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Qaeda's New Links Increase Threats From Global Sites
The New York Times ^ | June 16, 2002 | David Johnston, Don Van Natta Jr. and Judith Miller

Posted on 06/15/2002 10:51:00 AM PDT by sarcasm

WASHINGTON, June 15 — A group of midlevel operatives has assumed a more prominent role in Al Qaeda and is working in tandem with Middle Eastern extremists across the Islamic world, senior government officials say. They say the alliance, which extends from North Africa to Southeast Asia, now poses the most serious terrorist threat facing the United States.

This newly constituted alliance of terrorists, though loosely knit, is as fully capable of planning and carrying out potent attacks on American targets as the more centralized network once led by Osama bin Laden, the officials said.

Classified investigations of the Qaeda threat now under way at the F.B.I. and C.I.A. have concluded that the war in Afghanistan failed to diminish the threat to the United States, the officials said. Instead, the war might have complicated counterterrorism efforts by dispersing potential attackers across a wider geographic area.

The continued ability of the loose network to achieve deadly results was again displayed in Friday's attack in Karachi, Pakistan, when a car bomb exploded outside the American Consulate, killing at least 11 people and injuring at least 26 more. No Americans were believed to have been killed. Pakistani officials warned of a new militant coalition, including remnants of Al Qaeda.

Moreover, as Al Qaeda followers have fled Afghanistan, the old bin Laden hierarchy has been succeeded by a group of tactical operatives who have set up makeshift alliances with Muslim militant groups in countries like Pakistan, Egypt and Algeria.

In the months since the defeat of the Taliban in Afghanistan, intelligence analysts say, they have not regarded Al Qaeda as a spent force. But they have redefined their estimates of its potency and reach, concluding that the American-led war in Afghanistan had badly disrupted the group's leadership and forced Mr. bin Laden and his top lieutenants to turn to new operational leaders.

"Al Qaeda at its core was really a small group, even though thousands of people went through their camps," said one senior official, referring to the bin Laden training camps in Afghanistan. "What we're seeing now is a radical international jihad that will be a potent force for many years to come."

At least seven Qaeda operational lieutenants, whose increasingly important roles have not been previously disclosed, possess the managerial skill and authority to carry out attacks, government officials said. The officials said the seven Qaeda operatives have assumed a larger leadership role in place of the network's central command group, which was badly disrupted by the war in Afghanistan. Muhammad Atef, the military commander of Al Qaeda, was killed in American airstrikes last November; he was the most senior member of Al Qaeda to be killed during the fighting in Afghanistan.

One terrorism suspect who is said to personify the changing threat is Khalid Shaikh Muhammad, a Qaeda member from Kuwait who authorities have said was a central organizer of the Sept. 11 attacks. He has been sought by federal agents since the mid-1990's for his suspected role in organizing a failed plot to blow up a dozen American airliners over the Pacific Ocean. The presence in the group of someone of Mr. Muhammad's standing in carrying out large-scale attacks makes intelligence officials worried. But they say they cannot tell where, how, and when such attacks might come.

The six others include several Egyptian men who played a role in the bombing attack on two United States embassies in East Africa in August 1998. They also include Saif al-Abdel, a Saudi who is believed to have a seat on Al Qaeda's consultative council, helping to approve attacks, including the embassy bombings.

In order to track the more dispersed remnants of Al Qaeda and its affiliated groups, Robert S. Mueller III, director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, has in recent weeks created two separate analytical units within the new counterterrorism analysis division to focus on what some analysts are calling the "international jihad."

The current role of Al Qaeda's traditional leadership group and how much power its members have been forced to cede to their midlevel commanders is the subject of an intensifying debate among intelligence analysts about whether Mr. bin Laden himself is alive or dead.

As months go by without any evidence of his whereabouts, several senior government officials said this week that they were increasingly skeptical that he survived the American-led bombing in the Tora Bora region of Afghanistan last December. But he has dropped from sight for long periods before and, lacking definitive proof, most experts remain unconvinced that he is dead.

Several senior government officials said they had recently picked up a possible clue. In Afghanistan, Mr. bin Laden surrounded himself with a phalanx of fanatically loyal security guards, a few of whom have surfaced in other countries in recent months. Some experts say that if Mr. bin Laden were alive, his retinue of guards would have remained by his side.

One intelligence official who has closely monitored Al Qaeda for years said that some of the new central figures were drawn from the broader coalition that Mr. bin Laden assembled in late 1998 to help carry out his religious order to "kill Americans and their allies, both civil and military, in any country where this is possible."

The International Islamic Front for Jihad Against Jews and Crusaders, the umbrella organization that Mr. bin Laden founded in February 1998 in a training camp in eastern Afghanistan, included not only Al Qaeda, which had militants from many countries, but also two leading militant groups from Egypt, as well as Islamist groups from Algeria, Pakistan and Bangladesh, among others.

Some experts regard the formation of this alliance as Mr. bin Laden's most significant political achievement.

To some extent, Al Qaeda itself was always something of a hybrid that staged not only highly structured, top-down attacks but also relied on affiliated — or like-minded — militant groups that concocted and financed their own schemes, with Al Qaeda's blessing, to strike at American targets.

For example, Ahmed Ressam, the Algerian militant arrested in December 1999 trying to enter the United States from Canada to detonate a bomb at Los Angeles International Airport during the nation's millennium celebration, was seen by investigators as a freelancer who was part of this broader network from which Al Qaeda recruited. Though officials say he trained at a Qaeda camp in Pakistan and received some help in Canada from the group's operatives, they say he did not clear either his specific target or his plot with Al Qaeda's leadership.

Law enforcement officials said that it remains unclear whether Al Qaeda directed more recent plots like the one ascribed to Jose Padilla, the American who is said to have met with Al Qaeda leaders for discussions about detonating a radioactive bomb in the United States.

The officials said that it is uncertain whether Mr. Padilla, a former street-gang member, had the know-how to build a bomb or the ability to acquire radiological material. Like Richard C. Reid, the Briton who tried in December to blow up a Paris-to-Miami flight by igniting explosives in his shoe, Mr. Padilla has emerged as a minor figure in sharp contrast to operatives like Mr. Muhammad, whom authorities regard as far more worrisome.

Although sworn members of Al Qaeda were estimated to number no more than 200 to 300 men, officials say that at its peak this broader Qaeda network operated about a dozen Afghan camps that trained as many as 5,000 militants, who in turn created cells in as many as 60 countries.

Foreign intelligence officials said that even if Al Qaeda's entire leadership were eliminated, Western targets would remain at risk from the broader network posed by radicalized militants from the two major branches of Islam — the majority Sunni branch of the faith, and minority Shiites.

"The Sunni Muslim threat will remain for the short-to-medium term," said one foreign intelligence official. "A significant proportion of them are from Egypt, Algeria and Somalia," the official added.

Regrouping the Network
Clues on the Web
To Remote Sites

Smiling as he lounged on a floor pad in what appeared to be a private home in Afghanistan, Mr. bin Laden seemed to be fully in control. Al Qaeda's leader, in a videotape released by American authorities in December, appeared intimately acquainted with the details of the Sept. 11 hijackings.

On the tape, Mr. bin Laden said he knew that the suicidal nature of the plot was withheld from some of "the brothers" until just before the hijackings. Six days before the attacks, Mr. bin Laden said he was aware of the precise day and time of the attacks. And he said he was aware there would be multiple aircraft strikes at targets inside the United States.

For intelligence analysts, the tape provided a critical piece of information. The video confirmed that Mr. bin Laden could communicate with his operational forces in the field. The depth of his knowledge indicated that he not only was an inspirational figure but also operated as a commander in chief who was responsible for the attacks.

But since December, when the American-led raid at Tora Bora in northeast Afghanistan sought to root out one of Al Qaeda's last strongholds, Mr. bin Laden, as intelligence analysts put it, has "gone dark."

Intelligence agencies have heard nothing from him for six months. None of their sources, electronic or human, has provided any clear indication of his fate. Major bin Laden lieutenants in detention, like Abu Zubaydah, have not shed any light on what happened to Mr. bin Laden.

The fate of his terror network has been better understood. In recent months, Internet traffic among Al Qaeda followers indicates that elements of the network have regrouped — some in remote sanctuaries in Pakistan, government officials said.

Some of Mr. bin Laden's midlevel commanders have turned to new Web sites and Internet communications as part of what officials have described as a concerted effort to reconstitute a terror network after the rout of the Taliban in Afghanistan.

The Internet activity indicates that some of Mr. bin Laden's followers may have fled to villages in the Pakistani province of Baluchistan, along the Afghan border, a sometimes lawless region. American officials now believe that some of these villages in Baluchistan, and perhaps others in the Kashmir region, could be serving as new sanctuaries for Al Qaeda members.

Earlier this week, Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld said he had seen indications that Al Qaeda followers had regrouped in the Kashmir region, an area disputed by Pakistan and India. Indian leaders have long accused Pakistan of harboring Islamic militants in Kashmir.

The New Leadership
Without a Chain,
The Links Persist

With Al Qaeda's leadership said to be in disarray, at least seven Qaeda members who have specialized in organization and tactics have assumed a more prominent role within the loose coalition of remaining terrorist groups, analysts and government officials said.

The officials said these Qaeda lieutenants have both the authority to initiate attacks and the ability to carry them out by providing cash and false documents to operatives.

"The operators who are still out there — they are the ones that will conduct the next terrorist attack," a senior government official said.

Intelligence and law enforcement officials said they now believe that Al Qaeda operatives like Mr. Muhammad are operating independently, out from under the control of the bin Laden chain of command, which may no longer exist as a working command structure as it did in Afghanistan.

Besides Mr. Muhammad, who was identified last week as being suspected of having played a major operational role in the Sept. 11 attacks, the officials identified six other people whom they view as the planners of new attacks. Officials said they were scattered among several countries to regroup the activities of what is left of Al Qaeda and operations involving other terror groups.

"I'd sleep a lot better at night if these guys were off the street," a senior government official said.

According to government officials, these are the key leaders:

Saif al-Adel is said to sit on Al Qaeda's consultative council, the group that approves all terrorist operations, including the embassy bombings and the attack on the American warship Cole in October 2000, in Yemen. Mr. Adel, a Saudi, came to Al Qaeda as part of its affiliation with Egyptian Islamic Jihad. The United States government has been attempting to find Mr. Adel since 1993, when he trained tribal fighters to attack the United Nations peacekeeping force in Somalia, an operation that killed 18 American soldiers.

Fazul Abdullah Muhammad is a native of the Comoros Islands, an impoverished archipelago in the Indian Ocean. Mr. Muhammad was charged with conspiring to bomb the United States Embassy in Nairobi. Using the alias Haroun Fazul, Mr. Muhammad was Al Qaeda's chief operative in Kenya in the mid-1990's.

Muhsin Musa Matwalli Atwah is a 37-year-old Egyptian who was one of five fugitives indicted in the two American embassy bombings East Africa in 1998. Mr. Atwah was believed to have been in Afghanistan last fall, but American authorities said this week they do not know his current location.

Mustafa Mohamed Fadhil is an Egyptian who the authorities said was an important organizational operative in Al Qaeda. Mr. Fadhil is believed to have rented the house in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, where a half dozen conspirators made the car bomb that exploded outside the United States Embassy there, an attack that killed 11 people. Mr. Fadhil was also indicted in the embassy bombings case, but he has eluded capture. An American official this week said that Mr. Fadhil "was one of the most important people we are pursuing."

Abdullah Ahmed Abdullah, an Egyptian, has served since the early 1990's as a senior adviser to Mr. bin Laden, officials said. He was indicted for his alleged involvement in the bombing of the American Embassy in Nairobi. Cooperating witnesses have told the authorities that he conducted surveillance of the embassy three days before the bombing.

Fahid Muhammad Ally Msalam, 26, is another Qaeda suspect wanted for being directly involved in the bombing of the embassy in Nairobi. Mr. Msalam, a Kenyan, is said to be the Qaeda member who bought the Toyota truck that was used in the bombing. Prosecutors say he packed it with explosives and transported it to the embassy. His fingerprints were found on a magazine that was inside a Nike gym bag that also contained clothing with traces of TNT, according to testimony at the embassy bombing trial last year in Manhattan.

Senior government officials said that despite some Qaeda members who have been captured or killed, the organization still has the ability to initiate terrorist strikes.

One official said this about the remaining goal: "It's body bags. That's all that matters to them now."

Tracking the New Network
Shifting Alliances
Of Militant Groups

In May, not long after a suicide assault, also in Karachi, that killed 14 French citizens, Pakistani intelligence officials told President Pervez Musharraf that some of the country's most militant Islamic groups had joined forces to carry out fresh attacks against American targets. Pakistani officials said they believed the attack on the American Consulate had been carried out by a new coalition of organizations drawn from the remnants of Pakistani militant groups that were disrupted during General Musharraf's crackdown earlier this year.

Officials emphasized that it was no longer possible simply to label all post-Sept. 11 plots as Al Qaeda inspired, because the new terror alliance has largely replaced the old bin Laden network. Senior government officials this week said the Karachi bombing had been an example of the new broad-based coalition of various terrorist groups coming together for operations. "What many of these groups have in common, however, is that they had members go through the Al Qaeda training camps in Afghanistan," one official said.

Investigators have also looked for clues of the remade terrorist landscape in both the attacks and the foiled plots since Sept. 11.

At least six plots have been disrupted since Sept. 11. The first, on Sept. 13, was a plot to destroy the United States Embassy in Paris. A French citizen of Algerian ancestry was arrested in Paris and told prosecutors that he was part of a Qaeda plot to blow up the embassy.

In Singapore last December, the police arrested what they described as 13 Qaeda members who were part of a cell that had prepared to blow up embassies of the United States, Israel, Britain and Australia.

Earlier this week, Moroccan authorities said they had broken up an Al Qaeda cell that had identified NATO ships in the Strait of Gibraltar as potential targets.

Two men, both tied to Al Qaeda, have been arrested since Sept. 11: Mr. Reid, the suspected "shoe bomber" who was accused of trying to blow up a Paris-to-Miami flight on Dec. 22, and Mr. Padilla, the former Chicago gang member accused this week of beginning a plot to build and detonate a "dirty bomb" in the United States.

Investigators say they see important similarities between Mr. Reid and Mr. Padilla. Neither man is the traditional Al Qaeda attacker — Mr. Reid is British, while Mr. Padilla is of Puerto Rican descent. .

Although some government officials said Mr. Padilla's dirty bomb plot was only in its earliest stages, they said they were most struck that Al Qaeda would use someone like Mr. Padilla, whose American passport would allow him to enter the country with ease. "It's a very nice package for them to be able to move somebody — he has the clean passport," one official said. "We have some strong leads and ideas of where his support was coming from."

In Mr. Padilla's case, investigators said the new leadership's resiliency takes after a saying attributed to Ayman Zawahiri, a deputy to Mr. bin Laden whose whereabouts are not known: "Zawahiri described Al Qaeda as a bunch of grapes — even if you manage to pull off one grape, you still have a lot more grapes left."


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: espionagelist; terrorwar
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1 posted on 06/15/2002 10:51:00 AM PDT by sarcasm
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To: sarcasm
I tend to believe that Al Qaeda is part of a larger organization, a terror international which includes people from all across the political and religious spectrum who cooperate for the common goal:the destruction of Western civilization.
2 posted on 06/15/2002 10:56:39 AM PDT by Commander8
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To: sarcasm
: "Zawahiri described Al Qaeda as a bunch of grapes — even if you manage to pull off
one grape, you still have a lot more grapes left."


Good, now we know the dimensions of the problem.
There are a finite number of grapes in a bunch.

All we have to do is squeeze them all and destroy (even pre-emptively) any new bunches.

Having watched PBS FrontLine's "Siege of Bethlehem", I can give the nimrods of national
security a hint: the stereotypical American female teenager can't hold a candle
to terrorists when it comes to cell-phone use.

Even if they are products of "The Great Satan".
3 posted on 06/15/2002 11:02:50 AM PDT by VOA
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To: sarcasm
Each day Mecca comes closer and closer to be nuked and when it is nuked it will throw all these loudmouth primitives into total confusion. Oh..... And also take out the top 100 Jihadist Mosques/Madrassas of the Islamic world via cruise missles. Also Medina and Qum. This is my cruel plan for dealing with cruel Islam.
4 posted on 06/15/2002 11:04:07 AM PDT by dennisw
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To: sarcasm
My take on it is, if you have an Arabic-sounding name, you are the enemy.
5 posted on 06/15/2002 11:07:16 AM PDT by Lazamataz
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To: sarcasm
Makes it simpler.
6 posted on 06/15/2002 11:07:41 AM PDT by Lazamataz
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To: dennisw
Each day Mecca comes closer and closer to be nuked and when it is nuked it will throw all these loudmouth primitives into total confusion. Oh..... And also take out the top 100 Jihadist Mosques/Madrassas of the Islamic world via cruise missles. Also Medina and Qum. This is my cruel plan for dealing with cruel Islam.

Symbolism won't help. They need to be dealt with individually, up close and personal. The terrorist handbooks state you should be in physical shape, a good marksman, and good at martial arts. I think this is good advice for every American as well.

7 posted on 06/15/2002 11:09:19 AM PDT by Lazamataz
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To: Lazamataz
In the end, we'll have to find them all and kill them all. Period.

There's no getting around that salient fact.

Be Seeing You,

Chris

8 posted on 06/15/2002 11:11:46 AM PDT by section9
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To: dennisw
Weren't we told today that Islam is a "noble" religion?
9 posted on 06/15/2002 11:12:27 AM PDT by sarcasm
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To: sarcasm
the more centralized network once led by Osama bin Laden,

The dude is still in Afghanistan, hiding underground with his body temperature carefully matched to that of the surrounding rocks in order to fool infrared detectors.

10 posted on 06/15/2002 11:12:38 AM PDT by arthurus
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To: sarcasm
"What we're seeing now is a radical international jihad that will be a potent force for many years to come."

A Militia, well organized, will be our salvation.

11 posted on 06/15/2002 11:13:01 AM PDT by Mad_Tom_Rackham
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12 posted on 06/15/2002 11:14:29 AM PDT by Mo1
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To: Lazamataz
Symbolism will be a very good start. Same for turning Mecca to glass. Why fight all the Muslims when there is a (very) good chance you can demoralize them by doing it my way.
13 posted on 06/15/2002 11:16:07 AM PDT by dennisw
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To: sarcasm
Weren't we told today that Islam is a "noble" religion?

I say that Muslims consider their bloody Jehadis to be the Islamic nobility. They who can conquer and are well versed in how to strike fear into the heart of the non-Muslim.

14 posted on 06/15/2002 11:20:31 AM PDT by dennisw
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To: Commander8
Not to mock, but upon reading your post, my first thought was "S.P.E.C.T.R.E."
15 posted on 06/15/2002 11:22:52 AM PDT by Tree of Liberty
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To: sarcasm
And among those in that network are American-born muslim-converts like Padilla. We're going to have to recognize who the enemy is. They are just "terrorists." They are radical Islamists. We need to call them by name.
16 posted on 06/15/2002 11:24:19 AM PDT by Exigence
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To: arthurus
The dude is still in Afghanistan, hiding underground with his body temperature carefully matched to that of the surrounding rocks in order to fool infrared detectors.

And to make himself even harder to find, he's stopped breathing and spread his atoms out among those rocks.

17 posted on 06/15/2002 11:26:41 AM PDT by Exigence
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To: Tree of Liberty
Ha Ha verry funny.
18 posted on 06/15/2002 11:33:33 AM PDT by Commander8
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To: sarcasm
"Zawahiri described Al Qaeda as a bunch of grapes — even if you manage to pull off one grape, you still have a lot more grapes left."

I guess that nitwit hasn't heard that when America harvests grapes it does so by the megaton.

19 posted on 06/15/2002 11:43:07 AM PDT by LibWhacker
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To: Tree of Liberty
Yes! Al Queda = SPECTRE. Fiction becomes fact, sometimes. The line between art and reality is blurry.
20 posted on 06/15/2002 11:45:19 AM PDT by jwfiv
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