http://www.helenair.com/articles/2005/08/08/national/a03080805_03.txt

Al-Qaida 2.0': Angry Muslim outsiders yearning for a mission

By DANICA KIRKA - Associated Press Writer - 8/08/05
LONDON — They had roots in Pakistan, Ethiopia, Somalia and Jamaica: 
the suspected al-Qaida foot soldiers in Britain were immigrants or 
were children of immigrants — a new breed of recruits that 
underscores the changes in the organization since the Sept. 11 
attacks, say experts studying the London bombings. 
These experts, who include a pioneer in personality profiling, say 
al-Qaida, always loosely knit, is mutating into satellites that 
attract local operatives bound by disenchantment with the Western 
societies in which they grew up. It is no longer a hierarchy with 
Osama bin Laden calling the shots, they say.

"Al-Qaida version 1.0 is functionally dead," said Jerrold Post, a 
founding director of the CIA's Center for the Analysis of 
Personality and Political Behavior. "Al-Qaida version 2.0 is almost 
more an ideology. ... It's an adaptive organization responding to a 
crisis."

With its founding fathers in hiding, and dozens of key operatives 
under watch, al-Qaida has changed. No longer considered capable of 
large transnational attacks, it is taking advantage of people who 
don't have to cross borders, receive cash from abroad or engage in 
other international transactions that might alert authorities, said 
Brian Jenkins, a senior adviser to the president of the Rand Corp.

"We are now dealing with many little al-Qaidas with the potential of 
neighborhood al-Qaidas," Jenkins said. "They may not be able to 
carry out specialized operations ... but they can still operate at a 
lethal level." 
The diffuse nature of the shape-shifting al-Qaida is one reason it's 
hard to fight. Security services may crack one cell but find little 
connecting it to others. Police in Britain have failed so far to 
charge anyone in the July 7 attacks on three subway trains and a bus 
that killed 52 and four suicide bombers — an attack authorities said 
bore al-Qaida hallmarks.

"This is not the Prussian general staff," Jenkins said, arguing that 
the group defies being placed in a traditional military model. "They 
don't think about operations the way we think about operations."

Part of the goal is simply to keep going and keep launching attacks —
 thereby winning more recruits and money to the cause of creating 
Islam-led countries.

The new al-Qaida is finding fertile ground for recruits, 
particularly among the children of Europe's immigrants, Post said.

"Diaspora communities are the main resources for this global jihad," 
Post told The Associated Press. "(Their families) left for a better 
life, but they really have not been able to fully integrate with the 
recipient societies that they have immigrated to."

Unlike the United States, where immigrants usually come to stay, 
many of Europe's Muslims came to make money, then return home, said 
Olivier Roy, the French author of "Globalized Islam." Because of 
this and other factors, it has taken them longer to assimilate — 
adding to their sense of alienation.

"The second generation in America has been taken into the American 
mainstream, while in Europe there is a tendency to lag behind in 
social mobility," Roy said.

Post said many of the new recruits aren't "making it" in the way 
they wish they were, so they direct their anger and frustration at 
the "corrupt and modernizing West."

At the same time, fiery Muslim preachers offer a radical ideology — 
with few moderate voices strong enough to drown out their voices. 
Some 4,000 fundamentalist Web sites further spread the hate, he said.

Videotaped messages from the group's founders further spread the 
word. Al-Qaida deputy leader Ayman al-Zawahri, in a new videotape 
that aired Thursday on the pan-Arab satellite channel Al-Jazeera, 
warned London of more bloodshed. He linked the London attacks to the 
British troop presence in Iraq.

Amrit Walia, 26, a commodities trader who was a good friend of a man 
killed in the July 7 attacks, Anthony Fatayi-Williams, said that 
when he was a student he saw fundamentalist preachers hanging out at 
Bradford University, trying to win converts to their cause.

"We used to see how they'd all get recruited," he said. "We would 
walk out of the (student) union, there would be one of them — 
gangsters, radical clergy, whatever we're calling them today — 
standing around preaching, calling on them to be true Muslims, to 
stop denying their religion, to stop letting Britain degrade them 
and their sisters. And there'd be a line of young Pakistanis signing 
their names up."

Jenkins said al-Qaida recruiters are very good at spotting the 
vulnerable — often young men undergoing personal crises — whether 
drugs, crime, joblessness, poverty or a spiritual hunger. They are 
offered an ideology that explains the difficulties and provides a 
new mind-set.

"This is the way cults recruit," Jenkins said. "To a certain 
extent ... this is the way armies recruit."

Hoping to promote understanding, Walia, a Sikh, said friends of 
Fatayi-Williams, a Roman Catholic born in Nigeria, want to start a 
foundation to promote cultural understanding. They said that was 
part of the reason the victim's mother gave a heart-rending speech 
shortly after the attacks — a poignant moment that defined a 
national tragedy.

The willingness of men raised in Britain to turn against it has 
prompted soul-searching in this nation that has championed diversity 
and tolerance. Britain has some 1.8 million Muslims, many with roots 
in South Asia, and the overwhelming majority have moderate views.

Three Britons of Pakistani descent and one of Jamaican descent are 
believed to have carried out the July 7 attack. The suspects in the 
failed July 21 attacks on three subways and a bus include three 
people from East Africa. It is unclear whether the cells were linked.

Many Muslims worry they will be targeted by police, who shot an 
innocent Brazilian man to death on the London's subway thinking he 
was a suicide bomber. They fear officers are using racial profiling 
in their search for terror suspects.

Jenkins is leery of profiling, insisting too little is known about 
the suspects. He noted that millions of Muslims, including 
immigrants, have not come under al-Qaida's sway.

"The thing that holds it together is the ideology itself," he said 
of al-Qaida's decentralized structure. "How do you attack an 
ideology? It's very rough to do."

Associated Press Writer Mara Bellaby contributed to this story from 
London. 







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