http://english.alarabiya.net/en/perspective/analysis/2013/08/10/Saudi-terror-arrests-suggest-U-S-not-alone-at-war-against-al-Qaeda.html


Dr. Walid Phares - Special to Al Arabiya

Walid Phares

In the United States, the general perception is that the war against al-Qaeda 
is an American war against a specific anti-American organization. This 
perception has been stretched at times, by apologist academia, to a point where 
the public has been made to believe that the United States is alone in this 
confrontation and all it would take to bring about a cease to hostilities is 
for Washington to withdraw from the region. Parallel to this oversimplification 
is the other common assertion that no one else is fighting this battle, and if 
they are, Arab and Middle Eastern efforts are meaningless. These approaches 
have been proven wrong as events in the region and worldwide are demonstrating.

Two men have recently been arrested in Saudi Arabia on suspicion of planning 
terrorist strikes, part of the uncovered information which prompted the closure 
of several Western embassies in the region last week. Saudi officials said the 
two suspects, from Yemen and Chad, were planning suicide attacks connected to 
recent al-Qaeda threats on American and British diplomatic interests. According 
to Saudi media reports, the two jihadists were arrested towards the end of July 
after having exchanged information on social media about attacks. Officials in 
Riyadh said the two men investigated used mobile phones and encrypted 
electronic communications to discuss the terrorist plot.

The Saudi official statement explained, "The two recruited themselves for the 
service of deviant thought (al Qaeda's ideology), as evidenced by their seized 
items which included computer hardware, electronic media and mobile phones and 
which indicated their communication with the deviant group abroad either by 
electronic encrypted messages or through identities via the social networks 
(such as Abu Alfidaa, Hspouy, Muawiya Almadani, Rasasah fi Qusasah, and Abu El 
Feda Aldokulai) so as to exchange information about impending suicide 
operations in the region." The timing of this arrest parallels U.S. drone 
attacks in neighboring Yemen as well as Egyptian military operations in Sinai 
and Tunisian troop movements against the Jihadists in the south of their 
country.
Operating in `national clusters?'

The arrest by the Saudis of two suspected jihadists operating inside the 
Kingdom and planning attacks via sophisticated communications suggests several 
conclusions. One is regarding their nationalities. One culprit is from Yemen, 
and the other is from Chad but residing in Saudi Arabia. This fact shows that 
al-Qaeda personnel, volunteers or supporters do not necessarily operate in 
"national clusters." As much previous evidence has shown for years, if not for 
decades by now, there is an international network of followers of a radical 
doctrine whose members hail from as many countries as the indoctrination 
machine can reach. After the attacks of September 11, the most popularized 
slogan in U.S. counterterrorism commentary was that 14 of the 19 perpetrators 
were "Saudis." But years later, it was clear that the Jihadists have no 
specific "nationality" or "ethnicity." They operate where they can with what 
they have. As I argued in my book The War of Ideas in 2007, the ideology of 
al-Qaeda does not recognize countries and national boundaries. A Chadian was 
recruited to prepare an attack against the United States out of Saudi Arabia. A 
Nigerian was indoctrinated by a Yemeni to strike in Detroit. U.S. citizens were 
mobilized to strike in Somalia, and an Egyptian leads the world's terrorist 
network. There are no local agendas in Yemen or in Mauritania that are 
producing the international brand of Jihadi terrorists. Rather, it is a 
radical, systemic, totalitarian doctrine that is using – and often abusing – 
causes, grievances and historical conflicts. A victory for this ideology and 
its supporters and promoters will not solve the problems of the peoples 
oppressed under their regimes. In fact, a victory for the Jihadists will 
exacerbate such problems. The developments in Afghanistan, Tunisia, Libya and 
now Egypt are striking examples. Living under the other type of Terror, 
Khomeinism in Iran or Hezbollah in Lebanon is another example of the failure of 
these violent doctrines. The al-Qaeda threat is global, and Washington learned 
about it one more time last week as a result of intercepted messages between 
Zawahiri and Wuhaishi, possibly during a conference call of Terror leaders. The 
U.S. decided to shut down many embassies showing that the threat is up and 
running across large swaths of land, not on "its way to decline" as the Obama 
Administration affirmed so adamantly during the electoral year of 2012.

Back to the arrests in Arabia: The networks planning on massive strikes against 
American interests are also at war with several Arab countries. The latter's 
armies and peoples are also resisting them. In Arabia, there are arrests of 
al-Qaeda; in Yemen, the armed forces are battling terrorist invasions of entire 
villages; in Tunisia, soldiers and officers are machine-gunned down on the 
highways; in Libya, the Jihadists target the country's defense officials; in 
Lebanon, army commanders are killed; and in Egypt, the Army is leading a 
massive campaign against al-Qaeda linked brigades in Sinai. There is an all-out 
Arab war against Terror, with casualties at present higher than NATO's 
confrontation with the Taliban. More Arabs were killed in each one of these 
countries by al-Qaeda terrorists than all the U.S. citizens massacred by 
homegrown jihadists in the United States since 9/11.
The United States is not alone

The rational conclusion for Washington to reach at this point is that the 
United States is not alone in this fight against al-Qaeda and it is not the 
only victim of terror in the world. Another consequence of this reality should 
be for the U.S. government to set its priorities in accordance with strategic 
logic. When millions in Egypt, Tunisia and Libya march against the extremists, 
it should stand with them; when Egyptian, Tunisian, and Arabian and other armed 
forces battle al Qaeda, there should be a concerted global effort to defeat the 
Terror network. In short, the U.S. must support the Arab fight against al-Qaeda 
as part of international efforts to reduce the threat. At the same time, 
however, those Arab countries battling the Jihadists within their borders must 
also act as part of a global alliance and participate in the War of Ideas. All 
partners in the campaign to defend the international community against violent 
extremists must learn to put local and historical grievances aside and fight 
Terror as one body – the suicide bombers of Zawahiri and his henchmen strike 
both Arabs and Westerners alike.

_______
Dr. Walid Phares is the Co-Secretary General of the Transatlantic Parliamentary 
Group on Counter Terrorism and advises members of the U.S. Congress on the 
Middle East. He is the author of The Coming Revolution.
 





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