ISLAM
Reason Versus Revelation: A Counter-Attack on Brigadier Malik’s Theology of Terror

Brigadier S. K. Malik’s The Quranic Concept of War is not a treatise on faith but a soldier’s field manual disguised as revelation. Written under the patronage of General Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq and published in 1979, when Pakistan’s army was transforming religion into state ideology, the book fuses strategy with scripture. Zia’s own foreword—blessing it as both divine and doctrinal—betrays its purpose: a manifesto of militarized theology, not a meditation on piety.

Malik’s argument is stark and unapologetic. He claims the Qur’an offers a complete, timeless doctrine of war and asserts that “terror struck into the hearts of the enemies is not only a means; it is the end itself.” In that single line, fear becomes sacrament, terror becomes virtue, and psychological warfare becomes divine policy. Malik converts revelation into tactics and tactics back into revelation, producing an Islamist Clausewitz who sanctifies intimidation as holy warfare.

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