http://nationalinterest.org/commentary/al-qaedas-new-hunting-ground-5347

 


Al-Qaeda's New Hunting Ground


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Ariel Cohen <http://nationalinterest.org/profile/ariel-cohen>  

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May 23, 2011

Russia is becoming a target for al-Qaeda's new "marketing" campaign. Since
Osama bin Laden's death, al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), the most
active and dangerous of all al-Qaeda terrorist franchises, is bent on
expanding its global reach. AQAP recently translated
<http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/05/18/us-russia-qaeda-magazine-idUSTRE7
4H39R20110518>  into Russian al-Qaeda's online journal Inspire to attract
jihadis from the embattled North Caucasus and other Muslim-populated areas
of Russia.

North Caucasus
<http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media/images/50941000/gif/_50941275_caucasas_map62
4.gif>  terrorists have been using radical Salafi Islam to recruit
disgruntled youth who grew up on the battlefields of the two Chechen wars
(1994-1996 and 1999-2004) and amidst almost two decades of anti-Russian
guerilla warfare. 

One of the first Chechen leaders to link with al-Qaeda was Shamil Basayev,
the murderous mastermind of the Dubrovka Theater and Beslan school hostage
takings in 2002 and 2004. His successor, Doku Umarov, managed to strengthen
ties with local Islamic communities and claimed the establishment of the
"Caucasus Emirate," a pan-Caucasus Islamist terrorist movement waging "jihad
against the infidels." Their goal is to establish an Islamic emirate
consisting of all the North Caucasus, from the Black Sea to the Caspian.

If successful, such a geopolitical project would severely disrupt oil routes
from the Caspian to Europe and threaten Russia, the states of South Caucasus
(Georgia, Armenia and Azerbaijan), and Europe itself. It would become what
Afghanistan was under the Taliban, what Somalia is today or what Yemen may
be tomorrow-a vast, ungovernable terror base.

Umarov has launched a terror campaign of his own. He is allegedly behind
this January's suicide bombing at the Domodedovo Airport
<http://rt.com/news/umarov-domodedovo-blast-responsibility/> , two suicide
bombings <http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/8597792.stm>  in Moscow in March
2010 and the Nevsky Express bombing
<http://www.themoscowtimes.com/news/article/chechen-rebels-claim-nevsky-expr
ess-bombing/390777.html>  in November 2009. The Caucasus Emirate remains one
of the world's most active terrorist battlefronts. Umarov's organization
launches daily attacks on innocent civilians, police stations, and
government offices throughout the region.

The North Caucasus has been on al-Qaeda's radar screen for a decade and a
half. Ayman al- Zawahiri visited the area in the mid-1990s and was arrested
by the Russians. (He was subsequently released, for reasons which are still
unclear.) Zawahiri identified <http://www.aei.org/article/102040>  the
Caucasus as one of the primary fronts in the war against Russia and the
West. 

Furthermore, Umarov has made clear that Russia and the Caucasus are an
integral part of the global "jihad," saying
<http://www.kavkazcenter.com/eng/content/2007/11/22/9107.shtml>  that "after
the expulsion of infidels we must take back all of the historical lands of
the Muslims, and these borders are beyond the boundaries of the Caucasus"
and that "everyone who attacked Muslims, wherever they are, are our
enemies!" As Russia conquered vast swaths of its empire from Muslims in
Europe and Asia from the sixteenth through the nineteenth centuries, this
means the al-Qaeda affiliate has its sights trained on Tatarstan,
Bashkortostan, Russian lands along the Volga River, the Urals region, and
vast parts of Siberia. 

Umarov has received much support from al-Qaeda and other extremist
organizations, including funding from Middle Eastern and central Asian
sources. Some of his closest comrades-in-arms were emissaries of
al-Qaeda-Moganned, for example, who arrived in Chechnya in 1999, and Abdulla
Kurd, the international coordinator of his terror cells. Russian security
forces killed both of them in counterterrorist operations in this spring.

Umarov recently reaffirmed
<http://www.kavkazcenter.com/eng/content/2011/05/17/14313.shtml>  his
commitment to the global jihad in an interview and rejected the notion that
terrorists in the North Caucasus have been weakened by bin Laden's death.
The battlefield, he said, is not just the Caucasus but "also the whole [of]
Russia." Furthermore, he stated
<http://www.kavkazcenter.com/eng/content/2011/05/17/14313.shtml> , the death
of jihad leaders (such as bin Laden) cannot stop "the revival of Islam."

Clearly, the war on terror is not over. Zawahiri, once al-Qaeda's number
two, may take over as bin Laden
<http://blog.heritage.org/2011/05/02/pakistan-the-epicenter-of-global-terror
ism/> 's heir, unless the interim operations leader
<http://www.foxnews.com/world/2011/05/17/expert-says-al-qaeda-chooses-interi
m-operational-leader/>  Saif al-Adel, a former Egyptian commando with
Iranian ties, gets the job. After bin Laden, al-Qaeda remains committed to
expanding its theaters of operations and reaching out to affiliates,
including those in Russia. This is hardly surprising, as Chechen terrorists
fight in Afghanistan alongside al-Qaeda. Some, after being detained in
Guantanamo, have been repatriated to Russia. 

It is time for the Kremlin to recognize this threat. As for the United
States, we should continue our commitment to the war on terror and push to
prevent al-Qaeda affiliates from finding a new safe haven and new allies,
including those in the poorly governed North Caucasus.

 



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