from the June 12, 2006 edition -
http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0612/p01s02-woiq.html 



Next target: Zarqawi's global web

The slain leader was developing a wider terror network, particularly in
Europe. 

By Scott Peterson | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor 


BAGHDAD - American investigators are exploiting the intelligence bonanza
found in the rural safe house north of Baghdad where Abu Musab al-Zarqawi,
the leader of Al Qaeda in Iraq, was killed last Wednesday.

Analysts say that the memory sticks, hard drives, and documents found there
and at some 56 other sites raided after the Jordanian militant's death are
likely to damage Mr. Zarqawi's networks. The US military describes the finds
as a "treasure trove."

The new intelligence leads could uncover terrorist operations far afield
from Iraq - particularly in Europe - as Zarqawi had begun to piece together
a much wider network of militants, experts say.

"The US government will have a firm understanding of Zarqawi's network, not
only in Iraq, but Zarqawi's global network," says Rohan Gunaratna, a
terrorism expert at the Institute of Defence and Strategic Studies in
Singapore. "Zarqawi had penetrated at least 20 European countries, Canada,
... and even established cells in Southeast Asia."

Some say the scale of Zarqawi's operations - bolstered by recruits inspired
by his battlefield exploits in Iraq - may have begun to rival the less
visible Osama bin Laden.

"Zarqawi was building a global terror network parallel to Al Qaeda of bin
Laden," says Mr. Gunaratna, who is also author of "Inside Al Qaeda." "The
killing of Zarqawi is a huge victory - not so much against the Iraqi
insurgency, because the insurgency will continue, [but] internationally....
And this network will suffer."

Zarqawi's followers vowed to fight back Sunday with "major attacks" in Iraq,
and to renew their "allegiance" to Al Qaeda chief, Mr. bin Laden. An
Internet statement said the leadership of Zarqawi's Al Qaeda in Iraq met
after his death, and promised to "prepare major attacks that will shake the
enemy like an earthquake."

The group - posting its message on a site used by the umbrella Mujahideen
Shura Council - did not name a successor to Zarqawi.

Depending on what media survived the bombs and the caliber of the more than
two-dozen suspects detained in the raids, the information could potentially
be in league with that gleaned from the fall of Kabul in 2001 or the capture
of Al Qaeda operational mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed in Pakistan in
2003, experts say.

"There is a pattern of senior associates of Al Qaeda, that they keep so much
information, so much data - they like to have everything close to their
chest, and have it with them," says Michael Radu, the co-chair of the Center
on Terrorism at the Foreign Policy Research Institute in Philadelphia.

Zarqawi's network, especially in Europe, "is much more extensive than that
of bin Laden or [Al Qaeda No. 2, Ayman] al-Zawahiri," says Mr. Radu. "I
wouldn't be surprised if we see another wave of arrests in Europe. Then we
will know if what was captured [in Iraq] and after was indeed important for
[Zarqawi's] network."

Jordanian security officials estimate that Zarqawi recruited, trained, and
sent back 300 militants, who are now awaiting orders in their home countries
to strike, according to a report in Sunday's edition of The New York Times.

The US military in Baghdad is not further describing the contents or value
of the Zarqawi material, says spokesman Maj. Douglas Powell, because "the
intelligence is still being developed and we're not ready to address
anything specific." Maj. Gen. William Caldwell says he is pushing to have
some information quickly declassified.

US forces have "had a steady drum beat of operations against the Al Qaeda
network here in Iraq since the Zarqawi operation," Gen. George Casey,
commander of multinational forces in Iraq, told Fox News on Sunday. "We will
continue to go after [Zarqawi's] network and disrupt it in what we feel is a
very vulnerable period. And so we hope to take advantage of that."

Zarqawi's top followers will assume that US forces are exploiting the new
leads, says Gunaratna. "Some key operatives will change their venue and
their methods," he says. "They will know that Zarqawi's material has been
compromised."

The ultimate value of the intelligence from "such a big event" as last
week's raids "depends on how [Zarqawi's network is] organized. The goal is
always to cut off the head," says a US official in Baghdad familiar with
terrorism investigations.

"Think about it like a corporation. The little guy is going to have
information about his boss, who will know about the subdivision - the best
thing is to get them all," says the official. "But not everybody is
organized that way; it is not necessarily a hierarchy."

Indeed, Zarqawi's network appeared to operate alongside - not necessarily
over - a broader Iraqi insurgency. Last January Zarqawi helped form the
Mujahideen Shura Council, bringing together several Sunni insurgent groups
that share Al Qaeda's ideology of turning Iraq into an Islamic state.

"His Shura Council is 80 percent Iraqi, so [US and Iraqi forces] will
continue to hunt those people," says Gunaratna. "But Zarqawi has made this
group very Iraqi. He has seeded his ideas and values to those Iraqis."

Indeed, Zarqawi's adherents seem to be working on revenge. A string of
attacks have continued unabated in Baghdad and elsewhere in Iraq, killing an
average 19 people a day over the past three days.

Also Saturday, a more prescient clue: a gruesome video on the Internet of
the beheading of three uniformed Shiites, that were claimed in the video to
be members of a death squad - a tactic often used by Zarqawi himself against
Western hostages.

"Iraq is the front defense line for Islam and Muslims, so don't fail to
follow the path of the mujahideen [holy warriors], the caravan of martyrs
and the faithful," said Abdullah Rashid al-Baghdadi, the Iraqi leader of
Council.

"As for you, the slaves of the cross [Christian coalition forces], the
grandsons of Ibn al-Alqami [Shiites], and every infidel of the Sunnis, we
can't wait to sever your necks with our swords," warned Mr. Baghdadi,
according to an Associated Press translation of the Internet statement.

But the ability of Zarqawi's acolytes to produce and disseminate such videos
also may prove to undermine such technically savvy groups.

"They have to keep track of all these little cells they have, and contacts.
And the fact that so many have computer training is a temptation to put
everything on a hard drive, because who can memorize all those individuals
and aliases?" says Radu, of FPRI, about Al Qaeda leaders. "The electronic
age is a double-edged sword for them, because it makes them vulnerable if
those things are captured."

 

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