05/07/2011 12:00 AM

Interview with Terrorism Expert Bruce Riedel


'The Battle for the Soul of Pakistan Has Begun'


Many thought Osama bin Laden was hiding in the mountainous
Pakistan-Afghanistan border region. But he was just a two hour drive from
Islamabad. US terrorism expert Bruce Riedel spoke with SPIEGEL about how bin
Laden's death will affect al-Qaida and how the US should respond to
Pakistan's "double game." 

SPIEGEL: You have followed and been a part of the hunt for Osama bin Laden
since the very beginning. Did anything surprise you about how he was
ultimately found and killed?

Bruce Riedel: The most interesting development is the location where he was
found. He was not hiding in a cave in Waziristan, and he was not in a tribal
area along the Afghanistan-Pakistan border. Instead, he was found in the
city of Abbottabad, which is a garrison military city, only 30 miles (48
kilometers) from Islamabad. It is home to three regiments of the Pakistani
army, it is a frequent retirement city for Pakistani officers, and
Pakistan's first military dictator was born in this city. I think this
raises very puzzling and significant questions about who protected bin Laden
these last several years. Many suspected for a long time that bin Laden
would be found in the heartland of Pakistan. 

SPIEGEL: Why? Wasn't it always said that the tribal regions would offer the
best hideouts since neither the government nor the army has much influence
there?

Riedel: Other senior al-Qaida officials -- such as Khalid Sheikh Mohammed
and Abu Zubaydah -- have been captured in major Pakistani cities. There have
been reports for a long time that Taliban leader Mullah Omar is hiding in
Karachi, which I think is almost certainly true. It is a further indication
of the complexities of Pakistan. The Pakistan army had 140,000 troops
fighting militant groups along the border, but it is still very much in
close relationship with other parts of the jihadist movement. 

SPIEGEL: Who are the closest allies of al-Qaida in Pakistan? 

Riedel: We have known for a long time that al-Qaida has close connections
with the Pakistani Taliban, which cooperated with al-Qaida to assassinate
Benazir Bhutto and also with Lashkar e-Toiba, which attacked the Taj Mahal
Hotel and other places in Mumbai. Both groups have issued eulogies to bin
Laden threatening reprisals. But the bigger question is about the Pakistani
establishment: What did the Pakistani army and the Pakistani intelligence
service know? And how high up in the chain of command did that knowledge go?


SPIEGEL: President Barack Obama didn't give the Pakistani government any
forewarning that the raid on bin Laden's compound would take place. Do you
think we should see that as an indication of a concrete suspicion?

Riedel: Suspicion is the wrong word; it is deep mistrust. The Obama
administration has never had any illusions about Pakistan. I think they
understood right from the beginning that Pakistan was playing a double game
-- or at least that the Pakistani army was. But this will reinforce those
concerns and lead to tensions. 

SPIEGEL: What does that mean for US-Pakistani relations? 

Riedel: President Obama has to distinguish between civil society, civil
government and the military. Nobody believes that (Pakistani) President Asif
Ali Zardari knew where Bin Laden was. After all, Zardari's wife, Benazir
Bhutto, was murdered by al-Qaida and the Pakistani Taliban. It is also
universally understood that the Zardari government is very weak. It cannot
control the Pakistani intelligence services. The challenge for Obama and the
West will be to try to strengthen the civilian government while having
concerns about the military. 

SPIEGEL: That sounds like walking an impossibly thin line. 

Riedel: Of course it's a fine line. But the stakes are enormous. Pakistan
has the fastest growing nuclear arsenal in the world. It will soon surpass
the United Kingdom as the fifth-largest nuclear arsenal. It is the
sixth-largest country in the world in terms of population. It soon will
surpass Indonesia as the country with the world's largest Muslim population.
Bin Laden understood all of that very well, which is why he focused so much
on building alliances with other terrorist groups in Pakistan to undermine
the country's stability. 

SPIEGEL: What do Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence agency (ISI) and its
military possibly hope to gain by supporting al-Qaida? 

Riedel: That's a mystery. It could be loyalty to the common cause of global
jihad. It could be anti-Americanism. Or it could be a combination of
motives. 

SPIEGEL: What does bin Laden's death mean for al-Qaida? 

Riedel: Even though bin Laden has been relatively silent in recent times,
this is clearly a severe blow to al-Qaida. His ability to elude justice
created a myth. That is gone; the mystique has been shattered. We also heard
that the Navy Seals and the CIA team were able to get a considerable number
of computer hard drives out of the compound. That should lead to a further
dismantling of al-Qaida's core. Al-Qaida now risks becoming irrelevant
outside of Pakistan and Yemen. 

SPIEGEL: Why is Yemen so important for al-Qaida? 

Riedel: Al-Qaida has a flourishing cell in Yemen that can grow because the
Yemeni state is weak. The longer the struggle to overthrow (President) Ali
Abdullah Saleh goes on, the weaker (the state) becomes. 

SPIEGEL: The CIA ultimately got onto bin Laden's trail because it succeeded
in identifying a courier... 

Riedel: ...which has always been the most effective way of going after
senior al-Qaida figures. But we should not forget: (CIA Director Leon)
Panetta has said they were only about 60 percent sure that bin Laden was in
the compound. The president made a very gutsy call. 

SPIEGEL: It would appear that important information on the couriers was
derived from detainees in Guantanamo. In retrospect, does this somehow prove
that the people who always defended so-called "enhanced interrogation
methods" were right? 

Riedel: The information we have today does not say that torture led us to
bin Laden. I think the notion that you hear from some on the American right
-- that these results justify torture -- is just ridiculous. 

SPIEGEL: How can President Obama support democratic groups in Pakistan? 

Riedel: Obama will travel to Pakistan this year. He must signal how serious
he is about democracy in the country. He and the Europeans must continue
economic aid. The battle for the soul of Pakistan has begun.

Interview conducted by Cordula Meyer





URL:


*       http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/0,1518,761049,00.html

 



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