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What's Next for al-Qaeda? 


Authors: 

  

Richard N. Haass
<http://www.cfr.org/terrorism/next-al-qaeda/p24862?cid=rss-fullfeed-what_s_n
ext_for_al_qaeda%3F-050211&utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campai
gn=Feed%3A+cfr_main+%28CFR.org+-+Main+Site+Feed%29#expert_roundup_author_764
4> , President, Council on Foreign Relations

Ray Takeyh
<http://www.cfr.org/terrorism/next-al-qaeda/p24862?cid=rss-fullfeed-what_s_n
ext_for_al_qaeda%3F-050211&utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campai
gn=Feed%3A+cfr_main+%28CFR.org+-+Main+Site+Feed%29#expert_roundup_author_764
5> , Senior Fellow for Middle Eastern Studies, Council on Foreign Relations

Robert Danin
<http://www.cfr.org/terrorism/next-al-qaeda/p24862?cid=rss-fullfeed-what_s_n
ext_for_al_qaeda%3F-050211&utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campai
gn=Feed%3A+cfr_main+%28CFR.org+-+Main+Site+Feed%29#expert_roundup_author_764
6> , Eni Enrico Mattei Senior Fellow for Middle East and Africa Studies,
Council on Foreign Relations

Steven A. Cook
<http://www.cfr.org/terrorism/next-al-qaeda/p24862?cid=rss-fullfeed-what_s_n
ext_for_al_qaeda%3F-050211&utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campai
gn=Feed%3A+cfr_main+%28CFR.org+-+Main+Site+Feed%29#expert_roundup_author_764
7> , Hasib J. Sabbagh Senior Fellow for Middle Eastern Studies, Council on
Foreign Relations

Max Boot
<http://www.cfr.org/terrorism/next-al-qaeda/p24862?cid=rss-fullfeed-what_s_n
ext_for_al_qaeda%3F-050211&utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campai
gn=Feed%3A+cfr_main+%28CFR.org+-+Main+Site+Feed%29#expert_roundup_author_764
8> , Jeane J. Kirkpatrick Senior Fellow for National Security Studies,
Council on Foreign Relations

Daniel Markey
<http://www.cfr.org/terrorism/next-al-qaeda/p24862?cid=rss-fullfeed-what_s_n
ext_for_al_qaeda%3F-050211&utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campai
gn=Feed%3A+cfr_main+%28CFR.org+-+Main+Site+Feed%29#expert_roundup_author_764
9> , Senior Fellow for India, Pakistan, and South Asia, Council on Foreign
Relations

John B. Bellinger III
<http://www.cfr.org/terrorism/next-al-qaeda/p24862?cid=rss-fullfeed-what_s_n
ext_for_al_qaeda%3F-050211&utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campai
gn=Feed%3A+cfr_main+%28CFR.org+-+Main+Site+Feed%29#expert_roundup_author_765
0> , Adjunct Senior Fellow for International and National Security Law, CFR;
former legal adviser to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice

May 2, 2011

Osama bin Laden's death in a raid by U.S. troops on his compound north of
Islamabad, Pakistan, is both a symbolic and real blow to al-Qaeda. But will
it mean an end to terrorism or to al-Qaeda's hold on the imaginations of
radicals in the Middle East and elsewhere? Most likely it won't, according
to five CFR experts who weighed in on the subject.

While bin Laden's killing sends a strong signal to extremists, it doesn't
spell an end to their efforts, particularly those enabled by Pakistan, says
CFR President Richard N. Haass. In contrast, Ray Takeyh argues that the
revolts in the Middle East suggest that while bin Laden's death is a
laudable triumph of U.S. efforts, the region has moved on and bin Laden is
largely a symbol of a passing era. Robert Danin agrees with Takeyh, noting
that many moderate Sunnis and Shiites in the Middle East will be pleased at
bin Laden's demise, although some extremists will want to resurrect him as a
symbolic martyr. That impulse could be especially strong in countries like
Yemen, where the government is weak and vulnerable, says Steven A. Cook, who
also believes most Arabs are interested in transitioning to more open
political systems. Max Boot warns that maintaining a "comprehensive
counterinsurgency campaign" in Afghanistan is crucial to preventing the
country from falling back into terrorist hands. Daniel Markey observes that
while bin Laden's death could be an opportunity to improve U.S.-Pakistan
relations, it's more likely to exacerbate tensions than to enhance
cooperation. On the legal basis for the attack, John Bellinger says the
killing was lawful under both U.S. domestic law and international law.

Richard N. Haass
<http://www.cfr.org/experts/afghanistan-iraq-us-strategy-and-politics/richar
d-n-haass/b3350> , President, Council on Foreign Relations

The killing of Osama bin Laden constitutes a significant victory over global
terrorism. But it is a milestone, not a turning point, in what remains an
ongoing struggle without a foreseeable end.

The significance of what was accomplished stems from bin Laden's symbolic
importance. He has been an icon, one representing the ability to strike with
success against the United States and the West. That icon is now gone.

There is also the demonstration effect of what U.S. Special Forces are able
to do. It sends a clear message to terrorists that they are at least as
vulnerable as those they would seek to hurt. 

But any celebration needs to be tempered by two realities. The first is that
bin Laden's demise is in no way to be equated with the demise of terrorism.
There is no time for a V-T Day--a Victory over Terrorism Day celebration.

Terrorism is a decentralized phenomenon--in its funding, planning, and
execution. Removing bin Laden does not end the threat. There are successors
in al-Qaeda--and successors in autonomous groups operating out of Yemen,
Somalia, and other countries. So terrorism will continue. Indeed, it could
even grow somewhat worse in the short run as there are sure to be those who
will want to show that they can still strike against the West.

The second reason for responding with caution to this welcome development is
that it underscores yet again that Pakistan, home of some of the most
dangerous terrorists in the world, is decidedly less than a full partner.
Some parts of the government there are sympathetic to terrorism and
unwilling to act against it; others are simply unable to given a lack of
capacity. This reality is unlikely to change. As a result, the sort of
independent operation carried out against bin Laden is likely to be the rule
as much as the exception going forward.

Ray Takeyh
<http://www.cfr.org/experts/iran-democracy-and-human-rights-iraq/ray-takeyh/
b9599> , Senior Fellow for Middle Eastern Studies, Council on Foreign
Relations

The death of Osama bin Laden delivered another symbolic blow to two
interrelated concepts that have done much to bedevil the West: Islamic
radicalism wedded to terrorism as its most suitable expression. The Arab
Spring had already done much to discredit bin Laden's foundational ideology.
Al-Qaeda had long denounced pluralism and representation as fraudulent
conceits of the West. Granting power to men who presumably knew the mind of
God, violence against the West and imposition of severe cultural
restrictions were its only offerings to the region's restive youth. There
was little room in this vision for political emancipation, diversity of
opinion, or economic empowerment. From Tunisia to Yemen, the Arab masses
rejected this ideology through word and deed. The Arab revolt is a
denunciation of radicalism in all its hues: whether autocrats ruling in the
name of modernization or Islamists pledging redemption through terror. 

As the region moved beyond bin Laden's ideology, it also left behind his
methods. Al-Qaeda had professed that the only means of displacing Arab
despots was to unleash terror against their presumed patron--the United
States. The "enemy abroad" was the focal point of its wrath. Yet the Arab
masses proved that the likes of Egypt's Hosni Mubarak and Tunisia's
Zine-el-Abidine Ben Ali can actually be overthrown through peaceful
mobilization of people power. Islamist terror only offered the Arab
strongmen a rationale for maintaining power, as they conveniently brandished
the specter of Islamist power as a justification for their autocracy.
Ironically, al-Qaeda, its ideology, and its terrorism may have prolonged the
lifespan of an order it professed to despise. 

In the end, the Middle East has moved beyond bin Laden. Though his death
should certainly be celebrated as a triumph of painstaking efforts by the
U.S. government, he can only be remembered as a discredited relic of an
increasingly vanishing era.

Robert Danin
<http://www.cfr.org/experts/israel-egypt-lebanon/robert-danin/b8346> , Eni
Enrico Mattei Senior Fellow for Middle East and Africa Studies, Council on
Foreign Relations

Bin Laden's death brings to a close the decade-long search for the
mastermind of the terrorist attacks against New York and Washington on
September 11, 2001. As such, it will mark a significant turning point,
though not an end, to the U.S.-declared "War Against Terror." The
significance of bin Laden's departure, especially given al-Qaeda's
decentralized structure, will likely be more symbolic than operational.
Terrorism did not begin with al-Qaeda, nor will it end with al-Qaeda
weakened, though weakened it will be. Nonetheless, bin Laden's death deals a
blow to those who took inspiration from the Saudi-born terrorist leader, and
demonstrates that the United States remains a superpower with global reach.

In the Middle East, bin Laden's death will serve as a sort of Rorschach
test. Many moderate Sunni Arabs and Shiites will welcome his departure from
the scene, some explicitly, others tacitly. Mahmoud Abbas's Palestinian
Authority welcomed bin Laden's death as a victory for moderation, while his
soon-to-be partner Hamas denounced the killing. Israel, long in the vanguard
in the fight against terrorism, sees vindication of its own assertive and
often creative approach against terrorist leaders worldwide. In Abu Dhabi
today, the foreign ministers of Bahrain, Kuwait, and the United Arab
Emirates met and declined to comment on bin Laden's death. Nor have the
Saudis commented so far. The fear that bin Laden instilled for some is
likely to live on.

Given the unrest sweeping the Arab world, bin Laden's death is likely to be
less significant to the people of the Middle East than otherwise would have
been the case. For many Arabs, bin Laden had represented a violent reaction
to the Arab's powerlessness and failure to measure up to the West. Yet even
for many who had sympathized with his tactics, bin Laden had become an
embarrassment, having helped solidify a global image of the Arabs as
terrorists. The Arab uprisings now sweeping the region are an attempt to
forge a new Arab image and identity.

Now that Arabs from the Atlantic to the Gulf of Oman are taking matters into
their own hands, bin Laden may well be forgotten more quickly than he is in
the United States, where he murdered thousands of Americans and perforated
the nation's sense that international affairs take place abroad and not at
home. Yet for a small but significant group of bin Laden's followers, he
will be a symbolic martyr whose death will now need to be avenged.

Steven A. Cook
<http://www.cfr.org/experts/egypt-turkey-nato/steven-a-cook/b10266> , Hasib
J. Sabbagh Senior Fellow for Middle Eastern Studies, Council on Foreign
Relations

Osama bin Laden's death is an enormously symbolic event for the Arab world.
The Saudi-born al-Qaeda leader represented a worldview shared by a small but
influential group of Arabs. In this season of change in the Middle East,
there will no doubt be those who seek to carry on bin Laden's jihad, but the
demands of Tunisian, Egyptians, Syrians, Bahrainis, and others to live in
democratic societies suggest that bin Laden's ideological reach was quite
limited.

Even as al-Qaeda and its theoreticians welcomed the recent demise of
Tunisia's Zine al Abidine Ben Ali and Egypt's Hosni Mubarak--and would
probably like to see Libya's Muammar al-Qaddafi and Syria's Bashar al-Assad
go, too--the political change in the Middle East is not good for the
al-Qaeda franchise.

If countries in the region manage to make the transition to more open
political systems, individuals will have the opportunity to resolve their
grievances through political institutions that preclude them from taking up
arms against their own states or the United States. More important, it is
clear that the vast majority of Arabs do not share bin Laden and al-Qaeda's
view that the only legitimate authority on earth is God's. They support the
sovereignty of manmade law, so long as it is just.

That said, Hamas's quick condemnation of the U.S. military operation that
brought bin Laden to justice, and the fact that extremists are likely to
seek revenge, suggests that there is still fertile ground for al-Qaeda in
the Middle East and beyond. At the very least, al-Qaeda affiliates can find
opportunity to set down roots in places like Yemen, and perhaps Libya and
Syria, where Arab leaders have lost their grip but society has not fallen
into Somalia-like chaos.

Max Boot
<http://www.cfr.org/experts/israel-democracy-and-human-rights-iraq/max-boot/
b5641> , Jeane J. Kirkpatrick Senior Fellow for National Security Studies,
Council on Foreign Relations

What does the death of Osama bin Laden mean for the war in Afghanistan?

The positive impact is obvious: bin Laden had a close alliance with Taliban
leader Mullah Omar. No doubt many Taliban and associated operatives (e.g.,
in the Haqqani network) viewed bin Laden as a great holy warrior who charted
the way forward in the battle against infidels, crusaders, and Zionists. His
death could, therefore, strike a significant psychological blow against
insurgents. It may also have more direct repercussions. If bin Laden was
still acting, as he had in the past, as a key intermediary between the
Taliban and its wealthy Persian Gulf backers, then his death would clearly
interrupt the flow of funding.

But oddly enough, bin Laden's death may also be a setback for the U.S. war
effort in Afghanistan, at least in the West. In justifying his surge in
Afghanistan, President Obama has put too much rhetorical weight on the need
to counter al-Qaeda. The president has repeatedly claimed that all we were
doing in Afghanistan was denying al-Qaeda the ability to use that country as
a sanctuary. With bin Laden dead, many Americans may decide that the threat
from al-Qaeda is also gone and that we can afford to draw down in
Afghanistan. Not so.

Whatever al-Qaeda's fate (and it is too early to tell whether it will be
able to survive its "emir's" demise), other Islamist terrorist groups will
not be significantly hindered. This includes groups such as the Pakistani
Taliban, the Afghan Taliban, Lashkar-e-Taiba
<http://www.cfr.org/pakistan/lashkar-e-taiba-army-pure-aka-lashkar-e-tayyiba
-lashkar-e-toiba-lashkar--taiba/p17882> , and the Haqqani network, all at
least as virulent as al-Qaeda if lacking, so far, its global ambition. A
comprehensive counterinsurgency campaign in Afghanistan is still vital to
prevent that country from falling to Osama bin Laden's fellow travelers.

Moreover, by maintaining a large presence in Afghanistan, the United States
can also project power into Pakistan--as Navy SEALs showed by swooping down
on bin Laden's compound. Given how unstable Pakistan remains (instability
that may well be exacerbated by the fallout from this raid), it is
imperative that we have bases nearby, and no location is as convenient or
secure as Afghanistan.

Daniel Markey
<http://www.cfr.org/experts/india-pakistan-afghanistan/daniel-markey/b10682>
, Senior Fellow for India, Pakistan, and South Asia, Council on Foreign
Relations

Osama bin Laden's death comes at a time of intense crisis between the United
States and Pakistan. Its repercussions have the potential to launch the
bilateral relationship off a cliff, or to bring U.S. and Pakistani strategic
interests into better alignment.

Some Pakistanis, already enraged over U.S. drone strikes and the Raymond
Davis affair, are more concerned about the U.S. raid in Abbottabad being a
violation of Pakistan's territorial sovereignty than they are about bin
Laden's death. If terrorists launch a wave of reprisal attacks, Pakistanis
will be on the receiving end. Some will undoubtedly question whether their
security interests were well served by bin Laden's killing.

Pakistan's leadership will have doubts about continued U.S. engagement in
their region, what with bin Laden dead and a phased military withdrawal from
Afghanistan taking shape. For all their frustrations with Washington, they
also fear abandonment.

Many Americans, convinced that Pakistan has done less than it might to
confront radical militants and terrorists, see their worst suspicions
confirmed by the fact that bin Laden lived in a large, well-protected
compound right under the Pakistani military's nose. Either Pakistan's
intelligence service is terribly incompetent, fatally compromised, or both,
raising questions about its utility as a partner.

Americans and Pakistanis, therefore, have reasons to give in to their
mistrust. A more constructive outcome is possible, but it will require both
sides to think about long-term interests rather than near-term frustrations.
If handled smartly, bin Laden's death could mark a major reversal of
momentum for extremists and their supporters throughout South Asia.

That reversal would have to start in Islamabad, where too many military and
intelligence officials have actively or passively supported militants and
terrorists as a means to project influence into Afghanistan and India. They
will need to rethink such strategies. Recognizing that no terrorist group
can escape Washington's reach, Pakistan should now lend its unconditional
support to confronting and eliminating the wide range of terrorists
operating from its soil.

But that would not be enough. Bin Laden's death hardly clears the way for
disengagement from Pakistan. Disengagement is likely to enable the rise of a
new, perhaps even more dangerous, generation of terrorists. Instead,
America's strategy for the post-bin Laden era must be a far greater
commitment to helping Pakistan overcome the political, economic and security
conditions that make it an appealing safe haven for terrorists like bin
Laden. Such an effort will be costly, and it will take years.

Unfortunately, bin Laden's death is more likely to exacerbate tensions
between Washington and Islamabad than to encourage such farsighted
cooperation. But this would be a tragic waste of an historic opportunity to
write a more positive chapter in U.S.-Pakistan relations.

John B. Bellinger III
<http://www.cfr.org/experts/international-law-national-security-and-defense/
john-b-bellinger-iii/b6133> , Adjunct Senior Fellow for International and
National Security Law, CFR; former legal adviser to Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice

The U.S. killing of Osama bin Laden in Pakistan was lawful under both U.S.
domestic law and international law. The U.S. government's legal rationale
will be similar to arguments used by both the Bush and Obama administrations
to justify drone strikes against other al-Qaeda leaders in Pakistan and
elsewhere.  The Authorization to Use Military Force Act of September 18,
2001, authorizes the president to use "all necessary and appropriate force"
against persons who authorized, planned, or committed the 9/11 attacks.

The killing is not prohibited by the longstanding assassination prohibition
in Executive Order 12333 because the action was a military action in the
ongoing U.S. armed conflict with al-Qaeda and it is not prohibited to kill
specific leaders of an opposing force. The assassination prohibition also
does not apply to killings in self-defense. The executive branch will also
argue that the action was permissible under international law both as a
permissible use of force in the U.S. armed conflict with al-Qaeda and as a
legitimate action in self-defense, given that bin Laden was clearly planning
additional attacks.

Some critics of the administration's legal theory that the United States is
in an armed conflict with al-Qaeda might--if they were consistent with their
past criticisms--argue that the United States did not have a right to use
military force against bin Laden outside of Afghanistan, and that Washington
should instead have sent an extradition request to Pakistan or asked the
Pakistani government to arrest bin Laden.  But such traditional critics may
prefer to remain silent in this instance.

In addition, under the UN Charter, the United States would normally be
prohibited from using force inside Pakistan without obtaining Pakistan's
consent. It is not clear whether the Obama administration received the
consent of the Pakistani government to use force inside Pakistan in this
case, but the Pakistani government appears at least to have consented after
the fact to this potential infringement of its sovereignty.

 

 



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