http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/IE10Ak08.html
Al-Qaeda message aimed at US living rooms
By Michael Scheuer 

In an hour-plus videotaped interview broadcast last Saturday, al-Qaeda
deputy chief Ayman al-Zawahiri answered questions from an unnamed
interviewer from al-Qaeda's video arm, Al-Sahab Productions. The topics
addressed covered the range of issues usually focused on by al-Qaeda leaders
in videos, including Iraq, Afghanistan, Palestine and most other ongoing
Islamist insurgencies. 

Zawahiri also again attacked the perfidy of Hamas and the
Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood for cooperating with, respectively, the
Arab-state allies of the United States - calling them US Secretary of State
"Condoleezza Rice's boys" - at the recent Riyadh conference on Palestine and
Egyptian Hosni Mubarak's regime. 

In the video, however, Zawahiri's presentation introduces several new
elements that may portend an increasing al-Qaeda effort to make itself part
of domestic US politics and to appeal to the religious sentiments and
societal and economic dissatisfactions of American Muslims, especially black
Muslims. 

The new video maintains the high tempo of Zawahiri's media appearances in
2007. Zawahiri's May 5 appearance is his seventh of the year, of which two
have been on videotape and five on audio. Overall, Al-Sahab media
organization has released 35 videotapes in 2007, which is a rate of one
video every 3.6 days. [1] 

The frequency with which these al-Qaeda media products are released, as well
as their professional production values, strongly suggests that Al-Sahab is
headquartered in an area where its employees have easy access to
high-quality media gear and which has been reliably secured against
intrusions by al-Qaeda's enemies. 

Al-Qaeda has previously tried to impact US domestic politics through its
video and audio tapes. Osama bin Laden's "Speech to the American People" on
the eve of the 2004 presidential election is perhaps the most famous of
these efforts (Al-Jazeera, October 30, 2004). 

Zawahiri's May 5 statements, however, were much more specifically targeted
than bin Laden's message, and were meant to inflame further the ongoing
confrontation between President George W Bush's administration and the
Democratic-controlled Congress over the future of the Iraq war. 

In response to the interviewer's request for his views on the Iraq war
funding bill, which includes a withdrawal timetable for US forces, Zawahiri
replied that the measure "reflects Americans' failure and frustrations" and
added that the US failure is allowing the mujahideen to move "from the stage
of defeat of the Crusader ... to the stage of consolidating a Mujahid
Islamic Emirate [in Iraq] which will liberate the homelands of Islam,
protect the sacred things [sites] of Muslims, implement the rules of sharia
... and raise the banner of jihad as it makes its way through a rugged path
of sacrifice and giving toward the environs of Jerusalem, with Allah's
permission". 

While accurately reflecting al-Qaeda's goals, Zawahiri's words were likely
meant to provide quality fodder for those in US politics who argue that the
Iraq war must be won to prevent the rise of a new Islamic caliphate that
will be ruled by a doctrine of "Islamofascism" and threaten the United
States and Israel. 

For US politicians opposed to the war, Zawahiri offered grist of a similar
quality. When asked about his view of the US troop surge in Baghdad and
those who claim it is beginning to bear fruit, al-Qaeda's No 2 claimed that
the surge certainly is "bearing fruit", but only in Bush's "pockets and the
pockets of Halliburton". 

Then, turning to ridicule claims of the surge's success, Zawahiri invited
the US president to join him "for a glass of juice ... in the cafeteria of
the Iraqi Parliament in the middle of the Green Zone" - referring to the
deadly insurgent attack on that heavily defended site last month. Finally,
Zawahiri expressed some mock anguish over what he sees as a too-early US
withdrawal from Iraq. 

Such an action, he said, "Will deprive us of the opportunity to destroy the
American forces which we have caught in a historic trap. We ask Allah that
they only get out of it after losing two or three hundred thousand killed."
Citing the supposed greed of US war industries, focusing on the US-led
coalition's inability to protect facilities in the Green Zone, and
displaying zealousness to kill many more US troops, Zawahiri provided
ammunition to those in US politics who argue that the war is being lost, too
many Americans have already died, and only war profiteers have an interest
in staying the course in Iraq. 

Zawahiri's May 5 statements greatly expanded previous al-Qaeda efforts to
portray the Islamist movement as part of a world liberation campaign that is
meant to destroy US imperialism - "the most powerful tyrannical force in the
history of mankind" - and assist "all the weak and oppressed in North
America and South America, in Africa and Asia, and all over the world". [2] 

Al-Qaeda wants all people to know, Zawahiri said, "that when we wage jihad
in Allah's path, we aren't waging jihad to lift oppression from Muslims
only; we are waging jihad to lift oppression from all mankind, because Allah
has ordered us never to accept oppression, wherever it may be". He concluded
this part of the interview by inviting "all the world's weak and oppressed
ones to Islam, the religion of freedom and rejection of tyranny, the
religion which ... produced the 19 martyrs [of September 11, 2001], who
demolished the symbol of America's arrogance". 

Beyond this expansion, Zawahiri clearly sought to begin a process of sowing
political and racial discontent among American Muslims, focusing primarily
on blacks, who form the single most numerous group in the US Muslim
community. 

For the first time, Zawahiri identified al-Hajj Malik al-Shabazz - Malcolm X
- as a fellow Islamic "struggler and martyr". Quoting words he attributed to
Shabazz, Zawahiri said Shabazz's ideas recognized what many "seasoned"
Islamist groups and leaders in
the Muslim world have missed, namely: 

If you are not ready to die for it, take the word freedom out of your
vocabulary ... I believe in a religion that believes in freedom. Any time I
have to accept a religion that won't let me fight a battle for my people, I
say to hell with that religion ... Concerning non-violence, it is criminal
to teach a man not to defend himself when he is the constant victim of
brutal attacks ... We are non-violent with people who are non-violent with
us, but we are not non-violent with anyone who is violent with us ... Any
time you beg another man to set you free, you will never be free. Freedom is
something you have to do for yourself. The price of freedom is death. [3] 

Zawahiri told American Muslims that Malcolm X drew these "powerful concepts"
from Islam, and that they are as applicable today to the oppressed condition
of black American Muslims as they were in his lifetime (1925-65). Al-Qaeda's
deputy said to black American Muslims, "I hope no one replies to me that
blacks in America have been delivered from its tyranny because there are the
likes of [former secretary of state] Colin Powell - the liar of the Security
Council - and Condoleezza Rice in power." Using what he claimed was
Shabazz's analysis, Zawahiri identified Powell and Rice as "house slaves",
blacks who prospered because they were obedient and helpful to their
masters. 

Zawahiri then said that the current condition of most black American Muslims
is much closer to that of what Shabazz described as "field slaves", blacks
who "lived in huts, have nothing to lose ... they felt the sting of the
lash". This inferior status, Zawahiri claimed, was best exemplified by the
black American Muslims who today are serving in the US military: 

I am hurt when I find a black American fighting the Muslims under the
American flag. Why is he fighting us when the racist Crusader regime in
America is persecuting him like it persecutes us, and oppressing him like it
oppresses us? And perhaps his slave ancestors whom America kidnapped from
Africa were Muslims like us. The racist American Crusader regime is using
him and the other weak and oppressed to die so that the criminals in the
White House can amass their fortunes and add to their millions, whereas he
receives scraps after his blood is spilled or he comes out of the war a
cripple.

And I tell the soldier of color in the American army that the racist
Crusader regime kidnapped your ancestors to exploit them in developing their
resources, and today it is using you for the same purpose, after they
altered the look of the shackles and changed the type of chains and try to
make you believe that you are fighting for democracy and the American dream
... And after you achieve for them what they want, they will throw you out
into the street like an old shoe. 

To stress his last point - and add fuel to the fire raging in US politics
over health care for combat veterans - Zawahiri related a story he "heard on
the BBC in English this past March 17 about thousands of discharged wounded
soldiers who are now homeless". One such soldier, a 14-year veteran,
Zawahiri claimed, served two years in Iraq, was wounded and discharged, and
was later evicted from his house and now lives on a monthly pension of
US$400 and "sleeps in his grandmother's car on the street". 

Zawahiri's May 5 interview is, to date, al-Qaeda's most sophisticated and
nuanced attempt to bedevil US domestic politics, and it highlights the
long-standing fascination that al-Qaeda and many other Islamist groups have
had with the position of black Americans in US society, and the access they
could potentially provide thereto. 

Zawahiri's focus on US domestic politics and race relations also may be
benefiting from the input of a US citizen named Adam Yahiye Gadahn - aka
Azzam al-Amriki - who is a senior member of al-Qaeda's media committee.
Indeed, the deftness and political timeliness of Zawahiri's May 5 statements
suggests that al-Qaeda may have more than a single American advising it
about the complexities of US politics and on how to try to add a measure of
agitation to the US domestic political environment. 

Notes 
1. These statistics accompany the text of the interview in "Interview with
Sheikh Ayman al-Zawahiri", IntelCenter, al-Qaeda Videos, No 74, May 5. All
quotations from Zawahiri in this article are from this document. Also,
Zawahiri's answers contained three subtle threats of attacks inside the
United States. In referring to the "Crusaders", he promised attacks in "our
countries and theirs"; in discussing Khalid Sheikh Muhammad and the
September 11 attack, he said Sheikh Muhammad "has become a role model for
hundreds who are following in his footsteps, and they shall achieve more
than he achieved, with Allah's permission and help"; and in citing the
importance to Islam of the US-imprisoned Egyptian cleric Sheikh Umar Abd
al-Rahman, Zawahiri added, "for whose torture the Americans shall pay
dearly, with Allah's permission and help". 
2. Of the efforts al-Qaeda has made to portray itself as a force for
liberating the world's oppressed, the heretofore most notable is Zawahiri,
"The Freeing of Humanity and Homelands Under the Banner of the Koran",
February 2005, accessible at www.jihadunspun.com. 
3. All words attributed to Malcolm X/Shabazz in this article are as they
were stated by Zawahiri in his interview. 


 



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



--------------------------
Want to discuss this topic?  Head on over to our discussion list, [EMAIL 
PROTECTED]
--------------------------
Brooks Isoldi, editor
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

http://www.intellnet.org

  Post message: osint@yahoogroups.com
  Subscribe:    [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Unsubscribe:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]


*** FAIR USE NOTICE. This message contains copyrighted material whose use has 
not been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. OSINT, as a part of 
The Intelligence Network, is making it available without profit to OSINT 
YahooGroups members who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the 
included information in their efforts to advance the understanding of 
intelligence and law enforcement organizations, their activities, methods, 
techniques, human rights, civil liberties, social justice and other 
intelligence related issues, for non-profit research and educational purposes 
only. We believe that this constitutes a 'fair use' of the copyrighted material 
as provided for in section 107 of the U.S. Copyright Law. If you wish to use 
this copyrighted material for purposes of your own that go beyond 'fair use,' 
you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.
For more information go to:
http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/osint/

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/osint/join
    (Yahoo! ID required)

<*> To change settings via email:
    mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
    mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 

Reply via email to