http://www.terrorismanalysts.com/pt/index.php/pot/article/view/braniff-towar
ds-global-jihadism/html

 

Towards Global Jihadism: Al-Qaeda's Strategic, Ideological and Structural
Adaptations since 9/11

 by Bill Braniff and Assaf Moghadam

 Abstract

 In recent years, Al-Qaeda has suffered a number of setbacks, but has also
successfully spawned an expansionist global jihadist movement that will
survive the death of Osama bin Laden. This article describes how the
multifaceted threat posed by global jihadism has evolved over the last
decade. It first recounts some of the more salient examples of Al-Qaeda’s
post-9/11 strategic, ideological, and structural adaptations, and then
offers a balance sheet of Al-Qaeda’s contemporary strengths and weaknesses.
Al-Qaeda continues to enable the violence of others, orient that violence
towards the United States and its allies in a distributed game of attrition
warfare, and foster a dichotomous “us versus them” narrative between the
Muslim world and the rest of the international community. Despite this
overarching consistency, Al-Qaeda shepherds a different phenomenon than it
did ten years ago. The aggregation of the movement’s strategic, ideological,
and structural adaptations has fundamentally changed the nature of the
jihadist threat to the West. This evolved threat is not inherently more
dangerous, as counterterrorism efforts today focus on and disrupt capability
earlier and more consistently than prior to September 2001. This
multifaceted global jihad will, however, continue to produce greater numbers
of attacks in more locations, from a more diverse cadre of individuals
spanning a wider ideological spectrum.   

Introduction

Approaching the tenth anniversary of the 9/11 attacks, there is a growing
sense among counterterrorism analysts from the policy community and academia
that Al-Qaeda has substantially weakened in the last decade and is destined
to lose the battle against its enemies, and in particular the United
States.[1] Indeed, signs that Al-Qaeda is flagging are ample, and include
its loss of Osama bin Laden and important operational leaders; defeat or
near defeat of various Al-Qaeda franchises outside of Pakistan; a large
number of ideological challenges leveled against the group by some of its
former allies; and the series of protests that shook several Middle Eastern
and North African states beginning in early 2011. Because the revolts in
Tunisia, Egypt, Yemen, Bahrain, Syria, and other countries were mostly
nonviolent, they provided a striking counterexample to Al-Qaeda's emphasis
on violent regime change in the Middle East. 

These organizational setbacks are significant, but must be viewed in the
context of Al-Qaeda's success in spawning an expansionist global jihadist
movement.[2] Ten years into the fight against Al-Qaeda, that movement's
overarching narrative continues to attract followers from a multitude of
countries. All the while, the interplay of Al-Qaeda Core (AQC) with its
affiliated groups, associated groups, and inspired adherents provides an
increasing number of pathways to violence.[3] A number of successful and
unsuccessful plots in the past decade, and especially the last two years,
serve as a stark reminder that the global jihad remains devoted to striking
its enemies, often with ingenuity. The examples listed below span the
breadth of the movement; taken together, these representative plots allude
to the tactical, geographic, and organizational variability of the violence
emanating from the global jihad.  

 Al-Qaeda 

The August 2006 plot to blow up transatlantic airliners using liquid
explosives—an attack most likely timed to coincide with the fifth
anniversary of 9/11—served as a striking example of Al-Qaeda's ongoing
attempts to inflict significant pain on the United States five years after
9/11. Its interdiction may have forced Al-Qaeda’s external operations branch
to be more risk averse, but not to desist. In November of 2009, this branch
trained three separate cell leaders, all from separate Western nations, on
bomb-making techniques. After training them, AQC redeployed them to the
United States, the United Kingdom, and Norway, where the operatives led
respective terrorist cells in a geographically distributed complex suicide
attack—an adaptation of Al-Qaeda’s trademark complex attack. The successive
deaths of Al-Qaeda’s primary external operations planners at the time, Saleh
al-Somali and Rashid Rauf, did not prevent the plots from progressing,
albeit unsuccessfully.[4]

 Affiliated Organizations 

On 27 August 2009, Abdullah Hassan Talea Asiri, a Saudi national and member
of Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), attempted to assassinate
Assistant Interior Minister of Saudi Arabia, Prince Muhammad bin Nayef,
using a Pentaerythritol tetranitrate (PETN)-based explosive device hidden in
his underwear.[5] On Christmas Day 2009, AQAP-trained Nigerian citizen Umar
Farouk Abdulmutallab used the same compound when he attempted to detonate
explosives hidden in his underwear on Northwest Airlines flight 253. A third
variation of the AQAP attack placed PETN within printer cartridges shipped
in cargo planes intended to detonate over the continental United States in a
plot discovered in late 2010. 

 Associated Organizations 

On 30 December 2009, a Saudi national named Humam Khalil al-Balawi wore a
bomb vest into a CIA outpost in Khost, Afghanistan, killing himself, 7 CIA
employees and one Jordanian intelligence officer. Balawi, a formerly
imprisoned Al-Qaeda devotee and an infamous jihadist blogger known by the
pen name Abu Dujana al-Khorasani, had been recruited as an informer for the
Jordanian General Intelligence Directorate (GID), but played a sophisticated
double game on behalf of the Tehriki Taliban Pakistan (TTP). In a second TTP
plot in May 2010, a Pakistani-American citizen, Faisal Shahzad, demonstrated
effective operational security and planning but poor bomb-making skills when
he targeted New York's Times Square with a crude vehicle-borne improvised
explosive device (VBIED).   

 Adherents 

 In November of 2009, Nidal Malik Hasan, a U.S. Army Officer with only
tangential personal ties to a radical cleric and no known organizational
affiliation to Al-Qaeda, conducted a firearms attack at a deployment center
on Fort Hood, killing thirteen individuals and wounding over thirty others.
Al-Qaeda and its Yemen-based affiliate both endorsed the action, but neither
entity claimed the alleged assailant as a group member. In 2010 in Portland,
Oregon, Mohamed Osman Mohamud, a naturalized Somali-American citizen
attempted to detonate a VBIED at a Christmas tree lighting ceremony. In
March of 2011, authorities in the United States arrested Khalid al-Dawsari,
a Saudi Arabian student who, acting alone, procured explosive materials for
use against targets in the United States.  

This anecdotal survey of plots illuminates the contours of a multi-faceted
threat fostered by, but not unique to, the Al-Qaeda organization. To
describe how this multifaceted threat has evolved over the last decade, this
paper will first recount some of the more salient examples of Al-Qaeda’s
post-9/11 strategic, ideological, and structural adaptations. It will then
offer a balance sheet of Al-Qaeda’s contemporary strengths and weaknesses.
Ultimately, the aggregation of Al-Qaeda’s adaptations since 9/11 has brought
about an evolutionary change in the landscape of anti-Western Islamist
militancy, ushering in an era of global jihadism beyond Al-Qaeda. 

 Al-Qaeda Post-9/11: Strategic, Ideological and Structural Evolution

In the years following the 9/11 attacks, Al-Qaeda adapted—by necessity as
well as design—to a new reality in which the United States and its allies
were determined to defeat the group militarily. 

Strategic Evolution after 9/11: Changes in Emphasis

Al-Qaeda’s strategic adaptations have been numerous, but are frequently a
matter of degree rather than type. For that reason, these adaptations tell a
story of both organizational continuity as well as organizational change.  

First, Al-Qaeda increased its media production in the years following 9/11
to compensate for the loss of its training camp infrastructure and its
corresponding centrality among jihadist groups. This increase also reflected
its maturation as a terrorist organization seeking to capitalize on its
newly-found brand recognition.[6] Spurred on by the thoughts and actions of
fellow travelers such as Abu Musab al-Suri and Younis Tsouli (aka
Irhabi007), AQC embraced the agenda-setting power of the internet,[7] hence
Ayman al-Zawahiri’s assertion that at least half of the overall battle
against the Crusader-Zionist foe takes place in the media.[8] A look at the
number of official Al-Qaeda releases demonstrates the steadily growing
output of media productions on the part of the group, from six in 2002 to 11
in 2003, 13 in 2004, 16 in 2005, 58 in 2006, and peaking in 2007 with 97
releases. The number of media releases dropped to 49 releases in 2008 and
picked up slightly to reach 79 releases in 2009, but seemed to drop again in
2010.[9] After 2003, Al-Qaeda proved particularly skillful at exploiting
widespread negative sentiment about the American invasion and occupation of
Iraq.[10] It would seize upon the Ethiopian occupation of Mogadishu in a
similar way, urging the erstwhile Islamist militia turned jihadist group
al-Shabaab to “fight on” as “champions of Somalia.”[11]     

The second element of Al-Qaeda’s strategic evolution after 9/11 was its
determination to exploit perceived weaknesses of the West. Al-Qaeda and its
scions have increasingly monitored, identified, and exploited gaps in
Western defenses by reading Western literature and downloading materials
from Western websites. This new jihadi tactic was exemplified by a new genre
of jihadi publications termed “jihadi strategic studies”—writings that draw
on Western secular-rationalist sources, identify and analyze weaknesses of
both parties, consider political, economic, and cultural factors in the
conflict, and recommend realistic strategies.[12] 

Inspire magazine, an English language jihadist magazine produced by Al-Qaeda
in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), illustrates this trend. The first edition
of Inspire featured a “Message to the American People and Muslims in the
West” by Anwar al-Awlaki, a dual U.S. and Yemeni citizen—an article that
points to a future of religious intolerance for Muslims in the United
States. Al-Awlaki contextualizes this prediction with examples of racism
from American history.[13] In follow-on editions, Inspire amplified examples
of Islamophobia in the West, such as proposed Qur’an burnings and protests
over the establishment of mosques, to underline al-Awlaki’s argument and
reify Al-Qaeda’s narrative of a war against Islam.  

Third, since 9/11 Al-Qaeda has become more political in terms of its
communiqués as well as the timing and targeting of its attacks. The group
has attempted to create a rift between the United States and its allies,
conducting attacks against Spanish, British, German, and other forces to
undermine popular support for the war efforts in Afghanistan, Iraq, and
other theaters. Osama bin Laden’s offer of a truce to European countries in
April 2004 served a similar goal, as he withheld that offer to the United
States. Further, the group began exploiting the Western political calendar,
as was most clearly evident in the timing of the 11 March 2004 attacks in
Madrid, which were carried out just prior to the Spanish presidential
elections. Peter Nesser and Brynjar Lia assess a plot disrupted in Oslo,
Norway, in July 2010 as another indicator of Al-Qaeda’s interest in
attacking “peripheral” Western nations allied with the United States and
Israel.[14] 

A fourth strategic adaptation in the post-9/11 period is Al-Qaeda’s emphasis
on economic jihad, foremost by targeting oil facilities in Middle Eastern
and Gulf states. Prior to the 9/11 attacks, bin Laden acknowledged the
strategic importance of the energy sector, as is evident in his 1996
declaration of war, where he called upon the mujahideen to “protect this
(oil) wealth and [do] not … include it in the battle as it is a great
Islamic wealth and a large economical power essential for the soon to be
established Islamic state.”[15] The shift in Al-Qaeda’s strategy to
emphasize these targets was complete by the end of 2004, when in December
bin Laden declared the “bleed-until-bankruptcy” strategy. He called the
purchase by Western countries of oil at then-market prices the “greatest
theft in history” and concluded that there was now “a rare and golden
opportunity to make America bleed in Iraq, both economically and in terms of
human loss and morale… Focus your operations on it [oil production]
especially in Iraq and the Gulf area, since this [lack of oil] will cause
them to die off [on their own].”[16] Within a year, an Al-Qaeda cell
attempted to hit a key energy facility in Dammam, Saudi Arabia, and in
February 2006 Al-Qaeda’s Saudi affiliate was able to breach security at the
Abqaiq processing facility, the world’s largest crude processing plant.
Although the attack was not able to interrupt production, it foreshadowed
Al-Qaeda's growing focus on strikes at the economic assets of its enemies.  

In a recent example, the November 2010 Special Issue of Inspire celebrated
the economic rationale of Al-Qaeda’s attrition strategy. Demonstrating the
centrality of economic jihad, the magazine’s cover-art superimposed “$4200”
in large font over the blurred image of a United Parcel Service jet,
referring to the low price tag of its plots targeting the cargo airline
industry. It also alluded to a quote by al-Awlaki, who contrasted the low
cost of “Operation Hemorrhage” with the high cost that the attacks were
expected to exact from the West due to stepped up security expenses.[17]

Ideological Dilution: From Elitist Organization to Catch-All Movement

Al-Qaeda has endeavored to widen the target audience of its recruitment and
propaganda campaign. Whereas before 9/11, Al-Qaeda made exclusive appeals to
Muslims, it gradually adopted more populist rhetoric following 9/11 in order
to appeal to a wider audience, including non-Muslims. In an essay published
in February 2005 titled “The Freeing of Humanity and Homelands Under the
Banner of the Quran,” Ayman al-Zawahiri, for the first time, attempted to
appeal to anti-globalization and environmental activists. An article from
the first edition of Inspire magazine attributed to Osama bin Laden echoes
this approach, placing the blame for global warming squarely on American
shoulders.[18] 

Some of the populist propaganda emanating from Al-Qaeda is intended to
increase anti-Americanism among the camp of the ‘infidel’ proper, tearing at
the social fabric of the United States along racial lines. Examples include
Ayman al-Zawahiri’s co-opting of Malcolm X as a Muslim martyr who died
fighting against racial injustice; al-Zawahiri’s use of the term
“house-slaves” to discredit the success of prominent African-American
politicians; and Abu Dujana al-Khorasani’s appeal to various minority
communities in the United States to fight against their oppressors.[19]
Al-Qaeda has also made appeals to Muslim and African American members of the
military to turn their weapons against their own government, foreshadowing
such incidents as the Fort Hood shooting of November 2009.[20]

Al-Qaeda has also increased its efforts to frame local grievances in
accordance with its global narrative outside of the United States. While not
a new characteristic of Al-Qaeda propaganda, increased media production
amplifies its attempts to aggregate disparate Islamist conflicts since 2001.
Al-Qaeda has attempted to harmonize its propaganda with the grievance
narratives associated with local and regional jihadist movements in Yemen,
Somalia, the Caucasus, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Iraq, India, Central Asia, and
Southeast Asia. While its ability to globalize these disparate conflicts has
been limited, isolated successes across a spectrum of theaters has increased
the number of ideological pathways to participation in the global jihad.[21]


 Structural Adaptation: Towards Multipolarity

The evolution from organization to movement in the decade since 9/11 can be
explained by three structural adaptations more so than from the strategic
and ideological changes witnessed over the same time period. As an
organization, Al-Qaeda has changed in three significant ways: it has
formally affiliated with geographically dispersed groups; it has informally
partnered with geographically co-located groups; and it has fostered a
virtual safe-haven with few barriers to entry.  

Al-Qaeda’s mergers with militant groups, including Jama’at Tawhid wal Jihad
in Iraq, the Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat (GSPC) in Algeria,
al-Shabaab in Somalia, and the reconstitution of AQAP, have all resulted in
a fundamental structural shift. Rather than an organization with cells
spread in scores of countries, Al-Qaeda in 2011 is better understood as a
multi-polar organization with a central hub in North Waziristan and a small
number of autonomous regional nodes. By offering their organizational fealty
to Al-Qaeda, these organizations extend Al-Qaeda’s ideological and
operational influence in their respective regions, while also allowing
Al-Qaeda to engage in networking, propagandizing, and resource mobilization
in active conflict zones.[22]  These nodes create resilience and dynamism in
the movement, amplify the world’s perception of Al-Qaeda, and even provide a
degree of redundancy should Al-Qaeda suffer a devastating blow in Pakistan.


The most consequential implication of Al-Qaeda’s structural transition into
a multi-polar entity lies in the resulting locations, targets, and tactics
of terrorist violence. Thus, the most likely theaters for current and future
attacks against local and Western targets are those in proximity to the main
territorial hubs of Al-Qaeda Core and its affiliates, such as Afghanistan,
Algeria, Iraq, Pakistan, Somalia, Yemen, and their neighbors.[23] It is not
a coincidence that Al-Qaeda tactics such as suicide bombings have been
introduced precisely in these regions, where jihadist cells, including
Al-Qaeda affiliates, have sprung up. Algeria, Somalia, and Yemen, for
example, have seen prolonged periods of localized, brutal violence, but
radical Islamist groups in these countries traditionally shunned the use of
suicide bombings against Western targets until Al-Qaeda solidified its
affiliations in these areas.[24] Besides the adoption of suicide attacks,
the use of vehicle-borne improvised explosive devices (VBIEDs) offers
additional evidence of knowledge transfer to these regional nodes.  

Although patterns in attack locations, targets, and tactics can be observed
in relation to Al-Qaeda affiliates, the establishment of regional nodes
introduces increased complexity into the demographics and travel patterns of
the terrorists themselves. Perhaps unsurprisingly, tens of members of the
Somali diaspora from Minnesota, Canada, Sweden, and Great Britain have
reportedly joined al-Shabaab in Somalia, but so have many non-ethnic Somalis
with no personal connections to Somalia.[25]  While one may have expected a
Nigerian jihadist to join the movement through a militia in West Africa or
Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM), a wealthy Nigerian named Umar Farouk
Abdulmuttalab studying in England sought training in Yemen in order to
attack the United States.  

Al-Qaeda’s merger with the Algerian GSPC serves as an example of what
Al-Qaeda stands to gain from regional mergers. This merger enabled Al-Qaeda
to leverage AQIM’s existing reach into Europe where AQIM enjoys well
established connections, as well as into the Sahel, where ungoverned spaces
provide opportunities for fundraising and training. Al-Qaeda intends to use
affiliates such as AQIM as force multipliers, as was evident from an
intercepted message in which Ayman al-Zawahiri asked AQIM leader Droukdel to
help exact revenge against Denmark following the Danish cartoon
controversy.[26]

Al-Qaeda seeks to build regional alliances where it believes them to be
beneficial, and rejects them when the risks are excessive. Thus, the group
did not hesitate to reject an offer from the Lebanese jihadist group Fatah
al-Islam —likely a result of Al-Qaeda’s calculation that the embattled
group’s chances of survival looked rather dim. Similarly, Al-Qaeda does not
seem to have taken seriously overtures by Salafi-Jihadist factions in the
Gaza Strip such as Jaesh al-Islam.  Aware of the animosity Hamas harbors for
these jihadist groups and its willingness to use violence to obviate
competing groups or rogue behavior, Al-Qaeda was careful not to ally itself
with entities whose existence might be endangered. Al-Qaeda is keenly aware
of perceptions of strategic competence, and therefore would like to bet on
winning horses only.[27] 

Al-Qaeda has always maintained associations short of formal affiliation with
militant organizations, primarily as a result of geographic co-location in
training environments and conflict zones. While this tendency has not
changed over the last decade, what has changed is the intensity of
intelligence collection and military pressure on Al-Qaeda itself. As a
result, Al-Qaeda has utilized these associations more aggressively in recent
years, facilitating the reorientation of jihadist violence against Western
interests. 

Al-Qaeda attempts to reorient violence against the West by superimposing a
transnational explanatory framework on local grievances. The extent to which
it has been successful in instilling a global jihadist ideology into locally
oriented groups is reflected in the growing involvement of such groups in
attacks against Western targets. While there are many other examples,
Al-Qaeda’s relationship with Tehriki-Taliban Pakistan is perhaps the most
illustrative.[28]  In addition to the above mentioned attacks on the CIA
outpost in Khost, Afghanistan, and in Times Square, New York, Pakistani
citizens trained by TTP have also been involved in a sophisticated plot to
target the Barcelona metro with multiple suicide bombers.[29] 

In addition to operational convergence, regional affiliates and associates
have also embraced the same types of information operations for which
Al-Qaeda has become famous. As a result, al-Sahab media is now only one of
many organizations producing propaganda. The proliferation of highly
differentiated content found on dynamic jihadist websites, the empowering
nature of user-generated content, and links between jihadist activity
on-line and jihadist activity in the real world has created a third
structural shift in the global jihad. Independent jihadist pundits like Abu
Dujana al-Khorasani can articulate a new narrative, cultivate a new
demographic of consumers, and move seamlessly from the e-Jihad to the
battlefield by building trusted relationships on-line that translate into
mobilization networks. Further, when an iconic jihadist blogger makes this
transition, he is celebrated by jihadist media organs and on the virtual
forums he left behind, becoming a new role model and paving a new pathway to
participation in the global jihad. 

 An Al-Qaeda Scorecard

Despite much talk in recent years suggesting Al-Qaeda’s imminent demise,
Al-Qaeda capitalizes on a number of core strengths that will ensure its
relevance at least in the foreseeable future. The first, and most obvious,
strength is that after regrouping along the Afghan-Pakistan border, Al-Qaeda
has been able to reestablish a limited safe haven in an active conflict
zone. This allows Al-Qaeda to link up to other like-minded groups either
directly involved in the conflict or living parasitically off of the war
economies of that conflict. These associated organizations can then share
training resources, fundraising and mobilization networks, and opportunities
to propagandize. Al-Qaeda can facilitate violence locally, enable jihadist
attacks abroad, and shape propaganda as consultants to violent jihad.[30]  

The second of these strengths is that Al-Qaeda’s foundational ideological
assumption remains convincing to politicized demographics; the United States
is, in their perception, waging a war on Islam as evidenced by its
occupation of Muslim countries. As long as U.S. military is present in Arab
and Muslim countries—a political reality beyond Iraq and Afghanistan, given
current events in Yemen, Libya, and Somalia—Al-Qaeda’s propaganda will
resonate. 

A third, and related, advantage is that Al-Qaeda’s Salafi-Jihadist ideology
has been subsumed in a more inclusive global jihadist ideology.[31] Adopting
the elitist tenets of Salafi-Jihadism has been a potential barrier to entry
in the past, and ideologically contested components of Al-Qaeda’s
Salafi-Jihadism left it vulnerable on theological grounds. Global jihadism,
in contrast, is populist and malleable. The only requirement is to identify
with the basic world view presented through various lenses by various
components of the movement: the Muslim world, or one’s portion of it, is in
decline as a result of an anti-Islamic conspiracy, and only jihad
(understood solely in militant terms) can redeem it. Recognizing the value
of inclusivity, Al-Qaeda has subordinated itself to the broader violent
movement. Al-Qaeda now endorses lone-wolf jihadism conducted by those who
may lack Salafi credentials;[32]  its closest affiliate, AQAP, endorses
anti-regime violence by ideologically distant organizations;[33]  and
Al-Qaeda-inspired political organizations like Hizb ut-Tahrir America
endorse jihadism while making little pretense of piety.[34] 

The Internet provides Al-Qaeda its fourth core advantage. Legally
constrained and uncomfortable in the propaganda realm, the United States and
its allies have largely ceded the virtual arena as a platform in the war of
ideas.[35] Al-Qaeda and its affiliates, on the other hand, have built a
geographically distributed and resilient communications architecture that
they have saturated with highly differentiated propaganda. In the tribal
belt, for example, DVDs, movies, and other media produced by local branches
of companies such as As-Sahab, Ummat Studios, and Jundullah CD Center
feature jihadist propaganda in Urdu, Pashto, Arabic, English, and other
languages. Al Fajr media center distributes copies of such videos in German,
Italian, French, and Turkish on-line, where web forums make them available
to a broader community.  Members of those forums sub-title, translate,
expound upon, and further disseminate these materials on social media sites,
availing new consumers of jihadist propaganda. In September 2006, jihadism
scholar Reuven Paz declared, “global jihad has clearly won the battle over
the internet. As a means of indoctrination, Al-Qaeda and its affiliates
dominate this medium, while the West and the Muslim world have so far failed
to devise… a serious ‘counter-Jihadi’ response.” As we approach the tenth
anniversary of the 9/11 attacks, Paz’ assessment of the digitally-mediated
war of ideas rings as true today as it did in 2006.

Offsetting many of Al-Qaeda’s advantages, however, are several signs that
the group has been significantly weakened in recent days and years.  Most
recently, the American raid of Osama bin Laden’s safehouse in Abbottabad,
Pakistan, ended the life of the organization’s emir and the most important
unifying symbol of global jihadism.  This decapitation strike will not sound
Al Qaeda’s death knell outright, but the symbolic void left by bin Laden’s
death may lead to the fracturing of a geographically distributed and
ideologically fraught AQC.  Furthermore, intelligence collected during the
raid may amplify an existing trend for Al Qaeda – the death or capture of
key operational figures. Examples include the capture  Abu Faraj al-Libi in
May 2005 and the killing of others, such as Hamza Rabia, who died in
November 2005; Abu Laith al-Libi (January 2008); Abu Sulayman al-Jazairi
(May 2008); Abu Khabab al-Masri (July 2008); Rashid Rauf (November
2008);[36]  Saleh al-Somali (December 2009); and Saeed al-Masri (May 2010). 

Accompanying the loss of Al-Qaeda senior leaders has been the defeat, near
defeat, or stagnation of a number of Al-Qaeda’s local affiliates. Al-Qaeda
in the Arabian Peninsula, prior to its current reincarnation in Yemen, was
decimated by the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia,[37] while Al-Qaeda in Iraq
suffered a strategic defeat at the hands of the Sunni Awakening and “the
Surge.”  At its most lethal in 2007, Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM)
failed to destabilize Algiers, and its initial calls to conduct attacks in
neighboring countries did not materialize in significant numbers.[38]  In
the Sahel, where AQIM is currently most active, Moktar Belmoktar’s katiba
engages in kidnap for ransom and counterfeiting while also engaging in a
turf war with the committed AQIM jihadist Abdel Hamid Abou Zaid.[39]
Al-Shabaab’s popularity in Somalia saw its high-water mark during the
2007-2008 Ethiopian occupation, but now struggles to retain nationalist
Islamists among its ranks as it battles the African Union troops in
Mogadishu and the al Jamma wal Sunna Sufi militia in Central and Southern
Somalia. Tribal rivalries and competing interests further hamstring the
group, such that its relative position as the strongest group in Somalia
does not mean that Somalia is or will be what Afghanistan and Pakistan have
been for Al-Qaeda.  

Exacerbating Al-Qaeda’s problems in recent years are a number of underlying
weaknesses and long-term challenges.[40] The first is structural. While
mergers can afford Al-Qaeda the benefits described above, they are not
without risk. Principal-agent problems can dilute or undermine Al-Qaeda’s
brand. The clearest example of an Al-Qaeda affiliate ‘going rogue’ was that
of Al-Qaeda in Iraq under Abu Musab al-Zarqawi. Although Al-Qaeda needed to
take credit for violence waged against American troops if it was to remain
relevant, internecine violence fomented by al-Zarqawi alienated erstwhile
supporters from the Muslim world and provided the impetus for Sunni tribes
to mobilize against AQI. The result was not only a strategic loss for AQI,
but a significant black-eye for Al-Qaeda Core.[41] This and similar problems
are inherent in Al-Qaeda’s structure as a decentralized organization. 

Competition from state and non-state entities poses another long-term
challenge. Iran’s ongoing defiance of the West, and especially the United
States, undermines Al-Qaeda’s credibility in claiming the status of the
Muslim world’s leading anti-American force. Iranian foreign policy
“successes” such as its determined pursuit of a nuclear weapon, its pursuit
of regional hegemony, and its hostile attitude to Israel are problematic for
Al-Qaeda because it reminds Al-Qaeda’s current and potential supporters of
the mismatch between what the group preaches and what it does. It
underscores Al-Qaeda’s failure to attack Israel and act against Iran despite
the jihadist movement’s extremist rhetoric vis-à-vis both nations. 

Al-Qaeda also perceives popular Islamist movements such as the Muslim
Brotherhood and Hizballah as a threat. The Brotherhood provides an Islamist
alternative with a record of performance legitimacy on the Arab street. With
regard to the latter, Hizballah’s ability to stand up to Israel in the 2006
war has presented the Shia militant group as the Muslim world’s only
movement capable of fighting the Jewish state. Similar to the case of Iran,
the political and military success of Hizballah undermines Al-Qaeda’s
ability to claim a leadership role for the Islamic community at large. 

More recently, non-violent protests beginning with the Jasmine Revolution
highlight another weakness. For decades, jihadists have argued that violence
is necessary to overthrow authoritarian, apostate regimes. The recent wave
of protests across the Muslim world undermines the assertion that violence
is necessary, as several have succeeded where Al-Qaeda and its brethren have
repeatedly failed.  While significant, this set-back is conditional and
predicated upon the successful establishment of legitimate government in the
wake of the Arab Spring. 

The recantations and condemnations by individuals who were part of
Al-Qaeda’s foundational history, meanwhile, have presented Al-Qaeda with
what is perhaps its most significant challenge.[42] Al-Qaeda has been
plagued by a series of recantations and defections by formerly venerated
jihadists including Abdul Qadir bin Abdul Aziz, aka Dr. Fadl, and the Saudi
cleric Salman al-Awdah. These more recent recantations follow previous
condemnations of isolated acts of extreme jihadist violence by theologians
highly respected in the jihadist community, including Abu Basir al-Tartusi
and Abu Muhammad al-Maqdisi, who have rejected the usefulness of the London
bombings and AQI’s systematic targeting of Shia civilians, respectively.[43]


While the downplaying of its elitist, Salafi rhetoric has softened the blow
of these recantations to some extent, Al-Qaeda has been put in an untenable
position with respect to one issue. Al-Qaeda has been forced to defend
itself against charges that its actions lead to the death of countless
innocent Muslims. Whether Al-Qaeda uses allegations of apostasy to justify
these deaths ideologically; whether it argues pragmatically that the ends
justify the means; or whether Al-Qaeda genuinely tries to minimize Muslim
fatalities is irrelevant. Declining opinion polls in the Muslim world
reflect the indisputable fact that Al-Qaeda has failed to redeem Islam, but
has succeeded in killing innocent Muslims in large numbers. Despite its many
adaptations, this is Al-Qaeda’s major weakness, and it remains an enduring
weakness of the global jihad that the West should continue to expose.[44] 

Conclusion  

Al-Qaeda continues to enable the violence of others, orient that violence
towards the United States and its allies in a distributed game of attrition
warfare, and foster a dichotomous “us versus them” narrative between the
Muslim world and the rest of the international community. Despite this
overarching consistency, Al-Qaeda shepherds a different phenomenon than it
did ten years ago. The organization has adapted to changing environmental
pressures at the strategic, ideological, and structural levels, and the
aggregation of these adaptations has fundamentally changed the nature of the
jihadist threat to the West. This evolved threat is not inherently more
dangerous, as counterterrorism efforts today focus on and disrupt capability
earlier and more consistently than prior to September 2001. This
multifaceted global jihad will, however, continue to attempt greater numbers
of attacks in more locations, from a more diverse cadre of individuals
spanning a wider ideological spectrum.   

About the Authors: Bill Braniff is the Director of Practitioner Education
and an Instructor at the Combating Terrorism Center at West Point. Mr.
Braniff lectures frequently for counterterrorism audiences including the
Federal Bureau of Investigation, Joint Special Operations University, the
United States Attorneys’ Office, and Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
Mr. Braniff is also heavily involved in public education. His speaking
engagements include Council on Foreign Relations and World Affairs Council
events in cities around the country. In May of 2010 Bill took part in the
National September 11th Museum and Memorial Speaker Series and he is
featured in the Museum’s educational webcast series. 

 Assaf Moghadam is Senior Lecturer at the Lauder School of Government,
Diplomacy and Strategy at the Interdisciplinary Center (IDC) Herzliya, where
he is also a Senior Researcher at the International Institute of
Counter-Terrorism (ICT). Prior to joining IDC, he served as Director of
Terrorism Studies at the Combating Terrorism Center at West Point. He is the
author of The Roots of Terrorism (Chelsea House, 2006) and The Globalization
of Martyrdom: Al-Qaeda, Salafi Jihad, and the Diffusion of Suicide Attacks
(Johns Hopkins University Press, 2008/2011); co-editor of Fault Lines of
Global Jihad: Organizational, Strategic, and Ideological Fissures
(Routledge, 2011); and editor of Militancy in Shiism: Trends and Patterns
(Routledge, 2011).

Notes

[1] See, for example, Kristen Chick, “CIA Director says Al-Qaeda on the Run
as a Leader Killed in US Drone Strike,” Christian Science Monitor, 18 March
2010; and Peter Bergen, "Bin Laden's Lonely Crusade," Vanity Fair, January
2011. 

[2] For a similar argument, see Leah Farrall, "How al Qaeda Works," Foreign
Affairs, March/April 2011. While acknowledging that Al-Qaeda continues to
pose a threat today, the present authors would not go as far as Farrall in
arguing that "al Qaeda is stronger today than when it carried out 9/11." See
L. Farrall, "How al Qaeda Works." The global jihadist movement is defined
here as a transnational movement of like-minded jihadists led by Al-Qaeda.
It includes affiliated and associated individuals, networks, and groups. The
term “affiliated” denotes groups that have formal ties to Al-Qaeda, and have
often adopted the Al-Qaeda name, e.g., Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula.
The term “associated” refers to entities with more informal ties to
Al-Qaeda, i.e., those that are influenced by Al-Qaeda’s guiding ideology but
that have not sworn fealty (baya’a) to bin Laden. It also includes
‘adherents,’ i.e., individuals who are inspired by the world view propagated
by Al-Qaeda, its affiliates, and/or associates. The authors recognize that
these divisions are not perfect, that some groups associated with Al-Qaeda
have not fully adopted Al-Qaeda’s ideology, and that still other groups fall
into a gray area between associates and affiliates. However, for descriptive
purposes in this article, that division shall suffice.

[3] Although universal data is difficult to gather, in the United States
itself, there has been a marked increase in the number of individuals
radicalized toward jihadist violence. See, for example, Brian Michael
Jenkins, "Would-be Warriors: Incidents of Jihadist Terrorist Radicalization
in the United States since September 11, 2001," RAND Occasional Paper (Santa
Monica, CA: Rand Corporation, 2010).

[4] Al-Qaeda’s trademark attack is the complex suicide terrorist attack in
which multiple bombers strike multiple targets simultaneously, thereby
magnifying the psychological effect of the attack. In a heightened security
environment, the authors see the centrally planned but operationally and
geographically distributed plots as an adaptation of this trademark attack
intended to diversify risk across a portfolio of plots, thereby increasing
the likelihood of at least partial tactical success while maintaining the
psychology impact of a complex plot. See Raffaelo Pantucci, “Manchester, New
York, and Oslo: Three Centrally Directed Al-Qa’ida Plots,” CTC Sentinel 3.8
(August 2010); and Petter Nesser and Brynjar Lia, “Lessons Learned from the
July 2010 Norwegian Terrorist Plot,” CTC Sentinel, Vol. 3, Issue 8 (August
2010).    

[5] Early reports suggested that the bomber had hidden the explosive device
in his rectal cavity, but subsequent Saudi investigations discovered that
the bomb had been hidden in the attacker's underwear. See Peter Bergen and
Bruce Hoffman, "Assessing the Terrorist Threat," Bipartisan Policy Center,
10 September 2011, p. 9. 

[6] See Vahid Brown, “Cracks in the Foundation: Leadership Schisms in
Al-Qa’ida 1989-2006” (West Point, NY: Combating Terrorism Center, September
2007). 

[7] For a concise explanation of  Abu Musab al-Suri’s advocacy for a
sophisticated media campaign, to include decentralized Incitement and Media
Brigades best embodied by the actions of Younis Tsouli with respect to Iraq,
see Hanna Rogan, “Al-Qaeda’s Online Media Strategies: From Abu Reuter to
Irhabi 007,” Norwegian Defense Research Establishment, Report No.2007/02729,
28-29; and Rafael Pantucci, “Operation Praline: The Realization of Al-Suri’s
Nizam, la Tanzim,” Perspectives on Terrorism, Vol.  2, Issue 12 (2008). On
Abu Musab al-Suri, see also Brynjar Lia, Architect of Global Jihad: The Life
of Al-Qaeda Strategist Abu Mus’ab al-Suri (New York: Columbia University
Press, 2008). For a good discussion of Younis Tsouli, see Yassin Musharbash,
Die Neue Al Qaida: Innenansichten eines lernenden Terrornetzwerkes (Cologne,
Germany: Kiepenheuer & Witsch, 2006). 

[8] “Letter from Al-Zawahiri to Al-Zarqawi.” Available online at
GlobalSecurity.org,
http://www.globalsecurity.org/security/library/report/2005/zawahiri-zarqawi-
letter_9jul2005.htm, last accessed 20 April 2011.

[9] For figures until 2009, see Peter Bergen and Katherine Tiedemann, “The
Almanac of Al-Qaeda,” Foreign Policy, May/June 2010, available online at
http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2010/04/26/the_almanac_of_al_qaeda,
last accessed 20 April 2011. A report released in September 2010, quoting
the IntelCenter, stated that “in 2010 Zawahiri has so far released the
fewest tapes in seven years.” See P. Bergen and B. Hoffman, “Assessing the
Terrorist Threat,” op. cit., p. 21.

[10] While this easy propaganda victory evidenced Al-Qaeda’s opportunism,
Iraq presented a problem for Al-Qaeda as well; the organization did not have
members on the ground in Iraq who could violently resist the American
presence.  Al-Qaeda would address this issue not through a change in
strategy but a change in organizational structure, as discussed later in
this paper.

[11] “Fight on Champions of Somalia” is a meme used frequently in Al-Sahab’s
propaganda to demonstrate support for al-Shabaab, which offered it
organizational baya’a  [oath of allegiance] to Al-Qaeda in March of 2009.  

[12] Brynjar Lia and Thomas Hegghammer, “Jihadi Strategic Studies: The
Alleged Al Qaida Policy Study Preceding the Madrid Bombings,” Studies in
Conflict and Terrorism, Vol. 27, Issue 5, (September-October 2004). On
jihadi strategic studies, see also Mark E. Stout, Jessica M. Huckabey, and
John R. Schindler, Terrorist Perspectives Project: Strategic and Operational
Views of Al Qaida and Associated Movements (Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute
Press, 2008); and Dima Adamsky, “Jihadi Operational Art: The Coming Wave of
Jihadi Strategic Studies,” Studies in Conflict and Terrorism, Vol. 33, Issue
1 (January 2010).

[13] Anwar al-Awlaki, “Shaykh Anwar’s Message to the American People and
Muslims in the West,” Inspire, Issue 1 (Summer 2010). This is a reprint of
the speech published as an audio file. It was released originally on 10
March 2010, and again in July 2010.

[14] Petter Nesser and Brynjar Lia, “Lessons Learned from the July 2010
Norwegian Terrorist Plot”, op. cit.

[15] Bin Laden’s Fatwa, August 1996. Available at the “Online News Hour”
website,
http://www.pbs.org/newshour/terrorism/international/fatwa_1996.html; last
accessed 20 April 2011. 

[16] Quoted in Daveed Gartenstein-Ross, “Large-scale Arrests in Saudi Arabia
Illustrate Threat to the Oil Supply,” Long War Journal, 24 March 2010.

[17] Inspire: Special Edition (November 2010).  In his “Message to the
American People” from March 2010, and re-released by the Global Islamic
Media Front in July of 2010, al-Awlaki states: “But imperial hubris is
leading America to its fate: a war of attrition, a continuous hemorrhage
that would end with the fall and splintering of the United States of
America.”  The plots alluded to by AQIM are the placement of explosives on
UPS and FEDEX cargo planes, as well as the downing of a UPS cargo plane that
had taken off in Dubai on 3 September 2010.  To date, only the failed
printer cartridge plot involving the UPS flight to Chicago has been
confirmed by the U.S. intelligence community.

[18] Usamah bin Ladin, “The Way to Save the Earth,” Inspire, Issue 1.

[19] Benjamin Haas and Daniel McGrory, “Al-Qa’ida Seeking to Recruit
African-American Muslims,” CTC Sentinel 1.8 (July 2008). Abu Dujana
al-Khorosani was an elite pen on al-Hesbah and an independent blogger before
conducting the December 2009 suicide attack at Forward Operating Base
Chapman in Khost, Afghanistan.

[20] From a speech by Ayman al-Zawahiri broadcast on 5 May 2007 and
translated by the IntelCenter. Excerpts published in Michael Scheuer,
“Latest al-Zawahiri Tape Targets American Society,” Terrorism Focus 4.13
(May 8 2007). 

[21] For a detailed argument of Al-Qaeda’s inability to aggregate disparate
Islamist conflicts despite their efforts to do so, see Vahid Brown,
“Al-Qa’ida Central and Local Affiliates”, in Assaf Moghadam and Brian
Fishman  (eds)., Self-Inflicted Wounds: Debates and Divisions  within
al-Qa’ida and is Periphery (West Point, NY: Combating Terrorism Center,
2010), pp. 87-91. 

[22] V. Brown, “Al-Qa'ida Central and Local Affiliates,” op. cit., pp.
77-80.

[23] Examples include the proliferation of suicide attacks of attacks
against Western and UN targets in Pakistan, the February 2008 attack against
the Israeli embassy in Nouakchott, Mauritania carried out by militants
trained in AQIM camps, the July 2008 attacks against the Danish embassy in
Pakistan, the September 2008 attacks on the U.S. embassy in Yemen, and the
September 2008 coordinated suicide attacks in Somaliland and Puntland that
included an attack on the local compound of the United Nations Development
Program.

[24] Assaf Moghadam, "Shifting Trends in Suicide Attacks," CTC Sentinel 2.1
(January 2009); Assaf Moghadam, The Globalization of Martyrdom: Al-Qaeda,
Salafi Jihad, and the Diffusion of Suicide Attacks (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins
University Press, 2008); and Yoram Schweitzer, “Al-Qaeda and Suicide
Terrorism: Vision and Reality,” Military and Strategic Affairs 2.2 (October
2010). See also Jean-Pierre Filiu, “The Local and Global Jihad of Al Qa’ida
in the Islamic Maghrib,” Middle East Journal 63.2, (Spring 2009), 213-226;
and Lianne Kennedy-Boudali, “Al-Qa’ida in the Islamic Maghreb: Evaluating
the Results of the al-Qa’ida Merger, Occasional Paper (West Point, NY:
Combating Terrorism Center at West Point, September 2009).

[25] The phenomenon of Somalis returning from the diaspora to join
al-Shabaab is not surprising due to the group’s positioning as a resistance
movement with respect to the Ethiopian occupation from January 2007 to
January 2009.   Most famously in the case of non-Somalis joining al-Shabaab,
consider Omar Hamami, an American from Daphne, Alabama, born of a Syrian
father and Southern Baptist mother, who went on to be featured in English
language al-Shabaab propaganda.  For a biography of Hamami, see Andrea
Elliot, “The Jihadist Next Door,” New York Times Magazine, 27 January 2010. 

[26] Souad Mekhennet, et.al., “A Threat Renewed: Ragtag Insurgency Gains a
Lifeline From Al-Qaeda,” New York Times, 1 July 2008.

[27] On Al-Qaeda’s perceptions of strategic competence, see James J. F.
Forest, “Exploiting the Fears of Al-Qa’ida’s Leadership,” CTC Sentinel,2. 2
(February 2009).

[28] For example, the Islamic Jihad Union provided training to a German cell
of jihadists known as the Sauerland bombers, who plotted to attack numerous
targets in Germany before they were apprehended in September 2007.

[29] “Spain Becoming Breeding Ground for Jihadism – Experts,” BBC, 4 January
2011. 

[30] Alex Gallo, “Understanding Al Qa’ida’s Business Model,” CTC Sentinel
4.1 (January 2011).

[31] The authors are indebted to Jarret Brachman for this observation.

[32] Adam Gadahn, “A Call to Arms,” Al-Sahab, May 7 2010. 

[33] Gabriel Koehler-Derrick, “Developing Policy Options for the AQAP Threat
in Yemen,” CTC Sentinel 3.11 (November 2010).

[34] Authors’ interview with Madeleine Gruen, September 2010.

[35] While the internet provides Al-Qaeda with an advantage in the war of
ideas, the counterterrorism community is conducting continually more
effective disruption operations online. Successes include sting operations
in which putative jihadists were first identified online. This was the case
in Dallas, Texas in 2009, the shutting down of virtual facilitation networks
such as al-Tibyan, and even clandestine commandeering of jihadist websites
and materials. See U.S.A. v. Hosam Moher Husein Smadi, Case number 3-09 MJ
286, Warrant for arrest, 24 September 2009; and  Steve Swann, “Aabid Khan
and his Global Jihad,” BBC, 18 August 2008. Available online at
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/7549447.stm; last accessed 20 April 2011;
Ellen Nakashima, “Dismantling of Saudi-CIA Web Site Illustrates Need for
Clearer Cyberwar Policies,” Washington Post, 19 March 2010, A1. 

[36] Rashid Rauf’s death is contested, but most open sources indicate that
he was killed in a Predator drone strike on 22 November 2008 in Pakistan.

[37] Thomas Hegghammer, “The Failure of Jihad in Saudi Arabia,” CTC
Occasional Paper (West Point, NY: Combating Terrorism Center, 25 February
2010). 

[38] Upon affiliating with Al-Qaeda, GSPC veteran Abdel Malik Droukdal
initiated a campaign of vehicle-borne IED attacks against Western and
Algerian targets including the Algerian president, parliament, prime
minister, and constitutional court, as well as the United Nations. He also
encouraged AQIM to conduct attacks in Tunisia, Libya, Morocco, and
Mauritania, but activities in these countries have been limited, with the
exception of Mauritania.

[39] J.-P. Filiu, “The Local and Global Jihad of Al Qa’ida in the Islamic
Maghrib.”

[40] For a discussion of Al-Qaeda’s internal problems, see Assaf Moghadam
and Brian Fishman (eds.), Fault Lines in Global Jihad: Organizational,
Strategic, and Ideological Fissures (London: Routledge, 2011).

[41] Brian Fishman, “Dysfunction and Decline: Lessons Learned From Inside
Al-Qa’ida in Iraq” (West Point, NY: Combating Terrorism Center, 16 March
2009).  For more on Al-Qaeda’s principal-agent problems, see Jacob N.
Shapiro, “Theoretical Framework: The Challenges of Organizing Terrorism,” in
Joseph Felter, Jeff Bramlett, Bill Perkins, Jarrett Brachman, Brian Fishman,
James Forest, Lianne Kennedy, Jacob N. Shapiro, and Tom Stocking, “Harmony
and Disharmony: Exploiting al-Qa'ida's Organizational Vulnerabilities” (West
Point, NY: Combating Terrorism Center, February 2006.).

[42] For a dissenting view, see Nelly Lahoud, “Jihadi Recantations and their
Significance: The Case of Dr. Fadl,” in Assaf Moghadam and Brian Fishman
(eds.) ,  Fault Lines in Global Jihad: Organizational, Strategic, and
Ideological Fissures (London: Routledge, 2011).

[43] Figures that are more marginal within the jihadist movement have also
distanced themselves from Al-Qaeda’s violent tactics. Top Deobandi
institutions such as the Dar ul-Ulum Deoband have issued fatwas condemning
terrorism, while former members of the radical Hizb ut-Tehreer have formed
Quilliam, an institution designed to voice opposition to terrorist violence.


[44] Scott Helfstein, Nassir Abdullah, and Muhammad al-Obaidi, “Deadly
Vanguards:  A Study of al-Qa’ida’s Violence Against Muslims,” CTC Occasional
Paper (West Point, NY: Combating Terrorism Center, December 2009); and Brian
Fishman and Assaf Moghadam, “Do Jihadi and Islamist Divisions Matter?
Implications for Policy and Strategy,” in A. Moghadam and B. Fishman (eds.),
“Self-Inflicted Wounds.”

 

 

 



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