http://www.washtimes.com/national/20061221-122441-5208r.htm

CIA exercise reveals consequences of defeat

By Rowan Scarborough
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
December 21, 2006

The CIA this month conducted a simulation of how the Iraq war affects 
the global jihadist movement, and one conclusion was that a U.S. loss 
would embolden al Qaeda to expand its ranks of terrorists as well as 
pick new strategic targets, according to sources familiar with the 
two-day exercise.
     CIA spokesman Mark Mansfield confirmed to The Washington Times 
yesterday that the simulation took place in Northern Virginia. He 
declined to discuss its findings, saying that a final report is not 
finished and that the report will not be the intelligence community's 
official view. It will, however, be circulated within the community and 
possibly to U.S. policy-makers.
     The exercise involved 75 CIA analysts and outside specialists. It 
was conducted by the CIA's Office of Terrorism Analysis, within the 
agency's Counterterrorism Center.
     A source familiar with the simulation said it was a "red team" 
exercise in which participants played the role of global jihadists and 
war-gamed how the U.S. involvement in Iraq will influence their terror 
movement.
     Although it takes no policy positions, the simulation's key finding 
appears to bolster Mr. Bush's contention that a U.S. loss in Iraq will 
have far-reaching ramifications.
     At a press conference yesterday, Mr. Bush said, "A lot of Americans 
understand the consequences of retreat. Retreat would embolden radicals. 
It would hurt the credibility of the United States. Retreat from Iraq 
would dash the hopes of millions who want to be free. Retreat from Iraq 
would enable the extremists and radicals to more likely be able to have 
safe haven from which to plot and plan further attacks."
     Al Qaeda has made stopping democracy in Iraq a top priority, 
according to U.S. military officials. It has recruited hundreds of 
suicide bombers to come to Iraq and inflict mass casualties to spur a 
Sunni-Shi'ite Muslim civil war. The group wants to wear down U.S. troops 
to the point where they will retreat. Al Qaeda's ultimate goal is to 
turn Iraq and other Middle East countries into hard-line Islamic states, 
U.S. military officials say.
     One key finding from the "red team" exercise is that al Qaeda will 
follow past practices. Jihadists perceived the victory over the Soviet 
Union in Afghanistan in 1988 as a seminal event that spawned the 
creation of al Qaeda under the direction of Osama bin Laden. Al Qaeda 
leaders thought that if jihadists could defeat a global power in one 
theater, it could bring down governments in other nations.
     Six years later, when U.S. troops left Somalia after taking 
casualties at the hands of al Qaeda-trained Muslim fighters, it 
reaffirmed its feeling of invincibility and its belief that Western 
powers have a low threshold for casualties. After Somalia, al Qaeda -- 
and like-minded jihadists -- began attacking U.S. targets in the Persian 
Gulf region and ultimately struck America on September 11, 2001.
     The CIA-sponsored simulation predicts that al Qaeda will view a 
U.S. defeat in Iraq as another jihadist victory over a superpower and 
one that will bring it even more terrorist recruits.
     "When we did the simulation, the ramifications were enormous," said 
the source, who asked not to be named. The source said al Qaeda will 
proclaim, "God has given us a second victory over a superpower.
     "Imagine what defeat in Iraq would do," said the source. "Al Qaeda 
picks new targets after it thinks it's won."
This person expressed unhappiness that the Iraq Study Group, a 
bipartisan panel led by former Secretary of State James A. Baker III and 
former Rep. Lee H. Hamilton, devoted less than a page to what a loss in 
Iraq would mean for global terrorism.
     The source said he hopes the CIA report is circulated within the 
administration to drive home the point that the stakes are high in Iraq. 
Mr. Bush is set to announce early next year new strategies and tactics 
for winning in Iraq. He previously has dismissed proposals from 
Democrats to pull out all 135,000 U.S. troops now or withdraw them on a 
set timetable regardless of events on the ground.
     Mr. Mansfield said the Counterterrorism Center this year has 
sponsored 20 internal simulations, seminars and conferences using 
outside experts to examine issues related to the war on terror.
     He added, "We frequently reach out to experts outside of government 
and solicit their views on a range of matters. It is done routinely, and 
it is a very important aspect of our work. The simulation consisted of 
officers from around the intelligence community as well as outside experts."
     Such events are held, he said, "to better understand emerging 
threats to the United States."

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