Otago Daily Times

Bid to destroy al Qaeda has had opposite effect

Seventeen years after September 11, al Qaeda may be stronger than ever, reports Nabih Bulos, of the Los Angeles Times.

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IN the days after September 11, 2001, the United States set out to destroy al Qaeda. President George W. Bush vowed to ‘‘starve terrorists of funding, turn them one against another, drive them from place to place, until there is no refuge or no rest’’.

Seventeen years later, al Qaeda may be stronger than ever. Far from vanquishin­g the extremist group and its associated ‘‘franchises’’, critics say, US policies in the Mideast appear to have encouraged its spread.

What US officials did not grasp, said SITE Intelligen­ce Group director Rita Katz, was that al Qaeda was more than a group of individual­s.

‘‘It’s an idea, and an idea cannot be destroyed using sophistica­ted weapons and killing leaders and bombing training camps,’’ she said.

The group has amassed the largest fighting force in its existence. Estimates say it may have more than 20,000 militants in Syria and Yemen alone. It boasts affiliates across North Africa, the Levant and parts of Asia, and it remains strong around the Afghanista­nPakistan border.

It has also changed tactics. Instead of the headlinegr­abbing terrorist attacks, brutal public executions and slick propaganda used by Islamic State (al Qaeda’s onetime affiliate and now rival), al Qaeda now practises a softer approach, embedding itself and gaining the support of Sunni Muslims inside wartorn countries.

Here is a look at how al Qaeda has grown in some key Middle Eastern countries:

Iraq

The United States went to war against Iraq in 2003, based in part on the assertion — later debunked — that al Qaeda had ties to dictator Saddam

Hussein.

That claim turned out to be a selffulfil­ling prophecy.

In victory, the US disbanded the Iraqi army, putting hundreds of thousands of disgruntle­d men with military training on the street. Many rose up against what was perceived as a foreign invasion, feeding an insurgency that has never stopped. The insurgency gave birth to al Qaeda in Iraq, a local affiliate that pioneered the use of terrorist attacks on Shi’ite Muslims, regarded as apostates by Sunni extremists.

In its 2007 ‘‘surge’’, the US, in concert with progovernm­ent Sunni militias, largely defeated al Qaeda in Iraq. But by 2010, the group was ‘‘fundamenta­lly the same’’ as it had been before the boost in troops, according to General Ray Odierno, the top US commander in Iraq at the time.

The 2011 uprisings in neighbouri­ng Syria gave the group the breathing space it needed. Two years later it emerged as Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, also known as IS, and split from al Qaeda’s central leadership.

It also launched an audacious offensive that saw large swathes of Iraq fall into the hands of the jihadists. Although IS has since lost most of its territory, it remains a threat.

Yemen

Al Qaeda was active in Yemen even before September 11: it orchestrat­ed the October 2000 bombing of the US destroyer Cole in the port of Aden. After the World Trade Centre twin tower attacks, Bush hailed Yemen’s then president, Ali Abdullah Saleh, as a vital partner in the USdeclared war on terrorism.

Saleh received what he called ‘‘limitless’’ US support to fight the jihadists. He in turn gave the US a free hand to conduct attacks against the group’s operatives, including controvers­ial drone strikes, which began in 2002.

But by January 2009, al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (known as AQAP) had emerged and was soon considered the group’s most dangerous branch.

President Barack Obama unleashed special forces teams to hunt down AQAP operatives. He also ramped up drone strikes, launching roughly 200 from 2009 to 2016, according to a report by the Bureau of Investigat­ive Journalism. President Donald Trump has launched 160.

But the strikes and raids often killed more civilians than militants.

In late 2014, Iranianbac­ked Shi’ite Muslim rebels known as Houthis swept in from the country’s northwest to seize the capital, Sanaa. Amid the resulting chaos, AQAP netted a prize: the city of Mukalla, with Yemen’s thirdlarge­st port. It became the centrepiec­e of an al Qaeda fiefdom.

As early as 2012, Nasser Wuhayshi, AQAP’s selfstyled ‘‘emir’’ and founder, had said the group needed to win people over by ‘‘taking care of their daily needs’’.

The group rebranded itself as Ansar al Sharia, or Supporters of Islamic Law, and slowly introduced al Qaeda’s harsh form of Islamic law and governance.

Under Trump, the US has largely continued Obama’s policies in Yemen. It has given full support to an air campaign led by Saudi Arabia against the Houthis, despite criticism the strikes have caused most of the 16,000 civilian casualties in Yemen since the war began.

But even as the US has continued to carry out airstrikes and raids against AQAP, the group has positioned itself as a virtual ally, battling the Houthis alongside tribal fighters supported by Saudi Arabia.

Somalia

The fall of Somalia’s Government in 1991 led to the rise of the Islamic Courts Union, a collection of clerical organisati­ons that formed a shariabase­d judiciary. It gained legitimacy by offering services such as education and health care.

Washington, suspecting links to al Qaeda, supported the group’s enemies, and enlisted the Ethiopian army to crush it, which it did in 2006. In the de facto occupation that followed, the Islamic Courts Union’s radical youth wing, alShabab, grew as an independen­t resistance movement that took over most of Somalia’s central and southern regions.

Despite its unpopular applicatio­n of fundamenta­list Wahhabi doctrine, residents tolerated alShabab because it fought the Ethiopians, who are mostly Christian and have a longstandi­ng enmity with Somalis.

In 2012, it was declared as the new al Qaeda affiliate. The change of status attracted a significan­t number of foreign fighters, including some from the US.

The Obama Administra­tion’s policy of drone strikes, along with support for African Union peacekeepi­ng forces, flushed alShabab out of the capital, Mogadishu, in 2011. It lost control of most of Somalia’s towns and cities.

And in September 2014, a US drone strike killed its leader, Ahmed Abdi Godane, also known as Mukhtar Abu Zubeyr.

But the group held sway in rural areas, where its estimated 4000 to 6000 militants make it one of al Qaeda’s largest franchises. They carry out guerrilla attacks on African Union forces and civilian targets and have launched attacks in others parts of East Africa, including the 2013 attack on the Westgate mall in Nairobi, Kenya.

Syria

On December 23, 2011, a car bomb struck a residentia­l neighbourh­ood of Damascus, Syria, that was home to the State Security Directorat­e.

The building was all but destroyed. Drivers unfortunat­e enough to be near the explosion were burned alive. A second car bomb detonated soon after. All told, 44 people were killed.

That attack marked the debut of the Nusra Front, al Qaeda’s branch in Syria.

The Syrian Government had once given the jihadis passage to Iraq to fight coalition forces there. With the civil war, many had now come to return the favour. Nusra’s battlehard­ened fighters delivered dazzling successes to the rebel coalition seeking to overthrow President Bashar Assad.

It was so effective that US officials, including former CIA director David Petraeus, suggested arming and deploying the al Qaeda jihadis to fight their former comrades in IS.

And despite its adherence to a strict Islamist code of behaviour and its imposition of shariah in areas it controlled, the group enjoyed popular support from civilians tired of dealing with rapacious opposition factions more interested in looting than fighting.

Yet here again, the affiliate did not declare a caliphate. Instead, it rebranded itself, publicly cutting ties with al Qaeda even while retaining some of the group’s top operatives.

The group, now known as the Organisati­on for the Liberation of Syria, is estimated to have 10,000 to 15,000 fighters, including foreigners from as far as Albania and China.

Libya

Officially, there is no al Qaeda group in Libya. Its affiliate, the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group, was disbanded in 2011. Its members renounced violence but distinguis­hed themselves as relatively discipline­d rebels once the revolution against Libyan strongman Moammar Gadhafi started.

Since then, some, such as former group leader AbdelHakim Belhaj, who fought with Osama bin Laden in

Afghanista­n and was renditione­d by the US after 2001, have become powerful Islamist leaders, with a significan­t role in Libya’s chaotic politics.

Others have gone over to IS’ Libyan branch or joined other Islamist groups, including a number that took over the Libyan capital, Tripoli.

But while the US, other Western nations and the United Arab Emirates have focused almost exclusivel­y on dislodging IS from its bastions in the north and northeast, al Qaeda has enjoyed a resurgence, according to an August report from the United Nations.

The group’s threat in Libya registered with the US only this year. In March, the Pentagon’s Africa Command said it had killed two al Qaeda militants in a drone strike, including what was said to be a highrankin­g official, Musa Abu Dawud.

It was the first such attack against the group in Libya.

More followed, including another in June, in what is thought to be an expanded counterter­rorism campaign in the country. — TCA

 ?? PHOTO: TNS ?? Menacing . . . An al Qaeda member in Aleppo, Syria.
PHOTO: TNS Menacing . . . An al Qaeda member in Aleppo, Syria.
 ?? PHOTO: WIKIMEDIA COMMONS ?? Potent symbol . . . A flag used by various al Qaeda factions to represent jihad.
PHOTO: WIKIMEDIA COMMONS Potent symbol . . . A flag used by various al Qaeda factions to represent jihad.

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