Friday, September 6, 2013

About Elizabeth O’Bagy





Secretary of State John Kerry encouraged members of the House of Representatives to read a Wall Street Journal op-ed by 26-year-old Elizabeth O’Bagy — an analyst with the Institute for the Study of War — who asserted that concerns about extremists dominating among the Syrian rebels are unfounded.

“Contrary to many media accounts, the war in Syria is not being waged entirely, or even predominantly, by dangerous Islamists and al-Qaida die-hards,



Read more: http://dailycaller.com/2013/09/05/woman-informing-kerry-mccains-opinions-on-syria-also-an-advocate-for-syrian-rebels/#ixzz2e8xRGfjA

http://middleeastvoices.voanews.com/2012/08/quicktake-al-qaida-presence-in-syria-overstated-elizabeth-obagy-98075/
Reporter Cecily Hilleary has spoken to analysts, activists and opposition members inside and outside Syria to gauge the extent to which al-Qaida and other jihadist groups are active in the country—and what their long-term goals might be. Elizabeth O’Bagy, research analyst at the Washington-based Institute for the Study of War, cautions against these claims. She says if there is an al-Qaida presence in Syria, it is limited.
There is a tendency to confuse Islamic Salafism with jihadism
“There are two things that are essentially pointed to as signs: The black flag and the Salafist beard, which for me is difficult because I think that especially in the media there is a tendency to confuse Islamic Salafism with jihadism. They’re very different. And even the groups that tend to be more Islamist and Salafist are very clear that they are not terrorists, that they do not believe in kind of this jihadist ideology and that they are in fact fighting for a Syria, the nation-state of Syria, which in every way, shape or form is against any sort of jihadist ideology because they obviously don’t believe in nation-states. They believe in an Islamic community.”
The actual numbers of jihadist elements infiltrating these groups is very low
In the media, when they’re talking about al-Qaida, they are usually talking in connection to the Jabhat al-Nusra - or the Nusra front. What I’ve discovered upon looking at these groups specifically is that its core membership is actually mostly comprised of members from Fatah al-Islam and some of the other more Palestinian-oriented Islamist groups that were originally funded by the Syrian regime in 2006, 2007, sent into Lebanon and essentially were causing chaos and instability in Lebanon and now have turned that same direction against Syria because they’re no longer being supported by the Syrian regime.


Read more at Middle East Voices: http://middleeastvoices.voanews.com/2012/08/quicktake-al-qaida-presence-in-syria-overstated-elizabeth-obagy-98075/#ixzz2e8yFaQhl


No comments:

Post a Comment