Pity that Jenkins refuses to discuss Islam…

 

Without Islam there is no Islamic Terrorism.

 

B

  

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 <http://www.examiner.com/law-enforcement-in-national/osama-bin-laden-photo> 
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The elusive terror chief Osama bin Laden.

Photo: DoJ 

Canadian lawmakers quiz American terrorism expert about al-Qaeda

·         December 7th, 2010 4:00 pm ET

·         By  <http://www.examiner.com/user-copmagazine> Jim Kouri, Law 
Enforcement Examiner

"Osama bin Laden, the leader of al-Qaeda, has mentioned Canada as a "designated 
target" for terrorist action because of Canada's role in Afghanistan." - 
Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS)

Counterterrorist and security expert Brian Jenkins, who currently serves as 
Director of Transportation Security Research for the Mineta Transportation 
Institute (MTI), testified Monday before the Canadian Senate's Special 
Committee on Anti-Terrorism.

A former U.S. Green Beret officer and Fox News contributor, Jenkins covered the 
current state of the campaign against al-Qaeda-inspired terrorism around the 
world.  In addition to his role with MTI, Mr. Jenkins, is a senior adviser to 
the president of the RAND Corporation.

Jenkins said that, nearly a decade after the September 11 attacks, analysts are 
still remarkably divided in their assessments of the global campaign against 
this type of terrorism -- in part because it is difficult to calibrate the 
adversary's determination.

"Al-Qaeda has become many things and must be assessed from different angles," 
said Mr. Jenkins. "It is heir to a long tradition of jihad, the banner carrier 
and symbol of a radical expression of faith. It is author of an ideology and 
strategy of war, the center of a global network of like-minded fanatics, the 
instigator of a global terrorist campaign, and an active communications system 
augmented by an online army... It is a source of inspiration and a contributor 
to ongoing insurgencies, an ally of other extremist groups, a conveyer of 
societal and individual discontents, a magnet for the most violent jihadists, 
and a source of legitimacy for their violence."

He went on to present an update on the changes in the organization since 2001. 
In order to survive as the center of this armed jihad, he said, al-Qaeda had to 
protect its own leadership; relocate to a new secure base; reconfigure itself 
and find a new, more clandestine way of operating; develop a command system 
able to function in a more hostile environment. It had to be able to 
communicate with its field commanders, operatives, potential volunteers, and 
constituents; maintain its cash flow; and, above all, continue its terrorist 
campaign in order to continue its recruiting. Al-Qaeda has managed to do most 
of these things, he said.

Rather than continue a centralized operation in the face of opposition, it has 
become more decentralized, with local affiliates and allies. It appears 
strongest when it attaches itself to local conflicts in weak states. Al- Qaeda 
also benefits from its relationship with nearby like-minded groups not under 
its control and that have their own political and military agendas, such as 
Afghanistan's Taliban, the TTP, LeT, and others in Pakistan and India, Mr. 
Jenkins noted.

"Al-Qaeda-inspired jihadists have not been able to carry out a successful, 
significant terrorist operation in the West since 2005, although numerous plots 
have been uncovered and thwarted," he testified. "Al-Qaeda's paramount 
objective remains building an army of believers to take up arms, provoking a 
worldwide armed movement…The volume and sophistication of al-Qaeda's 
communications have increased. There are now thousands of web sites devoted to 
exhortation and instruction in the means of violence."

Al-Qaeda's affiliates demonstrate a continuing capacity for violence, he said. 
The situation in Afghanistan, where a year ago, American and NATO forces were 
judged to be losing, has not yet convincingly turned around. Analysts now argue 
about the importance of the struggle in Afghanistan to al-Qaeda's survival. 
Meanwhile, the growing role played by al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula gives 
the global enterprise a new base of operations. Al-Qaeda's campaign may morph, 
but it will likely continue for many years.

Mr. Jenkins also provided insight about how the situation may appear to Osama 
bin Laden. "Al-Qaeda asserts that Islam is under assault, in mortal danger from 
the West," he said. "Its leaders portray events since 9/11 as confirmation of 
their warning that hostile infidels led by America are determined to conquer 
all of Islam and that this aggression will continue unless it is checked by 
armed resistance. Apostate and corrupt governments of Muslims, in al-Qaeda's 
worldview, have ceased to be defenders of the faith. Instead, they have joined 
the oppressors."

Reward comes from participation, not the outcome of battles, he testified. The 
conflict is process-oriented, not progress-oriented as in the West. But triumph 
is inevitable [they believe] because God is on the side of the jihadists. 
Strategy does not drive operations. Operations are the strategy. To scatter and 
exhaust its enemies, al-Qaeda must launch attacks on all fronts. The 
battlefield is everywhere. There are no front lines, no home fronts, no 
distinction between combatants and non-combatants.

To someone like bin Laden, the world's current economic crisis is further 
evidence that they are on the right path. It is God's punishment for the 
infidels' materialism and corruption, proof of their decline and eventual 
defeat.

Home-grown terrorism is a growing concern. Mr. Jenkins said, "Al-Qaeda's 
recruiting was always global, but it has become more difficult to get its 
acolytes to training sites in Pakistan and Afghanistan. Recognizing this 
reality, the organization now places increased emphasis on do-it-yourself 
terrorism, urging local would-be warriors to do whatever they can, wherever 
they are."

Al-Qaeda knows that homegrown attacks provoke greater alarm than engagements on 
distant battlefronts, he said. They can count on the news media, partisan 
politics, and public anxiety to exaggerate the threat. People in the West have 
unrealistically come to expect 100 percent security, viewing any terrorist 
attempt as a failure on the part of those charged with their protection. Even 
foiled terrorism attempts and deliberate hoaxes have utility. They require 
little investment, which al-Qaeda now brags about, but they bring high returns 
in creating psychological terror.  

For its recruits, al-Qaeda promises masculine glory and a sensual afterlife to 
frustrated young men.  But martyrdom is not a political program, and 
re-establishment of a caliphate offers little to those seeking political 
freedom, equality under the law, employment, education, a better life on earth 
for themselves and their children, which may be why most of al-Qaeda's intended 
audience has ignored its summons. The greatest long-term threat to al-Qaeda is 
irrelevance.

"Nonetheless, al-Qaeda will continue to be a tenacious and resilient foe," Mr. 
Jenkins concluded. "Its campaign, now in its third decade, will almost 
certainly go on. Successfully countering it must be viewed as a very long-term 
effort—not a finite war with a clear beginning and end, or a permanent war 
without end, but not the peace we would all prefer."

Mr. Jenkins was a paratrooper and a captain in the Green Berets, serving in 
Vietnam and the Dominican Republic. He returned to Vietnam as a member of the 
Long Range Planning Task Group, receiving the Department of the Army's highest 
award for his service. He authored several articles, reports and books, 
including International Terrorism: A New Mode of Conflict and Will Terrorists 
Go Nuclear?

>From 1989-98, Mr. Jenkins was deputy chairman of Kroll Associates, a 
>Manhattan-based international investigative and consulting firm. Before that, 
>he was chairman of RAND's Political Science Department, where he also directed 
>research on political violence.

 

Jim Kouri, CPP is currently fifth vice-president of the National Association of 
Chiefs of Police and he's a columnist for Examiner.com and New Media Alliance 
(thenma.org).  In addition, he's a blogger for the Cheyenne, Wyoming Fox News 
Radio affiliate KGAB ( <http://www.kgab.com> www.kgab.com). Kouri also serves 
as political advisor for Emmy and Golden Globe winning actor Michael Moriarty.  

He's former chief at a New York City housing project in Washington Heights 
nicknamed "Crack City" by reporters covering the drug war in the 1980s. In 
addition, he served as director of public safety at a New Jersey university and 
director of security for several major organizations.  He's also served on the 
National Drug Task Force and trained police and security officers throughout 
the country.   Kouri writes for many police and security magazines including 
Chief of Police, Police Times, The Narc Officer and others. He's a news writer 
and columnist for AmericanDaily.Com, MensNewsDaily.Com, MichNews.Com, and he's 
syndicated by AXcessNews.Com.   Kouri appears regularly as on-air commentator 
for over 100 TV and radio news and talk shows including Fox News Channel, 
Oprah, McLaughlin Report, CNN Headline News, MTV, etc. 

To subscribe to Kouri's newsletter write to  <mailto:[email protected]> 
[email protected] and write "Subscription" on the subject line.





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