http://www.gulf-times.com/site/topics/article.asp?cu_no=2&item_no=124063&version=1&template_id=46&parent_id=26

Al Qaeda seeks support for Islamic state
Published: Sunday, 24 December, 2006, 08:43 AM Doha Time

By David Morgan

WASHINGTON: An al Qaeda campaign to establish an Islamist state in Iraq 
capable of rivaling the US-backed government in Baghdad has drawn 
limited support from Sunni insurgents, intelligence sources and analysts 
say.

But its prospects could improve if sectarian violence between Iraq's 
Sunnis and Shias spirals further out of control, increasing the 
likelihood that an Al Qaeda safe haven could be created in the country, 
analysts say.

Fear of the militant group creating such a haven was one of the reasons 
cited by President George W. Bush for the 2003 invasion that toppled 
President Saddam Hussain and has remained a prime motive for the US 
military presence in Iraq.

US intelligence officials say the so-called Islamic State in Iraq, 
announced on October 15, is more than a propaganda move by the Iraqi 
branch of Osama bin Laden's militant network.

"They're trying to form another government. They're fighting for 
legitimacy outside the current government set-up," said one intelligence 
official, who asked not to be identified because the matter involves 
classified information.

Another US official, who also spoke on condition of anonymity, described 
the October announcement as a "statement of intent", rather than a 
reality, by Al Qaeda, the group behind the Sept. 11 attacks on the US.

Al Qaeda second-in-command Ayman al-Zawahri bestowed public approval for 
the idea this week in a video-taped message urging Muslims to back what 
he called "the gateway for the liberation of Palestine and the revival 
of the Islamic caliphate." Al Qaeda has said the state exists in Baghdad 
and several provinces including Anbar, where US forces are struggling 
for control against an insurgent force of about 10,000 fighters.

The effort plays on Sunni fears of a resurgent Shia majority in Iraq 
that minority Sunnis have come to identify with death squads and violent 
militias, officials said.

The promise of a Sunni Islamist state in the heart of the Middle East 
would likely draw new Arab recruits to Al Qaeda from outside Iraq and 
deflect criticism from Arab Muslims who say the militant network has 
nothing to offer aside from violent resistance, according to analysts.

It could also provide a prototype for the wider strategic vision of bin 
Laden and Zawahri, who periodically cast their struggle as a movement 
toward the creation of a new Islamist caliphate stretching across the 
Muslim world.

"We have a new agenda by a very powerful group. I believe we are facing 
a very, very smart and maturing adversary," said Yasar Qatarneh, 
security analyst at the Jordan Institute of Diplomacy.

But a recent US intelligence report said Al Qaeda's move appeared to be 
premature and was having trouble attracting Sunni support.

"Many of the groups are unhappy with what they've done and are not on 
board," said an official who has seen the analysis.

Officials said secular Sunni nationalists distrust the group's extreme 
religious views. Iraqi Islamists also fear they could lose their 
strategic focus on local objectives by joining Al Qaeda, which is waging 
a global struggle against the West.

So far, the Islamic State in Iraq has attracted only what one 
knowledgeable former intelligence official described as "individuals and 
splinter groups." But Mustafa Alani, an Iraqi analyst at the Gulf 
Research Center in Dubai, said the disintegration of Iraq could give al 
Qaeda enough of a safe haven to install an actual state.

"(The Americans) are underestimating it," Alani warned. "There is a 
logistical reality on the ground - they need a safe haven." Qatarneh 
said Al Qaeda's initiative also underscores the urgency of reaching a 
political accommodation with the main nationalist segment of the Sunni 
insurgency.

"If we do not co-opt and get into the process the Sunni Iraqis in 
general, Al Qaeda is improving and will force itself as the main Sunni 
player in Iraq," Qatarneh said. - Reuters


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