The
Obama administration's efforts to counter the threat posed by al Qaeda and the
wider jihadist movement have been a contentious topic in the U.S. presidential
race. Political rhetoric abounds on both sides; administration officials claim
that al Qaeda has been seriously crippled, while some critics of the
administration allege that the group is stronger than ever. As with most
political rhetoric, both claims bear elements of truth, but the truth depends
largely on how al Qaeda and jihadism are defined. Unfortunately, politicians
and the media tend to define al Qaeda loosely and incorrectly.
The
jihadist threat will persist regardless
of who is elected president, so understanding the actors involved is critical.
But a true understanding of those actors requires taxonomical acuity. It seems
worthwhile, then, to revisit Stratfor's definitions of al Qaeda and the wider
jihadist movement.
A Network of Networks
Al
Qaeda, the group established by Osama bin Laden and his colleagues, was never
very large -- there were never more than a few hundred actual members. We often
refer to this group, now led by Ayman al-Zawahiri, as the al Qaeda core or al
Qaeda prime. While the group's founders trained tens of thousands of men at
their camps in Afghanistan and Sudan, they initially viewed themselves as a
vanguard organization working with kindred groups to facilitate the jihad they
believed was necessary to establish a global Islamic caliphate.
Most
of the men trained at al Qaeda camps were members of other organizations or
were grassroots jihadists. The majority of them received basic paramilitary
training, and only a select few were invited to receive additional
training in terrorist tradecraft skills such as surveillance, document forgery
and bomb making. Of this select group, only a few men were invited to join the
al Qaeda core organization.
Bin
Laden envisioned another purpose for al Qaeda: leading the charge against
corrupt rulers in the Muslim world and against the United States, which he
believed supported corrupt Muslim rulers. Al Qaeda sought to excise the United
States from the Muslim world in much the same way that Hezbollah drove U.S.
forces out of Lebanon and Somalia forced the U.S. withdrawal from Mogadishu.
Al
Qaeda became a network of networks -- a trait demonstrated not only by its
training methods but also in bin Laden's rhetoric. For example, bin Laden's 1998
"World Islamic Front" statement, which declared jihad against Jews
and Crusaders, was signed by al-Zawahiri (who at the time was leading the
Egyptian Islamic Jihad) and leaders of other groups, including the Egyptian
Islamic Group, Jamiat-ul-Ulema-e-Pakistan and the Jihad Movement of Bangladesh.
Following
the 9/11 attacks, the United States applied against the al Qaeda core the full
pressure of its five counterterrorism levers: intelligence, military, law
enforcement, diplomacy and financial sanctions. As a result, many al Qaeda
members, eventually including bin Laden, were captured or killed and their
assets were frozen. Such measures have ensured that the group remains small for
operational security concerns. The remaining members of the group mostly are
lying low in Pakistan near the Afghan border, and their isolation there has
severely degraded their ability to conduct attacks.
The
al Qaeda core is now relegated to producing propaganda for guidance and
inspiration for other jihadist elements. Despite the disproportionate amount of
media attention given to statements from al-Zawahiri and Adam Gadahn, the al
Qaeda core constitutes only a very small part of the larger jihadist movement.
In fact, it has not conducted a successful terrorist attack in years.
However,
the core group has not been destroyed. It could regenerate if the United States
eased its pressure, but we believe that will be difficult given the loss of the charismatic bin Laden and his replacement by the irascible
al-Zawahiri.
In
any case, the jihadist movement transcends the al Qaeda core. In fact, Stratfor
for years published an annual forecast of al Qaeda,
but beginning in 2009, we intentionally changed the title of the forecast to reflect the isolation and
marginalization of the al Qaeda core and the ascendance of other jihadist
actors. We believed our analysis needed to focus less on the al Qaeda core and
more on the truly active and significant elements of the jihadist movement,
including regional groups that have adopted the al Qaeda name and the array of
grassroots jihadists.
Franchises and Grassroots
An
element of the jihadist movement that is often loosely referred to as al Qaeda
is the worldwide network of local or regional militant groups that have assumed
al Qaeda's name or ideology. In many cases, the relationships between the
leadership of these groups and the al Qaeda core began in the 1980s and 1990s.
Some
groups have publicly claimed allegiance to the al Qaeda core, becoming what we
refer to as franchise groups. These groups include al Qaeda in Iraq, al Qaeda
in the Islamic Maghreb and al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula. Even though these
franchises bear the al Qaeda name, they are locally owned and operated. This
means that the local commanders have significant latitude in how closely they
follow the guidance and philosophy of the al Qaeda core.
Some
franchise group leaders, such as AQAP's Nasir al-Wahayshi, maintain strong
relationships with the al Qaeda core and are very closely aligned with the
core's philosophy. Other leaders, such as Abu Musab Abd al-Wadoud of AQIM, are
more distanced. In fact, AQIM has seen severe internal fighting over these
doctrinal issues, and several former leaders of Algeria's Salafist Group for
Preaching and Combat left the group because of this conflict. Further, it is
widely believed that the death of Somali al Qaeda leader Fazul Abdullah
Mohammed was arranged by leaders of Somali jihadist group al Shabaab, which he
had criticized sharply.
The
last and broadest element of the global jihadist movement often referred to as
al Qaeda is what Stratfor refers to as grassroots jihadists. These are
individuals or small cells of individuals that are inspired by the al Qaeda
core -- or increasingly, by its franchise groups -- but that may have little or
no actual connection to these groups. Some grassroots jihadists travel to
places such as Pakistan or Yemen to receive training from the franchise groups.
Other grassroots militants have no direct contact with other jihadist elements.
The
core, the franchises and the grassroots jihadists are often interchangeably
referred to as al Qaeda, but there are important differences among these actors
that need to be recognized.
Important Distinctions
There
are some other important distinctions that inform our terminology and our
analysis. Not all jihadists are linked to al Qaeda, and not all
militant Islamists are jihadists. Islamists are those who believe society is
best governed by Islamic law, or Sharia. Militant Islamists are those who
advocate the use of force to establish Sharia. Militant Islamists are found in
both Islamic sects. Al Qaeda is a Sunni militant Islamist group, but Hezbollah
is a Shiite militant Islamist group. Moreover, not all militant Muslims are
Islamists. Some take up arms for tribal, territorial, ethnic or nationalistic
reasons, or for a combination of reasons.
In
places such as Iraq, Afghanistan, Yemen, Libya and northern Mali, several
militant groups are fighting foreign forces, their government or each other --
and sometimes all of the above. Some of these groups are jihadists, some are
tribal militias, some are brigands and smugglers, and others are nationalists.
Identifying, sorting and classifying these groups can be very difficult, and
sometimes alliances shift or overlap. For example, Yemen's southern separatists
will sometimes work with tribal militias or AQAP to fight against the
government; other times, they fight against these would-be allies. We have seen similar dynamics
in northern Mali among groups such as AQIM, Ansar Dine, the Movement
for Unity and Jihad in West Africa, various Tuareg groups and other tribal
militias in the region.
Taxonomy
becomes even more difficult when a group uses multiple names, or when multiple
groups share a name. Groups adopt different names for discretion, confusion or
public relations purposes. AQAP called itself Ansar al-Shariah during its fight
to take over cities in southern Yemen and to govern the territory. But radical
cleric Abu Hamza al-Masri, who was arrested in the United Kingdom in 2004 and extradited
to the United States in 2012, has long led a movement likewise called Ansar
al-Shariah. Even the Libyan jihadist militia that attacked the U.S. Consulate in
Benghazi uses the same name. But just because these groups share a name,
and just because members or leaders of the groups know each other, does not
necessarily mean that they are chapters of the same group or network of groups,
or that they even subscribe to the same ideology.
As
we mentioned long before Moammar Gadhafi was ousted in Libya, jihadists and other militants
thrive in power vacuums. This assertion has proved true in Afghanistan,
Iraq and Somalia, and more recently in Libya, northern Mali and now Syria. Weapons flooding into such
regions only compound the problem.
Militant
Islamists have seized the opportunity to grow in influence in such places, as
have the subset of militant Islamists we call jihadists. So in this context,
while the al Qaeda core has been crippled, other portions of the jihadist
movement are thriving. This is especially so among those that aspire to mount
local insurgencies rather than those more concerned with planning transnational
attacks. The nuances are important because as the composition and objectives of jihadist groups change, so do
their methods of attack.
Source:
http://www.stratfor.com/weekly/defining-al-qaeda?utm_source=freelist-f&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=20121018&utm_term=sweekly&utm_content=readmore&elq=5abfa26b0f3542f38aec4251d8a9771c