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COUNCIL ON
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FOREIGN RELATIONS
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THE BAD GUYS




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Council on Foreign Relations, The Harold Pratt House, 58 East 68th
Street, New York NY 10021, Tel: 212-434-9400, Fax: 212-861-1789.
Membership Roster. 2001.
The Council on Foreign Relations has been the most powerful private
organization in U.S. foreign policy since it began in 1921. While priding
itself on non-partisanship and on recent efforts to recruit minorities,
women, and youth (under 35), CFR's 4,000 members mainly reflect the
resources needed by the ruling class to maintain their power. Don't call
them if you want to join; they call you. And don't wait for a call unless
you have big money, national security expertise, CIA experience, a political
constituency, or clout with the media. CFR publishes the prestigious journal
"Foreign Affairs" as well as a number of books and reports. Another major
activity is to organize closed meetings for their members with assorted
world leaders. Everyone feels free to share views and information about
current world events, primarily because CFR has strict confidentiality rules
and keeps its records locked up for 25 years.
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Jemaah Islamiyah
Southeast Asia, Islamists

What is Jemaah
Islamiyah?
 |
Abu Bakar Bashir,
alleged spiritual leader of Jemaah Islamiyah.
(AP Photo/Tatan Syuflana) |
A militant Islamist group
active in several Southeast Asian countries that’s seeking to
establish a Muslim fundamentalist state in the region. Jemaah
Islamiyah (“Islamic Group” in Indonesian) is alleged to have
attacked or plotted against U.S. and Western targets in Indonesia,
Singapore, and the Philippines.
Have authorities
pursued Jemaah Islamiyah?
Indonesian officials have jailed several members of the group
for allegedly planning an October 2002 bombing that killed nearly
200 people at a Bali nightclub. Before that, Indonesian
authorities had not aggressively investigated the group, though
Singapore, Malaysia, and the Philippines had cracked down on it.
After the Bali bombing, the United States—which suspects the group
of having ties to Osama bin Laden’s al-Qaeda network—designated
Jemaah Islamiyah a foreign terrorist organization.
Why hadn’t the
United States designated Jemaah Islamiyah a foreign terrorist
organization before the Bali bombing?
Because of a reluctance to anger Indonesian public sentiment.
While Singapore and Malaysia would have supported adding the group
to the U.S. list earlier, Washington had been trying to secure
Indonesia’s cooperation on the war on terrorism without alienating
its Muslim political parties or undermining its moderate
president, Megawati Sukarnoputri. The Bali bombing spurred
Indonesia to acknowledge the extent of its terrorism problem, and
the U.S. designation followed. Listing Jemaah Islamiyah as a
foreign terrorist organization restricts the group’s finances and
its members’ travels.
Where does Jemaah
Islamiyah operate?
Across Southeast Asia, including Indonesia, Malaysia,
Singapore, and possibly the Philippines and Thailand. Weak central
authority, lax or corrupt law enforcement, and open maritime
borders in some of these countries ease Jemaah Islamiyah’s ability
to operate throughout the region.
When was Jemaah
Islamiyah founded?
The name Jemaah Islamiyah dates to the late 1970s, but experts
aren’t certain if the name referred to a formal organization or an
informal gathering of like-minded Muslim radicals—or a government
label for Islamist malcontents. The group has its roots in Darul
Islam, a violent radical movement that advocated the establishment
of Islamic law in Indonesia—the world’s most populous Muslim
country that is also home to Christians, Hindus, and adherents to
other faiths. Darul Islam sprang up as the country emerged from
Dutch colonial rule in the late 1940s and continued to resist the
independent Indonesian republic, which it saw as too secular.
How big is Jemaah
Islamiyah?
We don’t know. U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell described
it as “an extremist group with cells operating throughout
Southeast Asia.” The State Department has cited 2001 press reports
estimating that Jemaah Islamiyah has some 200 members in Malaysia
alone.


Copyright ©2003 Council on Foreign Relations.
All Rights Reserved. |
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Jemaah Islamiyah
Southeast Asia, Islamists

What is Jemaah
Islamiyah?
 |
Abu Bakar Bashir,
alleged spiritual leader of Jemaah Islamiyah.
(AP Photo/Tatan Syuflana) |
A militant Islamist group
active in several Southeast Asian countries that’s seeking to
establish a Muslim fundamentalist state in the region. Jemaah
Islamiyah (“Islamic Group” in Indonesian) is alleged to have
attacked or plotted against U.S. and Western targets in Indonesia,
Singapore, and the Philippines.
Have authorities
pursued Jemaah Islamiyah?
Indonesian officials have jailed several members of the group
for allegedly planning an October 2002 bombing that killed nearly
200 people at a Bali nightclub. Before that, Indonesian
authorities had not aggressively investigated the group, though
Singapore, Malaysia, and the Philippines had cracked down on it.
After the Bali bombing, the United States—which suspects the group
of having ties to Osama bin Laden’s al-Qaeda network—designated
Jemaah Islamiyah a foreign terrorist organization.
Why hadn’t the
United States designated Jemaah Islamiyah a foreign terrorist
organization before the Bali bombing?
Because of a reluctance to anger Indonesian public sentiment.
While Singapore and Malaysia would have supported adding the group
to the U.S. list earlier, Washington had been trying to secure
Indonesia’s cooperation on the war on terrorism without alienating
its Muslim political parties or undermining its moderate
president, Megawati Sukarnoputri. The Bali bombing spurred
Indonesia to acknowledge the extent of its terrorism problem, and
the U.S. designation followed. Listing Jemaah Islamiyah as a
foreign terrorist organization restricts the group’s finances and
its members’ travels.
Where does Jemaah
Islamiyah operate?
Across Southeast Asia, including Indonesia, Malaysia,
Singapore, and possibly the Philippines and Thailand. Weak central
authority, lax or corrupt law enforcement, and open maritime
borders in some of these countries ease Jemaah Islamiyah’s ability
to operate throughout the region.
When was Jemaah
Islamiyah founded?
The name Jemaah Islamiyah dates to the late 1970s, but experts
aren’t certain if the name referred to a formal organization or an
informal gathering of like-minded Muslim radicals—or a government
label for Islamist malcontents. The group has its roots in Darul
Islam, a violent radical movement that advocated the establishment
of Islamic law in Indonesia—the world’s most populous Muslim
country that is also home to Christians, Hindus, and adherents to
other faiths. Darul Islam sprang up as the country emerged from
Dutch colonial rule in the late 1940s and continued to resist the
independent Indonesian republic, which it saw as too secular.
How big is Jemaah
Islamiyah?
We don’t know. U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell described
it as “an extremist group with cells operating throughout
Southeast Asia.” The State Department has cited 2001 press reports
estimating that Jemaah Islamiyah has some 200 members in Malaysia
alone.


Copyright ©2003 Council on Foreign Relations.
All Rights Reserved. |
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