LCCC ENGLISH
DAILY NEWS BULLETIN
June 23/07
Bible Reading of the day
Holy Gospel
of Jesus Christ according to Saint Matthew 6,19-23. Do not store up for
yourselves treasures on earth, where moth and decay destroy, and thieves break
in and steal. But store up treasures in heaven, where neither moth nor decay
destroys, nor thieves break in and steal. For where your treasure is, there also
will your heart be. The lamp of the body is the eye. If your eye is sound, your
whole body will be filled with light; but if your eye is bad, your whole body
will be in darkness. And if the light in you is darkness, how great will the
darkness be.
Free Opinion
Symposium: Strategies of Death.By
Jamie Glazov.FrontPageMagazine.com.
June 23
Deter a nuclear Iran, because an attack would be disastrous-By
Ivan Eland-June 23/07
Massimo D'Alema: Et tu Brute? By Emanuele
Ottolenghi. June 23/07
Syria's master plan to destroy Lebanon again-Counterterrorism
Blog-June 23/07
ANALYSIS-Sunni jihadis lose Lebanon battle but won't vanish-Reuters-June
23/07
The Two Challenges Facing the Lebanese Opposition and the Arab Regimes-By: Walid
Choucair-June 23/07
Latest News Reports From Miscellaneous Sources
for June 23/06/07
Mixed Messages from Syria-Christian
Broadcasting Network
Pope: Lebanon Present
in Church's Prayers-Naharnet
Saniora to Meet
Sarkozy, Rice Next Week-Naharnet
Army Ends Nahr al-Bared Operation,
Declares Victory Over Terrorists-Naharnet
Arab League Mediation
Hindered-Naharnet
Sukleen Truck Panics
Mtaileb Residents-Naharnet
Lebanon militants will leave 'in coffins'-ABC
Online
Man Arrested for
Smuggling Military Gear from China-Naharnet
Sharaa: Closure of Border Crossing with Lebanon for 'Security Reasons'-Naharnet
Smiles in Damascus and Tehran-Council on
Foreign Relations
Syria denies plan to close Masnaa crossing-Daily
Star
Moussa extends Beirut mission for one day after 'some progress' in ...Daily
Star
March 14 Forces, Arab League Delegation Discuss Weapons Smuggling ...MEMRI
France postpones Paris talks on Lebanese crisis until mid-July
Murr rules out truce with Fatah al-Islam militants
Qatar rotates 74 new troops for service with UNIFIL
Shiite clerics welcome Arab mediation
'Violence threatens Lebanese stability' - UN peace envoy
Interior Ministry starts voter registration
Rizk files complaint against owner of New TV
Judiciary delays union polls over by-law violations
Shares of Banque Libanaise rise by 100 percent in single day
Lebanese dread rumored closure of Syrian border
Baccalaureate exams kick off amid heavy security
Sidon-area river is 'a stinky swamp'
Harvard honors AUB professor Samir Khalaf
Nahr al-Bared refugees will go home to new dangers
The Two Challenges
Facing the Lebanese Opposition and the Arab Regimes
Walid Choucair- Al-Hayat - 22/06/07//
No single Lebanese side is capable of aborting the efforts of Arab League
delegates attempting to resume the dialogue between the conflicting Lebanese
sides and dealing with the problems marring the Lebanese relationship with
Syria, because by seeking to do so, it would be fully responsible for dragging
Lebanon to a scenario that combines both Gaza and Iraq.
Had it not been for the simultaneity of the threats looming before Lebanon after
the assassination of MP Walid Eido, the raging battles in the Nahr el-Bared
refugee camp, the possibility of further political upheavals that might result
in a second Lebanese government in violation of the constitution with the
threats emerging from the entire Hamas-Fatah-PLO affair; the Arab regime would
never have felt the need to move toward Lebanon, in conjunction with the Arab
fact-finding delegation tasked with attempting to contain the exploding
situation in the Palestinian territories.
The simultaneity of the Lebanese and Palestinian developments constituted a
source of threat to Arabs, because it implies that the outcome of the Riyadh
Arab summit - including the Arab peace initiative and the efforts to safeguard
the stability of Lebanon - were scrapped (less than three months from its
holding).
At the same time, if the Egyptian accusations to Iran of being behind the
developments in Gaza prove to be valid, and if the Lebanese accusations to
certain Syrian apparatus of being behind the instability in Lebanon could
equally be substantiated; then failure of the of the Arab drive in Lebanon and
the slipping of this tiny country into further security escalation through
Palestinian and Lebanese vehicles, in addition to the further political
escalation expected from naming two governments, would be the biggest proof that
Lebanon has indeed began its descent into becoming an arena in which the outcome
and the spirit of reconciliation from which they emerged, the Riyadh summit will
be scrapped.
The Saudi-Syrian reconciliation achieved during the summit led to a common
understanding on defusing the tensions in Lebanon in hope for further efforts to
accelerate the resolution of its worsening crisis.
The main theme for this Saudi-Syrian conciliation was helping the conflicting
Lebanese sides reach an agreement over the decision to establish the
international tribunal to prosecute those responsible for the assassination of
late Prime Minister Rafik al-Hariri in line with the Lebanese constitutional
means.
However, the Syrian side's refusal to cooperate on the issue of the tribunal,
despite Egyptian and Saudi reassurances to Syria, gave way to an Arab support to
take the tribunal to the UN Security Council for ratification.
The conflicting sides of Lebanon would be fully aware that they are seeking to
include Lebanon in the exploding regional scene and dragging it back to the
domain of clashing axes if they continue to contribute to the deteriorating
situation in Lebanon through allowing the efforts of the Arab League delegation
and its Secretary General, Amr Moussa for a resumption of the dialogue in
Lebanon and reaching a settlement to be aborted. This will only lead to further
tragedies, and undermine the achievements the Lebanese army accomplished in its
confrontation with Fatah al-Islam in the Nahr el-Bared refugee camp, as well as
its success, jointly with the Lebanese security forces, to thwart a plot to tear
another chunk of security influence from Lebanon to serve the interests of
illegitimate forces scattered all over its territory.
Undermining the accomplishments achieved by the Lebanese army with little
wherewithal amid the western nations' repeated, sometimes misleading, pledges of
material support, which have been going on for months now, would only undermine
Lebanon's ability to self-reliantly manage its own security, a security that the
people of Lebanon has been longing for, as evident by their massive show of
support for the army as it boldly embarked on challenges and offered sacrifices.
The potential toll for obstructing the Arab drive will not only lead to an
undermining of the achievements of the army, but will by extension, further
paralyze, divide and confuse the Lebanese institutions.
And while the challenge facing the people of Lebanon, particularly the
opposition in proving their ability to prevent the inclusion of Lebanon in the
precarious regional situation, the bigger challenge lies before the Arab regime
as a whole. The latter is fully aware that the failure of the Lebanese side to
respond to the efforts of the Arab delegation is mainly a reflection of the
regional tug of war, and that it shows the need for compromises that go beyond
merely encouraging the people of Lebanon to resume the dialogue between the
pro-government majority and the opposition.
The Arab regime might be seeking a balanced position when dealing with the
Lebanese crisis by treating it as an internal standoff between the people of
Lebanon and an external one between Lebanon and Syria. In doing so, the Arab
regime is seeking to preserve the impartiality of the Arab League in order to be
able to persuade Damascus to provide the margin needed to resolve these
standoffs and to avoid transforming the Lebanese crisis into a standoff between
key Arab players and Syria.
However the minute that Arab countries have the proof that what has been
suspected for long, namely that the crisis in Lebanon is the outcome of a
standoff between both Syria and Iran on one hand, and these countries, a much
different approach is likely to be considered.
Transforming the situation in Lebanon into an amalgam of what we have been
seeing in Gaza and Iraq constitutes a major threat to Arab security, and while
it was not possible to send Arab troops to Iraq or Gaza to prevent the situation
from slipping into total anarchy there, the circumstances surrounding a similar
step would be more favorable in Lebanon
Lebanon, Gaza, the Broader Syro-Iranian
Offensive
Walid Phares
The latest dramatic military and terror events in Gaza and Lebanon can be viewed
from a regional geopolitical perspective: A Syro-Iranian axis offensive on its
(their) primarily western front stretching along the Mediterranean coast.
In previous analyses I have argued that the Tehran-Damascus axis is involved in
a regional campaign to seize as much physical terrain and score as many
victories across the Middle East in order to consolidate their strategic posture
before 2008; the year they believe Americans will limit – perhaps diminish —
their moves because of the U.S. presidential campaign season.
Iran's and Syria's offensives have been well-coordinated on battlefields across
the Levant since last January, with a clear escalation since early spring.
Following are the main fronts:
Eastern Front: There have been multiple reports and much evidence of arming and
supplying neo-Taliban and other Jihadi forces in Afghanistan in order that they
may engage U.S.-led NATO forces and provoke chaos across the country.
Central Front: The axis has intensified its actions against U.S. and coalition
forces, as wells as Iraqi civilians in an attempt to create more sectarian
tension, with the greater objective of disrupting “surge” operations in
particular, and generally eroding U.S. and allied efforts in Iraq.
Western Front: The axis has unleashed two blitzkrieg-like offensives — one on
the upper western front (Lebanon). The other within the lower western front
(Gaza).
1. In Lebanon, the Tehran-Damascus axis has had as its goals to crumble the
Seniora Government, cripple the Lebanese Army, and crush the Cedars Revolution.
To accomplish these, two approaches have been taken:
a) Terrorism: The assassination of MP Walid Eido in Beirut, other bombing
attacks including car-bombs targeting and killing civilians.
b) Fatah al Islam attacks against the Lebanese Army in Nahr al bared and Tripoli
in the north.
In Lebanon, the axis is expected to launch more terror attacks. We are looking
at all Syro-Iranian assets in Lebanon, monitoring which ones will be deployed to
battle next, and when.
2. The axis has also been involved in Gaza where they surprised observers with
their decision to throw Hamas fully against Fatah and the PA in the enclave. The
plan to seize control of Gaza was projected a long time ago. But the timing was
at the discretion of the Syro-Iranian war room, which funds and strategically
controls Hamas and Islamic Jihad.
The heavy fighting in Gaza represents an important decision made by the regional
masters: The acceleration of the axis offensive so that by the end of summer,
four battlefields will be fully ignited against the U.S., its allies and
regional democracies: Afghanistan, Iraq, Lebanon and Gaza (Palestinian
territories). But just as important is the fact that an entire Taliban-like zone
has been established on the eastern Mediterranean under Hamas control and with
Syro-Iranian backing. Our expectations are that, short of a large-scale
counter-operation aimed at dislodging the "coup" in the enclave, the area will
become a massive terror base of operations.
In the final analysis, the axis' offensive on their western front is peaking.
The immediate goal of the axis is to protect the Syrian regime’s western
(Lebanon) flank and southern (Israel) flank.
Thrusting in Lebanon and spreading chaos, also would potentially shield Bashar
al Assad from the upcoming UN investigation into the assassination of Lebanese
Prime Minister Rafik Hariri (and others).
.Seizing Gaza would, in their estimation, curtail U.S. efforts in Iraq, and
pressure Israel away from Syria and Hezbollah. The Jihadi strategic mind is in
its full offensive mode in the region.
*Dr Walid Phares is the Director of the Future Terrorism Project at the
Foundation for the Defense of Democracies and the author of The War of Ideas
Lebanon declares victory
in camp war on militants
Thu Jun 21, 2007 3:43PM EDT
By Nadim Ladki
BEIRUT (Reuters) - Lebanon on Thursday declared victory in its 33-day war
against an al Qaeda-inspired militant group at a Palestinian refugee camp and
said its military operation there was over. The fighting between the army and
militants holed up in the Nahr al-Bared camp was the worst outbreak of violence
in Lebanon since the end its war 17 years ago and cost the lives of at least 166
people.
"I can tell the Lebanese that as of now the military operation in Nahr al-Bared
is finished," Defense Minister Elias al-Murr told Lebanon 's LBC television.
"All the positions of the terrorists have been crushed," he said adding that the
surviving members of Fatah al-Islam had pulled back from the edges of Nahr
al-Bared in north Lebanon into civilian areas deep in the camp. Murr said the
army would maintain a siege around the camp until all Fatah al-Islam militants
surrendered, including their leader Shaker al-Abssi.
"They have to surrender ... It's not good enough to say Abssi was killed, if he
is dead, give us the body," he said. Murr said the army was continuing some
mopping up operations and defusing mines and booby traps at the outskirts of the
camp. Witnesses said exchanges of machinegun fire continued at the camp after
Murr's announcement following a day of sporadic clashes. The fighting had been
concentrated in areas held by the militants on the outskirts of the camp.
Security forces are barred from entering Lebanon 's 12 Palestinian refugee camps
by a 1969 agreement.
The battle was the worst internal conflict since the 1975-1990 war. At least 166
people, including 76 soldiers, more than 60 militants and 30 civilians, have
been killed in the fighting, which also destroyed much of the camp. The army
says Fatah al-Islam started the conflict on May 20 by attacking its posts. The
group, which includes fighters from across the Arab world, says it has been
acting in self-defense.
Murr said in a newspaper interview published earlier that some of the fighters
arrested were members of al Qaeda. "There is a section of them which belongs
directly to al Qaeda," Murr told An-Nahar newspaper. Fatah al-Islam has said it
has no organizational ties to al Qaeda but shares its militant ideology. Most of
the camp's 40,000 residents fled during the early days of the fighting, which
has destroyed much of the sprawling maze of alleyways on the Mediterranean
seafront.
Neighboring Syria on Wednesday closed one of its border crossings into northern
Lebanon . Syria has closed three crossings into north Lebanon , citing security
concerns since the start of the Nahr al-Bared fighting. Anti-Syrian Lebanese
leaders say Fatah al-Islam is a tool of Syrian intelligence. Both Syria and the
group deny any links.
Reuters 2007. All rights reserved.
Pope: Lebanon
Present in Church's Prayers
Pope Benedict XVI has expressed concern over the situation in the Middle East,
and said the Holy Land, Iraq and Lebanon were very much present in the church's
prayers. "The Holy Land, Iraq and Lebanon are present, with the urgency and the
constancy that they deserve, in the prayers and actions of the Holy See and the
whole church," Benedict told an audience of Catholic bishops Thursday. "The
long-sought and long-awaited peace unfortunately is still largely offended," by
violence, the pontiff said. Violence "often degenerates into war, whether or not
declared, and ends up becoming a pressing international problem, as is today,"
he said.
"I knock on the heart of those who have specific responsibilities to ask that
they adhere to the important duty of guaranteeing peace to everybody
indistinctly, setting it free from the fatal disease of religious, cultural,
historic or geographic discrimination." In a pilgrimage Sunday in the footsteps
of St. Francis of Assisi, Benedict launched one of his strongest appeals for an
end to the "horrors" of fighting and terrorism in Iraq and the Middle East, and
decried "the illusion" that force could resolve conflicts.
The Pope also deplored the "feeling of abandonment" experienced by Iraq's
Christian communities during an audience with the patriarch of the Assyrian
Church of the East. He denounced the slaying of a Catholic priest in Iraq as a
"barbaric killing." "Particularly in Iraq, the homeland of so many of the
Assyrian faithful, Christian families and communities are feeling increasing
pressure from insecurity, aggression and a sense of abandonment," Benedict said.
Christians make up just 3 percent of Iraq's 26 million people. The major
Christian groups include Chaldean-Assyrians and Armenians, with small numbers of
Roman Catholics.
"Many of them see no other possibility than to leave the country and to seek a
new future abroad," the pontiff said. "These difficulties are a source of great
concern to me, and I wish to express my solidarity with the pastors and the
faithful of the Christian communities who remain there, often at the price of
heroic sacrifices."(AP-AFP-Naharnet) Beirut, 22 Jun 07, 09:09
Saniora to
Meet Sarkozy, Rice Next Week
French President Nicolas Sarkozy will have a busy diplomatic start next week,
with meetings lined up with U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon, U.S. Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice and California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, his office has
said. Those three encounters, along with a meeting with Yemen's President Ali
Abdullah Saleh, are set for Monday, with a meeting with Lebanese Premier Fouad
Saniora on Tuesday. Rice will be in Paris to attend a French-sponsored
conference aimed at launching a new international effort to end atrocities in
Sudan's western Darfur region. Sarkozy's spokesman said Schwarzenegger had asked
to meet the newly-elected president to discuss environmental issues. Both men
have declared the environment to be among their top priorities. State Department
spokesman Sean McCormack said Rice will discuss the humanitarian crisis in
Darfur and stability in Lebanon when she meets world leaders on Sunday and
Monday in Paris.
Rice plans to meet with Sarkozy other top French officials as well as Saniora,
McCormack said.(AFP-Naharnet) Beirut, 22 Jun 07, 08:27
Sharaa: Closure of Border Crossing with Lebanon for 'Security Reasons'
Vice President Farouk al-Sharaa said that Syria's closure of a border crossing
with northeastern Lebanon was a precautionary security measure only and that
Damascus has no immediate plans to close the Masnaa passage. Damascus' closure
Wednesday of the Qaa-Jousseh crossing prompted Lebanese media to speculate that
the only other open crossing, Masnaa, would also be closed. After the May 20
outbreak of fighting in the northern Palestinian refugee camp of Nahr al-Bared,
Syria had closed two other crossings Arida and Dabussiya. At the time, the
Syrians said those crossings were shut down for safety reasons.
"The closure of the (Qaa-Jousseh) border crossing is a precautionary security
measure," al-Sharaa told Syrian journalists in a briefing Thursday. He did not
elaborate why a precautionary move was needed. "Syria cannot resort to
completely closing the border unless it became impossible to improve
Syrian-Lebanese relations," he added. Since Syrian troop withdrawal from Lebanon
in 2005 under international pressure, Damascus has used the flow of goods and
people across the border as a pressure tactic against Lebanon, Lebanese
anti-Syrian politicians have said.
A full closure of Lebanon's border with Syria would sever Beirut's land links
with the Arab world and could severely hurt its economy. Al-Sharaa said the
anti-Syrian ruling majority in Lebanon would not succeed in harming
Syrian-Lebanese relations. "A small group of politicians, even if they owned a
Lebanese audience, cannot lead Syria to close the border because we have allies
(in Lebanon) and they are many and they are stronger," he said. Damascus has in
the past threatened to close its land border with Lebanon if an international
force is deployed along the boundary to prevent the illegal transfer of weapons
to Lebanon, as was envisaged in a U.N. Security Council resolution that ended
the Hizbullah-Israel war last year.
Wednesday's closure came as an Arab League delegation was in Beirut meeting with
Lebanese leaders, dispatched here after Lebanon's anti-Syrian parliamentary
majority demanded the Arabs act to end Syrian interference in Lebanese affairs
and alleged smuggling of weapons and militants into this country. Syria denies
the accusations. The Arab team was sent to Lebanon after a foreign ministers'
meeting in Cairo last week following the assassination of pro-government Beirut
MP Walid Eido which his supporters blamed on Syria.(AP-Naharnet) Beirut, 22 Jun
07, 09:14
Army Ends Nahr al-Bared Operation, Declares Victory Over Terrorists
Defense Minister Elias Murr declared victory over Fatah al-Islam terrorists,
saying the month-long military operation has ended but that the siege of the
northern Palestinian refugee camp of Nahr al-Bared with continue until the
militants surrendered.
"The military operations in Nahr al-Bared camp have ended, but the camp will
remain encircled until the total surrender of Fatah al-Islam," Murr told Kalam
al-Nass on LBC television late Thursday. He was referring to the al-Qaida
inspired group. "I dedicate this victory to the Lebanese people," he announced.
"The Lebanese army has destroyed all Fatah Islam positions," Murr said. "The
Lebanese army has crushed those terrorists. The army is combing the area," he
said, adding that troops were now carrying out searches and operations to disarm
unexploded ordnance. Murr said that "the military operation is over," but
stressed that the camp would remain "a theater of operations and under siege"
until the militants surrendered. Military officials said army experts were
clearing buildings, streets and houses of explosives placed by the militants. He
said a "large number" of Fatah al-Islam commanders had been killed over the past
month, while leader Shaker Abssi, deputy leader Abu Hureira and others were on
the run, suggesting they were hiding in the camp among several thousand
Palestinian civilians still holed up there.
A few hours before Murr's announcement, sporadic shooting by army artillery and
tanks could be heard in the camp as plumes of black and white smoke rose into
the sky. "What is happening now is some cleanup that the army's heroes are
carrying out, and dismantling some mines," he said.
His comments came after a few days after the Lebanese took control of Nahr al-Bared's
fringes in what has become known as the "new camp."
The remaining terrorists are now holed up in a small portion of Nahr al Bared
known as the "old camp" a densely populated neighborhood of single-storey
buildings and narrow streets on the southern tip of the shantytown where most of
the Palestinian refugees lived. Murr said that a total of 76 soldiers had died
since the battle broke out on May 20, and that another 150 had been wounded. He
also said that there are about 100 Fatah al-Islam militants injured in the
gunbattles.
That brought to at least 143 people killed in the deadliest violence since the
end of the 1975-1990 civil war.
Some Cabinet ministers and members of the anti-Syria governing coalition have
claimed Fatah Islam was created by Syrian intelligence to destabilize Lebanon, a
charge denied by both Syria and Fatah Islam. Sheik Mohammed Haj of the
Palestinian Scholars Association, a mediator who met with the militant group's
leaders in recent days, said Fatah al-Islam "has declared a cease-fire and will
comply with the Lebanese army's decision to end military operations."
He said the militants would abide by conditions set by the army to end the
fighting, but he would not elaborate. TV stations and newspapers said the deal
included handing over Fatah al-Islam's wounded and dismantling the
group.(AP-AFP-Naharnet) Beirut, 22 Jun 07, 07:56
Man Arrested
for Smuggling Military Gear from China
A man, allegedly smuggling military equipment in a shipment coming from China to
Beirut, has been arrested, the daily An Nahar reported Friday.
It said authorities, acting on a tip from the Lebanese army, arrested the man
who was only identified by his first name of Hisham. An Nahar said the detainee
claimed the shipment contained children's toys. But after a search, it turned
out that the container was packed with military gear. It said the equipment
included night vision goggles, face masks and military bag packs. Investigation
with the detainee uncovered that Hisham was an ex-activist with al-Tawheed, an
extremist Sunni group based in northern Lebanon. Beirut, 22 Jun 07, 11:55
Sukleen Truck
Panics Mtaileb Residents
Fire caused a blast in a garbage truck on the Mtaileb-Bikfaya road, northeast of
Beirut Friday, panicking residents who thought a bomb went off in the area.
Technical failure ignited the blaze in the Sukleen company truck, the state-run
National News Agency said.LBCI TV said the tire of the vehicle exploded because
of the fire, causing panic among the neighborhood's residents. Firefighters
rushed to the area and immediately put off the flames, NNA said. Sukleen later
said in a statement carried by NNA that the sound "was just the echo of a
failure in one of the truck's tires." Beirut, 22 Jun 07, 11:17
Arab League
Mediation Hindered
Arab League mediation efforts to try to break the months-long political impasse
that has crippled Lebanon have suffered a setback after the Hizbullah-led
Opposition demanded the formation of a national unity government as a
pre-condition for resumption of dialogue.
Social Affaris Minister Nayla Moawad accused Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri, a
key opposition leader, of seeking to scupper fresh efforts launched by Arab
league Secretary General Amr Moussa. "While he (Berri) accepted Amr Moussa's
proposal for a resumption of dialogue, he made it conditional on the formation
of a national unity government," she said. "This hardening of the opposition's
position is because of last-minute orders from Syria. Under such conditions the
chances of the Arab mediation mission succeeding are diminished and impasse
looms," Moawad said. She was speaking on the final day of the latest Arab League
push aimed at getting Lebanon's feuding anti- and pro-Syrian camps to talk to
each other and end more than seven months of political paralysis.
Moussa's delegation held lengthy overnight talks with Hizbullah leader Sayyed
Hassan Nasrallah which were followed by a separate meeting with MP Saad Hariri.
According to a source within the Arab League delegation, Berri told the team on
Thursday that any dialogue had to take place under a unity government.
"It is a unity government that will become a conference for dialogue," the
source quoted Berri as saying.
The anti-Syrian parliamentary majority had welcomed the league proposal for an
unconditional resumption of the Lebanese national dialogue interrupted by last
year's 34-day war with Israel. "Amr Moussa and the Arab delegation have proposed
restarting the Lebanon dialogue conference" grouping the country's 14 main
political and religious leaders, the source said. "If the delegation can create
an opening in Lebanon, that would support international and regional efforts to
solve the Lebanese crisis," he added. Moussa, who is heading a delegation for a
third day of meetings, told reporters "if the Lebanese are ready to talks abroad
nothing is preventing them from doing the same at home." He said his team had
decided to extend its mission by a day until Friday in a bid to end the
political stalemate plaguing the country for the past seven months. Iranian
Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki on Thursday welcomed any effort to kick
start the Lebanese dialogue and said "the security and stability of Lebanon are
very important for the Islamic republic," his ministry said. But in Paris, the
French foreign ministry announced that a meeting of Lebanese leaders scheduled
for next week had been postponed and could now take place in mid-July. Tehran
and Syria are the main backers of Hizbullah, which leads the Opposition against
Prime Minister Fouad Saniora's government.(AFP-Naharnet) Beirut, 22 Jun 07,
10:36
Smiles in
Damascus and Tehran
Iranian leaders hope a happy relationship with Syria will provide a foothold for
Tehran in the Middle East (AP Images/Alvaro Barrientos).
June 21, 2007
Prepared by: Lionel Beehner
Syria and Iran seem like unnatural allies. Syria is a predominantly Sunni state
run by Alawites, a secular Baathist offshoot; Iran is a mainly Shiite state, run
by religious mullahs. Despite this ideological paradox, the two countries
special relationship, which stretches back to the 1970s, has only strengthened
since the invasion of Iraq, the U.S.-led undermining of Syrian control of
Lebanon, and the election of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, an anti-U.S.
hardliner.
Yet then, as now, notes W. Abbas Samii of the Center for Naval Analyses in the
Mideast Monitor, the leadership in Damascus viewed cooperation with Iran as a
means to an end, not an end itself. Isolated after the February 2005
assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri (believed by
Western officials to be the work of Syrian agents), Damascus increasingly
glommed onto Tehran, which reciprocated its solidarity. Both oppose U.S.
interests in the region (its occupation of Iraq, support for Israel, and push
for tougher sanctions against Iran). Syria became a conduit through which the
Islamic Republic funneled arms to Hezbollah and Hamas. In Iraq, Syria has
allowed its border to be crossed with ease by Sunni insurgents, while Iran has
backed Shiite militias. Despite the divergent political aims of these groups,
both advocate the removal of U.S. forces from Iraq.
Iran is seeking a stronger foothold in the Middle East, and as Joshua Landis of
the University of Oklahoma points out in this interview with Bernard Gwertzman,
Irans reach into the Arab world is through Syria. The rest of the Arab
worldand specifically Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and Jordanis worried by what it
perceives as an encroachment of Iranian influence in the regionthe so-called
Shiite crescent. [L]ast summer's war between Israel and Hezbollah showed the
reach of Tehran's influence, writes CFRs Vali R. Nasr in TIME. Iran supported
Hezbollah and supplied it with sophisticated weaponry, and not surprisingly
basked in the glory of its perceived victory to overshadow the Sunni regimes
that had condemned the Shiite movement. Both regimes are further emboldened,
argues Barry Rubin of the Global Research in International Affairs Center, by
what they perceive as growing U.S. weakness in the region. The Syrians and
Iranians believe the United States, in [former Ayatollah] Khomeinis terms,
cannot do a damn thing, Rubin told Global Politician.
With violence raging once again in parts of Lebanon and the Palestinian
territories, some Middle East experts are eyeing the linkages among Iran, Syria,
and Levant-based militant groups more closely. The axis of Iran, Syria, Hamas,
and Hezbollah is a radical axis that, in many ways, is getting stronger
(Reuters), pronounced Israeli Deputy Prime Minister Shaul Mofaz. Syria, miffed
by forward movement on a tribunal investigating the Hariri murder, appears to be
ready for more dialogue with the United States and Israel. Syrian leaders, of
course, want a return of the Golan Heights (PDF), seized by Israel four decades
ago. Washington wants to wrest Damascus free from its partnership with Tehran,
not to mention secure its cooperation in locking down the border with Iraq.
Symposium: Strategies of Death.By
Jamie Glazov.FrontPageMagazine.com.
June 23
Symposium: Strategies of Death
By Jamie Glazov
FrontPageMagazine.com | June 22, 2007
In this
special edition of Frontpage Symposium, we have assembled a distinguished panel
to discuss evolving jihadi strategies. Our guests are:
Steven Emerson, an internationally recognized expert on terrorism and national
security and considered one of the leading world authorities on Islamic
extremist networks, financing and operations. He now serves as the Executive
Director of The Investigative Project, one of the world's largest archival data
and intelligence on Islamic and Middle Eastern terrorist groups. He is the
author of Jihad Incorporated: A Guide to Militant Islam in the US.
Bill Roggio, an independent civilian military blogger. He served in the Army
from 1991 to 1995, and now writes for his blog The Fourth Rail.
Daveed Gartenstein-Ross, a senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of
Democracies and the director of FDD's Project on Religion, Politics, and
Radicalism. He is the author of the new book My Year Inside Radical Islam, which
documents his time working at the Al Haramain Islamic Foundation, an
international Wahhabi charity that proved to be an al-Qaeda financier.
and
Walid Phares, Professor of Middle East Studies at the LLS Program of Florida
Atlantic University and a Senior Fellow with the Foundation for the Defense of
Democracies as well as a director for its Future Terrorism Project. He has
served as a Terrorism analyst with MSNBC till 2006. He is now a Fox News
contributor. He is the author of the recently published The War of Ideas:
Jihadism against Democracy. www.thewarofideas.net.
FP: Daveed Gartenstein Ross, Walid Phares, Steven Emerson and Bill Roggio,
welcome to Frontpage Symposium.
Daveed Gartenstein Ross, lets begin with you.
Tell us some of the ways in which Jihadist strategy is evolving.
Gartenstein-Ross: In a forthcoming article in the Summer 2007 issue of Middle
East Quarterly entitled Jihads New Leaders, my associate Kyle Dabruzzi and I
examine how the recent deaths of prominent terroristsmen like Abu Musab al-Zarqawi,
Shamil Basayev, and Abu Hafs al-Urdanihave helped usher in a new generation of
leaders, and with it a new jihadist strategy. With this new strategy, many
assumptions that analysts have long held about jihadist groups may no longer
apply.
Three primary characteristics are typical of the new jihadist leaders. First,
they are more aware of their international image. While they seek to shock and
strike fear into their enemies, they also want to appear reasonable to their
constituents and the larger Muslim population. The Taliban engaged in brutal
massacres during its rise and Zarqawi distributed videos showing the beheading
of captives, but the new leaders tend to minimize overt acts of brutality that
could undermine public support. Second, the new jihadists consider management of
civil society more than their predecessors did. In the past, when jihadists came
to dominate a country, it would automatically become a failed state. The Islamic
Courts Unions (ICU) experience in Somalia suggests that this may no longer be
true. Third, these new leaders have exploited advanced communications
technologies to improve their outreach and forge broader alliances.
Two new jihadist leaders are emblematic of these shifts. The first is Sheikh
Hassan Dahir Aweys, affiliated with Somalias ICU. Last year the ICU seized the
capital of Mogadishu in early June and went on to consolidate control over most
of the countrys major cities. Although a massive Ethiopian intervention has
reversed many of the ICUs gains, the ICU has now turned to insurgent warfare,
and is showing signs of success. Clearly, we havent heard the last of this
group.
Its important to understand what the ICU accomplished after taking power in
Somalia last year, as it tells us quite a bit about the new jihadist strategy.
Aweys, who served as head of the ICUs consultative council, was critical to
shaping the groups policies. He was cognizant of the ICUs international image,
and sought to diminish initial comparisons with the Taliban through restraint.
Upon taking Kabul, the Taliban ransacked a U.N. compound, captured the former
Afghan president, and emasculated and hanged him. In contrast, the ICU kept its
subjugation relatively bloodless. As the group captured strategic cities, there
was often little if any bloodshed, and warlords who had earlier controlled the
cities were allowed to escape.
Although the ICU brought a strict version of sharia law, it did so in a manner
more consistent with economic growth and civil society than previous jihadist
efforts. Aweys harnessed Islam, Somali nationalism, and Somalis distaste for
the warlords rule to attract people to the ICUs side. Moreover, the ICU was
able to somewhat improve the countrys standard of living. The U.N. Monitoring
Group on Somalia reported in late 2006 that checkpoints established by the
warlords cost businesses several million dollars a year. The ICUs elimination
of certain checkpoints that collected extortionate fees reduced business
expenses, in some cases by up to 50 percent of the delivery costs. The order
that the group brought also helped to reduce business security outlays.
Finally, the ICU established a broad-based jihadist coalition. There were
seventeen operational terrorist training camps in Somalia last year, and the
U.N. Monitoring Group reported, Foreign volunteers (fighters) have also been
arriving in considerable numbers to give added military strength to the ICU. . .
. Importantly, foreign volunteers also provide training in guerrilla warfare and
special topics or techniques. One senior ICU leader, Sheikh Hassan Turki
Abdullah Hersi, openly admitted foreign involvement in Somalia during a speech
to supporters. Brothers in Islam, he said, We came from Mogadishu, and we
have thousands of fighters, some are Somalis and others are from the Muslim
world.
The second jihadist leader who typifies the new strategy is Zarqawis
replacement in Iraq, Abu Ayyub al-Masri. Zarqawi captured the imagination of
many people throughout the Middle East, but was also a ruthless killer. His
videotapes showed the beheadings not only of Westerners but also Iraqis. Such
brutality turned many Iraqis against al-Qaeda in Iraq, and opened a rift between
Zarqawis foreign fighters and Iraqi insurgents. This fact was not lost on
al-Qaedas central leadership, as Ayman al-Zawahiri sent Zarqawi a letter in
July 2005 that urged him to curtail his brutal tactics.
Al-Masri, in taking al-Qaeda in Iraq in a different direction, has proven to be
a more effective leader. Not only does he avoid Zarqawis brutal excesses, but
he has also worked to incorporate Iraqi tribes under his banneressentially, to
Iraqify al-Qaeda. Al-Masri has also reached out to a broader range of jihadist
groups. For example, in an audiotape released just after the November 7, 2006
U.S. elections, he urged a more united front to destabilize the Iraqi
government:
O you the commanders of Al-Ansar and Al-Mujahidin army, and the rest of the
faithful ones. Our yearning for you has increased, and we are longing for your
amity. Your brothers pray to God to protect you. . . . We are not better than
you so that we come forward while you step back. You have started jihad before
us, you are more disinterest[ed] in leadership than us, and your soldiers are
more obedient. We consider you to be more faithful to God in your religion.
While the new jihadist leaders show a kinder public face, their brutal ultimate
goals remain unchanged. But this increased attention to public image and to
management of civil society means we are now facing a more formidable foe. The
jihadists have been adapting to us, as well as to their previous weaknesses. The
U.S. hasnt shown a great ability to in turn adapt to thembut doing so is
critical.
Roggio: Al Qaeda has long sought to throw the West, and primarily the United
States, out of Muslim land so it could attack and defeat the individual
governments who they perceive to be propped up by the U.S and establish the
Islamic Caliphate. But there has long been disagreements in the strategic
thinkers on how to best achieve this. Until recently, al Qaeda's leadership has
thought their goals would best be achieved by attacking the 'far enemy' the
U.S. and her allies - directly in order to force the nations to withdraw the
support from the Middle East. This strategy has shifted over the past several
years, as al Qaeda is now focusing operations and their organization primarily
in the Middle East and the Muslim crescent. Al Qaeda's operations show it now
wishes to focus its energy primarily on the 'near enemy.' This will the
organization to consolidate power after forming their Islamic Caliphate, and set
the stage for a final confrontation with the West.
This does not mean that al Qaeda is not engaging Western forces they are doing
so directly in Iraq and Afghanistan. But the purpose of the operations are to
first drive out the U.S. and the West by destroying their political will to
engage in the region, and then create the individual emirates from which
neighboring Muslim countries can be attacked and absorbed. While direct attacks
on Western countries have not been excluded al Qaeda will take an
opportunistic shot to strike the West if it believes it will further their goals
the primary focus is now on fighting the regional wars.
Evidence of this can be seen in al Qaeda's reorganization of regional commands.
These regional commands provide funding, training, expertise and support for the
'local Muslim insurgencies.
As Daveed clearly articulated, the support of the Somali jihad is the perfect
example of how al Qaeda is focusing on the near enemy. Al Qaeda in East Africa
has zeroed in on the failed state of Somalia as an ideal location to establish
the Islamic Courts. Money continues to flow into the coffers of the Islamic
Courts, and al Qaeda encourages fighters worldwide to participate in the Somali
jihad. From this East African base, al Qaeda hopes to spread the fighting into
Kenya, Ethiopian and beyond.
The newly created al Qaeda in North Africa (or al Qaeda in the Islamic Mahgreb)
is al Qaeda's North African command. This group, which maintain an extensive
support network in Europe and beyond, consists of the Algerian based GSPC (Salafist
Group for Preaching and Combat), the Moroccan Islamic Combat Group, the Libyan
Islamic Fighting Group, and the Tunisian Combatant Group. The organizations now
cooperate regionally to overthrow the governments in the Sahel region.
Under the command of Abu Musab al Zarqawi, al Qaeda in Iraq had long sought to
export jihad to Jordan, Lebanon, Israel and the Palestinian Territories. While
Abu Ayyub al Masri is less vocal about exporting jihad due to political
considerations with Sunni allies, the Islamic State in Iraq is but the first
step in expanding al Qaeda's influence in the region.
In Southeast Asia, the Indonesian based Jemaah Islamiyah has served as a
regional facilitator to Muslim insurgent and terrorist groups such as MILF and
Abu Sayyaf in the Philippines, and is thought to be behind the Muslim insurgency
in Thailand, the most violent in the region. While it has not been officially
announced, Jemaah Islamiyah is essentially the nucleus of a Qaeda in Southeast
Asia.
In Pakistan, al Qaeda has conducted a masterful campaign to seize and hold
territory. The tribal agencies and districts of the Northwest Frontier Province,
which borders Afghanistan, are rapidly falling under the influence of what
military and intelligence officials are now calling AQAM, or Al Qaeda and Allied
Movements. AQAM consists of the Al Qaeda Command, the Pakistani and Afghan
branches of the Taliban, Lashkar-e-Tabia and a host of jihadist groups that
operate inside Pakistan and Afghanistan.
These groups have officially taken control of Bajaur and North and South
Waziristan, and unofficially control numerous tribal agencies and districts
throughout the Northwest Frontier province. Taliban and al Qaeda attacks in
Afghanistan stem from the tribal agencies, as have bombings in India the London
Tubes bombings and the foiled London airline plot. Al Qaeda's leadership,
including Osama bin Laden and Ayman al Zawahiri are believed to be sheltering in
the terror havens of northwestern Pakistan.
Daveed's point on the new leadership is absolutely correct. What we are seeing
is the next generation of al Qaeda leaders stepping up after a large number of
the first generation have been killed or captured. These leaders are more in
line with al Qaeda's new strategy to deal with the near enemy primarily and the
far enemy secondly. I would add South Waziristan Taliban commander Baitullah
Mehsud to Daveed's list, as well as Matiur Rehman, who is believed by some
intelligence officials to be al Qaeda's commander in Pakistan.
Daveed is also correct that al Qaeda's new strategy now integrates the political
dimension which it eschewed in the past. The Somali example is the perfect case
study. The Taliban campaign in northwestern Pakistan and al Qaeda's campaign in
Iraq also contain a significant political dimension. The Taliban are providing
courts, security and services in the tribal areas. Al Qaeda established the
Islamic State of Iraq, to as Daveed noted, "Iraqify" the war. This was done to
appease Sunni insurgents who were upset that the foreigners were dominating the
insurgency. Al Qaeda in Iraq hasn't executed this perfectly, however, as
insurgent groups such as the Islamic Army in Iraq are now complaining al Qaeda
is strong arming them to join the state.
Emerson: Excuse me for being the party-pooper, but I just don't see the
over-reaching changes that others are attributing to new Jihadi strategies.
Modern Jihadi strategy has always been in a constant change of flux, whether it
was in 1993 at the time of the first World Trade Center bombing or 1998 at the
time of the Embassy bombings or 2000 at the time of the Cole bombing or 2001 or
2005.
The strategy is largely dependent upon changing external and internal factors,
such as quirky personality driven leaders, the existence of and accessibility of
modern communications technology (mostly the internet), the access to or lack
thereof to the big-daddy jihadists Osama Bin Laden and Ayman Al Zawahari and the
ease in which local regimes can be overthrown or undermined through
insurgencies. Indeed, why did we see a spate of Al Qaeda attacks in Saudi Arabia
in 2003 and 2004 and only a negligible amount in 2005 and 2006? The same for
Morocco.
Other factors include political and military vacuums that Jihadis can fill (why
only after years of chaos in Gaza and Lebanon has Al Qaeda suddenly become able
to establish a credible presence in both areas?), the cyclical availability of
trickled down petrodollars to Islamic fundamentalist war machines fronting under
the cover as charities and the resurrection of the age-old tribal/sectarian
(think Sunni-Shia) conflict that has superseded the one common Jihadi enemy that
kept the jihadi glue together for more than a decade (think of the unprecedented
Shiite-Hizbollah deal with the Sunni OBL in the 1990's). WE also have the
post-2002 sudden introduction of Iraq as a new jihadi battlefield against the US
that paralleled the old but original Afghan jihadi battlefield against the
Soviets; the continued recruitment, albeit in much larger numbers than 9-11 of
Saudi jihadists as suicide bombers in Iraq making them the number one foreign
contributor of suicide bombers in that country for 3 out of 4 years.
Somalia's Islamic Courts Union is as much a new jihadi strategy as it is a
functional response to a long term managerial problem: how to extend a long term
Islamic rule, much as the Taliban did in Afghanistan, over a large population,
in order to impose order, stability and prevent chaos. Yes, even Islamic
terrorist regimes despise chaos in their own house; they don't mind spreading it
to others' houses however.
I don't believe that there has been a conscious decision to change Jihadi
strategies. Rather there has been a changing jihadi strategy due to the changing
conditions of the battlefield, new world technology, instant technological
communications, changing geographic battlefields of war, different personalities
of jihadi leaders, constant shifts of jihadist center of geopolitical center of
gravity, new pockets of funding, shifting sanctuaries, new European recruits,
internet radicalization, secure chat room communications, and globilazation of
jihad into the West.
Let's take the biggest "apparent" changes in Jihadist strategies in the past 13
years, say from the time of the first World Trade Center bombing in NY in 1993.
It is now clear that Bin Laden had very little if anything to do with it; that
it was more the concoction of a family affair between Khalid Sheik Mohammed and
his nephew Ramzi Yousef.
I wrote an article in the Washington Post in the summer of 1993 called "The
Accidental Terrorist" in which I described the first WTC attack and subsequent
Landmark plots (bridges, tunnels and Federal buildings) as the product of
amorphous, groups, not externally-directed, of Islamic fanatics with similar
constellations of interests converging together for ad hoc plots, then
disappearing. Sound familiar? Of course, that's the same description that began
being used a decade later to describe the post-911 bombings in Spain and Britain
and plots in Italy, Germany, France, Toronto and elsewhere where the plots were
self-instigated and self-actuated, whose participants were usually whipped up
into a frenzy by the internet rather than an Imam.
Interestingly enough, from 1993 onwards, despite the formal creation of Al-Qaeda
in 1988 and first operational activity in Somalia in 1991, Al Qaeda did not
start to coalesce into a real structural command and control hierarchical
organization until 1995 with the union of Ayman al Zawahiri and Egyptian
Vanguard of the Oppressed ( a derivative of the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood). By
September 10, 2001, Al Qaeda had become a fairly button-down linear pyramidal
organization, with officials holding different tiers of responsibility. Indeed,
if one plots the structure of Al Qaeda from 1993 to 2007 on a graph, it would
look like a bell curve with the apex of the curve reaching its maximum height on
September 10, 2001.
As for the issue of jihadi self-image and self-promotion. Bin Laden had been a
master of this, first giving interviews to Arab media, the increasingly but
sparingly to the western media, most notably to John Miller then of ABC News and
Peter Bergen of CNN. He invited these journalists into his tent because video
and audio streaming on the internet was not yet possible and also because he was
not the most wanted, dead or alive, person in the world. His first manifesto,
the Ladenese Epistle, was published on the MSA (Muslim Student Association) list
serve in 1996 served as the first comprehensive set of Islamic justifications
for the war against the crusaders and the Jews and the establishment of the
caliphate.
Nowadays, of course, hardly a day passes without some Jihadi leader or Jihadist
operation posted on the internet. They are so numerous, in fact, that rivalries
have broken out by different factions questioning each other's legitimacy.
Like a balloon being squeezed, jihadists will go where they can breathe freely,
whether that be Africa or Asia. Indonesia is still pretty much free reign for
Jihadis as is northern Pakistan, Iraq, the Magreb and now even Bosnia, as Al
Qada now seeks to reconstitute its main leadership and re-establish its
franchise operations.
The tactical techniques of jihadis have not really changed much in the course of
13 years with the exception of the new technology developed by the Iraqi
insurgency. Conventional vehicular bombs is still the preferred method, often
accompanied by suicide bombers. But in the last three years, iIprovised
Explosive Devises have now accounted for 65% of the attacks in Iraq as opposed
to only 15% in 2003.
Phares: My colleagues' multiple remarks are right on target, even though they
come from different angles and cover distinct issues of analysis. Daveed's
interpretation of the new Jihadi leaders' "concerns with an international
image," is accurate. One can see that coming from the center of al Qaeda
headquarters: there is a rising insistence on the "image." When you compare the
old rigid speeches of the Bin Laden of the 1990s and the fall of 2001, and the
more sophisticated video messages by al Zawahiri in recent years, you'd realize
that tactical media enhancement has been factored in. Al Qaeda central "talks"
more like a world Caliphate in the making rather than an exclusively dogmatic
inspirer. The criticism of Zarqawi's excesses by Zawahiri and the sophisticated
analysis by Jihadi commentators on al Jazeera indicates clearly that the "core"
is waging a War of Ideas in addition to the War on Terror. I have always argued
that al Qaeda is also influenced by "intellectuals" on its outside, regarding
the psychological and political warfare with the Kuffars (infidels).
With time you can see their influence growing and expanding. The "advisors" of
the Caliphate-to-be on the international stage, are pushing for winning the
battle of the "image," even though, some Emirs in the battlefields may commit
excesses. Indeed, the Mahakem (Islamic Courts) of Somalia attempted to diffuse
the Taliban image; but only because they were accused by many anti-Jihadist
voices of becoming a new Taliban. In short there has been an effort among the
Jihadi propaganda elite to appear as a credible, rational and acceptable force
on the international stage. I would even argue that the calls for a Hudna
(Truce) with Europe issued couple years ago, are inscribed in this image
strategy. On the other hand, Bill also brings a good point of observation:
Increasingly both al Qaeda and the other Salafists groups are focusing on local
and regional quick victories: they were and are planning on establishing
"emirates" in Iraq's Sunni Triangle, Somalia, possibly some areas in Lebanon,
within Pakistan, and pushing again in the Great Sahel of North Africa.
There seems to be an urge to find a "geographical base" to replace Afghanistan,
including a return to large areas in the latter. Finally, Steve is also bringing
a good point that is the "continuity" in Jihadi strategies and tactics
worldwide. His description of the "squeezed balloon" is correct. As I advanced
in my book Future Jihad, there is a form of "Mutant Jihad" which shapes itself
as it collides with its enemies. I think what we are all observing is a
continuous morphing of Salafi Jihadism as it is fighting its way against its
enemies. Hence, in their strategic evolution the Jihadists maintain their
ideology, their doctrine and their historic objectives intact: Islamism as an
ideology, the Caliphate as an ultimate goal, and their indoctrination process
remains the same. But as they experience the mujabahat al Kuffar (confrontation
with the infidels), they steer the priorities of the struggle in various new
-and sometimes old- directions. Their apparent complex behavior is in fact very
simple to understand. For example, since they lost the Taliban-protected regime
in Afghanistan, the Jihadists worldwide have been looking into every possible
direction to "reestablish" the mother ship geographically and they continue to
try. This is predictable. Also, as they experienced their propaganda campaigns
since 2001, they realized that pre-9/11 rhetoric alone and extreme messages
(such as beheading videos) can backfire. They took into consideration what
Salafi clerics have advised and what secular "advisors" have proposed: a more
sophisticated language coating the unchanged ideological speech. In short, the
Jihadists are moving forward while selecting targets, weapons, tactics and
words, empirically.
My other
remark here is about our global perception of the Jihadist strategies. I believe
that they aggregate under two large trees: One, the Salafist, incorporates al
Qaeda, its branches, allies, Wahabi clerics, Muslim Brotherhood strategists and
to some extent Jihadi groups with "national" strategies. This whole sphere has a
solid core and multiple layers, but is not tightly integrated: it hurdle towards
the main historical objectives, not always in harmony. The other tree, is the
Khomeinist regime in Iran with its extensions such as Hizbollah in Lebanon,
other funded organizations and a state-to-state alliance with the Syrian regime.
The Khomeinist sphere is extremely centralized and integrated, regardless of the
shades of opinions. It moves along the lines of geopolitics and with a
concentrated financial backing coming from Iran's oil revenues. It is very
important to keep an eye on the evolution of both "trees," and watch for
convergence and diverging energies and the common threads.
This past semester I taught a course on "Jihadi Global Strategies" focusing on
the evolution of both trees within the War on Terror, or actually their wars
against democracies. The seminar developed interesting findings regarding the
Salafist and Khomeinist strategies against the US, Europe and other democracies.
There areas of exclusivity for each "tree" in their confrontation with the West
and other societies but there are also areas of converging interest such as
Iraq, Lebanon, the Palestinian areas, and surprisingly Latin America. I suggest
the expert community puts more efforts in advising Governments but also
educating the public as to the long term strategies of the two Jihadi "trees."
The public and private sectors are in dire need to be educated not only about
the ideology of Jihadism (and there is lots of catching up to do) but also about
the actual strategies of the various Jihadi movements and regime. Unfortunately
the current debate about the War on Terror in America (and also in the West)
didn't reach yet a consensus on the basics. There are still politicians and
opinion-makers, thanks to a failed expertise from the 1990s, who do not perceive
the conflict as with Jihadism. Such a systemic error of analysis is having an
impact on understanding the strategies of the Jihadists; actually it is helping
the latter strategically.
Gartenstein-Ross: Walid is entirely correct that an alarming number of
politicians and opinion leaders operate based on outmoded assumptions. Too
often, analysts charged with being on the cutting edge of the war on terror are
slow to adapt to changes in our enemies strategies, and slow to discard
assumptions thatwhile they may have been true years agoare no longer valid.
That is why its important to have a good read on our terrorist enemies
changing strategies as they levy war against us.
While many of the things Steve says are correct, his overall objection to the
idea that jihadist strategy has been changing in the directions that Bill and I
indicate does not cohere. He is correct that modern jihadist strategy constantly
adapts, but this doesnt mean that there are no discernable trends. He is also
correct that jihadist strategy is dependent on changing external and internal
factors. That is the nature of good strategy: any plan that does not take
account of changes to the environment in which a war is fought is unlikely to
meet with success.
A large part of Steves argument is dependent on the idea that because of
jihadist networks decentralization, there is no conscious decision to shift
strategy. I part ways with him on the extent to which these networks are
decentralized, and some of his examples actually show that these networks are
more centralized than many analysts believe. For example, the conventional
wisdom on both the Spanish and British bombing plots was initially that they
were self-instigated and self-actuated, but over time that conventional wisdom
has come crashing down. After Londons Metropolitan police concluded they had no
evidence linking the 7/7 bombings to al-Qaeda, Dan Darling and Steve Schippert
issued a devastating response that outlines multiple connections between the 7/7
plot and al-Qaedas international network. These include: 7/7 ringleader
Mohammad Sidique Khan meeting with senior Jemaah Islamiyah leaders; New York
terror suspect Mohammed Junaid Babar identifying Khan from a photograph and
claiming that they had met at an al-Qaeda training camp; and British al-Qaeda
leader Haroon Aswat making phone calls to the 7/7 bombers just hours before the
attacks. But the real nail in the coffin for the view that there was no
connection to al-Qaedas central network is the tape al-Qaeda released to
commemorate the bombings, in which bin Laden deputy Ayman al-Zawahiri revealed
that 7/7 bombers Shehzad Tanweer and Mohammad Sidique Khan had trained in
al-Qaedas Afghan camps. Zawahiris tape led Chatham House security expert Bob
Ayers to comment: It makes the police look pretty bad. It means the
investigation was either wrong, or they had identified links but were reluctant
to reveal them.
But really, the centralized or decentralized nature of contemporary terrorism is
not the issue. Even if al-Qaedas central leadership is less important than I
think, jihadist strategies can still shift perceptibly. People tend to copy
success, and if the jihadist movement were highly decentralized, its regional
leaders would likely try to copy the methods of other successful regional
leaders. The three characteristics that I outlinegreater awareness of
international image, more attention to management of civil society, and
exploitation of advanced communications technologiescan be discerned across a
number of geographic regions. I have already discussed how these characteristics
can be seen in the Islamic Courts Unions rise in Somalia, where the ICU largely
avoided overt acts of brutality, gained the local populations support, and
actually increased the countrys standard of livinga far different result than
the Taliban achieved in Afghanistan. I have also discussed how Abu Ayyub al-Masri
took al-Qaeda in Iraq in a completely different direction than Zarqawi. Al-Qaeda
in Iraq has achieved greater sophistication and support under al-Masri than it
did under Zarqawi, bringing numerous groups into the fold of the Islamic State
of Iraq.
Bill aptly added Matiur Rehman to my list. While Rehman is more focused on
terrorist operations than in organizing a broad-based movement, he has displayed
a willingness to exploit local civil society to further his goals, a task made
easier by the shift in Pakistani public opinion against President Pervez
Musharraf and the United States.
Another Pakistani, Faqir Mohammed, also displays the characteristics that I
outlined. Mohammed has become a powerful figure in the Mamoond tribe in
Pakistans Bajaur region through a strategic marriage. This has enabled Mohammed
to provide al-Qaeda with a local safe haven: in January 2005, the CIA fingered
his house in Bajaur as al-Qaedas winter headquarters. Figures such as Mohammed
are important to the jihadist strategy, elucidated by Bill, of reorganizing into
regional commands. (Its important to note that these regional nodes are still
attached to al-Qaedas core leadership. A senior U.S. military intelligence
officer described this to me as al-Qaeda federalism: while regional nodes can
survive separate from the core leadership, they also report to and take orders
from al-Qaedas central command. This reorganization is consistent with the new
jihadist strategy of fitting into existing civil society rather than trying to
completely overturn it.) By providing a link between al-Qaeda and the local
tribes, men like Mohammed can mitigate ethnic tensions that otherwise might
undercut al-Qaedas effectiveness. Rather than attempting to overturn the tribal
structure in Pakistan, Mohammed works within the existing tribal structure,
trying to carve out a place for al-Qaeda within it. This approach is more likely
to engender long-term success than past jihadist efforts to completely remake
the societies in which they operated.
As I said in my opening remarks, the jihadists are adapting to us, and to their
previous weaknesses. The strategic trends that I outline in this symposium are
discernable across multiple regions, and multiple leaders have contributed to
the changes. In the past, analysts assumed that when jihadists gained power in a
geographic region, it would automatically become a failed state. While this
assumption used to be correct, the adaptations that jihadists are now
undertaking call that conventional wisdom into question.
What can the United States do? Walid is plainly correct that public and private
sectors are in desperate need of being better educated, not only about jihadist
ideology but also about jihadist movements strategies.
Beyond education, U.S. officials should concentrate on twin goals. First, they
should prevent terrorist safe havens from arising in the first placea goal that
was endorsed by the 9-11 Commission. As made clear by Bills discussion of
al-Qaedas gains in Pakistan as well as FPMs previous symposium on that
country, our efforts on this front leave something to be desired. Second,
officials need to prove that U.S. allies and their aid organizations are as
adept at building a stable civil society as the jihadists. A large number of
Somali citizens looked favorably upon the ICU when it gained power because it
provided an alternative to the chaos that had prevailed before. Yet after
supporting a military intervention to topple the ICU, Washington failed to
provide the aid needed to allow Somalias transitional federal government to
thrive. We need to do better in the future.
Emerson: Even though my fellow colleagues provided interesting insights on the
topic, I still disagree that changes in strategy are taking place to the degree
that Daveed suggests. Since 9/11, every so often the wisemen of terrorism get
together and make a big stink about changing strategies and even shifting
paradigms and I think there is often a penchant for exaggeration.
Id like to go over more events that my colleague, Daveed, hailed as strategic
changes. Daveed is making much of this new generation of leaders more aware of
their international image who employ a softer touch and seek to achieve
strategic goals through the development of civil society. Im sorry, but this
simply is not new for the jihadist movement, and Ill tell you why. Yes, there
is a new generation of al Qaeda figureheads, but are they any more aware of
their international image? I would argue that it would be hard to be more aware
of international perception than Zarqawi. Has the al Qaeda and al-Qaeda
affiliated Iraqi insurgency become any less bloodthirsty? Has al-Masri chosen a
softer strategy? I would argue not. Very recently, al Qaedas Islamic State of
Iraq released a video of the execution of two Iraqi soldiers and what appeared
to be an Iraqi journalist. Bullets to the back of the head.
Just several weeks ago in April, we found a video released by Ansar al Sunnah, a
close and recently renewed ally of al Qaeda in Iraq. It showed the beheadings
and executions of 20 Iraqi policemen. The featured beheading in the video was
particularly disturbing , even for a beheading video, if you can imagine. I
wont go into the gory details. Many of the men were mowed down with automatic
gunfire. I dont see this as evidence of a softening jihadist strategy aimed at
gaining more sympathy in the Muslim world. The jihadist groups in Iraq are still
pursuing their brutal strategy, still executing the same attacks against Iraqi
civilians and policemen that have alienated some segments of the Muslim world.
Now lets get to the issue of civil society. How new is the development of civil
society to the global jihadist movement? The answer is, not new at all. The
Shiites did it first with Hizballah, followed by Hamas, a Sunni terrorist
organization with Salafist origins in the Muslim Brotherhood. It is true that
the Salafi-jihadist movement best represented by al Qaeda has tended to avoid
such civil society development. However, if they are using such means now, which
is very debatable, it is still at an embryonic stage. The fact remains that you
cant say that this is a new strategic development in the jihadist movement.
Concerning regional commands, Bill cites al Qaedas commands in North Africa and
East Africa as evidence of a new reorganization of bin Ladens organization. But
how different is it from the way it has been before? As Bill noted, Al Qaeda in
the Arab Maghreb Countries formed when GSPC, MICB, LIFG, and the Tunisian
Combatant Group formally united. This first hit the news about two years ago
when a Moroccan intelligence report was leaked. However, these groups were
already acting in concert with each other and al Qaeda years before that, not
just in North Africa but in the U.K., France, Spain, and Italy. It has even been
reported that bin Laden himself named the GSPC in 1997. I would say that it was
a regional command of al Qaeda then as well, although perhaps a less evolved
version. My point is there have been regional commands of al Qaeda in the past
and it shouldnt surprise us as more develop and it certainly does not indicate
a shifting strategy. Look at Al Qaeda on the Arabian Peninsula. About two years
ago, we identified about forty terrorist groups allied or affiliated with al
Qaeda. As Bill noted, Jemaah Islamiyya and Abu Sayaf have been al Qaeda allies
in Southeast Asia for years. Clearly not new developments in strategy. We are
now seeing al Qaeda battling it out to maintain a presence in Lebanon.
The main point is this: Yes, some strategies - not as many as Daveed sees have
changed in response to advances in technology and in response to our own
security pursuits. As I stated before, this is no surprise and while it has
significance, there is another matter of greater significance that gets lost in
the shuffle in conversations like the one we are having. That is that the
ideology responsible for what we now call the modern jihadist movement remains
unchanged, still seeks the same long term goals, and heres the kicker six
years into the Global War on Terrorism the United States has yet to come up with
a coherent strategy to defeat this ideology.
These short term shifts in operation and propaganda strategy that we see are
important in forming our own short term security and intelligence responses. I
like Walids term, mutant jihad because these are indeed adaptive responses on
the part of the jihadist movement.
As far as the degree of centralization versus devolution of operational
responsibility that Daveed spoke to, this is something that I wrote about in my
last book. As my colleagues know, after the invasion of Afghanistan, al Qaeda
became a franchised idea rather than a structured organization. This is not to
say that there are no connections to more traditional terrorist commands or
training.
Building on that, Id like to pick up on what Daveed said about the 7/7 cell and
centralization. In my last book, Jihad, Inc., I noted the many connections
between the 7/7 bombers and al Qaeda affiliated terrorist groups in South Asia,
specifically with Lashkar-e-Taiba and Jaish-e-Mohammad. Feel free to look it up.
But you have to ask yourself what you mean by the words you use. Daveed uses the
word, centralization. What is the threshold you would set to say a plot or
group is a part of a centralized jihadist network? It is very easy to say a
network is centralized due to the almost amorphous nature of modern networks.
What I mean by this is tenuous ties exist in abundance due to the ease of
international travel and the exploitation of modern technologies. Does this mean
that these networks are centralized? Not necessarily.
As a side response to Daveeds comments, I would argue that, while the 7/7
bombers went to Pakistan and possibly Afghanistan to receive explosives
training, al Qaeda or al Qaeda affiliated leadership was less relevant than what
Daveed argues. Khan, Tanweer, Hussain, and Lindsay were radicalized and sought
to attack targets in the UK completely independent of any al Qaeda leadership. I
would caution Daveed against taking Zawahiris word as gospel and assuming that
just because he said that al Qaeda itself, and not affiliates or allies, was
involved in the recruitment, planning, target selection, and execution of the
7/7 bombings, then it must be true. I know that it is clear to my colleagues the
benefits that could be incurred by al Qaeda if we blindly accepted that proposal
as unvarnished truth. It was an al Qaeda propaganda video. It is almost amusing
in the video to see Zawahiri talk of the bombers with such familiarity, as if he
was training them himself.
We have to be careful and avoid those kinds of assumptions. The truth is
probably somewhere in between. It is terrible that the British government
refuses to publicly come to terms with the international connections of the 7/7
cell, but we should see that the reason Zawahiri made such claims of direct and
intimate al Qaeda involvement was not any obligation to the truth, but a
recognition that al Qaeda stands to benefit if it can make it self appear
larger, more monolithic, and able to project its hard power around the world
through direct operational control.
Self-radicalized individuals, autonomous provisional cells, homegrown terrorism;
the proliferation of these were not a conscious shift in strategy on part of
the, and yes I will say it again, decentralized jihadist movement. The balloon
was squeezed. Mutant jihad. Bringing it back to my main point, what is relevant
is that we are seeing the same ideology and idea in a constant state of flux
trying desperately to realize its unchanging long term goals the defeat the
near and far enemies, the establishment of a Caliphate, and the expansion of Dar
ul Islam. The shifting short term strategies do matter to the extent that we
should understand them and develop appropriate security responses, but this
doesnt change the big picture.
I agree with the twin goals Daveed proposes to an extent, but it still misses
the big picture. While it is important to deny safe-havens and prove that we are
preferable to the jihadists in terms of building and sustaining civil society,
we need to focus on both understanding and undermining the influence of the
ideology. What troubles me is that the U.S. Government is not making the effort
to develop such strategies.
Phares: Again the debate is valid: Did al Qaeda and the global Jihadists adopt
"new strategies" or not? From our debate we can initially see that we have two
answers: One that says yes they changed -particularly in terms of PR and
regional structure- and another that says only few adaptations are occurring.
Perhaps we should -in the future- examine what we actually mean by "new
strategies." Does "change" in Jihadi strategies mean abandonment of past
strategies and selection of new ones, totally different from the previous one? I
think the panel is debating a question that could be better framed. For example
we can ask if the Jihadists have changed their global strategic options or not.
Did they abandon the goal of ultimately establishing the Caliphate? Apparently
not. But did they change their strategics to reach that final goal? In my
observation, there are now multiple Jihadi strategies aiming at the same global
objective:
1) The mainstream Wahabis and Muslim brotherhood circles of power in Saudi
Arabia, Qatar, Egypt, and other Arab and Muslim countries seek a bottom up
approach focusing on indoctrination and penetration of Arab-Muslim and Western
countries. Their strategy is to engage in influence and control of domestic and
foreign policies till they tip the balance in the favor of their agendas. Some
Islamist parties -as in Turkey- are adopting a partial component of this global
strategy, as in processing with a slow indoctrination and making steady progress
towards the goal.
2) Local-Jihadi groups (even though active overseas in terms of fundraising)
such as Hamas, PIJ, mainstream NIF in Sudan, etc, are still adopting the
strategy of "local Jihad first."
3) The al Qaeda nebulous, formed by the mother ship, its branches and its
allies, continue to seek the establishment of "emirates" wherever and whenever
it is possible but also mutates as it needs. This international Jihadism is
perhaps the most mutating among all others. In the center of the nebulous, I
still argue that al Qaeda is centralized: it has a leadership, communication
systems, and a war room. I must add that the center has its own "central cells."
The branches, made of groups that "came" to al Qaeda and pledged affiliation as
whole entities such as the Maghreb, the Peninsula, Mesopotamia and the Levant
(al Sham) "commands", follow the general strategic guidelines of the mothership
but have their own "adapted" strategies. Finally the non-linked Jihadi groups
that operates on their own, varies from actual networks to cells, to groups of
individuals. These satellites, still want to reach the global objectives but
they shoot on their own timing and with their own "guns." This rainbow of doom
sometimes puzzles the expert community.
4) And again, I still draw the attention of analysts and policy makers to the
fact that Khomeinist-led Jihadism is a "tree" of its own. Iran's regime and
Hezbollah are the core component of this regional-international network.
Operating in parallel to the Salafi "tree," it develops its strategies on the
grounds of regime interests. In the 1890s, the Iranian-Jihadists faced off with
the US (and France) in the region. In the 1990s, they practically withheld fire
against the West (with few exceptions) and concentrated on Israelis in Lebanon
and inside Israel and dedicated energies for self improvement. After 2003, the
Khomeinists "opened fire" against the US and the Coalition in Iraq, and as of
2005 assaulted the pro-Western Government of Lebanon. Currently the Jihadi
Salafists (al Qaeda type) and Khomeinists have a common enemy in Iraq, Lebanon
and internationally.
In conclusion I think in terms of historical goals, the grand strategies of both
trees are the same. In terms of evolution of these strategies, they are mutating
and adapting. Tactically -both in media and engagement- they constantly evolve.
FP: Daveed Gartenstein Ross, Walid Phares, Steven Emerson and Bill Roggio, thank
you for joining Frontpage Symposium.
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Jamie Glazov is Frontpage Magazine's managing editor. He holds a Ph.D. in
History with a specialty in U.S. and Canadian foreign policy. He edited and
wrote the introduction to David Horowitzs Left Illusions. He is also the
co-editor (with David Horowitz) of The Hate America Left and the author of
Canadian Policy Toward Khrushchevs Soviet Union (McGill-Queens University
Press, 2002) and 15 Tips on How to be a Good Leftist. To see his previous
symposiums, interviews and articles Click Here. Email him at jglazov@rogers.com.