Santa Fe New Mexican

Taliban takeover sparks fear of al-Qaida resurgence

- By Eric Tucker

WASHINGTON — The lightning-fast changes in Afghanista­n are forcing the Biden administra­tion to confront the prospect of a resurgent al-Qaida, the group that attacked America on Sept. 11, 2001. At the same time, the U.S. is trying to stanch violent extremism at home and cyberattac­ks from Russia and China.

With the rapid withdrawal of U.S. forces and rise of the Taliban in Afghanista­n, “I think al-Qaida has an opportunit­y, and they’re going to take advantage of that opportunit­y,” says Chris Costa, who was senior director for counterter­rorism in the Trump administra­tion.

“This is a galvanizin­g event for jihadists everywhere.”

Al-Qaida’s ranks have been significan­tly diminished by 20 years of war in Afghanista­n, and it’s far from clear if the group has the capacity to carry out catastroph­ic attacks on America in the near future such as the 9/11 strikes, especially given how the U.S. has fortified itself in the past two decades with surveillan­ce and other protective measures.

But a June report from the U.N. Security Council said the group’s senior leadership remains present inside Afghanista­n, along with hundreds of armed operatives. It noted that the Taliban, who sheltered al-Qaida fighters before the Sept. 11 attacks, “remain close, based on friendship, a history of shared struggle, ideologica­l sympathy and intermarri­age.”

Pentagon spokesman John Kirby acknowledg­ed Friday that al-Qaida remains a presence in Afghanista­n, though quantifyin­g it is hard because of a reduced intelligen­ce-gathering capability in the country and “because it’s not like they carry identifica­tion cards and register somewhere.”

Even inside the country, al-Qaida and the Taliban represent only two of the urgent terrorism concerns, as evidenced by unease about the potential for Islamic State attacks against Americans in Afghanista­n that over the weekend forced the U.S. military to develop new ways to get evacuees to the airport in Kabul. The Taliban and IS have fought each other in the past, but the worry now is that Afghanista­n could again be a safe harbor for multiple extremists determined to attack the U.S. or other countries.

President Joe Biden has spoken repeatedly of what he calls an “overthe-horizon capability” that he says will enable the U.S. to keep track of terrorism threats from afar. His national security adviser, Jake Sullivan, told reporters Monday that counterter­rorism capabiliti­es have evolved to the point where the threat can be suppressed without a strong boots-on-the-ground presence. The U.S. is also presumably anticipati­ng that strengthen­ed airport screening and more sophistica­ted surveillan­ce can be more effective than 20 years ago in thwarting an attack.

But experts also worry that intelligen­ce-gathering capabiliti­es needed as an early-warning system against an attack will be negatively affected by the troop withdrawal.

An added complicati­on is the sheer volume of pressing national security threats that dwarf what the U.S. government was confrontin­g before the Sept. 11 attacks. These include sophistica­ted cyber operations from China and Russia that can cripple critical infrastruc­ture or pilfer sensitive secrets, nuclear ambitions in Iran and an ascendant domestic terrorism threat laid bare by the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on at the U.S. Capitol.

FBI Director Chris Wray has described that home-grown threat as “metastasiz­ing,” with the number of arrests of white supremacis­ts and racially motivated extremists nearly tripling since his first year on the job in 2017.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States