The Malaysian 'Islamic' state versus the Islamic state (IS) : evolving definitions of 'Terror' in an 'Islamising' nation-state

This thesis is a study of the Malaysian state with regards to how it defines and redefines ' terror' as the nature of militancy changes from the period of Communist insurgency to present day's Islamist militancy. Through tracing the changes in the state's definition of a ‘terrori...

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Main Author: Chan, Nicholas Wai Yeap
Other Authors: Farish Noor
Format: Theses and Dissertations
Language:English
Published: 2017
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/69796
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-697962020-11-01T08:37:53Z The Malaysian 'Islamic' state versus the Islamic state (IS) : evolving definitions of 'Terror' in an 'Islamising' nation-state Chan, Nicholas Wai Yeap Farish Noor S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies DRNTU::Social sciences::Political science This thesis is a study of the Malaysian state with regards to how it defines and redefines ' terror' as the nature of militancy changes from the period of Communist insurgency to present day's Islamist militancy. Through tracing the changes in the state's definition of a ‘terrorist’, we seek to show how the portrait of a terrorist is not only inherently political (and at certain junctures, politicised), but it also reflects on the nature of the state, as the ' terrorist' is invariably the constitutive other of the state, albeit one at the extreme end. In the case of Malaysia, we have shown that the discursive ease m externalising the ' terrorist' is not always a certainty. While the state managed to belittle and ethicise the Communist Terrorists (CTs), the rise of Islamist militancy forced the state to shelve the term ' terrorist' in favour of religious 'deviancy'. It was not until the 'war on terror' paradigm was unleashed globally after the September 11 attacks did the Malaysian state able to unfreeze the term and brazenly reintroduced it back into its political, diplomatic, and security discourse. The grappling with the definition of ' terror' also advanced parallel to a process of state-driven Islamisation where the discursive ideal that is the 'Islamic state' became a point of contention and also legitimisation. Akin to a case of semantic acrobatics, we demonstrate how the Malaysian state securitised (1980-2001), normalised (2001-2013), and resecuritised (2014 onwards) the term as a result of a balancing act which not only aimed at neutralising the elements of militancy, but also to augment the state's ' Islamic ' credentials in a bid to outplay its major Islamist opponent, the Pan Malaysian Islamic Party (PAS). At the end, following the emergence of a transnational insurgent/quasi-state/ terrorist/ideology hybrid, the Islamic State (IS), we argue that the Malaysian state is now embroiled in an ' Islamic state versus Islamic State' trap, where the state after appropriating and normalising the ' Islamic state' ideal, has no choice but to contend with what is fundamentally a ' terrorist' group (by the state's own definition) in religious terms. In the face of afar enemy which it cannot decisively eliminate, the Malaysian ' Islamic' state has no choice but to defend itself from the perspective of a nation-state, as well as Islam. Master of Science (Asian Studies) 2017-03-28T02:05:25Z 2017-03-28T02:05:25Z 2017 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10356/69796 en 75 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Social sciences::Political science
spellingShingle DRNTU::Social sciences::Political science
Chan, Nicholas Wai Yeap
The Malaysian 'Islamic' state versus the Islamic state (IS) : evolving definitions of 'Terror' in an 'Islamising' nation-state
description This thesis is a study of the Malaysian state with regards to how it defines and redefines ' terror' as the nature of militancy changes from the period of Communist insurgency to present day's Islamist militancy. Through tracing the changes in the state's definition of a ‘terrorist’, we seek to show how the portrait of a terrorist is not only inherently political (and at certain junctures, politicised), but it also reflects on the nature of the state, as the ' terrorist' is invariably the constitutive other of the state, albeit one at the extreme end. In the case of Malaysia, we have shown that the discursive ease m externalising the ' terrorist' is not always a certainty. While the state managed to belittle and ethicise the Communist Terrorists (CTs), the rise of Islamist militancy forced the state to shelve the term ' terrorist' in favour of religious 'deviancy'. It was not until the 'war on terror' paradigm was unleashed globally after the September 11 attacks did the Malaysian state able to unfreeze the term and brazenly reintroduced it back into its political, diplomatic, and security discourse. The grappling with the definition of ' terror' also advanced parallel to a process of state-driven Islamisation where the discursive ideal that is the 'Islamic state' became a point of contention and also legitimisation. Akin to a case of semantic acrobatics, we demonstrate how the Malaysian state securitised (1980-2001), normalised (2001-2013), and resecuritised (2014 onwards) the term as a result of a balancing act which not only aimed at neutralising the elements of militancy, but also to augment the state's ' Islamic ' credentials in a bid to outplay its major Islamist opponent, the Pan Malaysian Islamic Party (PAS). At the end, following the emergence of a transnational insurgent/quasi-state/ terrorist/ideology hybrid, the Islamic State (IS), we argue that the Malaysian state is now embroiled in an ' Islamic state versus Islamic State' trap, where the state after appropriating and normalising the ' Islamic state' ideal, has no choice but to contend with what is fundamentally a ' terrorist' group (by the state's own definition) in religious terms. In the face of afar enemy which it cannot decisively eliminate, the Malaysian ' Islamic' state has no choice but to defend itself from the perspective of a nation-state, as well as Islam.
author2 Farish Noor
author_facet Farish Noor
Chan, Nicholas Wai Yeap
format Theses and Dissertations
author Chan, Nicholas Wai Yeap
author_sort Chan, Nicholas Wai Yeap
title The Malaysian 'Islamic' state versus the Islamic state (IS) : evolving definitions of 'Terror' in an 'Islamising' nation-state
title_short The Malaysian 'Islamic' state versus the Islamic state (IS) : evolving definitions of 'Terror' in an 'Islamising' nation-state
title_full The Malaysian 'Islamic' state versus the Islamic state (IS) : evolving definitions of 'Terror' in an 'Islamising' nation-state
title_fullStr The Malaysian 'Islamic' state versus the Islamic state (IS) : evolving definitions of 'Terror' in an 'Islamising' nation-state
title_full_unstemmed The Malaysian 'Islamic' state versus the Islamic state (IS) : evolving definitions of 'Terror' in an 'Islamising' nation-state
title_sort malaysian 'islamic' state versus the islamic state (is) : evolving definitions of 'terror' in an 'islamising' nation-state
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/69796
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