Much ado about absolutely nothing.

 

Bin Laden  and Zarqawi have been allied, and Zarqawi a member of al-Qaeda
for years.  This changes nothing.

 

Bruce

 

 

http://www.csmonitor.com/2004/1230/p01s03-woiq.html?s=hns 

 

from the December 30, 2004 edition 






(Photograph)




TERRORIST LINK: Osama bin Laden (left) and Abu Musab al-Zarqawi.
AL-JAZEERA/AP; US STATE DEPARTMENT/AP




 


In Iraq, a clear-cut bin Laden-Zarqawi alliance

Audiotape of Al Qaeda leader, released Tuesday, coincided with deadly
insurgent attacks.

By Dan Murphy | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor 

AMMAN, JORDAN - The connection between Osama bin Laden and Abu Musab
al-Zarqawi was cemented with Mr. bin Laden's latest taped statement on
Tuesday, in which he praised the Jordanian militant and said anyone who
participates in Iraq's Jan. 30 election will be considered an infidel and
fair game for attack. 

When Mr. Zarqawi's terrorist movement emerged in Iraq more than a year ago,
intelligence analysts saw it as separate from Al Qaeda, with more ferocious
rhetoric than the better-known terror group and a willingness to kill large
numbers of Muslim civilians.

But now, the US and its allies face a grave and growing threat: an alliance
of mutual interests and convenience between the group that carried out the
9/11 attacks in the United States and the one that has contributed so much
to Iraq's chaos.

"There were certainly some differences between bin Laden and Zarqawi,'' says
Rohan Gunaratna, a terrorism expert at Singapore's Institute of Defense and
Strategic Studies. "But these differences were minor compared to the biggest
things they have in common - their desire to hit at the US."

Preelection violence

Mr. bin Laden's statement coincided with a devastating spurt of insurgent
activity inside Iraq. On Tuesday, insurgent attacks killed at least 54
people in the center of Iraq, including the detonation of a massive bomb in
a house police were searching in Baghdad that killed at least 29, and 12
policemen who were captured and killed.

Wednesday the Assar al-Sunnah Army, the insurgent group that claimed
responsibility for the Dec. 21 bombing of the US base in Mosul, signaled it
would escalate attacks in the coming days by calling for a three-day
"curfew" for civilians. In the statement, reported by the Associated Press,
the group said, "All polling stations and those in them will be targets for
our brave soldiers."

US and Iraqi officials concede that violence is likely to continue to grow
as the elections draw nearer, but add they are determined to hold the
elections on schedule, a plan which both bin Laden and Zarqawi are intent on
disrupting.

The Zarqawi-bin Laden link

For bin Laden, the advantages of the alliance are clear, says Mr. Gunaratna.
The operational capabilities of Al Qaeda have been relentlessly trimmed back
by the US since the attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, but he and most of his
ideological core remain free.

Since the Iraq invasion, bin Laden has repeatedly called Iraq a battleground
against the "crusader" West, even as Zarqawi has emerged as his principal
agent. Zarqawi has positioned himself at the head of a growing network that
US officials believe has been behind more than 70 car-bombings inside Iraq
and "now makes him the de facto operational head of the Al Qaeda movement,
not the Al Qaeda group, worldwide,'' says Gunaratna.

Zarqawi and his fighters were the target of the US siege on Fallujah last
month. But US officials say they suspect many of the militants escaped
Fallujah to other Sunni cities such as Mosul, which has been the scene of
recent insurgent attacks.

By combining their resources, Zarqawi and Al Qaeda seem to be aiming to
further amplify their message of total war against the US, the Middle
Eastern regimes it favors, and Israel, with an expanded Internet reach and
ongoing attacks against US and Iraqi forces.

The Sunni-Shiite split

Bin Laden's latest statement urged Muslims to attack the US and any Iraqis
that work with the interim arrangements, including voters and election
workers. In the two-minute, five-second audio tape, he referred to what he
sees as "the third world war," led by the "Crusader Zionist Alliance"
against Muslims who, in turn, "have a rare and precious opportunity to get
out of the dependency and slavery to the West."

Zarqawi originally called his group Tawhid and Jihad, and his first
statement of note in Iraq was peppered with venomous anti-Shiite attacks.
Analysts once thought Bin Laden was unwilling to call for all out war
between Shiite Muslims and Sunni Muslims, the dominant Muslim sect of which
both bin Laden and Zarqawi belong.

Both men's Salafy branch of Sunni Islam is highly intolerant of Shiites, as
is Saudi Arabia, but it had seemed that bin Laden wanted to keep the focus
on the US. Zarqawi, for his part, seemed to want to form his own
organization.

But in an October Internet statement, Zarqawi announced he was changing the
name of his group to "Al Qaeda in the Land of the Two Rivers,'' a reference
to the Tigris and Euphrates. In Tuesday's tape bin Laden called Zarqawi his
organization's "emir," or leader, in Iraq.

In bin Laden's other recent statements before this one, he sought to speak
to Americans in a language of justice and democracy - a departure from his
usually more religious and militant approach. Some analysts thought it was a
sign that bin Laden was seeking not only to influence the US election, but
to broaden his appeal among Muslims turned off by his earlier virulent words
and actions.

While his latest tape may be a return to form, it doesn't mean that he's
abandoning his attempt to influence politics. "Bin Laden needs to be
understood as a crafty politician, a rational actor who tailors his comments
to different audiences,'' says Toby Jones, a Saudi Arabia specialist for the
International Crisis Group based in Cairo. "Perhaps different statements are
designed for different publics, so he doesn't worry too much about
consistency."

What's clearer is that bin Laden feels in a safe enough position, making
three statements in two months after years or scarce public statements.

Islamist terror groups have been increasing in size and number inside Iraq
since the US invasion in April 2003. While Zarqawi's group is the best
known, the Ansar al-Sunnah, which has grown strong in the area around Iraq's
third largest city of Mosul has also become a major player, carrying out
assassinations of Iraqi police, politicians, and construction workers.

The group claimed responsibility for the infiltration of a suicide bomber
into a US military base last week who killed 19 Americans and five Iraqis.
It posted a video of a man it said was the bomber on its website, wearing an
explosives belt and preparing to die. The attack was the largest loss of US
life in a single incident since the war began.

A growing insurgency

"There's no doubt that Iraq has become a major battleground for the global
jihad movement, which is composed of many different autonomous groups of
which Al Qaeda is but one component,'' says M.J. Gohel, director of the Asia
Pacific Foundation, a security think tank in London.

"Iraq is one place in the planet where they can hit very directly at US
interests and with much tragic success, so naturally bin Laden wants a piece
of the action. He's happy to give his blessings to [Zarqawi], who has
operational capabilities in Iraq that Al Qaeda doesn't have, and expand his
franchise in this way,'' says Mr. Gohel.

Gunaratna expects that the role of Islamist fighters, both foreign and
local, will continue to rise in Iraq in the years ahead, mirroring the
evolution of the Soviet war in Afghanistan in the 1980s. In the first few
years of the conflict, there was only a trickle of foreign fighters into
Afghanistan, but that accelerated as the war dragged on.

He says that more and more Muslims from the Middle East and Europe are
seeking to fight in Iraq, and that Al Qaeda is seeking to position itself to
integrate these fighters into its broader vision of a jihad against all
American interests, not simply limited to the specifics of Iraq.

"One of the overarching trends of Al Qaeda's strategy has been to co-opt
like-minded groups that start out with local interests in mind and seduce
them into waging global jihad,'' says Gunaratna.

"In some ways Al Qaeda as an organization is dying, but it is influencing
other groups to become like Al Qaeda. Iraq is now the major recruiting
center," he says.

He also worries of another trend that may mirror the Afghan experience.
"These fighters have been practicing terrorist tactics, car-bombings, in
Iraq from day one and now they're much more radicalized. They'll take their
tactics home with them when they leave."

 



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