http://www.hindustantimes.com/Be-afraid-al-Qaeda-will-be-back/Article1-69956
9.aspx

 

Be afraid, al Qaeda will be back

Boaz Ganor
<http://www.hindustantimes.com/Search/search.aspx?q=Boaz%20Ganor&op=Story> ,
Hindustan Times
May 19, 2011

Osama bin Laden may be dead but the global jihad network is still up and
running. The last few years have seen the terrorism research community in
the US divided on the question of whether al-Qaeda is still a dangerous and
active organisation, capable of executing major attacks or whether it's
obsole 

te and no longer capable of executing even minor attacks. 

One part of the group points out that in the past few years, al-Qaeda has
failed to generate major attacks, let alone attacks as monstrous as 9/11. 

They add that it was transformed from an organisation with a clear command
and control structure into an informal network based on cells and local
networks, which relies on inspiring radical elements and homegrown terrorism
in the Muslim and western worlds. 

These local networks and radical Islamist individuals execute self-initiated
attacks inspired by al-Qaeda. 

The seconds group of scholars emphasise that it's too early to eulogise this
dangerous organisation since despite its forced change of modi operandi due
to operational constraints, the organisation is still capable of carrying
out complex and dangerous terrorist attacks.

Truth be told, both groups have merit. While al-Qaeda promoted and advanced
the idea of 'global jihad', it has also generated local ideological
imitators throughout Arab and Muslim States and in Muslim communities in the
West. 

Local jihadist terrorist organisations allied themselves with al-Qaeda and
defined themselves as its branches in their local arena, be it AQAP
(al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula) located in Yemen, AQIM (al-Qaeda in the
Islamic Maghreb), al-Qaeda in Iraq etc. 

Other local jihadist organisations affiliated themselves to the al-Qaeda
model and its leaders as a symbol, being inspired by - but not being
directed by - al-Qaeda. At the same time, the third circle of the global
jihadist network included 'homegrown terrorists' -  incited and agitated
Muslim youth, who formed local independent networks or acted as 'lone
wolves', intensified and bolstered these phenomena. 

The global jihad phenomenon is, therefore, a complex worldwide network.
Their symbol - the man at whom all the operatives looked for inspiration,
was eliminated on May 2, but the network's other components are still
operational and their motivation for reprisal attacks even increased. 

The spontaneous festivities in the US only added fuel to the fire. Even
President Barack Obama's soothing words on the war not being waged against
the Muslim world but against the members of al-Qaeda are unlikely to satisfy
the global terrorist network's operatives or many of their supporters in the
Muslim world.

Therefore, it should be taken into account that in a short time frame
incited extremist individuals might attempt to attack American symbols -
embassies, American corporations and tourists in Muslim countries. 

At the same time self-initiated homegrown terrorists and local networks in
western countries may conduct terrorist attacks in crowded areas, tourist
attractions and public transportation. Al-Qaeda's proxy organisations will
attempt to conduct in the mid-term better planned and more lethal attacks
against American targets around the world - against the air transportation
to and inside the US, and against targets in the US. 

The hardcore of al-Qaeda, under bin Laden's successor, will attempt to
avenge the killing of their leader by executing a mega-attack on the the
scale of 9/11. 

The motivation of al-Qaeda to conduct such an attack is now at its peak.
Al-Qaeda probably took into consideration that its leader might be killed by
its enemies and prepared a contingency operational plan for a mega-terrorist
attack that could now be executed. 

But in recent years, al-Qaeda leaders threatened time and again to conduct
such attacks against the US and other western countries. So far they haven't
managed to repeat a 9/11. The question, therefore, remains unanswered - does
al-Qaeda have the operational capability needed to conduct a mega-terrorist
attack, which would materialise its motivation for revenge? 

Only time will tell.

(Boaz Ganor is founder and executive director, International Institute for
Counter-Terrorism, The Interdisciplinary Centre, Herzliya, Israel. The views
expressed by the author are personal)

 



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