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Management of Savagery
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Management of Savagery : ウィキペディア英語版
Management of Savagery

''Management of Savagery: The Most Critical Stage Through Which the Islamic Nation Will Pass'' ((アラビア語:إدارة التوحش: أخطر مرحلة ستمر بها الأمة), ''Idārat at-Tawaḥḥuš: Akhṭar marḥalah satamurru bihā l 'ummah''),〔 also translated as ''Administration of Savagery'', is a book by the Islamist strategist Abu Bakr Naji, published on the Internet in 2004. It aimed to provide a strategy for al-Qaeda and other jihadists whereby they could create a new Islamic caliphate.
The real identity of Abu Bakr Naji is claimed by the Al Arabiya Institute for Studies to be Muhammad Khalil al-Hakaymah. His known works are this piece and some contributions to the al-Qaeda online magazine ''Sawt al-Jihad''. National Public Radio has described Naji as a "top al-Qaida insider" and characterized the work as "al-Qaida's playbook".
==Themes==
''Management of Savagery'' discusses the need to create and manage nationalist and religious resentment and violence in order to create long-term propaganda opportunities for jihadist groups. Notably, Naji discusses the value of provoking military responses from superpowers in order to recruit and train guerilla fighters and to create martyrs. Naji suggests that a long-lasting strategy of attrition will reveal fundamental weaknesses in the ability of superpowers to defeat committed jihadists.
''Management of Savagery'' argues that carrying out a campaign of constant violent attacks in Muslim states will eventually exhaust their ability and will to enforce their authority, and that as the writ of the state withers away, chaos—or "savagery"—will ensue. Jihadists can take advantage of this savagery to win popular support, or at least acquiescence, by implementing security, providing social services, and imposing Sharia. As these territories increase, they can become the nucleus of a new caliphate.〔〔 Naji nominated Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Yemen, North Africa, Nigeria and Pakistan as potential targets, due to their geography, weak military presence in remote areas, existing jihadist presence, and easy accessibility of weapons.

Naji professes to have been inspired by Ibn Taymiyya, the influential 14th century Islamic scholar and theologian.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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