There aren't enough bars jihadis would go to. Nowhere you could go, sit with a drink, and eavesdrop on the messy, convoluted and contradictory mess that is violent jihadism around the world. So instead we have the imaginary Sharaaabtoon, a place where various self-proclaimed mujahadeen will be brought forth to be seen and overheard, just as if they were the clientele of a bar. Remember: no shahada, no service. Twitter: @Sharaabtoon
Showing posts with label Al Qaeda. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Al Qaeda. Show all posts
Wednesday, 17 July 2013
"Russia's Bin Laden" Threatens the Winter Olympics
Summary: Doku Umarov and the Caucasus Emirate have threatened Russia's 2014 Winter Olympics. If they make good on this threat, they will cease to be seen as fighting a localized war against Russia, and instead become known as international jihadis.
Doku Umarov, nicknamed "Russia's Osama Bin Laden" for his attacks on civilians there, has called on his followers to employ "maximum force" and "any methods" to prevent the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi. Umarov was the last President of rebel Chechen Republic of Ichkeria against Russian rule, before he proclaimed himself the first Emir of the Caucasus in 2007. Sochi, in the north Caucasus, thus falls within his declared "emirate", and as a major prestige project of Umarov's arch-enemy President Putin, the Winter Olympics there could hardly fail to be a major target for him.
Umarov's Caucasus Emirate (Имарат Кавказ Imarat Kavkaz) has pursued a mixed strategy in its war against Russia, on the one hand perpetrating significant attacks on civilians (bombing the Moscow Metro in 2010 and a Moscow airport in 2011) and fostering links with al Qaeda and the Taliban, and on the other hand occasionally declaring halts on attacks against anything but military and police targets. With this threat against the Winter Olympics, Umarov is clearly once more giving the green light to attacks against all Russians, military and civilian alike.
However, he most distinctive feature thus far of the Emirate, and Umarov in particular, has been their distinct and intense localism. Historically, they have tried to assure the world that their struggle is anti-Russian, not pan-Islamist. When terrorists of Chechen descent bombed the Boston Marathon earlier this year, Umarov denied any involvement by his organisation, stressing that their primary enemy is Russia and they “are not engaged in military hostilities with the United States.” They have also paid only the most minimal lip service to the 'Palestinian cause', that sacred cow of jihadis across the world. Umarov's religious beliefs are also unusual and particular to his Chechen homeland. He specifically abjures Salafi and Wahhabi forms of Islam, and instead identifies himself as a "traditionalist" Muslim, placing him at odds with most violent jihadis.
This threat against the Sochi Winter Olympics, however, has a much more international edge to it. Though Umarov may justify attacking this "Satanic dancing" on the grounds that the north Caucasus is the graveyard of innumerable Muslims killed in Russia's conquest of the region two centuries ago, if his organisation actually follows through and strikes at the events their victims will hail from many different countries. This, alongside with the lingering association with the Boston Bombing, would be sufficient to earn the Caucasus Emirate a new international status, and a host of new enemies to go along with it. Umarov will need to consider if striking at Putin's prize is worth making his name known to the angry populations of half the world.
Wednesday, 5 June 2013
Update: Syria's Rebel Fighters Oppose Democracy, Condemn their Exiled Leaders, and are Losing to al-Assad
Firstly, the fighters are increasingly turning away from the high ideals that were attributed to them in the early days of the anti-regime protests. UN investigators have reported both that most of the rebels actually fighting the war in Syria don't even claim to want a democracy, or a "state for all" which accept's Syria's religious and ethnic minorities. This means that the radical Islamist and jihadi ideologies being pushed by the al-Nusra Front, al Qaeda, and their allies now dominate the armed opposition -feeding into ever more atrocities and sectarianism. What this means is that, when it comes to the rebels winning, a "military solution" in Syria means a jihadi solution.
Secondly, those fighters inside Syria are disillusioned with their political 'leaders' in exile (amongst whom there are genuine democrats and secularists). Rebels in the interior have released a statement condemning the Syrian National Coalition and accuse it of being unable to move beyond "negativity" and "discord", causing it to fail to represent the Syrian revolution. This comes after the Syrian National Coalition failed, yet again, to even agree on who should represent the Coalition in Geneva talks later this month. The rebels called the Coalition "feeble", and demanded that in future at least half the Coalition's leadership bodies should be made up of "revolutionary forces" -meaning fighting men. Their arguments are even those we described before -that those who bear the burden of fighting should lead. The statement included the words: "The revolutionary forces that have signed this statement will no longer bestow legitimacy upon any political body that subverts the revolution or fails to take into account the sacrifices of the Syrian people or adequately represent them." As we predicted, the struggle between the internal and external 'wings' of the opposition is growing and will come to a head -and when it does, the "revolutionary forces" of the interior (those least supportive of democracy and religious tolerance) will prevail.
Thirdly, Hezbollah has doubled down in its support of al-Assad, and their combined forces are winning again. This week, regime and Hezbollah forces working in concert retook the strategic town of Qusair from the rebels. Qusair is key for al-Assad to keep open his supply lines between Damascus and Lebanon (and the Alawite heartland of the coast), and gives his forces an open path to possibly take back control of Homs Governate. This area is often referred to as the key to the Syrian conflict, and it is hard to imagine any road to rebel victory that does not require them to hold Homs.
Syria's civil war is unfolding into the expected tragedy.
Syria's civil war is unfolding into the expected tragedy.
Thursday, 30 May 2013
Al Qaeda allies had Sarin Gas in Turkey -were they targeting Alawites Abroad?
Summary: Al Qaeda's ally the al-Nusra Front was caught with sarin gas in Turkey, allegedly planning an attack on a Turkish city known for its Alawite community. With al Qaeda in Iraq simultaneously striking Shia targets there, are these jihadi groups now trying to export Syria (and Iraq)'s Sunni-Shia violence across the region?
A 2kg cylinder of sarin gas was found yesterday by Turkish authorities after they searched the homes of militants belonging to the Syrian al-Nusra Front. This jihadi organisation is either a close ally or a full-blown branch of Al Qaeda (depending on who you talk to), as well as being the most aggressive and successful rebel fighting group in the Syrian civil war.
That al-Nusra possesses sarin gas is not in itself surprising. The rebels have already captured significant amounts of chemical weapons formerly belonging to Syria's al-Assad regime, and are believed to have used sarin in an attack that killed twenty-six people, including government forces, in March this year. As the leaders of the opposition's armed struggle, it was only a matter of time before al-Nusra was able to get its hands on some of these captured stockpiles. Al-Assad has even claimed that militants linked to al Qaeda (most likely al-Nusra) were behind the sarin attack in March -though al-Assad's regime attributes almost all rebel actions to al Qaeda lately.
However, the fact that al-Nusra was caught with Sarin in a foreign country (even one next door) is more significant. According to the authorities, the gas intended for use in an attack in the Turkish city of Adana. If so, this would be the first clear attack by Syrian rebels on a foreign target. A car bombing in the Turkish city of Reyhanlı earlier in May is believed to have been carried out by the al-Assad regime or its proxies. No immediate explanation has been offered for why al-Nusra would want to strike a Turkish city with Sarin Gas -Turkey's government and population are broadly pro-rebel, if not pro-jihadi (though this distinction could have been enough to motivate al-Nusra to strike). One extremely worrying explanation is that the target was to be Adana's significant population of Alawites, the Shia offshoot which forms the core of the al-Assad regime and its supporters. The Alawite community is well-established and was in place long before the current civil war, making it a visible and accessible target if al-Nusra desired to strike against Alawites abroad.
If al-Nusra really is trying to extend its sectarian campaign against Alawites abroad, this would be a significant escalation of the conflict. Turkey has over seven hundred thousand Alawites, and Lebanon has over a hundred thousand. The fact that al Qaeda in Iraq is also currently trying to foment sectarian blood-letting there by striking at Shia targets makes it hard not to see al-Nusra's actions here as part of a wider Sunni jihadi plan to spread their "war on Shi'ism" across the Middle East.
As previously related in Sharaabtoon, to truly put it to devastating use significant quantities of sarin gas, as well as an advanced delivery system, are required. More primitive attempts to use it tactically are likely to fail, as Iraqi insurgents found out in May 2004. However, it can be used very effectively in smaller strikes on concentrated civilians targets, as was seen in the Tokyo subway sarin attack in 1994. If the al-Nusra/al Qaeda alliance is planning to use chemical weapons against Shia civilians across the region, the inhabitants of Turkey, Lebanon, Iraq and Iran may have even more to fear from these jihadis gaining such armaments than even Israel's people do.
Alawite Distribution in the Levant |
Wednesday, 29 May 2013
Featured News: Al Qaeda gives member Poor Job Evaluation
Being a member of al Qaeda nowadays is hard work. Not only do you have to dodge drone strikes worry about your declining brand value, now you have to worry about the upper management getting all testy because you don't file expense reports, don't turn up to meetings, or you spend too much time on internet social media. But this is apparently exactly what was happening to Moktar Belmoktar, a commander in al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) who recently got so fed up with the 'brass' that he quit and formed his own jihadi organisation, the Al-Mulathameen ("Masked") Brigade (also known as the al-Mua'qi'oon Biddam ["Those who Sign with Blood"] Brigade).
In a letter obtained by the Associated Press, AQIM's leaders give a scathing (and very long) review of Belmoktar's performance (referring to him by his alternate name Khaled Abou El Abbas). Here are a few of the highlights:
- "Abu Abbas is not willing to follow anyone... he is satisfied only when followed and obeyed."
- "your brigade did not achieve a single spectacular operation targeting the crusader alliance"
- "Why do you only turn on your phone with the Emirate when you need it, while your communication with some media [online jihadi forums] is almost never ending!"
- "We ask you also: How many administrative and financial reports have you sent up to your Emirate?"
- "How many meetings was Abu Abbas invited to... only to see him always refuse to participate?"
- "Abu Abbas aired our laundry publicly and spilled secrets of jihad to random young men whom he doesn’t know"
... and our personal favourite...
- "As for your whispering in the ear of the organization’s emir, we consider it as derisive and snide and denigrating a figure who by our ancient Islamic law should be esteemed and respected, even if he were a black Ethiopian slave with a head like a raisin."
After job evaluations like that, is it a surprise that so many jihadis need to drink in the Sharaabtoon?
The full letter in English:
http://hosted.ap.org/specials/interactives/_international/_pdfs/al-qaida-belmoktar-letter-english.pdf
The full letter in Arabic:
http://hosted.ap.org/specials/interactives/_international/_pdfs/al-qaida-belmoktar-letter.pdf
Read more:
http://bigstory.ap.org/article/ap-exclusive-rise-al-qaida-saharan-terrorist
Tuesday, 21 May 2013
Featured News: Kenya police kill serial jihadi couple, infant "human shield" survives
A pair of star-crossed lovers, experienced in terrorism. The Kenyan police, shooting to kill. Grenades. Tear gas. And a baby used as a human shield. These were all involved in an overnight stand-off in Nairobi this weekend, serving as a reminder that al Shabaab is actively seeking to strike against Somalia's neighbours.
The couple were shot dead at their apartment on the outskirts of Nairobi, after a lengthy stand-off during which they threw grenades at the police. The man killed was a Kenyan citizen suspected of carrying out two grenade attacks in October 2011, as the first blows in what became a string of al Shabaab violent attacks against Kenya. Despite the deaths of the jihadi couple, the firing of tear gas into the apartment, and militants' use of their eight month-old baby as a human shield, the child survived.
Kenya has a significant Somali population, especially in its eastern areas and in the slums of Nairobi. Al Shabaab (al Qaeda's East African branch) has been able to draw upon these links in order to make good on its promise to take revenge against Kenya for sending troops to support the Somali Transitional Federal Government, al Shabaab's bitter foe. While Kenyan security forces have prevented this particular atrocity-in-the-making from going ahead, it will certainly not be the last attempt.
Read more:
http://news.yahoo.com/kenya-police-kill-terror-couple-122010655.html;_ylt=AmNFvBUsRb_hzK.uVf.KW7ISscB_;_ylu=X3oDMTB0Y2l1a2VtBG1pdAMEcG9zAzMzBHNlYwNsbl9BZnJpY2FfZ2Fs;_ylg=X3oDMTBhYWM1a2sxBGxhbmcDZW4tVVM-;_ylv=3
The couple were shot dead at their apartment on the outskirts of Nairobi, after a lengthy stand-off during which they threw grenades at the police. The man killed was a Kenyan citizen suspected of carrying out two grenade attacks in October 2011, as the first blows in what became a string of al Shabaab violent attacks against Kenya. Despite the deaths of the jihadi couple, the firing of tear gas into the apartment, and militants' use of their eight month-old baby as a human shield, the child survived.
Kenya has a significant Somali population, especially in its eastern areas and in the slums of Nairobi. Al Shabaab (al Qaeda's East African branch) has been able to draw upon these links in order to make good on its promise to take revenge against Kenya for sending troops to support the Somali Transitional Federal Government, al Shabaab's bitter foe. While Kenyan security forces have prevented this particular atrocity-in-the-making from going ahead, it will certainly not be the last attempt.
Read more:
http://news.yahoo.com/kenya-police-kill-terror-couple-122010655.html;_ylt=AmNFvBUsRb_hzK.uVf.KW7ISscB_;_ylu=X3oDMTB0Y2l1a2VtBG1pdAMEcG9zAzMzBHNlYwNsbl9BZnJpY2FfZ2Fs;_ylg=X3oDMTBhYWM1a2sxBGxhbmcDZW4tVVM-;_ylv=3
Monday, 20 May 2013
Syria’s coming Jihadi Ascendancy? Part Three: the Jihadis and the Wider World
Summary: if jihadis come to dominate the armed opposition in Syria, it will only cause al-Assad’s foreign allies to increase their support for his regime, greater tacit support for the jihadis by the Gulf Arab states, and a West that is increasingly left out in the cold. This may force al-Assad, his allies, the West, and the non-jihadi rebels into an alliance of necessity to stem the jihadi tide. The only alternative, a direct Western intervention, would likely just make the conflict even bloodier.
The interested parties abroad
The interested parties abroad
The ascension of jihadi groups to leadership in the interior military struggle, as described in the last two Sharaabtoon posts on Syria, would have considerable consequences for the increasing number of other countries and bodies are invested in the outcome of the civil war.
Al-Assad’s allies
Some responses seem predictable: Russia and Iran, both staunch allies of the al-Assad regime, would react with alarm and are likely to be driven to support the government to even greater degrees -and to grow ever more hostile to international diplomatic efforts to weaken al-Assad, or recognise the Syrian National Council (SNC). It will become easier for them to join Bashir al-Assad in decrying the Syrian opposition (whom they will likely continue to portray as a singular body) as "terrorists" seeking a "military solution", who need to stop fighting or be defeated so that a "political solution" can be effected. Any future attacks akin to the aforementioned targeting of a Russian passenger jet will make Russia's "terrorist" characterization of the Syrian rebels even more compelling. Already, Iran has extended the Syrian government a $1 billion line of credit, and Russia is believed to be selling a new sophisticated missile system to Syria, one that could even be used against a Western intervention force. Russia and Iran would only invest more if al-Assad seems to be in danger of losing control of Syria altogether.
Hezbollah, with Iran's blessing, would likely be even more robust in its response to a (Sunni) jihadi ascendancy. Hezbollah has no choice but to back al-Assad to the hilt: his regime has been (along with Iran) their most important sponsor and is an irreplaceable supply route for weapons. Al-Assad’s fall would leave Hezbollah isolated and lacking in the weapons and funds it needs to confront its domestic enemies inside Lebanon, and its existential foe in neighbouring Israel. Through the support it has given to the al-Assad regime already, Hezbollah has isolated itself from most of the region, changing its perception in the Arab world from a lionized leader of the “resistance” against Israel to a bloody-handed accomplice to al-Assad’s slaughter. Without al-Assad, Hezbollah would be almost without friends, and surrounded by bitter enemies. Therefore, it should not be dismissed as mere bluster that in April Hezbollah’s leader declared that his organization would not allow the al-Assad regime to fall, and that is possible that his “forces of resistance” might have to intervene.
Although it denies having taken an official side in the conflict, in recent weeks Hezbollah has acknowledged that several of its members, including a notable commander, have died while “performing their jihadi duties” in Syria. Significantly, on May 19th this year Hezbollah militants openly fought alongside Syrian government troops in an offensive to retake the town of Qusair (near the Lebanese border) from rebels. Hezbollah is also much more adept at the kind of sectarian and guerrilla-style conflict now characterizing the Syrian civil war than the Syrian government itself is. Hezbollah has announced that it is supporting the Shia fighters in Syria who are calling themselves “Popular Committees”, and who claim to be protecting Syria’s Shias against sectarian attacks. These are non-Alawite Shias, and many of them already hold Lebanese passports, making their appeals to self-defence an emotive one in Hezbollah’s base of Lebanon.
The other main mission of Hezbollah in Syria (along with other foreign Shia fighters) is the defence of the Sayyida Zaynab shrine near Damascus, which contains the grave of Zaynab, a granddaughter of the Prophet Mohammed and wife of Caliph Ali. The shrine, its neighbourhood and visiting pilgrims have been the target of sectarian attacks since before the Syrian civil war, and Syria’s Sunni jihadis have already demonstrated a willingness to attack what they see as “Shia” shrines. If strategic interests weren’t enough, these religious links would be a strong enough draw to ensure that Hezbollah, the region’s leading Shia jihadi group, would be ever more drawn into a conflict if Syria’s Sunni jihadis seemed to be winning it.
The jihadis and their sponsors
Conversely, a jihadi ascendancy inside Syria would be welcomed by Hamas. The Syrian civil war has driven a wedge between Hamas and its former patron Iran, forcing the former to seek out new partners and sponsors in the region. Already, Hamas has been fostering its links with deep-pocketed Gulf Arab states, and is allegedly helping train Free Syrian Army (FSA) fighters Damascus, focusing on aiding them in developing better rockets and making better use of tunnels in combat. The great hope of the jihadis, and the fear of the West, is that the Syrian jihadis may find themselves also receiving at least the tacit or indirect support of the rising regional player now likely acting the shadowy role of Hamas' new patron: Qatar. Qatar appears to be taking the place of Iran (which heavily supports the al-Assad regime) as Hamas’ patron; the Emir of Qatar notably visited Gaza in late 2012, and pledged $400 million to the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip.
Qatar seems to be competing with Saudi Arabia for influence among Syrian rebel forces. Both are backing the entire rebel spectrum from mainstream Islamists in the FSA to violent jihadi groups with money and arms. However Qatar’s chosen militants seem to be enjoying the upper hand thus far. Qatar is the site of the only SNC “embassy” abroad –as well as Hamas’ only “embassy”. The candidate favoured by the Qatari government, Ghassan Hitto, has even been elected Prime Minister of the Syrian National Coalition. Qatar and Hamas share the same motivation for their involvement: to build up their own influence and connections with jihadis and Islamists alike in a post-al-Assad Syria –although Hamas may also specifically have Syria in mind as a future launching pad for attacks on Israel. Qatar is unlikely to be funding the al Nusra Front directly, its funding of Islamist groups that share its outlook and desire al Nusra’s support on the battle field means that Qatari money and arms will certainly bleed through to the most radical jihadis. Qatar’s specific favouring of Islamist and jihadi groups is actually producing resentment among other rebel groups which it deems insufficiently “Islamic” and therefore doesn’t fund. This resentment, however, is a sign of the strength that Qatar’s backing is bringing to the Islamist and jihadi rebels.
Saudi Arabia’s motives are similar to Qatar’s: it wants to break Iran’s “arc of influence” from Iran to Lebanon (Hezbollah), and to shore up its own influence in the Sunni world by being seen as defending Syrian Sunnis from the “Alawite” al-Assad regime. Additionally, Saudi Arabia has its own large supply of unemployed and restless young radicals, which the Saudi regime believes are less likely to become a source of trouble at home if they can be sent to fight (and die) in Syria’s “jihad”. This has been Saudi Arabia’s approach to past conflicts such as Chechnya, Iraq and Afghanistan. There have even been reports that the Saudi government is equipping and transporting Yemeni jihadis to Syria, however this may be a sign of weakness as much as strength. The fact that Saudi Arabia is going to such lengths to bring in fighters loyal to itself may be an indication that it is struggling to find allies amongst Syria’s indigenous jihadis.
For their part, the al-Nusra front seems to be ever more dominated by Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the head of the Islamic State of Iraq (formerly “al Qaeda in Iraq”) who has moved into northern Syria and is now directing much of al-Nusra’s struggle. His leadership will only make al-Nusra progressively more radical, violent and focused on sectarian killings.
The wallflower West
The Western powers (including Israel) would likely be put in the most difficult position by a jihadi takeover of the interior military struggle. Each of these nations would find itself having to choose between doubling down its support of the political leaders in exile (who would seem increasingly unable to affect the situation on the ground in Syria), or seeking a new means to end the conflict in the West's (and their own) favour, which most essentially means excluding violent jihadis from power. However, the rebels controlling northern Syria have already splintered into hundreds of separate armed groups, and in the face of growing jihadi power would all have a much greater incentive to make a deal with the jihadis and their allies than they would with the West.
Israel would face the most troubling situation right on its doorstep: Hezbollah empowered by its alliance with al-Assad, and the rest of Syria now a safe haven for jihadis. Israel might even find itself nostalgic for the days of its old, but predictable, enemy Bashir al-Assad.
The ‘odd couple’
The West’s need to banish the jihadis from a post-war Syria may cause the most unlikely-seeming alliance to come about: an accord between the Western democracies (including Israel), Russia, the non-jihadi Syrian opposition (especially its political exterior), and the al-Assad regime. This deal would allow them all to lessen or cease attacks on each other in order to focus on the military defeat of the jihadi groups, in exchange for a "political solution" to the conflict whereby exiled opposition politicians receive a share of power and Bashir al-Assad (likely) remains President. Iran and Hezbollah would likely be silent, if not official, partners in such an accord. Such an arrangement will become ever more likely the more the jihadi groups gain in military strength for two reasons: jihadi clashes with the non-jihadi Syrian opposition fighters would weaken the latter more and more, and the latter are the wing of the opposition most likely to oppose a "political solution" (which would almost certainly favour the political exiles over the military leaders).
Secondly, if the jihadis emerge as the pre-eminent threat to the al-Assad regime on the battlefield, it increases the perception that a "military solution" (toppling al-Assad) would really mean a jihadi solution, thus encouraging the non-jihadi opposition to turn increasingly away from military means. It would be impossible to exclude the al-Assad regime from such an accord, if not Bashir himself, as such a jihadi ascendancy would leave the government as the only non-jihadi party still possessing true military power in the interior. There is some limited evidence that suggests an accord between the non-jihadi rebels and the al-Assad regime is possible. Smokescreen it may be, but the government has set up a “ministry of reconciliation” led by Ali Haidar, who himself has lost a son in the civil war. The prospect of peace talks reared its head in February, when SNC offers to meet with regime officials in Rome and to visit Moscow were both made and subsequently rescinded. There has been no real progress so far, but the pressure to reach a settlement increases every day as the jihadi rebels grow stronger.
However, even if such an "odd couple" alliance occurred and succeeded in both implementing the political integration of much of the opposition and driving back the jihadis on the conventional battlefield, it would by no means mean the end of jihadi violence in Syria. Still flush with their links to the Islamic State of Iraq, the Syrian jihadi groups would almost certainly follow the path the former has laid out in Iraq: revert to large-scale, often sectarian bombings against civilian and government targets. This would serve their twin aims of destabilizing the new regime and harming the internal populations they see as their enemies.
By this point, these jihadi groups in Syria would likely have outlived their usefulness to Qatar and the other Gulf Arab states (no longer having any real chance of toppling al-Assad from power), and so their supplies of money and weapons from these sources would likely dry up. However this would be unlikely to prevent the jihadis from continuing their fight, as they would now be involved in a far less monetarily costly "war" (terrorist bombings being less expensive than fielding fighting units and controlling territory) which could sustain itself in much the same the fashion as its counterparts in Iraq: kidnapping for ransom, "protection money", and other profit-making crimes. The Syrian jihadis would also retain their network of non-state friends abroad, especially Hamas, who would continue to enjoy deep pockets if it retained its Qatari backers (which seems probable, the Qataris being unlikely to want to jettison its other new agent of influence if they abandon Syria's jihadis). Horrific jihadi bombings and violence would remain a sad fact of life in Syria for years to come.
Intervention -the Alternative?
Growing consensus that the al-Assad regime has already used chemical weapons against insurgents has increased the chances that Western democracies, possibly in concert with Israel, will begin intervening more directly against the government in the civil war, as the use of such weapons was set out as the "redline" for intervention by President Obama. It is possible that if Western nations commenced lethal support, especially in the form of heavy and high-tech weaponry, for the non-jihadi opposition, that they would be able to reverse the rising jihadi tide on the battlefield and also topple the Assad regime. Direct Western military intervention (however unlikely) would certainly achieve the same aim, and indeed do so more directly. However, at best these paths would still result in the same post-war jihadi terrorism that is described above and still seen in Iraq years after the end of true military conflict there, and run the significant risk of adding to this bloody mix pro-al-Assad/anti-opposition insurgencies and terrorism.
The most likely source of such violence in an a post-war Syria ruled by a pro-Western opposition would be the on-going alliance of Iran and Hezbollah with the Shia (and possibly other religious) minorities in Syria. There have already been indications that the al-Assad regime has been attempting to cement its control of the Alawite-majority coast region of Syria. The logic is that, should Damascus fall, al-Assad and his forces can withdraw to this rump state, retaining access to the sea and to their ally Hezbollah in Lebanon. This balkanization of Syria would likely mean the continuation and escalation of the kind of military involvement Hezbollah has already engaged in in Syria. After Israeli airstrikes on Syrian government sites earlier in May, al-Assad promised to provide “game-changing” weapons to Hezbollah, which has historically been in the market for exactly the kind of long-range missiles that the Syrian government possesses. Hezbollah desires these weapons so they can be used (or threatened) against Israel, and the al-Assad regime would need a safe place to base these missile systems if it lost control of most of Syria –thus a pact between them would serve both their interests.
The rump al-Assad regime would likely continue to draw support from other non-Alawite minorities in Syria, such as the Christian population, which also has many reasons to fear a Syria where jihadis enjoy significant power. Hezbollah itself already has Christian allies in Lebanon –such an alliance in Syria also is not unlikely. Iran and Russia also have every incentive to keep any new regime which Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the jihadis hold sway over as weak as possible, and so would likely keep backing the al-Assad/Hezbollah alliance in fighting the new government. The kind of war this alliance would be fighting would likely be just as sectarian and brutal as that being waged by the Sunni jihadis. Already, pro-regime forces have begun massacring civilians in Sunni villages in the coastal region in order to consolidate their control and ‘demographic advantage’ there. These atrocities would only escalate if bitter and vengeful al-Assad/Shia forces were forced to withdraw to this area, and could even be expanded to include terrorist-style bombings in the (Sunni-majority) rest of Syria. Notably, in May the al-Assad regime is already suspected of using its own terrorist or jihadi proxies to carry out a sophisticated bombing in a Turkish border town which has become a haven for Syrian refugees.
There is also little reason to suspect that a Western intervention which ousts al-Assad would dampen the appeal of Sunni jihadi organisations to ordinary Syrians. In addition to how unpopular any intervention which put Western troops into Syria would be (and thus how much more popular the jihadis fighting the “invaders” would become), the civil war has already taken on enough of a sectarian edge to be self-sustaining. This would be especially true in the face of the aforementioned on-going war by Shia armed groups. It is notable that even the non-sectarian Sunni rebel groups are not “secular.” It has been widely observed that there have been no truly secular rebel forces or staff in the rebel courts for some time. This is yet another difference between the rebels of the interior and the political opposition in exile, which includes true secularists.
This perceived religious edge to the conflict will keep the jihadis’ sectarian message appealing even after al-Assad falls. This will be coupled with the desire for revenge against the communities perceived as having supported al-Assad, and the growing acceptance among the rebels of brutal acts as “just part of war.” The head of the Syrian National Colaition has notably argued that rebel atrocities cannot be compared with those of the government as “we cannot employ Platonic idealism to judge those who risk their lives against a barbaric campaign." If the jihadis become the only outlet for such revenge, their numbers will continue to grow even after a Western intervention.
Thus a Syria where both al-Assad's regime and the jihadis are excluded from power would likely face ongoing terrorist-style violence from these two opponents simultaneously for the foreseeable future. Such a war on two fronts would weaken the regime, and would likely leave the Syrian jihadis in a much stronger position than even their allies in Iraq are currently, and stronger than they themselves would likely be if the regime and opposition allied together against them. The level of sectarian violence could be even greater than that which was seen at the height of Iraq’s civil war: the most powerful groups on both the Sunni and Shia sides would be radicalized, and each in engaging in their own bloody sectarian “jihad”.
As matters stand, the black flag of jihad is rising like a tide in Syria. Sooner or later, rolling it back will become the most pressing concern for all others involved.
Saturday, 18 May 2013
Featured News: al Shabaab's Minnesota recruiters jailed
This week, four men of Somali origin in Minnesota for recruiting and raising money for al Shabaab, which as of last year is al Qaeda's branch in the Horn of Africa.
Although al Shabaab has lost control of its main bases in Mogadishu and Kismayo over the past year, it has continued to engage in a guerilla-style struggle against the African Union troops backing up Somalia's Transitional Federal Government. What these arrests in Minnesota demonstrate is that, for a jihadi organisation with a distinctly local outlook, al Shabaab has an impressive global reach, facilitated by its links to the Somali diaspora. This doesn't just mean recruiting and raising money in Minnesota -it also means carrying out terrorist attacks abroad. So far, the attacks on foreign soil have mostly been limited to Kenya, which has both a significant Somali population and a border with Somalia itself. However, the ongoing involvement of Western governments in the Somali civil war (especially the US' use of drones to target al Shabaab/al Qaeda militants) means there is a solid possibility of al Shabaab using its existing recruiting and money-raising networks to carry out terrorist attacks in the West.
Read more:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-22535766
Although al Shabaab has lost control of its main bases in Mogadishu and Kismayo over the past year, it has continued to engage in a guerilla-style struggle against the African Union troops backing up Somalia's Transitional Federal Government. What these arrests in Minnesota demonstrate is that, for a jihadi organisation with a distinctly local outlook, al Shabaab has an impressive global reach, facilitated by its links to the Somali diaspora. This doesn't just mean recruiting and raising money in Minnesota -it also means carrying out terrorist attacks abroad. So far, the attacks on foreign soil have mostly been limited to Kenya, which has both a significant Somali population and a border with Somalia itself. However, the ongoing involvement of Western governments in the Somali civil war (especially the US' use of drones to target al Shabaab/al Qaeda militants) means there is a solid possibility of al Shabaab using its existing recruiting and money-raising networks to carry out terrorist attacks in the West.
Read more:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-22535766
Wednesday, 15 May 2013
Featured News: Sectarian and anti-government bombs kill 35 in Iraq
A series of car bombs on Wednesday targeted Shia neighbourhoods in Baghdad and government buildings in Kirkuk, in northern Iraq, killing at least 35 overall.
The aim of these attacks is fairly clear: with the onset of sectarian warfare in Syria, Iraq's jihadis are now trying to widen the 'battlefield' into Iraq. Tens of thousands of Iraqis died in the sectarian blood-letting from 2006 to 2007, and this is exactly the kind of conflict that the Syrian-Iraqi jihadis would like to recreate. With the merger/alliance of the "Islamic State of Iraq" and Syria's al-Nusra Front, it has been ensured that the more success either enjoys, the other will be able to push their own country deeper into conflict.
Read more:
http://news.yahoo.com/series-bombs-kills-least-14-people-across-iraq-134640415.html
The aim of these attacks is fairly clear: with the onset of sectarian warfare in Syria, Iraq's jihadis are now trying to widen the 'battlefield' into Iraq. Tens of thousands of Iraqis died in the sectarian blood-letting from 2006 to 2007, and this is exactly the kind of conflict that the Syrian-Iraqi jihadis would like to recreate. With the merger/alliance of the "Islamic State of Iraq" and Syria's al-Nusra Front, it has been ensured that the more success either enjoys, the other will be able to push their own country deeper into conflict.
Read more:
http://news.yahoo.com/series-bombs-kills-least-14-people-across-iraq-134640415.html
Thursday, 9 May 2013
Featured News: Yemeni President says al Qaeda is expanding
Today, the President of Yemen said that al Qaeda is growing in power inside his country.
Yesterday, suspected militants linked to al Qaeda killed an intelligence officer in southern Yemen.
The day before, three Yemeni air force pilots based in southern Yemen were murdered.
Sadly, the facts seem to be on the President's side.
Read more:
http://news.yahoo.com/yemens-leader-warns-al-qaida-expansion-182348969.html;_ylt=ArzpAHZPTBXMToNR361K2MtvaA8F;_ylu=X3oDMTNmcjJiZmhsBG1pdAMEcGtnAzhhMjc0NzUzLWQ4YWQtM2Y3Yy05N2UxLWUyYTYxYTNmM2EyYQRwb3MDNQRzZWMDbG5fTWlkRWFzdF9nYWwEdmVyAzJjYWE4MTIwLWI4ZDYtMTFlMi05ZmZmLWIxNGEzYTg5MTIyOA--;_ylg=X3oDMTBhYWM1a2sxBGxhbmcDZW4tVVM-;_ylv=3
Yesterday, suspected militants linked to al Qaeda killed an intelligence officer in southern Yemen.
The day before, three Yemeni air force pilots based in southern Yemen were murdered.
Sadly, the facts seem to be on the President's side.
Read more:
http://news.yahoo.com/yemens-leader-warns-al-qaida-expansion-182348969.html;_ylt=ArzpAHZPTBXMToNR361K2MtvaA8F;_ylu=X3oDMTNmcjJiZmhsBG1pdAMEcGtnAzhhMjc0NzUzLWQ4YWQtM2Y3Yy05N2UxLWUyYTYxYTNmM2EyYQRwb3MDNQRzZWMDbG5fTWlkRWFzdF9nYWwEdmVyAzJjYWE4MTIwLWI4ZDYtMTFlMi05ZmZmLWIxNGEzYTg5MTIyOA--;_ylg=X3oDMTBhYWM1a2sxBGxhbmcDZW4tVVM-;_ylv=3
Tuesday, 7 May 2013
Featured News: Two Malian soldiers killed in Gao suicide attack
France hasn't even finished withdrawing its troops from Mali yet, but the jihadis they were sent to fight are already stepping up their attacks.
Read more:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-22416987
Read more:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-22416987
Syria’s coming Jihadi Ascendancy? Part Two: Algerian Lessons
Summary:
in newly-independent Algeria, a split between the political leaders of the government
in exile and the armed brigades on the front lines led to a conflict between
them –one which the military leaders easily one. Syria’s opposition appears to
be following this model of a weak, vacillating political leadership outside the
country coming to clash with a much stronger “opposition” military force inside
Syria: the jihadis. If al-Assad is toppled from within, we may see a jihadi-led
military alliance taking power in Syria at the expense of the political
leadership.
The Setting
A once-powerful regime, with heavy support from overseas, despite its advanced weaponry, supremacy in the air and considerable power to win conventional battles, nevertheless found its control rapidly deteriorating to cover only a series of coastal enclaves. Its enemy called itself “mojahedin” and employed terrorist and guerrilla-style warfare. The regime decided to give up on the goal of keeping control of the country, and negotiated with the rebellion’s political leaders in exile. The members of the exile government, who spent years building the international alliances and legitimacy they believed their new regime would need, returned to their “liberated” country, only to find it themselves facing a new opponent. Most of the leaders of the fighting groups had no intention of allowing the returning politicos to assume power won by their blood and struggle. The two sides came to open conflict with each other, and the military leaders swiftly crushed the politicians, handing power to those with the best military connections, not necessarily to those with the widest public support.
A once-powerful regime, with heavy support from overseas, despite its advanced weaponry, supremacy in the air and considerable power to win conventional battles, nevertheless found its control rapidly deteriorating to cover only a series of coastal enclaves. Its enemy called itself “mojahedin” and employed terrorist and guerrilla-style warfare. The regime decided to give up on the goal of keeping control of the country, and negotiated with the rebellion’s political leaders in exile. The members of the exile government, who spent years building the international alliances and legitimacy they believed their new regime would need, returned to their “liberated” country, only to find it themselves facing a new opponent. Most of the leaders of the fighting groups had no intention of allowing the returning politicos to assume power won by their blood and struggle. The two sides came to open conflict with each other, and the military leaders swiftly crushed the politicians, handing power to those with the best military connections, not necessarily to those with the widest public support.
The country was newly-independent Algeria –but it could just
as easily be Syria, if the al-Assad regime falls to its armed internal enemies.
In the previous instalment of Sharaabtoon, the coming split between the
out-of-country Syrian National Council (SNC) and the armed opposition within
Syria (especially the jihadis like the al-Nusra Front, but also the more hard-line
Islamist elements of the Free Syrian Army –FSA) was explained. The military
prowess, extensive funding and ‘uniting’ sectarian message of the jihadis will
continue to draw fighters to them, and the SNC and more moderate FSA elements
will have to shun and exclude the jihadis to keep receiving assistance from
their Western allies.
If al-Assad falls, and these two sides fight for control of
the new Syria, the result will likely be the same as was seen in Algeria. The
fighting brigades, led by jihadis and their allies, will come to dominate the new Syrian political landscape.
How Algeria was Won
What doomed the Algerian Provisional Government (consisting largely of the political leaders who had waited out the war against the French in exile) was essentially its lack of sufficient firepower inside the country when the struggle with the military-led faction broke out. Only a minority of the National Liberation Front (FLN) fighters backed the Provisional Government, causing them to have little control outside of parts of the capitol city region, and one other area. Much of this lack of support can be attributed to the fact that the commanders of the military faction had far closer connections with the fighting brigades, and much deeper relationships with them after years of leading them against French forces. This was compounded by the “cult of the gun” that had emerged amongst the internal FLN fighters and supporters. France’s focus on defeating the Algerian rebellion with military means had its mirror in convincing the supporters of that revolt that only a military solution could end French rule. Hence the armed struggle was elevated above all other endeavours, and politicians were seen as weak and ineffectual.
Those same French military operations did the greatest damage
to the kind of fighting brigades amongst which the future leaders of the
Provisional Government had the most support, the ordinary maquis (guerrilla
brands), especially in Algiers. Least affected had been the ‘Army of the
Frontiers’ fighters, who enjoyed heavy backing from the Moroccan and Tunisian
governments and who could move back and forth across the borders at will,
giving them both greater arms and protection. This Army of the Frontiers was
dominated by those FLN military leaders who refused to submit to the rule of
politicians, and who would subsequently undertake the “March on Algiers” and
oust the Provisional Government and its scattered supporters.
Syria’s Fighting Men
The current scenario in Syria has its differences, but the broad similarities are compelling, and the factors which favour a jihadi rise are even stronger than those which aided the rise of the military leaders in Algeria. Like French counterinsurgency operations, al-Assad’s forces have compelled Syria’s opposition politicians to largely reside abroad. The rising size and power of the jihadis, detailed in the previous instalment, is akin to the lopsided advantage the Army of the Frontiers enjoyed in Algeria, as is the jihadis’ comparatively generous foreign support. The more moderate FSA brigades have the “non-lethal” support of the West; the jihadis have arms and funds from the deep pockets of the pro-Islamist Gulf Arabs. The failure of the West to provide effectual assistance to the rebels has led many fighters who previously pinned their hope on NATO (as in Libya) to give this up, and lose any desire to make themselves acceptable to the West by shunning the jihadis. More and more Syrian rebels are asking “What has the West done for us? Now, we have only God." Al-Assad’s forces have so far been able to inflict greater defeats on the non-jihadi fighters than the jihadis (hence the admiration the other rebels feel for the jihadis’ “special forces” prowess), again weakening the forces most likely to ally themselves with the SNC in a post-al-Assad contest.
Syria’s Fighting Men
The current scenario in Syria has its differences, but the broad similarities are compelling, and the factors which favour a jihadi rise are even stronger than those which aided the rise of the military leaders in Algeria. Like French counterinsurgency operations, al-Assad’s forces have compelled Syria’s opposition politicians to largely reside abroad. The rising size and power of the jihadis, detailed in the previous instalment, is akin to the lopsided advantage the Army of the Frontiers enjoyed in Algeria, as is the jihadis’ comparatively generous foreign support. The more moderate FSA brigades have the “non-lethal” support of the West; the jihadis have arms and funds from the deep pockets of the pro-Islamist Gulf Arabs. The failure of the West to provide effectual assistance to the rebels has led many fighters who previously pinned their hope on NATO (as in Libya) to give this up, and lose any desire to make themselves acceptable to the West by shunning the jihadis. More and more Syrian rebels are asking “What has the West done for us? Now, we have only God." Al-Assad’s forces have so far been able to inflict greater defeats on the non-jihadi fighters than the jihadis (hence the admiration the other rebels feel for the jihadis’ “special forces” prowess), again weakening the forces most likely to ally themselves with the SNC in a post-al-Assad contest.
Al-Assad’s air power continues to be formidable, and allows his regime to frustrate many conventional rebel offensives, giving an edge to those rebels skilled at non-conventional attacks on the regime, such as co-ordinated suicide bombings. Al Nusra and other jihadis’ alliances with al Qaeda in Iraq (AQI) give them unique access to the necessary skills. The jihadis also enjoy an implicit ally in the government of Jordan. The Hashemite Kingdom has witnessed horrific violence resulting from large militarized refugee populations residing within its borders before, and so is keen to see the hundreds of thousands of Syrian refugees already within its borders return home as soon as possible. More likely than not, that means a military solution by those rebels who are currently strongest, giving the Jordanian government an incentive to let arms and supplies move across its borders to the rebels. Much of the same is true of the Turkish government. All this is to say nothing of the public services the jihadis run, which builds their support amongst the Syrian population daily. At present the jihadis and their allies in Syria remain a minority of rebel fighters, albeit a sizeable one, but all these factors will cause them to quickly grow the longer the conflict continues. Not only will a “cult of the gun” emerge, but as the most effective wielders of the gun, a “cult of jihad” is likely to take hold of much of Syria’s internal opposition.
Syria’s Forlorn Political Hopes
The successes of the jihadis on the battlefield are only mirrored by the vacillation and squabbling in the halls of politics. The SNC has been seen as consumed by infighting and ineffectual on the ground almost since it was formed in October 2011. Many of its members are long-standing exiles and opponents of the al-Assad regime, seen by many within Syria as disconnected from recent events and the on-going struggle.
These weaknesses caused another body, the National Coalition
for Syrian Revolutionary and Opposition Forces, to be set up in November 2012
as an alternative. Despite the recognition and diplomatic support the National
Coalition has subsequently enjoyed from other nations (especially Western
democracies), it has received little more than lip-service support from the
armed brigades within Syria, and what little influence it enjoys largely stems
from the fact that the SNC controls twenty-two of its seventy council seats.
The National Coalition as a whole has firmly shunned Syria’s jihadis,
comparatively to the limited links the SNC maintains with them. This is a poor
omen for its ability to influence events on the ground. Significantly, it was
the jihadis who initiated the recent rebel offensives in Aleppo, Damascus and
Raqqa province, which were not sanctioned by the local leaders linked to the National
Coalition. The al-Tawhid Brigade (كتائب التوحيد), a
prominent and powerful Islamist unit of the FSA, refused to join the National
Coalition when the latter was founded, even though this brigade actively
supports the SNC.
The first leader of the National Coalition, Moaz al-Khatib (a
Sunni cleric, seen as a unifying figure in Syria) resigned in March this year,
complaining of too much Western interference and rule-setting. He was replaced
by the President of the SNC, George Sabra. Just before al-Khatib’s resignation,
an interim government with a SNC-linked Islamist Prime Minister, Ghassan
Hitto. Hitto, however, is a joint Syrian and American citizen, having lived in
the USA since 1980 –longer than many of the rebel fighters have even been
alive. President
Sabra has insisted that the SNC will not be “subsumed under anybody.” The
National Coalition is further hampered by its failure to provide meaningful
services to civilians inside Syria. Essentially, the National Coalition has
significant weaknesses of its own, and only enjoys influence on the ground
through the SNC politicians who increasingly dominate it. At best, it is becoming
a weak appendage of the SNC it was meant to replace.
The political opposition is further divided by the refusal of
the National Co-ordination Committee (NCC) to work with either the National
Coalition or the SNC. Formed in November 2011, the NCC is made up largely of
left-leaning, Kurdish and independent non-Islamist political parties and
activists. It calls for dialogue with the al-Assad regime rather than its
military ouster, and vociferously opposes Western intervention or diplomatic
pressure. Although its influence is limited, the fact that even the political
exiles cannot be united against al-Assad is a severe sign of weakness.
But perhaps the greatest indictment of all against these
political leaders is that even the Western democracies that were initially so
keen to embrace these councils are now beginning to side-line them. In late
February this year, the US government announced that it was stepping up with
another $60 million in aid to the Syrian rebels –but this aid is to be provided
directly to the FSA’s military groups inside Syrian. The SNC will continue to
be involved and consulted on the distribution, but the sense that the internal
actors are those most significant to the outcome of the struggle is undeniable.
What can be done?
All of these factors indicate that, if al-Assad falls or retreats with his forces to an Alawite-majority rump state on the coast, the contest for who will control newly “liberated” areas of Syria will be won by the jihadis, not the SNC or National Coalition, just as the Army of the Frontiers won control in Algeria.
It is possible that foreign intervention could change this internal equation, but it would depend highly on the form that intervention takes. The simple enforcement of a “no fly zone” against regime air power, or the creation of safe “humanitarian corridors” to ensure safe movement of refugees (and implicitly also of rebel forces), would do little to truly change the outcome. These actions would only amplify the on-going military trends without shifting the balance between the different armed wings of the opposition. The provision of “lethal” aid (meaning weapons) by the West to their preferred armed groups could help them win greater success and prominence on the battlefield, but potentially these weapons could simply end up flowing to those who already have the most power to control territory and distribution: the jihadis. Direct Western intervention with troops could certainly win the war and allow the West to choose the new regime, at least in the immediate sense, but this course of action is fraught with its own series of complications, especially the fact that most of the aforementioned political groups oppose Western troops entering Syria. Most importantly, however, no amount of arms or funds, or even direct intervention, can rectify the weak and fractured nature of the exiled political leadership itself –and a political alternative is needed to exclude the jihadis from power.
The flailing and non-co-operation of Syria’s self-proclaimed political leaders empowers the armed brigades inside Syria, and especially so the jihadis, who draw their arms from their rich Gulf Arab backers, not from the flailing councils, who are now not even the sole conduit for what little Western non-lethal aid is available. If the war continues its current course, and al-Assad falls to his internal military opponents, the most powerful of these armed brigades will dominate the new Syria –and that means a very large slice for the violent jihadis. That means significant power and resources for the jihadis to put to use everywhere else they wish to spread conflict.
What can be done?
All of these factors indicate that, if al-Assad falls or retreats with his forces to an Alawite-majority rump state on the coast, the contest for who will control newly “liberated” areas of Syria will be won by the jihadis, not the SNC or National Coalition, just as the Army of the Frontiers won control in Algeria.
It is possible that foreign intervention could change this internal equation, but it would depend highly on the form that intervention takes. The simple enforcement of a “no fly zone” against regime air power, or the creation of safe “humanitarian corridors” to ensure safe movement of refugees (and implicitly also of rebel forces), would do little to truly change the outcome. These actions would only amplify the on-going military trends without shifting the balance between the different armed wings of the opposition. The provision of “lethal” aid (meaning weapons) by the West to their preferred armed groups could help them win greater success and prominence on the battlefield, but potentially these weapons could simply end up flowing to those who already have the most power to control territory and distribution: the jihadis. Direct Western intervention with troops could certainly win the war and allow the West to choose the new regime, at least in the immediate sense, but this course of action is fraught with its own series of complications, especially the fact that most of the aforementioned political groups oppose Western troops entering Syria. Most importantly, however, no amount of arms or funds, or even direct intervention, can rectify the weak and fractured nature of the exiled political leadership itself –and a political alternative is needed to exclude the jihadis from power.
The flailing and non-co-operation of Syria’s self-proclaimed political leaders empowers the armed brigades inside Syria, and especially so the jihadis, who draw their arms from their rich Gulf Arab backers, not from the flailing councils, who are now not even the sole conduit for what little Western non-lethal aid is available. If the war continues its current course, and al-Assad falls to his internal military opponents, the most powerful of these armed brigades will dominate the new Syria –and that means a very large slice for the violent jihadis. That means significant power and resources for the jihadis to put to use everywhere else they wish to spread conflict.
In Part
3: Syria’s jihadis and the wider world.
Sunday, 5 May 2013
Featured News: Car bomb hits Qatari delegation in Mogadishu -7 killed
Sponsoring jihadis in a foreign conflict may or may not help the sponsor government's chosen side win the war, but historically there has always been one certainty: blowback. Jihadis have never failed to eventually turn on their sponsors, if they get the chance.
Qatar isn't funding jihadis in Somalia (to anyone's knowledge) -but they are likely funding militants linked to al Qaeda either directly or indirectly in Syria.
The fact that al Qaeda-linked militants bombed a military convoy carrying a Qatari delegation in Mogadishu this morning should give the Qataris pause about their strategy in Syria.
Qatar isn't funding jihadis in Somalia (to anyone's knowledge) -but they are likely funding militants linked to al Qaeda either directly or indirectly in Syria.
The fact that al Qaeda-linked militants bombed a military convoy carrying a Qatari delegation in Mogadishu this morning should give the Qataris pause about their strategy in Syria.
Syria’s coming Jihadi Ascendancy? Part One: The Government, the Opposition, and the Jihadis
Summary:
jihadis linked to al-Qaeda already
account for at least a quarter of all Syrian rebel fighters, and they are on a
collision course with the non-jihadi opposition,
especially its political leaders in exile.
So far, the only groups that are winning in Syria’s civil war are the violent jihadis.
Jihadi fighters in Syria have punched above their weight in military terms since the early days of the civil war -however, they may come to play an even more significant role in determining the political outcome of the conflict. Their ever-growing power on the internal military front of the war against the al-Assad regime is setting the Syrian opposition up for a struggle between its internal military wing(s), and its external political wing, the Syrian National Council (SNC). Most worryingly, this struggle could follow the path of the similar internal-external clash in newly-independent Algeria, which ended with the ascendancy of those who fought in the trenches, not the politicians who built international alliances in exile.
The Choice
Until early April this year, the Syrian opposition's political leaders abroad faced a choice: should they attempt to integrate the jihadi fighting brigades inside Syria into their political structure and give them a role in a post al-Assad government, or should they do their best to exclude and isolate them? What made this choice difficult was that the most prominent jihadi group was also the most aggressive and successful arm of the rebel forces: the al-Nusra Front (جبهة النصرة لأهل الشام). A salafi group, many of al-Nusra’s members previously fought against under the banner of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi’s al Qaeda in Iraq (AQI) against US forces. The al-Nusra Front formed in Syria between late 2011 and early 2012, when it was joined by several leading militants from Palestinian and Lebanese-Palestinian jihadi groups. It now likely accounts for up to a quarter of all opposition fighters inside Syria, and its popularity continues to grow as it both wins victories and provides services to the civilian population.
The al-Nusra Front has
carried out a string of highly successful bombings (including suicide bombings)
against Syrian government and security forces targets, and has been at the
forefront of the “Battle of Aleppo” alongside the Free Syrian Army (FSA) and
other Islamist and jihadi forces
attempting to capture the city. Other rebels in Aleppo have described
al-Nusra’s fighters as “like special forces”. Its arms and training are widely
considered to be the best amongst the opposition. While the exact origin of its
funding is unclear, it appears to be flush with weapons and money. Generous
Gulf Arab (especially Qatari) aid to Islamist (especially salafi) opposition
fighters is seen as the likely source. This further compounds al-Nusra’s
ability to recruit, as its sponsors furnish it with weapons, whereas rebels
backed by the West receive only “non-lethal” supplies.
Conversely, however, the al-Nusra Front was viewed with deep suspicion by the SNC’s Western allies, due to its history of atrocities (including bombing attacks against civilian targets, the mass execution of captured government soldiers, and the murder of a pro-government Syrian journalist) and its suspected links to international jihadi terrorist organisations. The political exterior faced the choice of marginalizing its own importance in the interior by severing its links with the actual rising power in the warzone, or of trying to build relations with them at the cost of their alliances with Western democracies.
Al-Nusra's Bad Company
This choice was removed earlier this month, when the leader of the Islamic State of Iraq (دولة العراق الإسلامية) -an umbrella organisation of violent jihadi groups largely created out of the former al Qaeda in Iraq (AQI) –announced that it was merging with the al-Nusra Front to form a new organisation: the "Islamic State of Iraq and Al-Sham." Although Abu Golani, the leader of al-Nusra, announced the next day that their relationship constituted an alliance, not a merger, the crucial aspect was established: Syria’s pre-eminent fighting group was being supported with funds and recruits by al Qaeda.
For the SNC, or the FSA, to link itself in any formal way with what was now essentially a branch of al Qaeda would be to destroy its international legitimacy and bring ostracism on itself from Washington to Ankara. For its part, a merger or alliance with al Qaeda shows that the al-Nusra Front is entirely unconcerned with building the kind of international alliances that the SNC desires. These two wings of the Syrian opposition have thus chosen two irreconcilable paths. Indeed, in future we will become less likely to speak of the "Syrian opposition" as a singular entity, and more and more come to speak of a divide between jihadi and non-jihadi opposition groups in Syria, if not a greater plurality of competing groups altogether.
Conversely, however, the al-Nusra Front was viewed with deep suspicion by the SNC’s Western allies, due to its history of atrocities (including bombing attacks against civilian targets, the mass execution of captured government soldiers, and the murder of a pro-government Syrian journalist) and its suspected links to international jihadi terrorist organisations. The political exterior faced the choice of marginalizing its own importance in the interior by severing its links with the actual rising power in the warzone, or of trying to build relations with them at the cost of their alliances with Western democracies.
Al-Nusra's Bad Company
This choice was removed earlier this month, when the leader of the Islamic State of Iraq (دولة العراق الإسلامية) -an umbrella organisation of violent jihadi groups largely created out of the former al Qaeda in Iraq (AQI) –announced that it was merging with the al-Nusra Front to form a new organisation: the "Islamic State of Iraq and Al-Sham." Although Abu Golani, the leader of al-Nusra, announced the next day that their relationship constituted an alliance, not a merger, the crucial aspect was established: Syria’s pre-eminent fighting group was being supported with funds and recruits by al Qaeda.
For the SNC, or the FSA, to link itself in any formal way with what was now essentially a branch of al Qaeda would be to destroy its international legitimacy and bring ostracism on itself from Washington to Ankara. For its part, a merger or alliance with al Qaeda shows that the al-Nusra Front is entirely unconcerned with building the kind of international alliances that the SNC desires. These two wings of the Syrian opposition have thus chosen two irreconcilable paths. Indeed, in future we will become less likely to speak of the "Syrian opposition" as a singular entity, and more and more come to speak of a divide between jihadi and non-jihadi opposition groups in Syria, if not a greater plurality of competing groups altogether.
The Ties that Bind
A vicious anti-Shia outlook is a uniting factor for these and many smaller jihadi groups. In an al-Nusra video posted online, a crowd of bearded men stand behind a little boy who, while slitting the air with a knife, sings “Just wait Alawites. We will come to slaughter you." The Alawites are a Shia offshoot which counts around ten per cent of the population (including President Bashar al-Assad himself) among its members, and from which al-Assad draws many prominent officials in his regime and most members of the of pro-government shabiha (الشبيحة) militias (another fifteen per cent of Syria’s population are Christians, other Shias and Druze, and the rest are Sunnis).
In Ahrar al-Sham’s first broadcast, they described the al-Assad regime as part of a “Safavi” (Iranian) plot to spread Shia Islam and establish a Shia state extending from Iran to Lebanon and Palestine. In December of 2012 there appear to have been instances of Shia mosques being burned by rebel forces. In May this year Islamist fighters associated with the FSA posted pictures online of their “exhumation” and secret reburial of a companion of the Prophet Mohammed entombed in the town of Adra, because this “Shiite shrine” had “become a centre of polytheism”. The accusation of “polytheism” against Shias is a staple of (Sunni) jihadis. Jihadi terrorism against Shia targets in Syria predates the current civil war; in September 2008, a Damascus car bombing killed seventeen near a prominent Shia shrine. Another explosion in the same neighbourhood in December 2009 may also have been a bombing. This kind of sectarianism gives the more hard-line Islamists and jihadis a unifying cause, and puts these groups (even those within the FSA) at odds with non-sectarian and secular members of the opposition.
However jihadi sectarian violence has not just been directed against Shias; following a pattern seen in many other conflicts involving salafi jihadis, other Sunni Muslims of the “wrong” school or persuasion, and other religious minorities, have been targeted. Most notably, the leading (though not uncritical) pro-regime Sunni cleric and over forty other worshippers were killed in March when a prominent Sunni mosque in Damascus was targeted by a suicide bomber during a sermon. In February, following animosity between the United Courts Council (which is linked to the SNC) and sharia courts backed by al-Nusra, fighters belonging to the latter stormed a United Courts Council courthouse in Aleppo, where they assaulted and kidnapped scholars and judges.
Attacks against Christians by anti-government protesters began in mid-2011, and in Homs especially even Islamist fighters associated with the FSA have been implicated in the ethnic cleansing of Christians. Chechen fighters suspected of being linked with the al-Nusra Front (and likely also the Brigade of Emigrants in Greater Syria) are believed to have kidnapped two Syrian bishops in late April. Kidnapping, either for ransom or execution, is a well-established jihadi tactic. Shared sympathy for all these kinds of sectarian actions, as well as established co-operation on the battlefield, will make it difficult for the SNC or FSA to distance themselves from al-Nusra without alienating other jihadi groups and even more ‘moderate’ Islamist fighters within their own ranks. Such alienation would only foster an ever-closer jihadi alliance.
International Terrorism
Pressure from Western democracies to sever links with, and possibly even combat, such jihadi groups is likely to grow with time. This will be due to both horror at such attacks on civilians, and the possibility of Syrian jihadis (or foreigners trained by them) being linked to future terrorist attacks against Western targets. An indicative event occurred on April 29th this year, when two ground-to-air missiles were launched at a Russian passenger jet carrying around 160 travellers over Syria (en route from Egypt to Russia), which only survived destruction due to emergency manoeuvres. Although the identity of the attackers remains unconfirmed, barring a spectacularly risky "false flag" attack by the al-Assad regime (which would risk alienating its most powerful ally), it would seem that those responsible were certainly Syrian opposition fighters, and specifically jihadis judging by the fact that the target was both foreign and unquestionably civilian.
If similar attacks continue, and succeed, when it comes to Syria the designation of "terrorist" may well become synonymous with "rebel" in the minds of Europeans and Americans. Whether the bombings occur in Damascus, London, or over the skies of the Middle East, the SNC and FSA may find Western democracies demanding that jihadis be excluded from their areas of control in order for equipment and funds to continue flowing.
From now on, when speaking of the Syrian civil war, it will increasingly make sense to refer to three mutually opposed sides: the al-Assad regime, the Western-backed opposition, and the jihadis.
In
Part Two: the lessons France’s war in Algeria holds for the future of Syria’s jihadis.
Thursday, 15 March 2012
Featured News: African Jihadi Bombs more Sophisticated and more Deadly in 2011
There's a reason so much of the Sharaabtoon has been buzzing about Africa so far this year. Now, the Pentagon's anti-IED (Improvised Explosive Device) has confirmed that al Qaeda-linked groups in their attacks in Somalia (al Shabaab), Nigeria (Boko Haram) and Kenya (probably al Shabaab again) are using more sophisticated devices to kill more people with each explosion.
Nigeria saw a nearly fourfold jump in the number of improvised explosive device incidents last year, while Kenya saw an 86 percent increase, according to the unit.
Read more:
http://news.yahoo.com/somalia-kenya-nigeria-bombings-deadlier-2011-095653687.html;_ylt=AiBjAZgWMsZqSyq5qf7e7c9vaA8F;_ylu=X3oDMTNldWgxdGNxBG1pdAMEcGtnA2QzYzFlZmRkLWUwZDUtMzliNi05YmU1LTU3NjU3MmQxNmIzMgRwb3MDMQRzZWMDbG5fQWZyaWNhX2dhbAR2ZXIDZDljMjAxMDAtNmU5OC0xMWUxLWJlNGItYmEzZjhiNWU0NzRk;_ylv=3
Nigeria saw a nearly fourfold jump in the number of improvised explosive device incidents last year, while Kenya saw an 86 percent increase, according to the unit.
Read more:
http://news.yahoo.com/somalia-kenya-nigeria-bombings-deadlier-2011-095653687.html;_ylt=AiBjAZgWMsZqSyq5qf7e7c9vaA8F;_ylu=X3oDMTNldWgxdGNxBG1pdAMEcGtnA2QzYzFlZmRkLWUwZDUtMzliNi05YmU1LTU3NjU3MmQxNmIzMgRwb3MDMQRzZWMDbG5fQWZyaWNhX2dhbAR2ZXIDZDljMjAxMDAtNmU5OC0xMWUxLWJlNGItYmEzZjhiNWU0NzRk;_ylv=3
Labels:
Al Qaeda,
East Africa,
Featured News,
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Nigeria,
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Monday, 12 March 2012
The Decline, but not Fall, of al Qaeda
Unlike Jacob Marley in "A Christmas Carol", it would be wrong to begin by claiming al Qaeda is dead. Al Qaeda is most certainly not dead. The world's most famous violent jihadi organisation has certainly declined and lost the effective ability to conduct the kind of headline-grabbing attacks against targets in the West which made it famous, but it has responded to this by changing and adapting its strategies and tactics. Al Qaeda is moving towards a franchise model, merging and allying itself with local actors involved in local conflicts wherever it can around the globe. "Al Qaeda international", however, is badly damaged. So where is al Qaeda declining and where is it ascending?
South East Asia: in decline
Al Qaeda long sponsored the Jemaah Islamiyah (الجماعة الإسلامية) ("Islamic Congregation") terrorist organisation in South East Asia, and essentially treated it as its regional operator, lending funding and operational support in the early 2000's. It was this organisation which perpetrated the 2002 Bali nightclub bombings, and it was once an actor of considerable capabilities. However relentless security crackdowns by the Indonesian government have decimated its ranks and largely left Jemaah Islamiyah cut off from al Qaeda internationally. This is well illustrated by the almost farcical story of the frustrated attempts by Jemaah Islamiyah's master bomb maker to re-establish ties with jihadis in Afghanistan and Pakistan in 2011. Even though he travelled to Abbotabad (Pakistan) during this time, it seems he had no idea Bin Laden was there, and he largely failed even to secure meetings with senior violent jihadis in either country, forced instead to resort to emailing years-old contacts he had never actually met in person. After a few frustrated months he was captured by Pakistani security forces.
None of this is to suggest that violent jihadism itself is defeated in Indonesia and the Philippines. Jemaah Islamiyah is damaged but still dangerous, and many smaller jihadi networks with non connection to al Qaeda internationally are sprouting up and capable of carrying out attacks. However al Qaeda's links to violent jihadism in this region have declined to being negligible, and so in this area al Qaeda has experienced a definite decline -even a death of sorts, albeit a local one.
Afghanistan: in decline
Although NATO forces in Afghanistan continue to struggle against the Taliban insurgency there, they have largely succeeded in their mission of disrupting and destroying al Qaeda's networks and operations in the country. According to the Department of Defense, the last known killing of an al Qaeda fighter by Coalition forces was in April 2011, and the last capture of one was in May. This points essentially to a depletion of al Qaeda's forces in Afghanistan, and its cessation of existing as a separate organisation. Any al Qaeda fighters which remain in Afghanistan at this point have most likely been absorbed into the Taliban's forces and have stopped having any connections or contacts with al Qaeda's international leadership. Many more have been killed or fled. Here again al Qaeda seems to have slowly disappeared as force, although the Taliban insurgency has only grown.
Bin Laden: in decline long before his death
A retired Pakistani Brigadier General with access to the ISI (Inter-Services Intelligence Directorate) agents who interrogated Bin Laden's wives has recently claimed that al Qaeda decided to retire Bin Laden back in 2003, as he was going mentally senile and had been degenerating into "fantasies" since late 2001. This seems to correspond with the will purportedly written by Bin Laden soon after 9/11 in which he urges his childrenot to pursue an education and peace in the West rather than carrying on jihad, and the awkward un-released video messages taped by Bin Laden which were also found. The allegation is that Ayman al-Zawahiri, now the leader of al Qaeda and long considered the brains behind the organisation, was the one who decided to sideline Bin Laden. al-Zawahiri may even have dispatched Bin Laden's older Saudi wife Khairia to Abbotabad in March 2011 (the first time she had seen Bin Laden since 2001) to act as bait for US intelligence, leading them to Bin Laden. In the end, the US found Bin Laden through a courier, but intercepted phonecalls from Khairia may have helped confirm that he really was in that compound in Abbotabad.
Much of this cannot be confirmed yet, but if true it seems that Bin Laden himself may well have declined faster than his international organisation did. His final killing at the hands of US forces may well have have been the death of a sidelined, senile old man rather than the terrorist mastermind he was in his prime.
Al Qaeda's leadership: in decline
If you were a member of the leadership of al Qaeda's international branch two years ago, chances are that right now you are either dead or on the run from drone strikes, complaining about how cash-strapped you are. If there really was a physical sharaabtoon for jihadis, you would be the sad, nervous-looking guy at the bar trying to drown his sorrows with the one drink he's been nursing for hours. Two-thirds of al Qaeda's senior figures at the time of 9/11 had been captured or killed as early as 2004, and the last year has seen US drone strikes regularly killing senior members, devastating the organisation's leadership. And off course there was the death of the man who was at least al Qaeda's figurehead, Bin Laden. The organisation now seems to be beset with internal divisions and rivalries as what is left of the leadership tries to re-assert itself, but with different individuals vying for control.
What this means is that al Qaeda's international organisation has extremely limited operational capacity for launching the sort of large-scale attacks it once did. For this reason, a new strategy seems to be emerging; one of merging al Qaeda with other local violent jihadi organisations, with both parties trying to draw legitimacy and support from the other.
Yemen: in the ascent
The multiple conflicts now raging in Yemen make the news in the West far less than those in Libya and Syria did or do, however it is only in Yemen that al Qaeda (so far) is playing a major role, and is growing stronger. With the deterioration of central authority throughout the country due to the year-long struggle to oust President Saleh (who stepped down persobally last month but whose regime remains largely in place), al Qaeda has been able to actually capture and hold territory in its own right in Yemen. Al Qaeda seized the southern towns of Jaar and Zinjibar in April and May 2011, and has fended off multiple government attempts to retake them. In February an al-Qaeda linked group killed at least 26 people with a suicide attack within hours of the new President being sworn in. Earlier in March, in a brazen cross-desert attack al Qaeda fighters killed nearly 200 government troops, subsequently beheading some of them and dumping their bodies in the desert near Zinjibar. Government troops across the country are said to be fearful of further al Qaeda attacks and suffering from intensely low morale. The soldiers killed are believed to have been poorly equipped (like much of the military), so there remains the possibility that the government could enjoy greater successes against al Qaeda if it were to deploy more of its better-trained and armed specialized anti-terrorist units to the front, and the US has enjoyed some successes with drone strikes in killing senior al Qaeda leaders in Yemen, particularly that of US-born Anwar al-Awlaki in September last year. However the Yemeni government also faces other tribal, religious and separatist insurgencies, and so its divided attention may continue to allow al Qaeda to flourish here.
Somalia: in the ascent
Al Shabaab may be having mixed fortunes as of late, facing several military setbacks at the hands of African Union troops, but al Qaeda's February merger with al Shabaab was an unquestionable boon for both organisations. Al Shabaab gets access to al Qaeda's name recognition, plus whatever foreign fighters and operational support it can still muster, and al Qaeda through al Shabaab can bolster its own claims to continued relevance and power in East Africa. This connection is especially useful as through it al Qaeda can facilitate links and connections between jihadis across the region, such as the "exchange programme" of fighters between Somalia and Yemen which has been observed recently. This Yemeni connection and the al Shabaab merger actually places al Qaeda in a position of strength and a position to grow in East Africa, at least verses some of its more dismally-performing regions.
North Africa and the Sahara: in the ascent
There's been a lot written in Sharaabtoon lately about jihadism in this region, and not all of it involves al Qaeda -at least, not yet. Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) is alive and active, and continues to perpetrate attacks on security services and kidnappings in the Sahara and North Africa, particularly in Algeria. The end of the Libyan civil war has caused the region to be flooded with the loot of Gaddafi's former arsenals, fuelling conflict and greatly easing the process of acquiring small arms and heavy weaponry for all, including violent jihadis. Already we see some evidence for AQIM attempting to escalate its attacks in the region, and local forces such as Boko Haram (which may already have limited al Qaeda links) may well attempt to integrate further with AQIM, al Qaeda international (such as it exists) or other al Qaeda-aligned organisations in the region (such as al Shabaab) in order to increase their ability to carry out complex and large-scale attacks. Al Qaeda has not yet grown strong in this region, but the potential for it do so is dangerously large.
South East Asia: in decline
Al Qaeda long sponsored the Jemaah Islamiyah (الجماعة الإسلامية) ("Islamic Congregation") terrorist organisation in South East Asia, and essentially treated it as its regional operator, lending funding and operational support in the early 2000's. It was this organisation which perpetrated the 2002 Bali nightclub bombings, and it was once an actor of considerable capabilities. However relentless security crackdowns by the Indonesian government have decimated its ranks and largely left Jemaah Islamiyah cut off from al Qaeda internationally. This is well illustrated by the almost farcical story of the frustrated attempts by Jemaah Islamiyah's master bomb maker to re-establish ties with jihadis in Afghanistan and Pakistan in 2011. Even though he travelled to Abbotabad (Pakistan) during this time, it seems he had no idea Bin Laden was there, and he largely failed even to secure meetings with senior violent jihadis in either country, forced instead to resort to emailing years-old contacts he had never actually met in person. After a few frustrated months he was captured by Pakistani security forces.
None of this is to suggest that violent jihadism itself is defeated in Indonesia and the Philippines. Jemaah Islamiyah is damaged but still dangerous, and many smaller jihadi networks with non connection to al Qaeda internationally are sprouting up and capable of carrying out attacks. However al Qaeda's links to violent jihadism in this region have declined to being negligible, and so in this area al Qaeda has experienced a definite decline -even a death of sorts, albeit a local one.
Afghanistan: in decline
Although NATO forces in Afghanistan continue to struggle against the Taliban insurgency there, they have largely succeeded in their mission of disrupting and destroying al Qaeda's networks and operations in the country. According to the Department of Defense, the last known killing of an al Qaeda fighter by Coalition forces was in April 2011, and the last capture of one was in May. This points essentially to a depletion of al Qaeda's forces in Afghanistan, and its cessation of existing as a separate organisation. Any al Qaeda fighters which remain in Afghanistan at this point have most likely been absorbed into the Taliban's forces and have stopped having any connections or contacts with al Qaeda's international leadership. Many more have been killed or fled. Here again al Qaeda seems to have slowly disappeared as force, although the Taliban insurgency has only grown.
Bin Laden: in decline long before his death
A retired Pakistani Brigadier General with access to the ISI (Inter-Services Intelligence Directorate) agents who interrogated Bin Laden's wives has recently claimed that al Qaeda decided to retire Bin Laden back in 2003, as he was going mentally senile and had been degenerating into "fantasies" since late 2001. This seems to correspond with the will purportedly written by Bin Laden soon after 9/11 in which he urges his childrenot to pursue an education and peace in the West rather than carrying on jihad, and the awkward un-released video messages taped by Bin Laden which were also found. The allegation is that Ayman al-Zawahiri, now the leader of al Qaeda and long considered the brains behind the organisation, was the one who decided to sideline Bin Laden. al-Zawahiri may even have dispatched Bin Laden's older Saudi wife Khairia to Abbotabad in March 2011 (the first time she had seen Bin Laden since 2001) to act as bait for US intelligence, leading them to Bin Laden. In the end, the US found Bin Laden through a courier, but intercepted phonecalls from Khairia may have helped confirm that he really was in that compound in Abbotabad.
Much of this cannot be confirmed yet, but if true it seems that Bin Laden himself may well have declined faster than his international organisation did. His final killing at the hands of US forces may well have have been the death of a sidelined, senile old man rather than the terrorist mastermind he was in his prime.
Al Qaeda's leadership: in decline
If you were a member of the leadership of al Qaeda's international branch two years ago, chances are that right now you are either dead or on the run from drone strikes, complaining about how cash-strapped you are. If there really was a physical sharaabtoon for jihadis, you would be the sad, nervous-looking guy at the bar trying to drown his sorrows with the one drink he's been nursing for hours. Two-thirds of al Qaeda's senior figures at the time of 9/11 had been captured or killed as early as 2004, and the last year has seen US drone strikes regularly killing senior members, devastating the organisation's leadership. And off course there was the death of the man who was at least al Qaeda's figurehead, Bin Laden. The organisation now seems to be beset with internal divisions and rivalries as what is left of the leadership tries to re-assert itself, but with different individuals vying for control.
What this means is that al Qaeda's international organisation has extremely limited operational capacity for launching the sort of large-scale attacks it once did. For this reason, a new strategy seems to be emerging; one of merging al Qaeda with other local violent jihadi organisations, with both parties trying to draw legitimacy and support from the other.
Yemen: in the ascent
The multiple conflicts now raging in Yemen make the news in the West far less than those in Libya and Syria did or do, however it is only in Yemen that al Qaeda (so far) is playing a major role, and is growing stronger. With the deterioration of central authority throughout the country due to the year-long struggle to oust President Saleh (who stepped down persobally last month but whose regime remains largely in place), al Qaeda has been able to actually capture and hold territory in its own right in Yemen. Al Qaeda seized the southern towns of Jaar and Zinjibar in April and May 2011, and has fended off multiple government attempts to retake them. In February an al-Qaeda linked group killed at least 26 people with a suicide attack within hours of the new President being sworn in. Earlier in March, in a brazen cross-desert attack al Qaeda fighters killed nearly 200 government troops, subsequently beheading some of them and dumping their bodies in the desert near Zinjibar. Government troops across the country are said to be fearful of further al Qaeda attacks and suffering from intensely low morale. The soldiers killed are believed to have been poorly equipped (like much of the military), so there remains the possibility that the government could enjoy greater successes against al Qaeda if it were to deploy more of its better-trained and armed specialized anti-terrorist units to the front, and the US has enjoyed some successes with drone strikes in killing senior al Qaeda leaders in Yemen, particularly that of US-born Anwar al-Awlaki in September last year. However the Yemeni government also faces other tribal, religious and separatist insurgencies, and so its divided attention may continue to allow al Qaeda to flourish here.
Somalia: in the ascent
Al Shabaab may be having mixed fortunes as of late, facing several military setbacks at the hands of African Union troops, but al Qaeda's February merger with al Shabaab was an unquestionable boon for both organisations. Al Shabaab gets access to al Qaeda's name recognition, plus whatever foreign fighters and operational support it can still muster, and al Qaeda through al Shabaab can bolster its own claims to continued relevance and power in East Africa. This connection is especially useful as through it al Qaeda can facilitate links and connections between jihadis across the region, such as the "exchange programme" of fighters between Somalia and Yemen which has been observed recently. This Yemeni connection and the al Shabaab merger actually places al Qaeda in a position of strength and a position to grow in East Africa, at least verses some of its more dismally-performing regions.
North Africa and the Sahara: in the ascent
There's been a lot written in Sharaabtoon lately about jihadism in this region, and not all of it involves al Qaeda -at least, not yet. Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) is alive and active, and continues to perpetrate attacks on security services and kidnappings in the Sahara and North Africa, particularly in Algeria. The end of the Libyan civil war has caused the region to be flooded with the loot of Gaddafi's former arsenals, fuelling conflict and greatly easing the process of acquiring small arms and heavy weaponry for all, including violent jihadis. Already we see some evidence for AQIM attempting to escalate its attacks in the region, and local forces such as Boko Haram (which may already have limited al Qaeda links) may well attempt to integrate further with AQIM, al Qaeda international (such as it exists) or other al Qaeda-aligned organisations in the region (such as al Shabaab) in order to increase their ability to carry out complex and large-scale attacks. Al Qaeda has not yet grown strong in this region, but the potential for it do so is dangerously large.
Al Qaeda in Iraq: declined, but may rebound?
There are almost daily bombings and shootings in Iraq, usually targeted at security forces or of a sectarian nature (against Shia Muslims), many of them carried out by al Qaeda linked fighters, who in the past three months are estimated to have killed around 250 people in attacks. What should be remembered, however, is that this is actually a huge improvement for Iraq. Even with the US troop withdrawal there has been no return to the full-scale sectarian slaughter of 2006-2007 in which thousands of Iraqis died, and since 2008 al Qaeda has no longer controlled any towns or significant areas of territory, which it once did openly. Indeed, the old al Qaeda in Iraq (AQI) organisation no longer exists as a separate entity, but instead joined with several other violent jihadi groups in late 2006 to form the Islamic State of Iraq (دولة العراق الإسلامية) organisation, under whose umbrella it now claims its attacks. The decline of both groups s closely linked to disenchantment with such violent jihadis' due to their relentless sectarian violence in the mid 2000's and their brutality even to their Sunni co-religionists, a resentment best known for leading to the "Anbar Awakening" of Sunni Arab tribes turning against al Qaeda. This alienation of most of the Iraqi population (which inn any case has a Shia majority) makes any return to the kind of power and control al Qaeda enjoyed in the mid-2000's unlikely, and its ranks are now thought to be largely filled by foreign fighters. In spite of this, the Islamic State of Iraq seems to have little connection to al Qaeda international.
Al Qaeda's real rebound potential in Iraq, however, comes from the dynamics of the conflict in neighbouring Syria. There, a largely Sunni insurgency is locked in bloody conflict with a regime dominated by Alawis (an offshoot of Shia Islam). Al Qaeda will use the narrative of a government of Shia "apostates" slaughtering Sunni Muslims to try to drive the sectarian conflict in Iraq, and by extension assert its own continued relevance and to entice recruits. Al Qaeda international has already declared its support for the anti-government rebels in Syria. If the Assad regime in Syria does fall, al Qaeda will be a major player and beneficiary in the ensuing chaos and (no doubt) sectarian reprisals.
Overall
Al Qaeda is not dead. Al Qaeda international has declined, and its regional organisations have essentially disappeared from some localities, but in other areas it is experiencing real growth and power, and has the potential to expand in others. Al Qaeda is unlikely to ever regain its lost power as an organisation which could seemingly strike anywhere in the world, and whatever growth it does see in the future will be along its adopted franchise model, and heavily tied up in local conflicts and with alliances (and mergers) with local jihadis.
Like Marley, even al Qaeda's ghost still seems to have the power to affect the world, even if it must primarily do so by working through others.
There are almost daily bombings and shootings in Iraq, usually targeted at security forces or of a sectarian nature (against Shia Muslims), many of them carried out by al Qaeda linked fighters, who in the past three months are estimated to have killed around 250 people in attacks. What should be remembered, however, is that this is actually a huge improvement for Iraq. Even with the US troop withdrawal there has been no return to the full-scale sectarian slaughter of 2006-2007 in which thousands of Iraqis died, and since 2008 al Qaeda has no longer controlled any towns or significant areas of territory, which it once did openly. Indeed, the old al Qaeda in Iraq (AQI) organisation no longer exists as a separate entity, but instead joined with several other violent jihadi groups in late 2006 to form the Islamic State of Iraq (دولة العراق الإسلامية) organisation, under whose umbrella it now claims its attacks. The decline of both groups s closely linked to disenchantment with such violent jihadis' due to their relentless sectarian violence in the mid 2000's and their brutality even to their Sunni co-religionists, a resentment best known for leading to the "Anbar Awakening" of Sunni Arab tribes turning against al Qaeda. This alienation of most of the Iraqi population (which inn any case has a Shia majority) makes any return to the kind of power and control al Qaeda enjoyed in the mid-2000's unlikely, and its ranks are now thought to be largely filled by foreign fighters. In spite of this, the Islamic State of Iraq seems to have little connection to al Qaeda international.
Al Qaeda's real rebound potential in Iraq, however, comes from the dynamics of the conflict in neighbouring Syria. There, a largely Sunni insurgency is locked in bloody conflict with a regime dominated by Alawis (an offshoot of Shia Islam). Al Qaeda will use the narrative of a government of Shia "apostates" slaughtering Sunni Muslims to try to drive the sectarian conflict in Iraq, and by extension assert its own continued relevance and to entice recruits. Al Qaeda international has already declared its support for the anti-government rebels in Syria. If the Assad regime in Syria does fall, al Qaeda will be a major player and beneficiary in the ensuing chaos and (no doubt) sectarian reprisals.
Overall
Al Qaeda is not dead. Al Qaeda international has declined, and its regional organisations have essentially disappeared from some localities, but in other areas it is experiencing real growth and power, and has the potential to expand in others. Al Qaeda is unlikely to ever regain its lost power as an organisation which could seemingly strike anywhere in the world, and whatever growth it does see in the future will be along its adopted franchise model, and heavily tied up in local conflicts and with alliances (and mergers) with local jihadis.
Like Marley, even al Qaeda's ghost still seems to have the power to affect the world, even if it must primarily do so by working through others.
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