Good, but these are personality not policy conflicts...won't matter in the
long run.
 
B

 

http://www.jamestow
<http://www.jamestown.org/terrorism/news/article.php?articleid=2373676>
n.org/terrorism/news/article.php?articleid=2373676
Leadership Disputes Plague Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb
By Andrew Mcgregor

A battle is underway for control of the leadership of Algeria's last
major armed Islamist group. A country exhausted by violence has used a
combination of amnesties and military action to reduce the once
powerful Salafist Group for Call and Combat (GSPC) to a few hundred
fighters. Under the leadership of Abu Mus'ab Abd al-Wadoud (also known
as Abdelmalek Droudkel), the commander since 2004, the GSPC has been
reorganized into Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM). Droukdel's
decision to align the group with Osama bin Laden and adopt
al-Qaeda-style tactics has led to a further loss of personnel. There
are now reports that the GSPC leader has been deposed by a three-day
meeting of group leaders in the Lakhdaria region east of Algiers. GSPC
amirs loyal to Droukdel have already been replaced, but the congress
was unable to decide on a new leader (Liberté, September 18).

Several factors were involved in Droukdel's dismissal, including the
controversial transformation of the GSPC into a regional branch of
al-Qaeda without consultation with the rest of the movement (as
required), the inequitable distribution of funds from extortion and
kidnapping rackets, the adoption of suicide bombings and the
recruitment of teenagers to carry out such attacks (Terrorism Monitor;
September 13; Terrorism Focus, September 18).

Surprisingly, former GSPC leader Hassan Hattab is reported to have
taken part in the congress that ousted Droukdel. Hattab has been part
of the Islamist insurgency since it began in 1992. A former
paratrooper, Hattab joined the Armed Islamic Group (GIA) at its
inception, becoming the group's amir in the Kabylie mountains two
years later. Hattab formed the GSPC in 1998 in reaction to the brutal
violence and civilian massacres that characterized GIA operations.
Hattab conceived the movement as a guerrilla force that, unlike the
GIA, would avoid inflicting civilian casualties in favor of targeting
government and military personnel. Hattab was forced out of the GSPC
leadership in 2001 and has been inactive since 2004, other than a
recent public debate (via the internet and press interviews) with
Droukdel over insurgent methods. Despite numerous reports of his death
and a death sentence delivered in absentia earlier this year, the
ex-GSPC leader remains a fugitive in the Algerian mountains. Hattab
insists he is still the legitimate leader of the GSPC/AQIM and denies
reports from his rivals that he resigned from the organization
(Terrorism Focus, November 14, 2005).

In March 2006, Hattab urged AQIM members to take advantage of the
government amnesty offer, but did not do so himself. A month later,
Hattab denounced the AQIM suicide attacks in Algiers in an open letter
to President 'Abd al-Aziz Bouteflika, repeating his call for AQIM to
abandon the armed struggle. Hattab also suggested the Islamist
movement had begun to "drift" from its original goals (Magharebia,
April 17, May 10).

Further criticism of AQIM's jihad came last week from Dr. Yusuf
al-Qaradawi, an Egyptian Muslim Brother who has made himself an
influential figure in political Islam through his embrace of modern
communications technology, including internet and television
broadcasts from his base in Qatar. Known for views that frequently
conflict with those of Salafis, al-Qaradawi rebuked AQIM for its
extremism while receiving medical treatment in an Algerian military
hospital: "You should follow in the footsteps of the Islamic group in
Egypt which has announced that they are shunning violence…Regret your
actions and join the Islamic mainstream" (The Peninsula [Doha],
September 20).

On the same day, a call for greater violence in Algeria came from
al-Qaeda's number two, Ayman al-Zawahiri. In a statement, al-Zawahiri
urged the people of Algeria and other North African states to carry
out an ethnic cleansing of French and Spanish residents as part of the
effort to restore "al-Andalus" (Muslim rule in the Iberian peninsula)
(Reuters, September 20).

AQIM faces financial problems, has lost many of its leaders and is
opposed by most of the population, including many Algerian Islamists.
Operations are now largely restricted to six eastern provinces and two
provinces in the south after the GSPC sustained heavy losses in
government offensives. Most of the remaining units are infiltrated by
Algerian intelligence operatives who seek to inflame divisions within
the movement. Hattab has also complained of GIA extremists
infiltrating the GSPC, creating deviation from its goals and methods.
Since 1999, 8,000 militants have taken advantage of the amnesty, with
only 300 still in the field (al-Sharq al-Awsat, September 16). Many of
those who have accepted the presidential pardon are dissatisfied with
the government's unfulfilled promises of work and housing, but a mass
return to arms still seems unlikely.

Droukdel, however, has rejected appeals from former comrades and
religious leaders to abandon his struggle: "We will not surrender to
apostates and bad scholars" (Ech-Chorouk, August 29). The change of
leadership could signal an end to the close ties with al-Qaeda and a
refocus on the national insurgency. In terms of tactical doctrine,
Hattab and Droukdel have been at odds for years, each claiming support
from the Quran and Sunna for their methods. Hassan Hattab has already
admitted being in contact with Algerian government officials regarding
the possibility of his own surrender and suspension of the outstanding
death sentence against him. It is possible that dismantling the
Algerian wing of al-Qaeda might be the price of a presidential pardon
for Hassan Hattab.



.
 
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