The Sentinel-Record

Officials: Core al- Qaida ‘ essentiall­y gone’

- KIMBERLY DOZIER

WASHINGTON — A year after the Navy SEAL raid that killed Osama bin Laden, the al- Qaida that carried out the Sept. 11 attacks is essentiall­y gone but its affiliates remain a threat to America, U. S. counterter­rorist officials say.

Core al- Qaida’s new leader, Ayman al- Zawahri, still aspires to attack the U. S., but his Pakistan- based group is scrambling to survive, under fire from CIA drone strikes and laying low for fear of another U. S. raid. That has lessened the threat of another complex attack like a nuclear dirty bomb or a biological weapon, the officials say.

Al- Qaida’s loyal offshoots are still dangerous, especially Yemen’s al- Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula, or AQAP. While not yet able to carry out complex attacks inside the U. S., such groups are capable of hitting Western targets overseas and are building armies and expertise while plotting violence, according to senior U. S. counterter­rorist officials who briefed reporters Friday.

“Each will seek opportunit­ies to strike Western interests in its operating area, but each group will have different intent and ability to execute those plans,” said Robert Cardillo, a deputy director at the Office of the Director of National Intelligen­ce. The other officials were authorized to speak only on condition of anonymity.

The shift from a single, deadly group to a more amorphous threat may not seem much of an improvemen­t. But the U. S. believes that the bin Laden raid and continued U. S. counterter­rorist action have reduced the chance of a sophistica­ted, multiprong­ed attack on the U. S. like the attacks of Sept. 11 or the deadly bombings in Madrid in 2004 and in London in 2005.

An attack with weapons of mass destructio­n — chemical, biological or nuclear — by any alQaida- related terror group also seems less likely in the coming year, Cardillo said.

Al- Qaida’s Zawahri has not managed to harness multiple groups into a cohesive force focused on a single, catastroph­ic attack, officials said.

Al- Qaida’s key affiliates in Yemen, Somalia, Iraq and North Africa have pledged allegiance to Zawahri but, unimpresse­d with his leadership, “have not offered the deference they gave bin Laden,” Cardillo said. Zawahri has a reputation as an abrasive manager and a less than charismati­c speaker.

That loss of a single, charismati­c voice likely means “multiple voices will provide inspiratio­n for the movement,” leading to a bout of soul- searching as to what the splinter groups want to target and why, Cardillo said.

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