Europe challenges Islamist extremism amid calls for unified position
 
 
The countries of the European Union are waging a violent war
against terrorism, its financing and beliefs, as this war has intensified
recently against the background of the attacks carried out by ISIS and its
extremist wolves in the region.
Treating extremism
European leaders are trying to regroup to confront the
Islamist trend and its elements, as they held a mini-summit on November 10 with
French President Emmanuel Macron, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Austrian
Chancellor Sebastian Kurz, and Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte, along with
European Council President Charles Michel and European Commission President
Ursula von der Leyen to discuss measures needed to stop the bloodshed in the
region.
The leaders fear broader attacks that could kill hundreds,
as happened on the night of November 13, 2015 in Paris. During the recent
summit, Macron stressed that EU countries need to formulate a rapid, decisive
and unified response against violent extremist threats.
Macron added during the summit, which was held via video conference,
that the measures necessary for confronting terrorism must include developing
the frameworks that the EU relies on in common databases, exchanging
information to enhance knowledge of current and potential criminals after
careful study of terrorist cases, and strengthening punitive measures in a
strict and uniform manner so that no extremist escapes accountability for his
crime.
Extremist propaganda
With regard to extremist propaganda and incitement on the internet,
the French president said that EU platforms should seriously confront violent
speech on the internet and not leave any space on social media sites to be a
means of communication between extremists or to mobilize or recruit new members.
He called on the competent authorities to monitor the contents that extremists
share on the internet in order to neutralize the murderous ideologies from
European society.
Brussels meeting
Macron took advantage of his meeting with senior European
leaders in Brussels to emphasize the immigration laws between them, which are
governed by open cooperation, and to dispense with some strict measures
followed by the rest of the world in what is known as the Schengen system. He
also stressed the need to tighten measures to monitor internal borders,
register names of migrants between countries, and address any security defects
in the system.
Against terrorism, not religions
German Chancellor Angela Merkel took advantage of the
meeting to raise an important intellectual issue that dominates the discussion of
fighting terrorism, which is the confusion between religions and issues of
extremism. She stressed that the war that European countries seek to wage is against
terrorism and its groups, not religions, whether Islam or Christianity.
Merkel pointed out that they seek to confront extremist
beliefs and suspicious financing methods that facilitate the work of terrorist
groups, adding that EU countries must adhere to the democratic model of state
rule and combat ideologies against freedom and political pluralism.
European measures
EU countries, particularly France and Germany, are trying to
find a unified formula to combat extremism in the region, as the recent
terrorist operations have showed, in addition to the political reports that
were available before the implementation of this latest wave, that terrorist
elements still have the ability to carry out violent attacks.
This is directly linked to the ideological dimension, which
means that Islamist groups have an ideological hegemony over the minds of the
troubled youth in the region. This makes them ready to embrace extremism and to
implement it on the ground when the opportunity arises.
The Brotherhood represents the most important and prominent
current in this context, as it has a wide network of organizations in Europe,
especially in Germany and France. The group first began operating in Europe
through the Islamic Center of Munich, Germany, while France witnessed the
group’s establishment of the European Institute of Human Sciences and the Grand
Mosque of Paris. The Brotherhood also established other organizations in the
region to spread the group’s ideology, which paved the way for extremism.
However, an important question remains for Europe, which is
will EU countries unite in their decisions to declare some as terrorists? Leaders
could agree to classify a group as terrorist, such as the Iranian-backed
Hezbollah, as Germany has banned it, while the EU basically prohibits its armed
side but not its political side. But what is their ability to avoid it
completely and in a unified manner? This also applies to the Brotherhood and Turkish
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's Grey Wolves group. Will France be able to
appeal to everyone to classify it as a terrorist as it did?
 
          
     
                                
 
 


