that if any government got a chance to
    acquire nuclear power before the other treaty members had a chance to
    notice and impose sanctions, it would jump at the opportunity.

    So the nonproliferation regime is not and could never be based on
    some principle of international fairness. But it does not follow that
    the United States and its allies should simply accept the development
    of nuclear technology by just anyone. It should be relevant to our
    deliberations that a particular candidate is our enemy. When it comes
    to Islamic states, there is serious reason to worry that, both now
    and in the immediately foreseeable future, popular anti-American
    sentiment is especially likely to play an important role in the
    shaping of foreign policy. Over the next quarter-century, it is
    conceivable and certainly desirable that Islamism and
    anti-Americanism may be unlinked. But we must be honest and
    acknowledge that in the short term at least, the U.S. democratization
    strategy has done almost nothing to reduce Islamist anti-Americanism,
    whether Shiite or Sunni - this despite the fact that the same
    strategy has benefited Islamists across the region by allowing them
    to run for office and enter government.

    Much of the reason for this close linkage between Islamism and
    anti-Americanism comes from Iran. As an enemy of the United States,
    which has worked consistently against American interests, Iran is in
    a category by itself, most nearly matched by North Korea, the other
    still-standing member of President Bush's axis of evil. In this,
    Iran's motives have been primarily Islamic-ideological, not
    pragmatic.

    For many years under the shah, Iran was a natural American ally -
    precisely because it was Shiite and non-Arab, and uncomfortably close
    to the Soviet Union and its fantasy of a warm-water port. Even after
    the 1979 revolution and the hostage crisis, it is possible that the
    United States would have eventually reopened relations with an
    avowedly Islamic Iran had the government softened its
    anti-Americanism. The United States has never made secularism a
    condition of friendship. It has been fully prepared to support
    Islamic states like Saudi Arabia, and even used religion to cement
    the anti-Communist alliance during the cold war. The Iraqi Shiite
    Islamists have been willing to work alongside the Americans, and the
    United States has in return treated them as its allies,
    democratically chosen by the Iraqi electorate.

    Islamist anti-Americanism is the direct legacy of Ayatollah
    Khomeini's success in marrying Islamic faith to anti-imperialism -
    making "Death to America" into a religious chant, not just a
    political slogan. Of course the United States was hardly blameless.
    It did everything it could to open itself to the imperialist charge,
    including, in Iran, backing the famous 1953 countercoup that removed
    from power Iran's first democratically legitimate prime minister,
    Mohammed Mossadegh. Contemporary Islamists can also point to
    America's continuing hypocritical support of regional authoritarian
    regimes.

    Iranian-rooted Islamist anti-Americanism has worked far better than
    its designers might have imagined, spreading to Sunni Islamists who
    have little love to lose for Iran. The marriage of Islamism and
    anti-Americanism will probably be considered by history as the most
    significant consequence of the Iranian revolution. Anti-Americanism
    has become a staple of Islamist sermons and Web postings, an
    effective tool for drawing to the movement angry young people who
    might not naturally be drawn to religion. Bin Ladenism, in this
    sense, owes much to the Iranian revolution even though Al Qaeda was
    never Iran's direct ally. United States support for Israel has always
    been an important part of the argument for Islamist anti-Americanism,
    but today it is by no means a necessary component. If U.S. support of
    Israel were to weaken, the American presence in Iraq and elsewhere in
    the gulf would easily substitute as a basis for hatred.

    The United States therefore has strong reason to block its enemy Iran
    from acquiring nuclear weapons - not simply because Iran will seek to
    become a greater regional power, as any nation might do, but because
    the Islamic Republic of Iran as currently constituted is
    definitionally anti-American. There need not be a direct threat of
    Iranian first use against either the United States or Israel for this
    reason to weigh heavily. A nuclear Iran will be a stronger and more
    effective enemy in pursuing anti-American policies under the banner
    of Islam. That will not change until the Iranian state abandons
    either its Islamic identity or its association between Islam and
    anti-Americanism. Iran's eagerness to acquire nuclear capacity need
    not be a result of a particularly Islamic motivation, but if and when
    Iran does have the bomb, its enhanced power and prestige will
    certainly be lent to policies that it conceives as promoting the
    Islamic interest.

    Whether force, negotiation or some combination is the right path to
    take to keep Iran from going nuclear is of course a hugely important
    question. It turns on many uncertain facts, like the true progress of
    Iran's nuclear program and how much it can be affected by air attack;
    Iran's capacity and will to retaliate against an attack; whether
    there is any chance Iran would respond to negotiations; and the
    ability of the United States to withstand any retaliation while
    150,000 U.S. troops are in Iraq. As we have recently learned in Iraq,
    it is not enough to think you have a good reason to go to war - you
    must also have a realistic understanding of the practical and moral
    costs of things going horribly wrong. Any choice, though, must be
    made against the backdrop of the reality that the Islamic government
    of Iran is not only unlikely to collapse soon - it is also very
    unlikely to become less anti-American in the near future.

    The same, unfortunately, is true of the world's Islamist movements,
    for whom anti-Americanism remains a rallying cry and a principle of
    belief. Perhaps the promotion of democracy in the region, pursued
    consistently by the United States over the long term, might someday
    allow the rise of leaders whose Islamism is tempered by the need to
    satisfy their constituents' domestic needs - and who eschew
    anti-Americanism as wasteful and misguided. Iraq was the test case of
    whether this change could occur in the short term. But we failed to
    make the experiment work and gave Iraq's Islamist politicians, Shiite
    and Sunni alike, ample grounds to continue the anti-American rhetoric
    that comes so easily to them. In the wake of our tragic mismanagement
    of Iraq, we are certainly a generation or more from any such
    unlinking of Islamism and anti-Americanism, if it is to occur at all.
    And Islamism itself shows no signs of being on the wane as a social
    or political force.

    That means that the best we can hope for in nuclear Islamic states in
    the near term is a rational dictator like Pervez Musharraf of
    Pakistan, who sees his bread buttered on the side of an alliance with
    the West. Such rulers can be very strong and can bring stability, but
    we also know that their rule (or reign) promotes Islamist opposition,
    with its often violent overtones. When such rulers die or otherwise
    fall from power, the Islamists will be poised to use the
    international power conferred by nuclear weapons to pursue their own
    ends - ends for now overwhelmingly likely to be anti-American.

    None of this is inherent in the structure of Islam itself. Islam
    contains a rich and multivocal set of traditions and ideas,
    susceptible to being used for good or ill, for restraint or
    destruction. This interpretive flexibility - equally characteristic
    of the other great world religions - does not rob Islam of its
    distinctiveness. An Islamic bomb would not be just the same as the
    nationalist bomb of a majority-Muslim state, nor would it be the same
    as a Christian bomb or a Jewish one. But its role in history will
    depend, ultimately, on the meaning Muslims give it, and the uses to
    which they put their faith and their capabilities. In confronting the
    possibility of the Islamic bomb, we - Muslims and non-Muslims alike -
    need to remember that Islam exists both as an ideal system of morals
    and values and as a force that motivates actual people living today,
    with all the frailties and imperfections that make us human.

    © The New York Times Magazine

    Noah Feldman is a law professor at New York University and adjunct
    senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations.
    For nearly 50 years, worries about a nuclear Middle East centered on
    Israel. Arab leaders resented the fact that Israel was the only
    atomic power in the region, a resentment heightened by America's
    tacit approval of the situation. But they were also pretty certain
    that Israel (which has never explicitly acknowledged having nuclear
    weapons) would not drop the bomb except as a very last resort. That
    is why Egypt and Syria were unafraid to attack Israel during the
    October 1973 Yom Kippur War. "Israel will not be the first country in
    the region to use nuclear weapons," went the Israelis' coy formula.
    "Nor will it be the second."

    Today the nuclear game in the region has changed. When the Arab
    League's secretary general, Amr Moussa, called for "a Middle East
    free of nuclear weapons" this past May, it wasn't Israel that
    prompted his remarks. He was worried about Iran, whose self-declared
    ambition to become a nuclear power has been steadily approaching
    realization.

    The anti-Israel statements of the Iranian president, Mahmoud
    Ahmadinejad, coupled with Iran's support for Hezbollah and Hamas,
    might lead you to think that the Arab states would welcome Iran's
    nuclear program. After all, the call to wipe the Zionist regime from
    the map is a longstanding cliché of Arab nationalist rhetoric. But
    the interests of Shiite non-Arab Iran do not always coincide with
    those of Arab leaders. A nuclear Iran means, at the very least, a
    realignment of power dynamics in the Persian Gulf. It could
    potentially mean much more: a historic shift in the position of the
    long-subordinated Shiite minority relative to the power and prestige
    of the Sunni majority, which traditionally dominated the Muslim
    world. Many Arab Sunnis fear that the moment is ripe for a Shiite
    rise. Iraq's Shiite majority has been asserting the right to govern,
    and the lesson has not been lost on the Shiite majority in Bahrain
    and the large minorities in Lebanon and Saudi Arabia. King Abdullah
    of Jordan has warned of a "Shiite crescent" of power stretching from
    Iran to Lebanon via Iraq and (by proxy) Syria.

    But geopolitics is not the only reason Sunni Arab leaders are rattled
    by the prospect of a nuclear Iran. They also seem to be worried that
    the Iranians might actually use nuclear weapons if they get them. A
    nuclear attack on Israel would engulf the whole region. But that is
    not the only danger: Sunnis in Saudi Arabia and elsewhere fear that
    the Iranians might just use a nuclear bomb against them. Even as
    Iran's defiance of the United States and Israel wins support among
    some Sunnis, extremist Sunnis have been engaging in the act of
    takfir, condemning all Shiites as infidels. On the ground in Iraq,
    Sunni takfiris are putting this theory into practice, aiming at
    Shiite civilians and killing them indiscriminately. Shiite militias
    have been responding in kind, and massacres of Sunni civilians are no
    longer isolated events.

    Adding the nuclear ingredient to this volatile mix will certainly
    produce an arms race. If Iran is going to get the bomb, its neighbors
    will have no choice but to keep up. North Korea, now protected by its
    own bomb, has threatened proliferation - and in the Middle East it
    would find a number of willing buyers. Small principalities with huge
    U.S. Air Force bases, like Qatar, might choose to rely on an American
    protective umbrella. But Saudi Arabia, which has always seen Iran as
    a threatening competitor, will not be willing to place its nuclear
    security entirely in American hands. Once the Saudis are in the hunt,
    Egypt will need nuclear weapons to keep it from becoming irrelevant
    to the regional power balance - and sure enough, last month Gamal
    Mubarak, President Mubarak's son and Egypt's heir apparent, very
    publicly announced that Egypt should pursue a nuclear program.

    Given the increasing instability of the Middle East, nuclear
    proliferation there is more worrisome than almost anywhere else on
    earth. As nuclear technology spreads, terrorists will enjoy
    increasing odds of getting their hands on nuclear weapons. States -
    including North Korea - might sell bombs or give them to favored
    proxy allies, the way Iran gave Hezbollah medium-range rockets that
    Hezbollah used this summer during its war with Israel. Bombing
    through an intermediary has its advantages: deniability is, after
    all, the name of the game for a government trying to avoid nuclear
    retaliation.

    Proliferation could also happen in other ways. Imagine a succession
    crisis in which the Saudi government fragments and control over
    nuclear weapons, should the Saudis have acquired them, falls into the
    hands of Saudi elites who are sympathetic to Osama bin Laden, or at
    least to his ideas. Or Al Qaeda itself could purchase ready-made
    bombs, a feat technically much less difficult than designing nuclear
    weapons from scratch. So far, there are few nuclear powers from whom
    such bombs can be directly bought: as of today, only nine nations in
    the world belong to the nuclear club. But as more countries get the
    bomb, tracing the seller will become harder and harder, and the
    incentive to make a sale will increase.

    II.

    The prospect of not just one Islamic bomb, but many, inevitably
    concentrates the mind on how Muslims - whether Shiite or Sunni -
    might use their nuclear weapons. In the mid-1980's, when Pakistan
    became the first Islamic state to go nuclear, it was still possible
    to avoid asking the awkward question of whether there was something
    distinctive about Islamic belief or practice that made possession of
    nuclear technology especially worrisome. Most observers assumed that
    Islamic states could be deterred from using nuclear force just like
    other states: by the threat of massive retaliation.

    During the last two decades, however, there has been a profound
    change in the way violence is discussed and deployed in the Muslim
    world. In particular, we have encountered the rise of suicide
    bombing. In historic terms, this development is new and unexpected.
    Suicide bombing has no traditional basis in Islam. As a technique, it
    was totally absent from the successful Afghan jihad against the
    Soviet Union. Although suicide bombing as a tool of stateless
    terrorists was dreamed up a hundred years ago by the European
    anarchists immortalized in Joseph Conrad's "Secret Agent," it became
    a tool of modern terrorist warfare only in 1983, when Shiite
    militants blew up the U.S. Marine barracks in Lebanon.

    Since then, suicide bombing has spread through the Muslim world with
    astonishing speed and on a surprising course. The vocabulary of
    martyrdom and sacrifice, the formal videotaped preconfession of
    faith, the technological tinkering to increase deadliness - all are
    now instantly recognizable to every Muslim. And as suicide bombing
    has penetrated Islamic cultural consciousness, its list of targets
    has steadily expanded. First the targets were American soldiers, then
    mostly Israelis, including women and children. From Lebanon and
    Israel, the technique of suicide bombing moved to Iraq, where the
    targets have included mosques and shrines, and the intended victims
    have mostly been Shiite Iraqis. The newest testing ground is
    Afghanistan, where both the perpetrators and the targets are orthodox
    Sunni Muslims. Not long ago, a bombing in Lashkar Gah, the capital of
    Helmand Province, killed Muslims, including women, who were applying
    to go on pilgrimage to Mecca. Overall, the trend is definitively in
    the direction of Muslim-on-Muslim violence. By a conservative
    accounting, more than three times as many Iraqis have been killed by
    suicide bombings in the last 3 years as have Israelis in the last 10.
    Suicide bombing has become the archetype of Muslim violence - not
    just to frightened Westerners but also to Muslims themselves.

    What makes suicide bombing especially relevant to the nuclear
    question is that, by design, it unsettles the theory of deterrence.
    When the suicide bomber dies in an attack, he means to send the
    message "You cannot stop me, because I am already willing to die." To
    make the challenge to deterrence even more stark, a suicide bomber
    who blows up a market or a funeral gathering in Iraq or Afghanistan
    is willing to kill innocent bystanders, including fellow Muslims.
    According to the prevailing ideology of suicide bombing, these
    victims are subjected to an involuntary martyrdom that is no less
    glorious for being unintentional.

    So far, the nonstate actors who favor suicide bombing have limited
    their collateral damage to those standing in the way of their own
    bombs. But the logic of sacrificing other Muslims against their own
    wills could be extended to the national level. If an Islamic state or
    Islamic terrorists used nuclear weapons against Israel, the United
    States or other Western targets, like London or Madrid, the
    guaranteed retaliation would cost the lives of thousands and maybe
    millions of Muslims. But following the logic of suicide bombing, the
    original bomber might reason that those Muslims would die in God's
    grace and that others would live on to fight the jihad. No state in
    the Muslim world has openly embraced such a view. But after 9/11, we
    can no longer treat the possibility as fanciful.

    Raising the question of Islamic belief and the bomb, however, is not
    a substitute for strategic analysis of the rational interests of
    Islamic governments. Like other states, Islamic states act on the
    basis of ordinary power politics as much as or more than on the basis
    of religious motivation. Pakistan, which tested a series of warheads
    in 1998, at the height of tensions with India, has not used its
    atomic power as a tool of the faithful in a global jihad. The
    proliferation operation spearheaded by the nuclear scientist - and
    sometime Pakistani national hero - Dr. Abdul Qadeer Khan appears to
    have been based on a combination of national interest and greed, not
    on religious fervor. Khan found buyers in Iran and Libya, but also in
    decidedly non-Islamic North Korea. (In a twist much stranger than
    fiction, Saddam Hussein apparently turned down the offer.)

    Some observers think that Iran, too, wants the bomb primarily to
    improve its regional position and protect itself against regime
    change - not to annihilate Israel. According to this view, Iran's
    nuclear push reflects a drive to what is sometimes called national
    greatness and might more accurately be defined as the ability of a
    country to thumb its nose at the United States without fear of major
    repercussions. A televised pageant hastily arranged to celebrate
    Iran's atomic program in April of this year featured traditional
    Persian dancing and colorful local garb intermixed with make-believe
    vials of enriched uranium. To an Iranian audience accustomed to
    decoding official symbols, these references were nationalist, not
    pan-Islamic. (They were also subtly subversive of the mullahs:
    singing and dancing are not favored forms of expression in the
    clerical enclave of Qom.)

    But at the same time, Ahmadinejad has emphasized Iran's pan-Islamic
    aspirations to act on behalf of Muslims everywhere. An emerging
    nuclear power needs friends. Right now Iran wants to reduce, not
    promote, division between Sunnis and Shiites - and promoting broader
    "Islamic" interests by going after Israel is one way to lessen Sunni
    fears about Iran's rise. Ahmadinejad has put his money where his
    mouth is, providing Hezbollah with medium-range missiles - though
    apparently not chemical warheads - to use against Israel. The
    nationalist language he has sometimes used at home may be a cover for
    sincerely held pan-Islamic ends - a version of the old revolutionary
    strategy of making nationalist claims in order to attract the support
    of those fellow Iranians who do not respond well to Islamist
    ideology. That it is convenient for Iran to emphasize Islamic unity
    does not mean that at least some of its leaders do not believe in it
    as a motivating goal.

    It is common among foreign-policy realists to suppose that a country
    acting on nationalist motives is easier to deter than a country moved
    by religious ones. There is no especially strong evidence for this
    assumption - plenty of nationalist regimes have done crazy things
    when they logically should have been deterred - but the claim has a
    common-sense ring to it. Nationalists care about peoples and states,
    which need to be alive to prosper. It is a basic tenet of nationalism
    that there is nothing higher than the nation-state itself, the
    pinnacle of a people's self-expression. Religious thinkers, on the
    other hand, believe almost by definition that there is something in
    heaven greater than government here on earth. Under the right
    circumstances, they might sacrifice lives - including their own - to
    serve the divine will as they interpret it.

    III.

    We urgently need to know, then, what Islam says about the bomb. Of
    course there is no single answer to this question. The world's
    billion-plus Muslims differ regarding many aspects of their
    1,400-year-old religious tradition. Furthermore, nuclear weapons are
    a relatively new technology, unforeseen by the Prophet and
    unmentioned in the Koran. Nevertheless, contemporary Muslims are
    engaged in interpreting their tradition to ascertain how and when
    nuclear power may be used. Their writings, contained in fatwas and
    treatises that can be found on the Web and in print, tell a
    fascinating and disturbing story.

    The Islamic discussion of nuclear weapons is profoundly intertwined
    with a parallel discussion of suicide bombing that is also taking
    place in the Muslim world. Suicide bombing and nuclear weapons
    typically kill without discrimination, murdering soldiers or
    civilians, men or women or children. And using nuclear force against
    another nuclear power can be suicidal, in the broad sense that
    retaliation may destroy the nation that attacked first. Beyond these
    commonalities is the fact that the rise of suicide bombing is driving
    a historic reconsideration of what might be called the Islamic ethics
    of violence. To consider Islam and the bomb today must thus
    inevitably draw us into the complex legal and political thinking of
    those Muslim authorities who justify the use of force.

    The story starts with traditional Islamic law. The Shariah never
    followed the Roman adage that in war the laws are silent. Because
    jihad is a pillar of Islam, and because in Islam God's word takes
    legal form, the classical scholars devoted considerable care to
    identifying the laws of jihad. In common with the just-war doctrine
    developed in Christian Europe, the law of jihad governed when it was
    permissible to fight and what means could lawfully be adopted once
    warfare had begun. There were basic ground rules about who was fair
    game. "A woman was found killed in one of the battles fought by the
    Messenger of God," runs a report about the Prophet Muhammad
    considered reliable and binding by the Muslim scholars. "So the
    Messenger of God forbade the killing of women and children." This
    report was universally understood to prohibit the deliberate killing
    of noncombatant women and children. Some scholars interpreted it to
    mean that anyone incapable of warfare should be protected and so
    extended the ban to the elderly, the infirm and even male peasants,
    who as a rule did not fight. Muslims living among the enemy were also
    out of bounds. These rather progressive principles were broadly
    accepted by the Islamic legal authorities, Sunni and Shiite alike.
    For well over a thousand years, no one seriously questioned them.

    Such black-and-white rules were well suited to the hand-to-hand or
    horse-to-horse combat characteristic of limited medieval wars. A few
    quirky challenges did arise, and the Muslim lawyers had to deal with
    them. The great theologian and jurist al-Ghazali, who wrote in the
    11th and 12th centuries and was widely noted for his revival of
    religious piety and his skepticism of secular philosophy, dealt with
    the problem of human shields. He ruled that if the enemy drove
    captured Muslims before him, the Muslim army could still fight back,
    even if it might mean killing some of those Muslims. The reason he
    gave was that "we know that the law intends minimizing killing."
    There was also the catapult - precursor of artillery and air power -
    which was capable of sending a burning projectile into a populated
    city, where the resulting fire might kill women or children.
    Authorities differed on whether that tactic was permissible. Some
    disallowed the catapult when children or Muslim captives were in the
    city. In support, they cited a verse from the Koran that reads, "Had
    they been separated clearly, then We would have chastised the
    unbelievers among them with a painful chastisement." According to
    this school of thought, the "separation" of permissible targets
    (i.e., non-Muslim men) from impermissible targets is the precondition
    for a general attack. Another school of thought, by contrast,
    permitted the use of the catapult regardless of collateral damage in
    order to serve the general interest of the Muslims.

    No law can exist for a millennium without being broken, and there are
    scattered historical reports, mostly from Christian chroniclers, of
    Muslim forces acting outside the bounds of lawful jihad, without the
    authorization of the scholars. Men were always considered legitimate
    targets, and Muslim armies sometimes slaughtered them just as Muslims
    could be slaughtered by their enemies. Remarkably enough, though, the
    legal principles of jihad protecting women, children and fellow
    Muslims survived well into the modern era, when the secular regimes
    of the Muslim world began to fight according to secular ideas. The
    World War I Armenian genocide, which took place in the last,
    secularizing gasp of the declining Ottoman Empire, was the first
    really substantial systematic violation of the ban on killing women
    and children in recorded Islamic history. In the bloody 20th century,
    when mass exterminations took place in Europe, Africa and Asia,
    Muslim states had a relatively better record, marred of course by
    Saddam Hussein's gassing of the Kurds. And there have been the
    genocidal killings in Darfur in this new century. Even these horrific
    events, however, were not dignified by the claim that they were
    permitted under the law of jihad.

    IV.

    The last two decades have seen a challenge to this Islamic tradition
    of warfare under law, a challenge driven mostly by the attempt to
    justify suicide bombing despite its evident inconsistency with
    Islamic tradition. On the subject of suicide, the Koran could hardly
    be clearer: "Do not kill yourselves; for surely God has been merciful
    to you." Faced with this explicit text, the solution of the militant
    Islamist ideologues has been to avoid the category of suicide
    altogether and to treat the bomber as a martyr rather than as one who
    has taken his own life. This interpretation is not very convincing in
    historical terms: martyrdom classically meant that another person
    killed the Muslim warrior, not that he pushed the button himself.
    Nevertheless, many Muslims now seem to find the argument convincing.
    Even among rather secular Muslims, it has become standard to refer to
    suicide bombers as martyrs.

    The killing of women, children and Muslim men, however, has proved
    harder to explain away as a permissible exercise of jihad. The
    reaction to 9/11, which has (so far) been the high-water mark of
    suicide bombing, illustrates the nature of the difficulty of
    reconciling suicide bombing with Islamic law. One problem concerns
    the offensive nature of the attack at a time when the United States
    was not at war with any Muslim entity. Offensive jihad requires the
    authorization of a legitimate Muslim leader, absent on 9/11. A more
    serious concern was the obvious reality that the 9/11 attacks were
    certain to kill - and did kill - women, children and Muslims, all in
    direct contravention of classical jihad principles. Since the whole
    point of 9/11 was to announce and embody jihad on the international
    stage, the attacks quickly became the centerpiece of a high-stakes
    debate about whether they did or did not qualify as legitimate acts
    of jihad.

    In the immediate aftermath of 9/11, it was sometimes asserted in the
    West that there were no Muslim voices condemning the attacks. This
    was never true. Prominent Muslim scholars expressed their
    disapprobation in public arenas like television and the Internet.
    These included senior Sunni scholars like the grand mufti of Saudi
    Arabia and the head of Al-Azhar, in Egypt, nominally the flagship
    institution of Sunni higher learning - who gave a news conference.
    More popular figures, like Al Jazeera's resident cleric, Sheik Yusuf
    al-Qaradawi, explained that Islam "considers the attack on innocent
    human beings a grave sin." Shiite scholars also spoke out, including
    Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the supreme leader of Iran.

    The position of the Muslim scholars and observers who condemned the
    9/11 attacks was simple and consistent across the Sunni-Shiite
    divide: this was not jihad but an unlawful use of violence. Offensive
    jihad was prohibited in the absence of formal authorization by a
    Muslim leader. But even if the attacks could somehow be construed as
    defensive, the perpetrators of 9/11 broke the rules with their
    willingness to kill women and children. In confident and insistent
    tones, these critics cited the classical scholars and insisted that
    nothing in Islamic law could justify the tactics used by Al Qaeda.
    Ayatollah Muhammad Husayn Fadlallah, the Lebanese cleric whose
    spiritual authority is recognized by Hezbollah, gave an interview to
    the Beirut newspaper Al Safir in which he asserted that given their
    impermissible choice of targets, the 9/11 bombers were not martyrs
    but "merely suicides."

    At the same time, it is important to note that in 2001 few prominent
    Muslim scholars - the Saudi grand mufti was the main exception -
    condemned the use of suicide bombings in all circumstances. Fadlallah
    approved the attack on the U.S. Marines in 1983 and, according to the
    United States, played a role in ordering it. Qaradawi, whose
    television presence gives him reason to stay within the Islamist
    mainstream, distinguished the 9/11 attacks from the permissible
    defensive jihad of the Palestinians. He was happy to praise a God who
    "through his infinite wisdom has given the weak a weapon the strong
    do not have, and that is their ability to turn their bodies into
    bombs as Palestinians do." Qaradawi has also repeated the common view
    that the killing of Israeli women is justified on the grounds that
    all Israelis must serve in the military, and so no Israeli is a true
    noncombatant: "An Israeli woman is not like women in our societies,
    because she is a soldier."

    The equivocation by Muslim scholars with respect to the technique of
    suicide bombing reflected the reality that throughout the Muslim
    world, Palestinian suicide bombers were by 2001 identified as martyrs
    dying in a just cause. This, in turn, was the natural outgrowth of
    the decades before suicide bombing, when Palestinian terrorists were
    applauded for killing Israeli civilians, including women and
    children. Given that embracing Palestinian suicide bombing had become
    a widespread social norm, it would have been essentially unthinkable
    for an important Muslim scholar to condemn the practice without
    losing his standing among Muslims worldwide. In the Islamic world, as
    in the U.S. Supreme Court, the legal authorities cannot get too far
    away from their public constituency without paying a price.

    What happened, in other words, is that without the scholars paying
    too much attention to the question, the killing of Israeli women and
    children had become a kind of exception to the ordinary laws of
    jihad. Opportunists like bin Laden then began to widen the loophole
    to include new victims. With respect to the unauthorized nature of
    his offensive jihad, bin Laden asserted that in fact the attacks were
    defensive, since in his mind the U.S. was occupying the sacred soil
    of Saudi Arabia - just as Israel was occupying the Muslim land of
    Palestine. Once all of Saudi Arabia was placed on a par with the holy
    cities of Mecca and Medina, traditionally closed to non-Muslims, the
    presence of American soldiers anywhere on the Arabian Peninsula (even
    if their presence was with the permission of the Saudi government)
    could be depicted as a profanation, a violation of the Prophet's
    deathbed directive to "banish the pagans from the Arabian Peninsula."

    Bin Laden was embroidering on the theories of his onetime mentor
    Abdullah Azzam, the intellectual godfather of Al Qaeda. Azzam was a
    Palestinian Islamist who made his way to Afghanistan via Saudi Arabia
    and established the so-called Bureau of Services to channel Arab
    youth into the Afghan jihad. As Azzam trod his personal path from
    Palestinian militancy to universal pan-Islamic jihadism, he wrote an
    influential treatise called "Defense of Muslim Lands." In it, Azzam
    argued that not a single hand span of Muslim territory anywhere could
    ever be ceded to the enemy "because the land belongs to Allah and to
    Islam." Though Azzam would never have acknowledged it, his account of
    the divine ownership of Muslim lands was probably influenced -
    unconsciously, to be sure - by religious-Zionist claims about the
    holiness of the Land of Israel.

    When it came to the killing of civilians, bin Laden's thought
    developed more gradually. In early pronouncements, before 9/11, he
    spoke as if the killing of women and children was inherently an
    atrocity. "Nor should one forget," he admonished an interviewer in
    1996, "the deliberate, premeditated dropping of the H bombs [sic] on
    cities with their entire populations of children, elderly and women,
    as was the case with Hiroshima and Nagasaki." After 9/11, however,
    the argument changed. Now bin Laden began to suggest that American
    civilians were fair game. He could not argue that like Israelis, all
    Americans were subject to mandatory military service. Instead he
    proposed that because "the American people are the ones who choose
    their government by their own free will," and because they "have the
    ability and choice to refuse the policies of their government,"
    attacks on American civilians were justified. Voting was now playing
    the role for Americans that military service played in the case of
    Israelis: the active step transforming civilians into fair game.

    Such an appeal to collective responsibility was, however, pretty weak
    in Islamic legal terms. It might suffice for bin Laden's videotaped
    self-justifications, and it might salve the consciences of potential
    jihadis hoping to join the rank and file of Al Qaeda. But it would
    never satisfy serious students of classical Islamic law, who found
    the 9/11 attacks problematic from an Islamic legal perspective.

    In Saudi Arabia in particular, radical Muslim scholars with much more
    learning than bin Laden have sought to develop legally persuasive
    justifications for civilian killings. Probably the most sophisticated
    effort from a legal standpoint is a document titled "A Treatise on
    the Law of the Use of Weapons of Mass Destruction Against the
    Unbelievers," written in 2003 by a brilliant Saudi dissident named
    Sheik Nasir bin Hamad al-Fahd. (Fahd, a theorist rather than an
    activist, is currently back in prison, as he has been off and on for
    almost a decade.) The treatise begins with the assumption that the
    world's Muslims are under attack. But how are today's Muslims
    supposed to defend themselves, given their military inferiority?
    Fahd's response is that, if they have no other choice, they may use
    any means necessary - including methods that would otherwise violate
    the laws of jihad. "If the unbelievers can be repelled . . . only by
    using" weapons of mass destruction, then "their use is permissible,
    even if you kill them without exception."

    Lest his argument prove too much, Fahd tempers it by the claim that
    the Muslims fighting the jihad may not inflict disproportionately
    more harm on the enemy than the enemy has inflicted on them. That
    raises the question of the extent of American guilt. "Some Brothers
    have added up the number of Muslims killed directly or indirectly by
    [American] weapons and come up with a figure of nearly ten million,"
    the treatise states. This total, Fahd concludes, would authorize the
    use of weapons of mass destruction to kill 10 million Americans:
    indeed, "it would be permissible with no need for further [legal]
    argument." (The number is never explained or analyzed, and you might
    assume that it was meant to correspond very roughly to the population
    of New York.)

    Fahd's arguments sit uneasily with the classical Islamic discussions
    of the laws of jihad. The classical Islamic law never explicitly says
    that women and children may be intentional targets if it is the only
    way to win the jihad. It does not allow violations of the law just
    because the enemy has broken the rules or killed many Muslims. So the
    treatise must fall back on whatever evidence it can muster from the
    classical sources that seems to modify the basic rules. The catapult
    rears its head and is cited as precedent for nonspecific killing. The
    right to fight even when Muslim hostages may be killed is brought out
    as proof of the permissibility of collateral damage when there is no
    other choice.

    The legal arguments in use here are stronger than bin Laden's
    makeweights, but they, too, would probably not be sufficient on their
    own to justify the deviation from the legal traditions of jihad
    wrought by today's jihadis. The notion that it's right because it's
    necessary is doing the real work, and old-fashioned legal arguments
    are following along. It is no accident that the argument from
    necessity has been so prominent in modern Western writing about
    modern warfare in general and the nuclear bomb in particular. If the
    technology of mass destruction can be exported, why not the
    justification that comes with it?

    Within the world of radical Islam, there are those who believe that
    the erosion of the laws of jihad has gone too far. There are reports
    of difficulty recruiting foreign candidates for suicide missions
    directed at Iraqi civilians. The debate about how jihad may be
    prosecuted is not over by any means. But it is an unavoidable fact
    that the classic restrictions on the killing of women, children and
    Muslims in jihad have been deeply undermined in the last decade.

    V.

    If the Islamic laws of war are under revision, or at least the
    subject of intense debate, what does that mean for the question of
    the Islamic bomb? The answer is that the expanding religious sanction
    for violence once thought unacceptable opens the way for new kinds of
    violence to be introduced and seen as legitimate in turn. First
    Israeli women and children became acceptable targets; then Americans;
    then Shiites; and now Sunnis of unstinting orthodoxy. It would seem
    that no one is out of bounds.

    It is therefore now possible to imagine that the classical Islamic
    principles governing war would not be applied even by a
    self-consciously Islamic regime deciding when and if to detonate a
    nuclear device. The traditional ban on killing women, children and
    fellow Muslims would have gone a long way toward banning most
    potential uses of nuclear power by a sincerely Islamic state actor.
    As those prohibitions have eroded, the reassurance that might be
    afforded by a state's Islamic commitments has waned.

    This means that a nuclear Islamic state would be at least as willing
    to use its weapons as a comparable non-Islamic state. But would an
    Islamic state be prepared to take the jihad to the enemy even if it
    would result in what amounts to collective suicide through the
    destruction of the state and its citizens? If the leaders of Iran or
    some future leaders of a radicalized, nuclear Saudi Arabia shared the
    aspiration to martyrdom of so many young jihadis around the world,
    might they be prepared to attack Israel or the United States, even if
    the inevitable result were the martyrdom of their entire people?

    The answer depends to a large degree on whether you consider Islam
    susceptible to the kind of apocalyptic, millennial thought that might
    lead whole peoples, rather than just individuals, into suicidal
    behavior. It is important to note that for all his talk of the war
    between civilizations, bin Laden has never spoken of the end of days.
    For him, the battle between the Muslims and the infidels is part of
    earthly human life, and has indeed been with us since the days of the
    Prophet himself. The war intensifies and lessens with time, but it is
    not something that occurs out of time or with the expectation that
    time itself will stop. Bin Laden and his sympathizers want to
    re-establish the caliphate and rule the Muslim world, but unlike some
    earlier revivalist movements within Sunni Islam, they do not declare
    their leader as the mahdi, or guided one, whose appearance will usher
    in a golden age of justice and peace to be followed by the Day of
    Judgment.

    >From this perspective, the utter destruction of civilization would be
    a mistake, not the fulfillment of the divine plan. Even the most
    radical Sunni theorists of jihad invoke a passage from the Koran
    according to which civilization itself - "the crops and the cattle" -
    must not and cannot be destroyed completely. Bin Laden might seem to
    have few qualms about killing millions of Americans or other
    Westerners. He might well use a nuclear device if he gambled that
    there would be no enemy for the United States to bomb in retaliation.
    But even he might not be prepared to unleash a global nuclear
    conflagration on the expectation that a better order would emerge
    once many millions of Muslims and infidels died. (Bin Laden has
    called for Muslims to acquire nuclear weapons, and in the 1990's
    reportedly tried to acquire them himself - but there is little hard
    evidence that he has made subsequent efforts in that direction.)

    With respect to Shiite eschatology, there is greater reason for
    concern. Iran's Shiism is of the "Twelver" variety, so called because
    the 12th imam in the line of succession from the Prophet disappeared
    into a state of occultation - or being hidden - from which he is
    expected to return as the mahdi. Ayatollah Khomeini played on the
    messianic overtones of this belief during the Iranian revolution, in
    which some of his followers went so far as to hint that he might be
    the returning imam. Moktada al-Sadr's Shiite militia in Iraq is
    called Army of the Mahdi. Recently, Iran's president, Mahmoud
    Ahmadinejad, contributed to renewed focus on the mahdi, by saying
    publicly that the mission of the Islamic revolution in Iran is to
    pave the way for the mahdi's return, and by visiting the mosque at
    Jamkaran, on the outskirts of Qom, where, according to one tradition,
    the vanished imam was last seen. Some reports suggest that youth
    religion in Iran in increasingly focused on veneration of the
    vanished imam.

    Islam has a vision of the end of days, with wars between the faithful
    and the tribes of Gog and Magog (Yuj and Majuj in their Arabic
    incarnation). Twelver Shiism is, at its core, an eschatological
    faith, focused on the ultimate return of the imam-mahdi, who will
    restore the Shiites to their rightful place and redeem their
    generations of suffering. Since the vanished imam is by tradition a
    human who has never died, but remains in occultation, he is also
    believed to affect the course of events even from his hidden place.
    And Shiite tradition fills in the picture of the mahdi's return with
    an elaborate account of signs that will herald the event, including
    advance messengers, earthquakes and bloodshed.

    But belief in redemption - even accompanied by wars and death and the
    defeat of the infidels - need not translate into a present impulse to
    create a violent crisis that would precipitate the messianic
    situation. Like their Jewish counterparts, Shiite religious
    authorities have traditionally sought to resist speculation about the
    imminence of a messianic return. Shiite messianic thought is less
    focused than its messianic Christian counterpart on generating global
    crisis and letting God sort things out. Khomeini himself believed
    that the mahdi's advent could be hastened - but by social justice,
    not by provoking war. This put him on the activist side of Shiite
    teaching about the mahdi, much as he was also an activist about the
    exercise of worldly power by the mullahs. A popular revolutionary
    slogan urged the imam's coming but asserted that Khomeini would
    govern alongside him.

    Other Shiite thinkers, by contrast, take a more fatalist stance, and
    prefer to believe that the mahdi's coming cannot be hastened by human
    activity - a view that corresponds loosely to Ayatollah Ali
    al-Sistani's belief, with regard to Iraq and elsewhere, that the
    clerics should not themselves govern. One small, semi-secret Iranian
    organization, the Hojjatiya Society, was banned and persecuted by
    Khomeini's government in part for its quiescent view that the mahdi's
    arrival could not be hastened.

    Ahmadinejad is not the only or even the most important player in
    Iran's nuclear game. The supreme leader, Ayatollah Khamenei, still
    makes the ultimate decisions on armaments and other matters, and
    there are numerous factions in the country with opposed interests and
    ideology and goals. Nevertheless, Ahmadinejad has in some respects
    succeeded in making the nuclear issue his own, and as a result his
    personal views about the end of days have been the subject of much
    speculation and innuendo, inside Iran and out. The Mideast scholar
    Bernard Lewis, in a recent Wall Street Journal column, hinted darkly
    and without much evidence that Ahmadinejad might be planning a
    nuclear attack on Israel for the Night of Power (this year it fell on
    Aug. 22), when the Prophet Muhammad made his mystical journey to the
    Furthest Mosque, associated in tradition with al-Aqsa in Jerusalem.
    Rumors, possibly spread by Ahmadinejad's enemies, have tied him to
    the outlawed Hojjatiya - a link mistakenly interpreted outside Iran
    as evidence that he might want to bring back the imam by violence,
    rather than that he might prefer to wait piously and prepare for the
    imam's eventual return on his own schedule. It is of course
    impossible to gauge the man's religious sensibilities perfectly. Yet
    the relative absence of a contemporary Shiite trend to messianic
    brinkmanship suggests that Ahmadinejad's recent emphasis on the mahdi
    may be interpreted more in terms of an attempt to summon Khomeini's
    legacy and Iran's revolutionary moment than as a desperate
    willingness to bring the nation to the edge of war. When Ahmadinejad
    invoked the mahdi in his now-famous letter to George Bush, he seemed
    to be using the doctrine in ecumenical terms, emphasizing the Islamic
    tradition that Jesus - revered as a prophet, though not as the Son of
    God - will return alongside the mahdi and govern in tandem with him.

    So although a renewed Shiite messianism does create some cause for
    concern about the potential uses of an Iranian bomb - in particular
    because it suggests that Ahmadinejad may be more a utopian than a
    realist - it is almost certainly a mistake to anticipate that Iran
    would use its nuclear power in a way that would provoke large-scale
    retaliation and assured self-destruction. Iranian leaders have been
    more than ready to sacrifice their own citizens in large numbers.
    During the Iran-Iraq war, major efforts went into recruiting young
    boys to the Basij militias, which were then sent to the front lines
    on what were essentially suicide missions. Religion played the
    central part in motivating the teenage soldiers, and it is reasonable
    to believe that religion helped salve the consciences of those who
    ordered these children into battle. Yet even this discounting of the
    value of human life - in a war started by Saddam Hussein, not by Iran
    - fell short of voluntarily putting an entire nation at risk.
    Ahmadinejad surely understands the consequences of using a nuclear
    bomb, and Shiite Islam, even in its messianic incarnation, still
    falls short of inviting nuclear retaliation and engendering
    collective suicide.

    VI.

    These worries about an Islamic bomb raise the question of why we
    trust any nation with the power that a nuclear capacity confers. Why,
    for instance, do we trust ourselves, given that we remain the only
    nation actually to have used nuclear weapons? The standard answer to
    why we keep our nuclear bombs - a response developed during the cold
    war - is that we must have the capability to deter anyone who might
    attack us first. The promise of mutually assured destruction was its
    own kind of collective suicide pact, albeit one supposed to scare
    both sides out of pushing the button. That is why, throughout the
    heyday of the unilateral disarmament movement, critics of this
    justification pointed out that our threat was only credible if we
    were, in fact, prepared to kill millions of civilians in a rapid act
    of retaliation. If this kind of killing was morally unjustified, went
    their argument, then the threat to use it was also immoral.

    The truth is that we hold on to our nuclear capability not only as a
    matter of deterrence but also to maintain our own global strategic
    position. If we do not want Islamic states - or anyone else for that
    matter - to have a nuclear capability, it is not necessarily because
    we consider them especially likely to bring on their own destruction
    by using it. It is, rather, that we do not want to cede some
    substantial chunk of our own global power to them. This principle -
    if it is a principle - lies behind the general strategy that is
    embedded in the international nuclear-nonproliferation treaty.
    Everybody involved understands that if any government got a chance to
    acquire nuclear power before the other treaty members had a chance to
    notice and impose sanctions, it would jump at the opportunity.

    So the nonproliferation regime is not and could never be based on
    some principle of international fairness. But it does not follow that
    the United States and its allies should simply accept the development
    of nuclear technology by just anyone. It should be relevant to our
    deliberations that a particular candidate is our enemy. When it comes
    to Islamic states, there is serious reason to worry that, both now
    and in the immediately foreseeable future, popular anti-American
    sentiment is especially likely to play an important role in the
    shaping of foreign policy. Over the next quarter-century, it is
    conceivable and certainly desirable that Islamism and
    anti-Americanism may be unlinked. But we must be honest and
    acknowledge that in the short term at least, the U.S. democratization
    strategy has done almost nothing to reduce Islamist anti-Americanism,
    whether Shiite or Sunni - this despite the fact that the same
    strategy has benefited Islamists across the region by allowing them
    to run for office and enter government.

    Much of the reason for this close linkage between Islamism and
    anti-Americanism comes from Iran. As an enemy of the United States,
    which has worked consistently against American interests, Iran is in
    a category by itself, most nearly matched by North Korea, the other
    still-standing member of President Bush's axis of evil. In this,
    Iran's motives have been primarily Islamic-ideological, not
    pragmatic.

    For many years under the shah, Iran was a natural American ally -
    precisely because it was Shiite and non-Arab, and uncomfortably close
    to the Soviet Union and its fantasy of a warm-water port. Even after
    the 1979 revolution and the hostage crisis, it is possible that the
    United States would have eventually reopened relations with an
    avowedly Islamic Iran had the government softened its
    anti-Americanism. The United States has never made secularism a
    condition of friendship. It has been fully prepared to support
    Islamic states like Saudi Arabia, and even used religion to cement
    the anti-Communist alliance during the cold war. The Iraqi Shiite
    Islamists have been willing to work alongside the Americans, and the
    United States has in return treated them as its allies,
    democratically chosen by the Iraqi electorate.

    Islamist anti-Americanism is the direct legacy of Ayatollah
    Khomeini's success in marrying Islamic faith to anti-imperialism -
    making "Death to America" into a religious chant, not just a
    political slogan. Of course the United States was hardly blameless.
    It did everything it could to open itself to the imperialist charge,
    including, in Iran, backing the famous 1953 countercoup that removed
    from power Iran's first democratically legitimate prime minister,
    Mohammed Mossadegh. Contemporary Islamists can also point to
    America's continuing hypocritical support of regional authoritarian
    regimes.

    Iranian-rooted Islamist anti-Americanism has worked far better than
    its designers might have imagined, spreading to Sunni Islamists who
    have little love to lose for Iran. The marriage of Islamism and
    anti-Americanism will probably be considered by history as the most
    significant consequence of the Iranian revolution. Anti-Americanism
    has become a staple of Islamist sermons and Web postings, an
    effective tool for drawing to the movement angry young people who
    might not naturally be drawn to religion. Bin Ladenism, in this
    sense, owes much to the Iranian revolution even though Al Qaeda was
    never Iran's direct ally. United States support for Israel has always
    been an important part of the argument for Islamist anti-Americanism,
    but today it is by no means a necessary component. If U.S. support of
    Israel were to weaken, the American presence in Iraq and elsewhere in
    the gulf would easily substitute as a basis for hatred.

    The United States therefore has strong reason to block its enemy Iran
    from acquiring nuclear weapons - not simply because Iran will seek to
    become a greater regional power, as any nation might do, but because
    the Islamic Republic of Iran as currently constituted is
    definitionally anti-American. There need not be a direct threat of
    Iranian first use against either the United States or Israel for this
    reason to weigh heavily. A nuclear Iran will be a stronger and more
    effective enemy in pursuing anti-American policies under the banner
    of Islam. That will not change until the Iranian state abandons
    either its Islamic identity or its association between Islam and
    anti-Americanism. Iran's eagerness to acquire nuclear capacity need
    not be a result of a particularly Islamic motivation, but if and when
    Iran does have the bomb, its enhanced power and prestige will
    certainly be lent to policies that it conceives as promoting the
    Islamic interest.

    Whether force, negotiation or some combination is the right path to
    take to keep Iran from going nuclear is of course a hugely important
    question. It turns on many uncertain facts, like the true progress of
    Iran's nuclear program and how much it can be affected by air attack;
    Iran's capacity and will to retaliate against an attack; whether
    there is any chance Iran would respond to negotiations; and the
    ability of the United States to withstand any retaliation while
    150,000 U.S. troops are in Iraq. As we have recently learned in Iraq,
    it is not enough to think you have a good reason to go to war - you
    must also have a realistic understanding of the practical and moral
    costs of things going horribly wrong. Any choice, though, must be
    made against the backdrop of the reality that the Islamic government
    of Iran is not only unlikely to collapse soon - it is also very
    unlikely to become less anti-American in the near future.

    The same, unfortunately, is true of the world's Islamist movements,
    for whom anti-Americanism remains a rallying cry and a principle of
    belief. Perhaps the promotion of democracy in the region, pursued
    consistently by the United States over the long term, might someday
    allow the rise of leaders whose Islamism is tempered by the need to
    satisfy their constituents' domestic needs - and who eschew
    anti-Americanism as wasteful and misguided. Iraq was the test case of
    whether this change could occur in the short term. But we failed to
    make the experiment work and gave Iraq's Islamist politicians, Shiite
    and Sunni alike, ample grounds to continue the anti-American rhetoric
    that comes so easily to them. In the wake of our tragic mismanagement
    of Iraq, we are certainly a generation or more from any such
    unlinking of Islamism and anti-Americanism, if it is to occur at all.
    And Islamism itself shows no signs of being on the wane as a social
    or political force.

    That means that the best we can hope for in nuclear Islamic states in
    the near term is a rational dictator like Pervez Musharraf of
    Pakistan, who sees his bread buttered on the side of an alliance with
    the West. Such rulers can be very strong and can bring stability, but
    we also know that their rule (or reign) promotes Islamist opposition,
    with its often violent overtones. When such rulers die or otherwise
    fall from power, the Islamists will be poised to use the
    international power conferred by nuclear weapons to pursue their own
    ends - ends for now overwhelmingly likely to be anti-American.

    None of this is inherent in the structure of Islam itself. Islam
    contains a rich and multivocal set of traditions and ideas,
    susceptible to being used for good or ill, for restraint or
    destruction. This interpretive flexibility - equally characteristic
    of the other great world religions - does not rob Islam of its
    distinctiveness. An Islamic bomb would not be just the same as the
    nationalist bomb of a majority-Muslim state, nor would it be the same
    as a Christian bomb or a Jewish one. But its role in history will
    depend, ultimately, on the meaning Muslims give it, and the uses to
    which they put their faith and their capabilities. In confronting the
    possibility of the Islamic bomb, we - Muslims and non-Muslims alike -
    need to remember that Islam exists both as an ideal system of morals
    and values and as a force that motivates actual people living today,
    with all the frailties and imperfections that make us human.

    © The New York Times Magazine

    Noah Feldman is a law professor at New York University and adjunct
    senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations.
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