http://english.alarabiya.net/articles/2012/04/28/210756.html

السبت 07 جمادى 
الثانية 1433هـ - 28 
أبريل 2012م
Al-Qaeda `essentially gone' but affiliates remain a threat: U.S. officials
Somali government troops and African Union soldiers take position during 
fighting in the district of Daynile, south of capital Mogadishu. Somalia's 
al-Qaeda-linked militants clashed on Friday with African Union and Somali 
government troops. (Reuters)      

Al Arabiya with agencies

A year after the Navy SEAL raid that killed Osama bin Laden, the al-Qaeda that 
carried out the Sept. 11 attacks is essentially gone but its affiliates remain 
a threat to America, U.S. counterterrorist officials say. Core Qaeda's new 
leader, Ayman al-Zawahri, still aspires to attack the U.S., but his 
Pakistan-based group is scrambling to survive, under fire from CIA drone 
strikes and laying low for fear of another U.S. raid. That has lessened the 
threat of another complex attack like a nuclear dirty bomb or a biological 
weapon, the officials say. However, Qaeda's loyal offshoots are still 
dangerous, especially Yemen's Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, or AQAP. While 
not yet able to carry out complex attacks inside the U.S., such groups are 
capable of hitting Western targets overseas and are building armies and 
expertise while plotting violence, according to senior U.S. counterterrorist 
officials who briefed reporters Friday.

"Each will seek opportunities to strike Western interests in its operating 
area, but each group will have different intent and ability to execute those 
plans," said Robert Cardillo, a deputy director at the Office of the Director 
of National Intelligence. The other officials were authorized to speak only on 
condition of anonymity.

The shift from a single, deadly group to a more amorphous threat may not seem 
much of an improvement. But the U.S. believes that the bin Laden raid and 
continued U.S. counterterrorist action have reduced the chance of a 
sophisticated, multipronged attack on the U.S. like the attacks of Sept. 11 or 
the deadly bombings in Madrid in 2004 and in London in 2005.

An attack with weapons of mass destruction - chemical, biological or nuclear - 
by any Qaeda-related terror group also seems less likely in the coming year, 
Cardillo said.

Qaeda's Zawahri has not managed to harness multiple groups into a cohesive 
force focused on a single, catastrophic attack, officials said.

Qaeda's key affiliates in Yemen, Somalia, Iraq and North Africa have pledged 
allegiance to Zawahri but, unimpressed with his leadership, "have not offered 
the deference they gave bin Laden," Cardillo said. Zawahri has a reputation as 
an abrasive manager and a less than charismatic speaker.

That loss of a single, charismatic voice likely means "multiple voices will 
provide inspiration for the movement," leading to a bout of soul-searching as 
to what the splinter groups want to target and why, he added.

"There will be a vigorous debate about local versus global jihad within and 
among terror organizations," he said.

`Lone wolves'

While the danger of an elaborate, large-scale attack had diminished, the threat 
of so-called "lone wolves" inspired but not directed by Qaeda still present a 
challenge to counterterrorism efforts, officials said.

Attacks such as the shooting spree last month in France by militant gunman 
Mohamed Merah and a 2009 homegrown assault at Fort Hood in Texas are difficult 
to disrupt.

"People like Merah who act on their own, who equip themselves with weapons, who 
decide to act essentially on their own timing and at their own targets, are 
truly the most difficult targets we face," a counterterrorism official, who 
spoke on condition of anonymity, said.

Sidelined by Arab Spring

Qaeda has also found itself largely sidelined and wrong-footed by the popular 
uprisings of the Arab spring, with Bin Laden and his "theology" losing popular 
standing in Arab states, officials said.

However, the upheaval and toppling of regimes has left a vacuum where security 
services had once aggressively pursued militants.

"The replacement security organs are pretty immature," the counterterrorism 
official said.

"That can be a relatively dangerous combination of more extremists on the 
street and fewer security officials to actually to watch them."

In Syria, Qaeda hopes to exploit continuing violence to gain a foothold, the 
official said, adding that Qaeda is "interested in not only affecting the 
result but in contributing to the fighting."

The official suggested that Qaeda leaders were seeking to avoid the mass 
killing of civilians that marked the network's attacks in Iraq.

Apart from the affiliate in Yemen, other Qaeda offshoots in Iraq, Somalia and 
Africa's Sahel region are more focused on local adversaries and shoring up 
their position, the official said.

The network's branch in the arid Sahel region of Africa, known as Qaeda in the 
Islamic Maghreb, is seeking to take advantage of unrest in Mali after a March 
coup, fighting in alliance with Tuareg separatist rebels.

In Somalia, Qaeda-linked Shebab insurgents have lost "a great deal of their 
momentum and their popularity," partly because of military defeats and their 
refusal to allow outside food aid into territory under their control, the 
official said.

The officials also noted that every time U.S. counterterrorist forces strike, 
they must take care to avoid everything from civilian casualties to hitting the 
wrong target, lest the blowback produce more enemies.

No silver bullet to destroy Qaeda: Panetta

In a related story, U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said Friday there is 
"no silver bullet" to completely destroy Qaeda but argued that killing Osama 
bin Laden helped set the network back.

Panetta spoke to reporters aboard a military plane on his way from Latin 
America, where he visited Colombia, Brazil and Chile to bolster bilateral 
military cooperation and regional security ties.

"Having been involved in the operations, even before we did bin Laden, it's 
clear that there is no kind of silver bullet here to suddenly being able to 
destroy Qaeda, and that includes even going after bin Laden," he said.

"But the way this works is that the more successful we are at taking down those 
who represent their spiritual and ideological leadership, the greater our 
ability to weaken their threat to this country and to other countries."

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