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- Title
Can Jihadis Be Rehabilitated?
- Authors
Seifert, Katherine
- Abstract
As U.S. policymakers become increasingly uneasy about the fate of the remaining detainees currently held at Guantánamo Bay, greater attention is being paid so-called jihadist rehabilitation programs that have been established abroad. Numerous governments, including Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Singapore, Canada, and Britain, have established programs that seek either to rehabilitate Islamist terrorists or to prevent further radicalization of jihadist sympathizers. Different states tailor their programs to the mores, laws, and needs of their societies. Muslim-majority countries concentrate on radicals who have either crossed the line into actual terrorist activities or who are active members in lslamist organizations deemed to be a threat to the state. Western initiatives focus instead on individuals who may seek camaraderie with extremist groups online or at local mosques; their programs seek to forestall further radicalization. While there is a clear divergence in approach, both must answer the same question: Have their efforts been successful or have they merely released detainees into their respective societies who feign detoxification but whose commitment to jihad has merely gone underground? The wrong answer to this question poses a serious threat to global, as well as local security.
- Subjects
COUNTERTERRORISM; TERRORISTS; CORRECTIONAL psychology; JIHAD; RECIDIVISM; ISLAM; TERRORISM
- Publication
Middle East Quarterly, 2010, Vol 17, Issue 2, p21
- ISSN
1073-9467
- Publication type
Article