U.S. Counterterrorism Strategy Update
Tuesday, 1 November 2005, 2:16 pm
Press Release: US State Department
U.S. Counterterrorism Strategy Update

Ambassador Henry A. Crumpton, Coordinator for Counterterrorism
Testimony Before the House International Relations Committee, Subcommittee 
on
International Terrorism and Nonproliferation
Washington, DC
October 27, 2005


Chairman Royce, Ranking Member Sherman, Distinguished Members of the 
Subcommittee: thank you for the opportunity to testify today. I will 
summarize my formal written statement and ask that you include my full 
testimony in the record.

Since 1776 the United States has often waged war against tyranny and terror. 
Sadly, throughout the last couple of centuries terror has been an enduring 
tactic employed by our enemies. In this modern era we face a rapidly 
evolving global battlefield and a transformative enemy that embraces 
terrorism in new ways, and thus poses unique challenges. Certainly, 
globalization, modernization, and the development of democracy and free 
markets afford us many wonderful opportunities for peace and prosperity. 
Yet, this globalization dynamic imposes political and cultural stress, and 
reactionary forces exploit this stress and employ terrorism as a means and, 
sometimes, as an end. For some, terrorism serves to define their political 
agenda and to provide them identity. al-Qaida, without terrorism, is 
nothing. Hizballah uses terrorism to achieve political goals, such as 
boosting their power and prestige to win seats in Lebanon's parliament. Iran 
and Syria export terrorism to serve their narrow, selfish national 
interests. The FARC in Colombia, in concert with narco-traffickers, 
terrorizes for political and economic gain. So, terrorism not only has 
various adherents and forms, it may serve various ends. We must understand 
these differences, to formulate and implement more effective and enduring 
strategies.

To further complicate this challenge, note the shifting terrain upon which 
this war is waged. Our foes exploit the explosive growth of media and the 
internet, as well as the ease of travel and communication around the world. 
These advancements have made possible the rapid movement of operatives, 
expertise, money, and explosives. Terrorists no longer depend on personal 
contact to plan, organize and conduct their attacks: they use the media and 
the internet to advance key messages, rally support, share experiences, 
recruit, train, and spread fear.

With the accumulation and diffusion of knowledge, terrorists acquire new 
tactics and new weapons, such as multiple shaped charges detonated along our 
convoy routes in Iraq. Suicide bombers trigger explosive-laden backpacks in 
soft target sites, in London and Bali. Enemy operatives seek to develop 
expertise in biological and chemical weapons, as revealed in anthrax labs 
and training manuals seized in Afghanistan in 2001-2002.

The enemy is also learning to deploy in smaller numbers, in teams or 
individuals or even remotely -- with increased lethality. From an 
operational perspective, these enemy forces are developing into micro 
targets with macro impact. This trend is challenging our notion of warfare, 
operationally, legally, politically, and even philosophically.

The enemy learns and adapts, and takes advantage of our modern, progressive, 
and global society. We must learn and adapt, also.

In the aftermath of the September 11 attacks 4 years ago, we and our allies 
have waged an unremitting war against al-Qaida, its associates and its 
supporters. We have been on the offensive, and taken the fight to the enemy 
in a campaign of direct and continuous action that has degraded the ranks of 
al-Qaida's leaders and operatives; constricted the space that terrorists 
operate in and transit through; and choked the enemy's lifeblood by cutting 
off key funding channels and sources. These offensive measures continue to 
bolster the security of the United States and its citizens and interests 
abroad. As the President noted in his 6 October speech, in the last four 
years, we have stopped 10 major al-Qaida attacks, three aimed at our 
homeland.

While we and our international partners have made great strides, we must do 
more.

In the case of al-Qaida and affiliates, we confront a loose confederation of 
extremist networks targeting the United States, its allies and interests, 
and the broader international system. According to Australian strategist 
David Kilcullen, this confederation has many of the characteristics of a 
globalized insurgency. Its aim is to overthrow the existing international 
system and replace it with a radical, totalitarian pan-Islamic "Caliphate." 
Its methods include intelligence collection, analysis, counterintelligence, 
deception, denial, propaganda, subversion, terrorism, insurgency and open 
warfare. So, while we speak of "terrorists" we must focus not only on 
"terrorism," but rather on all the methods they employ. We must also focus 
on their strategy, and attack that as well.

Al-Qaida gains strategic strength from making local conflicts their own, 
from aggregating these conflicts, from deploying operatives on a global 
scale. We must, therefore, cut the links, material and ideological, from al- 
Qaida and its affiliates and prevent al-Qaida from recruiting more allies. 
We must cut these links and isolate the enemy. These links include ideology, 
finances, intelligence, communication, cultural affiliation, training, and 
other support infrastructure. Toward that end, we must cut these ties while 
we simultaneously attack three strategic objectives:

* Enemy leadership; * Enemy safe havens, which include + geographic space, 
such as state sponsors of terrorism, failing states, ungoverned areas where 
terrorists can train and organize; + cyberspace, which provides 
internet-based means for communication, planning, resource transfer and 
intelligence collection; and + ideological space, which includes belief 
systems and cultural norms that enhance the enemy's freedom of action; * The 
conditions the enemy exploits to advance their cause -- local groups, 
grievances, communal conflicts and societal structures that may provide 
fertile soil in which extremism flourishes.

As the President stressed in the 2003 National Strategy for Combating 
Terrorism, we must engage these strategic targets with all instruments of 
statecraft, to include diplomacy, military power, the rule of law, economic 
power, and intelligence/covert action. We must orchestrate these 
instruments, in harmony for each particular environment, for each specific 
target. This requires intensive intelligence collection and analysis, 
followed by sharp and quick action. More than ever, the intelligence sensor 
must be linked to policy conductor, at all levels.

This is yet another challenge in this global war, the challenge of multiple 
level operations. We must simultaneously work at four levels: global, 
regional, national, and local. This is where we can break the links that 
al-Qaida seeks to forge. Breaking these links helps eradicate or diminish 
enemy safe haven, usually in border areas which confounds operations based 
exclusively on national level operations. This is also how to attend to the 
local conditions that the terrorist seek to exploit; deny them 
disenfranchised and angry young men as recruits, and deny them the 
operatives for terrorist attacks.

This is not just an academic outline, but a viable operational method that 
has worked. In Afghanistan in 2001-2002, the United States placed an 
emphasis on local, national, regional, and global conditions, on fracturing 
enemy forces, on employing all instruments of statecraft, and on providing 
hope and opportunity for the dispossessed. In Southeast Asia, from where I 
have just returned, the rapid U.S. response to the tsunami in Sumatra helped 
accelerate a peace accord in Aceh. The strong regional leadership of the 
Malaysian government may forge a peace accord between the Philippine 
Government and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front, perhaps helping to deny 
safe haven in Mindanao for JI operatives that threaten Indonesia and the 
region. And, in southern Thailand, a local conflict must be addressed, 
before al-Qaida and affiliates can exploit to their own ends.

There is another example where al-Qaida seeks to claim a local conflict as 
their own: Iraq. Al-Qaida and its allied foreign fighters seek to hijack, 
transform, and direct local, Sunni, Baathist insurgents in Iraq. They view 
Iraq as a training ground and indoctrination center for Islamic extremists 
from around the world. They not only want to defeat the US and our Iraqi 
allies, but also the notion of democracy in the Middle East. The enemy is 
recruiting, especially from countries in the Middle East and North Africa. 
Networks endeavoring to funnel would-be combatants to Iraq have been 
disrupted in several European countries. In the near future, some of these 
battle-hardened fighters from Iraq could return to their home countries or 
our own, exacerbating domestic conflicts or providing new skills and 
experience to existing extremist networks in the communities to which they 
return. Iraq, therefore, presents local, national, regional, and global 
consequences and opportunities, for the enemy and for us.

How we define the various enemy forces, cut their links, and isolate them, 
in partnership with our local allied forces, will be the key to breaking the 
insurgency. In addition, as Secretary Rice said when she testified before 
your counterparts in the Senate (October 19), we and the Iraqi Government 
will succeed when we:

* Keep Iraq from becoming a safe haven from which Islamic extremists can 
terrorize the region or the world. * Demonstrate positive potential for 
democratic change and free expression in the Arab and Muslim world, even 
under the most difficult conditions. * Turn the corner financially and 
economically, so there is a sense of hope and a visible path toward 
self-reliance.

Success in Iraq and all counterterrorism conflicts depends upon the success 
of our partnerships. The State Department, with the cooperation and support 
of other Federal agencies, works to build the political will and practical 
capacity of other governments and non-state actors, such as international 
organizations, to combat terrorism. We have intensified old relationships 
and built new ones with foreign militaries, intelligence services, law 
enforcement authorities, foreign ministries, and banking officials to 
advance our common counterterrorism goals. We are working with foreign civic 
groups, provincial officials, tribal authorities, business leaders, 
educators, and a growing array of private sector partners who have vested 
interests in political stability, liberal institutions such as free markets, 
and democracy.

We have sought to focus the resources and abilities of a wide variety of 
multilateral organizations to build a seamless global counterterrorism web. 
Immediately after 9/11 we pressed the UN to set new, higher international 
standards for combating terrorism. We have worked to encourage all countries 
to ratify and implement the existing international conventions and protocols 
on counterterrorism. President Bush signed the UN Nuclear Terrorism 
Convention on September 14, the first day it was open for signature. We are 
working closely with our allies to secure final agreement on a Comprehensive 
Convention on International Terrorism which will close additional gaps in 
international law. We are coordinating with allies who have the ability to 
provide assistance -- such as the EU and the G-8 -- to build will and 
capacity to combat terrorism around the globe.

We ask, encourage, and when necessary pressure other governments to counter 
existing threats within their borders or to prevent a terrorist problem from 
taking hold. If these foreign governments do not have the means, we 
coordinate the resources of the State Department, the Intelligence 
Community, DOD, the Justice Department, the FBI, Treasury, Homeland 
Security, and other agencies to provide the tools and training required. 
Because of the U.S. Government's collective efforts, our foreign partners 
have successfully identified and interdicted terrorist groups, passed 
legislation to criminalize terrorism and terrorist finance that meets 
international standards, and improved their ability to enforce those laws 
and prosecute those who violate them. And, our partners are teaching us 
about the nature of the enemy, about the conditions they exploit, and about 
the benefits of such partnerships.

As we seek to defend our homeland and to attack the terrorist enemy, we must 
also find a way to counter the appeal of violent ideologies. Similar to the 
Cold War, we must understand the social and political conditions that 
terrorists exploit, and address these conditions while we simultaneously 
engage the enemy directly. We and our allies must convince these exploited 
populations that alternatives of prosperity, freedom, and hope are possible. 
Ultimately, we will beat al-Qaida's hateful intentions and twisted ideology 
by deploying our most powerful weapon: the ideals and values upon which this 
great country was founded. These ideals and values, however, should not be 
imposed, but rather we must create the political space for others to 
establish their own brand of liberal institutions and democracies, to suit 
their needs.

We are working to develop a comprehensive strategy to de-legitimize 
terrorism and to encourage efforts by the majority of Muslims who reject 
violent extremism. As the President noted in his 6 October speech, "the most 
vital work will be done within the Islamic world, itself." In his excellent 
book "No god but God," Reza Aslan notes that it will take many years to 
defeat those "who have replaced Muhammad's original version of tolerance and 
unity with their own ideals of hatred and discord." But, he adds, that "the 
cleansing is inevitable, and the tide of reform cannot be stopped. The 
Islamic Reformation is already here." So we must listen to Muslim reformers 
and support their efforts to bring forth Islamic democracy, as in Iraq.

We are not only broadening our partnerships in the Islamic world, but 
refining our pubic diplomacy, becoming more effective in countering 
extremist propaganda, and advancing our broader strategy in concrete ways. 
Specifically,

* The President has launched a new effort to promote freedom and democracy. 
In a September 19 address to the United States Institute of Peace, the 
President's Advisor for Homeland Security and Counterterrorism Frances 
Townsend underscored the President's freedom agenda and its importance in 
our counterterrorism strategy. * The U.S. will further encourage economic 
prosperity based on free market and free trade principles. * The U.S. will 
support international educational reform that demands intellectual integrity 
and tolerance, and prepares young people to compete in an international 
economy, as an alternative to systems that promote ignorance, fear, and 
paranoia. * The U.S. will advocate women's rights. One half of the world's 
population needs not only a voice, but a leadership role in all countries. * 
The U.S. will work bilaterally and multilaterally to address local and 
regional conflicts that global terrorists seek to exploit.

So, we must provide a more effective policy context, at all levels, to 
enable those operators and implementers to orchestrate the instruments of 
statecraft. We must engage the enemy, especially its leadership, with 
unrelenting vigor. We must deny the enemy safe haven. We must address the 
broader conditions that terrorists exploit, providing viable, attractive 
alternatives to the disaffected. Toward that end, we must continue to build 
international partnerships. All of this will take time; all of this will 
require the kind of sustained, determined, focused effort that will last as 
long as required. We must steel ourselves for a long, hard, and complex war. 
But we've done this before, and we have won. We will do so again. The 
American people expect no less. Thank you. I welcome your questions or 
comments.


Released on October 28, 2005

ENDS
http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/WO0511/S00012.htm




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