JD Week3: Assignment
154 TERRORISM IN PERSPECTIVE
O ne of the surprises of September 11 was that some of the suicide bombers had been living and studying in the West for
years. We like to think that our way of life and the freedoms we enjoy are so attractive that any- one who lives among us will inevitably become pro-Western. The globalization of Al Qaeda—its recruitment of locals to participate in attacks— and its careful grooming of operatives, were dis- cussed by the terrorists themselves in a New York City courtroom, where four of the 1998 African-embassy bombers were tried a year and a half before September 11. It is too bad that the terrorists’ revelations, including about the orga- nization’s vast business holdings, its detailed planning of operations, its emplacement of sleepers, and its attempts to acquire weapons of mass destruction, didn’t receive more attention. If they had, perhaps we would not have been so astonished by Al Qaeda’s ability to operate inside America.
This chapter begins with a discussion of a ter- rorist who participated in the bombing of the U.S. embassy in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, in August 1998. His story is important for two rea- sons. First, he was a sleeper. A “talent scout” noticed that he attended a radical mosque regu- larly, and that he was increasingly agitated about the plight of Muslims around the world. Told that he would have to be trained at a camp to earn the trust of his new Islamist friends, he spent his own money to travel to Afghanistan. The real purpose of his training was to assess his potential. He was found to be barely educated, with few skills. But he had something else criti- cally important to Al Qaeda at the time: lan- guage skills and Tanzanian citizenship. This is
exactly the kind of operative that Americans are beginning to fear—a confused young man who thinks he is helping Muslims by serving as a sleeper for a terrorist group, whose principal value to the terrorists is his country of residence. Now we fear that the terrorist sleepers may be our next-door neighbors.
The second reason this operative’s story is important is that he comes from Africa, an area of the world that may well become an enclave of Islamist extremism and anti-American sentiment in the future. Americans tend to fixate on enemies that can be fought with military might. We have a much harder time seeing failing states, where ter- rorists thrive, as a source of danger. We need to assess why bin Laden’s and other extremists ideas spread. And we need to look for clues globally, not just in the Middle East.
America has had the luxury of ignoring countries at far geographic remove throughout most of its history. This is no longer possible. Nor is it sufficient to concentrate exclusively on one or two villains in a given decade. We have to be alert to the possibility that the villain may be a seduc- tive, hateful idea about Us versus Them, rather than an individual; and that the hateful idea may be taking hold—in seemingly obscure or remote locations. The growing availability of powerful weapons, porous borders, and the communica- tions revolution make it possible for smaller and smaller groups to wreak havoc almost anywhere on the globe.
In the spring of 2000 two American defense attorneys contacted me to ask whether I would be willing to serve as an expert witness in the trial of Khalfan Khamis Mohamed, an Al Qaeda operative who was involved in the bombing of
The Ultimate Organization
Networks, Franchises, and Freelancers
Jessica Stern
❖
SOURCE: Chapter Nine “The Ultimate Organization” pp. 237–280 from Terror in the Name of God: Why Religious
Militants Kill by Jessica Stern. Copyright © 2003 by Jessica Stern. Reprinted with permission of HarperCollins
Publishers.
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the U.S. embassy in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, in August 1998. That attack, and the simultaneous bombing of the American embassy in Nairobi, Kenya, killed 224 people, most of them Africans, and injured thousands.
Mohamed had already admitted his guilt at the time his lawyers called me. He had told the FBI that he had rented the house where the bomb was built, bought the truck used to trans- port components, bought a grinder for grinding the explosive, and ground some of the TNT himself. After the bombing, he fled to South Africa with a new identity, a new passport, and $1,000 in cash, this last procured for him by Al Qaeda.
After a worldwide manhunt lasting longer than a year, South African authorities found Mohamed in Cape Town, working at an Indian fast-food restaurant called Burger World. The South African government extradited him to the United States. The U.S. government wanted him executed for his crimes. Mohamed’s lawyers wanted my help in arguing that his punishment should be to spend the rest of his life behind bars in a maximum- security federal prison, but that he should not be put to death.
Khalfan Khamis Mohamed was born in 1973 on the island of Pemba and grew up in the vil- lage of Kidimni on Zanzibar Island. His twin sis- ter, Fatuma, was born in the evening, but he didn’t arrive until morning, giving his mother a lot of trouble, she recalls. But from that point on, she says, “He was just an ordinary child who went to school. . . . After school he performed the normal domestic chores and liked playing football, like all youth. He didn’t indulge in any antisocial behavior.”1
The family was poor. They lived in a mud hut with a thatched roof. His father died when Mohamed was six or seven years old. People on Zanzibar don’t pay close attention to dates, and Mohamed’s mother doesn’t recall exactly when her husband died. After the death of his father, Mohamed helped his mother support the family by working on the farm, harvesting fruits that grow wild in the forest, and taking care of a neighboring farmer’s cows.
Mohamed comes from a very different sort of place than many of the terrorists—a place that, ironically, benefited from globalization long before the term become popular. Zanzibar con- sists of two islands: Zanzibar (known locally as Unguja) and Pemba. The islands are in the Indian Ocean, twenty-five miles off the coast of
Tanzania, six degrees south of the equator. Clove, jackfruit, mango, and breadfruit grow in the valleys of Pemba Island. Coconut trees, brought by Indian traders centuries ago, now grow wild. Monkeys, civets, bushpigs, and mon- gooses thrive in the forests. Some one hundred species of birds live in Tanzania, and thirteen species of bats have been identified on Pemba. The islands are also famous for their butterflies and the great variety of game fish found in the waters between them. Fishing and agriculture are Zanzibar’s main industries.
Today, Pemba and Zanzibar are largely iso- lated from the rest of the world. Foreign visitors tend to be adventurers attracted by the lush, undisturbed reefs or the profusion of game fish found in Pemba Channel. Visitors describe an extraordinarily friendly people who seem utterly mesmerized by their foreign looks and ways. They write of the remarkable melee of cultures— African, Arab, Persian, and Indian—magnificent Arabic architecture, abundant fruits and fishes, but also poverty and squalor, with the scent of spices rising above the stench of sewage and rotting fish.
Although it is relatively isolated today, Zanzibar was once the trading center for all of Africa, with trade links to Arabia, China, India, Persia, and Southeast Asia. The nineteenth-century English explorer Richard Burton described Pemba as an “emerald isle” in a “sea of purest sapphire.” The scent of cloves, he said, was enticing even from the sea. The people were a mixed race who had retained, despite their conversion to Islam, the skills of divination and other “curious practices palpably derived from their wild ancestry.”2 The traditional dhow, a single-masted ship with a lateen sail, used by Arab merchants for two mil- lennia to sail on the monsoon winds, is still in use today and is still built in the same way—with a hull of mangrove or teak, and ribs of acacia— with no nails.
A succession of invading powers left rem- nants of their cultures and languages. Shirazi Persians, who settled on the coast of East Africa in the tenth century, intermarried with the locals, giving rise to an Afro-Persian race.3 Omani Arabs, who settled on Zanzibar some six cen- turies later, have had the largest influence on the culture and language. The name Zanzibar is the Arabic expression for “land of blacks.” Kiswahili, Tanzania’s official language, contains a substan- tial fraction of Arabic, Farsi, and Hindi words, as well as some Portuguese and English ones.
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Tanzania was formed as a sovereign state in 1964 through the union of Tanganyika, on the African mainland, and Zanzibar. Zanzibar and Pemba Islands have a separate govern- ment administration from the rest of Tanzania. Zanzibaris are seeking greater autonomy for their archipelago. They would like to reap more of the profits of the export of cloves, which the central government taxes heavily, and to control more of the tourist trade.
Tanzania’s ruling party, and Tanganyika itself, are predominantly Christian. The ruling party refers to any threat to its rule as motivated by Islamism, which, ironically, may incite precisely the kind of extremism the ruling party fears. During the last decade, elections have been declared fraudulent by multiple international observers, and protests have been met with violence perpetrated by the police, who are pre- dominantly Christian, against Zanzibaris, who are predominantly Muslim. To the extent that Islamism is indigenous in the region, it is found more on the mainland than on the islands, as well as in neighboring Kenya, although this could change. Zanzibaris are deeply disap- pointed that the United States did not protest Tanzania’s tampering with the election results of 1995 and 2000 or the violence that ensued, although the government’s crimes were pub- lished widely.4 Although the region is remark- ably tolerant historically, stimulated by its long-time exposure to multiple cultures, anti- Western Islamist sentiment could easily take root here if democracy fails and state repression continues.5
Muslims represent 97 percent of the popu- lation of Zanzibar, most of them Sunni. Shia represent 12 percent of the population. As in Indonesia, Islam coexists with Zanzibar’s tradi- tional religions, including animism. Zanzibar is famous for its sorcerers, seers, and witch doctors. Spells often involve Arabic texts, and witches often dress in traditional Arab garb. Evelyn Waugh wrote that novices came to Pemba from as far away as Haiti to study magic and voodoo. A cult of witches “still flourishes below the sur- face,” he wrote, expressing his frustration that “everything is kept hidden from the Europeans.”6
Zanzibar is the home of a secret sect known as the Wachawi, who practice their arts even today. They are said to be able to take on the shapes of animals and birds. Haitian voodooists learned to animate corpses for labor in the fields by
studying with the Wachawi, who reportedly developed the technique to escape their masters’ notice when they fled bondage. The Wachawi are said to be able to bring the recently deceased back to life, with personality and memory intact. Locals describe their neighbors returning from midnight meetings in the bush, pale and speech- less, having seen their recently deceased loved ones restored to life. Early-twentieth-century visitors said that natives told them of powerful witch guilds, which required prospective members to offer up a near relation—a spouse or a child—to be eaten by other initiates.8
As a child, Mohamed attended a madrassah in the afternoons. The family described him as serious and quiet—more observant than his sib- lings, but also a better student. When he was in the middle of tenth grade, his older brother, Mohamed Khalfan Mohamed, asked Mohamed to come to live with him and his family in Dar es Salaam on the mainland to help out in the family dry-goods store. Mohamed intended to complete his schooling in Tanzania, but his time was taken up with his work at the shop and attending mosque. He had always been some- what of a loner, his siblings recounted, but he became even more isolated after dropping out of high school, spending time only with his family and people he met at the mosque.9
The mosques in Dar es Salaam were more political than the one Mohamed attended in Zanzibar. There was a great deal of discussion about the plight of Muslims in Chechnya and especially in Bosnia. Worshipers were told that it was their duty to help fellow Muslims around the world in any way they could.10 One of Mohamed’s new friends was a man named Sulieman. Sulieman was from Zanzibar, but he worked on a fishing boat based in Mombasa, Kenya, owned by a man whom Mohamed knew only as “Mohamed the Fisherman.” Mohamed the Fisherman turned out to be Mohamed Sadiq Odeh, a Saudi of Palestinian origin who was a member of Al Qaeda. Odeh would play an important role in the embassy- bombing conspiracy.11
Sulieman introduced Mohamed to Fahid, who would also participate in the bombing, who vis- ited Dar es Salaam only occasionally. Mohamed started spending much of his free time with Fahid and Fahid’s friends, who were very religious. Sometimes they met in Dar es Salaam, and some times in Mombasa, Kenya. Mohamed says that they mainly talked about how to help Muslims
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around the world. Often, he said, they would meet in cars.12
By 1994, Mohamed began to despair at his own life, family members said. He spent more and more time at the mosque. He was radical- ized in that mosque, his sister-in-law recalled.
Mohamed told Fahid he wanted to go to Bosnia to fight against the Serbs. Fahid told him that you cannot become a soldier for Islam with- out training. Fahid also told Mohamed that he did not trust him, and that he could earn Fahid’s trust only if he went to Afghanistan to be trained. Mohamed saved his earnings from the dry-goods shop and in 1994 traveled with Sulieman to Pakistan. Fahid had given them a contact in Karachi, who arranged for their trip to the camp. Fahid had been at the camp for around a month when Mohamed and Sulieman arrived. Mohamed told FBI investigators that the camp was called Markaz Fath, and that it was run by a Pakistani Jihadi group called Harkar- ul-Ansar. He said his teacher was a Pakistani named Abu Omar. Mohamed said that he met a lot of people at the camp, one of whom was an American known as Sulieman America. The people he met were interested in helping Muslims around the world, Mohamed said, and in waging a Jihad against America and against conservative Muslim states. He said he had never heard the name Al Qaeda.13
During the first two months at the camp, the group was trained to use light weapons (handguns and rifles), launchers, and surface-to- air missiles. Mohamed and his friends Sulieman and Fahid were selected for advanced training, which included learning how to manufacture explosives and how to join detonators and wires. Mohamed was not trained in the use of chemical weapons, although he said that other members of his group were. Afternoons were taken up with Islamic studies—including films of atrocities per- petrated against Muslims in Chechnya and Bosnia—and sports. Mohamed stayed at the camp for nine or ten months, he says.14 At the end of his training, Mohamed wanted to go to Bosnia, but he was not selected. He was told to leave a number in case he was needed at a later date. Mohamed went back to Dar es Salaam, bitterly disappointed that he had not been allowed to join the fight against the Serbs.15
Mohamed continued to spend time with the “brothers” he had met in the mosque or had got- ten to know at the camp. He went to Somalia
twice in 1997—once to teach Somali fighters what he had learned in Afghanistan, and once for a meeting with the men who would ulti- mately bomb the American embassy.16 Just before his first trip to Somalia, Fahid introduced him to a man named Hussein, who would later lead the group that bombed the U.S. embassy in Dar es Salaam. Fahid told Mohamed that Hussein is our brother, that he is a good man who had been trained to be a mujaheed. Odeh, explaining how Mohamed fell under Hussein’s influence, described Hussein as “persuasive, authoritarian,” and “a very strong leader, a man of compelling personality.” Mohamed was impressed by Hussein’s knowledge of Islam. Some time after this meeting, Hussein moved to Dar es Salaam with his family. They stayed with Mohamed in a small flat.17
Three years after he returned from Afghanistan, Hussein approached Mohamed to invite him to participate in a “Jihad job.” Mohamed said that he would like to participate, although he was not informed about what the “Jihad job” would entail. Eventually Hussein asked Mohamed to take cer- tain actions. He instructed him to buy a truck, which Mohamed did in his own name. He paid for the truck, a white Suzuki, with cash that Hussein gave him. Fahid accompanied him and drove the truck because Mohamed did not know how to drive. The group used the truck to trans- port equipment needed for the bomb, including cylinder tanks, detonators, fertilizer, and TNT. Hussein also asked him to rent a house, large and private enough to conceal the group’s activities. Mohamed remembered Hussein telling him that he wanted the house to be hidden from the street, but that it should also be “nice.” Mohamed found a house with a high wall, which he rented in his own name. The owner insisted that Mohamed pay a year’s rent in advance, which he did, with money Hussein gave him.18
Mohamed, Hussein, and Hussein’s family moved into the house in the Ilala district of Dar es Salaam. Other team members came to the house, but no one ever discussed his role in the plot. Hussein instructed Mohamed to remain in the house most of the time, so that if any neigh- bors came by, there would be someone who could speak to them in Swahili. Other team members arrived soon before the bombing: an engineer named Abdul Rahman, whom Mohamed described as working with “all confidence”; and “Ahmed the driver,” whom Mohamed thought
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was Egyptian. Ahmed was the suicide bomber who would drive the truck into the embassy. Some five days before the attack, Hussein told Mohamed that the target of the bombing would be the American embassy. Mohamed helped load the tanks, boxes of TNT, and sandbags into the back of the truck. When the truck got stuck in the sand behind the house, Mohamed helped the driver dig it out.19
Hussein and the rest of the team left several days before the bombing. Most of them said they were going to Mombasa, without specifying their final destination. In fact, they had been instructed to return to Afghanistan before the bombing took place. Hussein asked Mohamed to remain in Dar es Salaam, to help the driver with any last-minute details, and to remove incrimi- nating evidence from the house. Mohamed did as he was told, with one exception. He did not like the idea of throwing away the food grinder he had used to grind the TNT, since it was still usable. So he gave it to his sister Zuhura, asking her to clean it well and to pass it on to his mother.20
When he was captured by the FBI in October 1999, Mohamed told investigators he was not sorry that Tanzanians were killed, which he said was part of the business. He said he had bombed the embassy because it was his responsibility, according to his study of Islam. He said he thought the operation was successful because the bomb worked, it sent a message to America, and because it kept American officials busy investigating it. He also said that if he had not been caught, he would continue participating in the Jihad against America or possibly against Egypt, and that if the U.S. government were to release him from custody, he would bomb Americans again. He told his investigators that he thought about Jihad all the time. He told them he wants Americans to understand that he and his fellow warriors are not crazy, gun-wield- ing people, but are fighting for a cause.21
I travel to New York to watch Mohamed’s trial. Security is tight. The taxi drops me several blocks from the entrance to the courthouse because the street is blocked to traffic. You must pass through several layers of security before you get to the room where the trial is being held. There are metal detectors and guards on the first floor, and you have to show identification and sign in outside the courtroom. A guard is suspi- cious about why I am here. I explain that I am a defense-team visitor, and an agent instructs me
to sit in the third wooden bench on the right. I can see from the back of the room that the bench is already full. When she sees that I mean to sit there, a woman pulls a child onto her lap and slides closer in toward her neighbor on the hard wooden bench. This is Mohamed’s family, I realize. The women wear bright Zanzibar cot- tons. The boys and men wear prayer caps. The little boy immediately to my right is wearing pressed white cotton. He stares at me with vel- vety eyes, not at all shy, seemingly delighted with the opportunity to examine such a strange foreign creature, whom good fortune has brought conveniently near at hand. His mother is too distracted to notice his staring and he is free to inspect every inch of me, which he does with obvious pleasure. It is a hot day. I notice the smell of anxiety in my benchmates’ sweat, but also the pleasant scent of spices. I see Mohamed’s mother at the far end of the bench. She sits tall, with dignity, but she looks modest and kind. She appears surprisingly calm, at least for now. There are brothers, sisters, children, and spouses also sharing the bench, as well as the family with whom Mohamed lived when he fled to South Africa.
A social worker has been called up to the wit- ness stand to provide Mohamed’s social history. She has traveled to Zanzibar twice and shows the court pictures of Mohamed’s school, the neigh- borhood where he grew up, and the take-out restaurant where Mohamed worked as chef in Cape Town. When she is done, various members of Mohamed’s family are called up to the stand. Each is asked what they remember about Mohamed. An older brother remembers him as good in school and good at soccer. Mohamed was kind and peaceable, he said, and would always try to break up fights. A younger sister recalls him help- ing her with her schoolwork. Another says that Mohamed played games with her children, his nieces and nephews. The mother of the family for whom he worked in Cape Town recalled how patient and kind Mohamed had been with her children and her elderly parents. He even taught her elderly mother to read the Koran. She said that she would gladly have given up her daughter in marriage to Mohamed. All but one of Mohamed’s family members said it was their first time travel- ing by airplane or traveling abroad.
The last witness was Mohamed’s mother, whose name is Hidaya Rubeya juma. There was a hush in the room as a large lady dressed in bright cottons and a turban took the stand. I saw
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Mohamed looking down as his mother took her seat. It seemed to me that Mohamed had a harder time facing his mother than he did facing his victims or accusers. There was jolt of pain in the room, as though the air had been ionized with terror—his and ours. Not a fear of death, but the recognition of evil. The recognition that this person who had killed so many has a mother who loves him, despite his crimes, and that he is afraid to look her in the eye. That despite his evil actions, he is human, just like us. It is one thing to understand this intellectually. It is another to see a mother face her killer son, with his many victims looking on, seeing her fear, her agony, and her loss. The loss of her son—first to evil, and maybe to death.
Mohamed’s attorney, Mr. David Ruhnke, asked Mohamed’s mother, “After you leave and return to Africa next week, do you know whether you will ever see your son again?”
“I don’t even know,” she answered quietly.22
“Do you know what this is about, and that the people here have to decide whether your son is to be executed or put in prison for life? And I want to ask you a very difficult question, which is, if your son were executed, what would that do to you?”
“It will hurt me. He is my son.”23
Soon after this, the court was adjourned. Hidaya Rubeya Juma was the last witness to appear in the penalty phase of Mohamed’s trial. Closing arguments began at the next session.
In his closing arguments, the prosecutor, Mr. Fitzgerald, emphasized what he referred to as Mohamed’s two-sided personality. “I submit to sit before you and tell you that Khalfan Mohamed’s personal characteristics as an indi- vidual human being include the following: one, Khalfan Mohamed has exhibited responsible conduct in other areas of his life; two, Khalfen Mohamed has shown himself to be a person capable of kindness, friendship, and generosity; and three, Khalfan Mohamed lost his father at an early age and worked to help his family, which struggled financially after the death of the major breadwinner.” Mohamed can be very kind, Fitzgerald adds. “You want him to marry your daughter. You wouldn’t think he would hurt an ant. The next day he is in custody, saying ‘Yeah, I bombed people and I’ll do it again.’ That’s what he is. He’s got two faces. . . . He fooled his family. . . . He is capable of savagery.”24
Jury members concluded that, if executed, Mohamed would be seen as a martyr and that
his death could be “exploited by others to justify future terrorist acts.” He received a life sentence without parole.
When authorities interrogated Mohamed Sadiq Odeh in Pakistan, where he had flown on the day of the bombing, he admitted that he was a member of Al Qaeda and gave his interroga- tors the names of some of the Al Qaeda members involved in the plots. He also referred to “two or three locals,” whose names he appeared not to know, who had been left behind in Dar es Salaam and Nairobi to finish the job. One of those expendable locals was Mohamed.
According to several Al Qaeda members who testified at the trial, Al Qaeda is highly “tiered,” and for the most part, Africans were not admit- ted to the upper ranks. Mohamed was recruited as a sleeper because he had a passport, language skills, and would not stand out as a foreigner in Dar es Salaam. Odeh explained to the FBI that there are several types of Al Qaeda operatives: sophisticated operatives who are involved in intelligence collection, choosing targets, surveil- lance, and making the bombs. But another cate- gory of operatives includes “good Muslims” who “are not experts in anything that would have a long-term benefit to the rest of the group.”25 The main thing they have to offer is their knowledge of the local languages and customs.
These dispensable young men, recruited to act only in the implementation phase of an attack, are unlikely to join Al Qaeda in a formal sense. They are often identified in the mosque, Odeh said. Atrocities against Muslims— anywhere in the world—help to create a climate that is ripe for recruiting young men to become soldiers for Allah. It is not even necessary to mention the name Al Qaeda to recruit them, Odeh told Jerry Post, a psychiatrist who inter- viewed him.26 It is possible that many of the American, British, and Southeast Asian sleepers that law-enforcement authorities continue to dis- cover all over the world were recruited to play a similar role. Like Mohamed, the group of Yemeni Americans taken into custody in September 2002 apparently went to Afghanistan for a relatively short course of training. In the camp, potential recruits’ skills and commitment can be closely observed so that trainers can funnel them into the appropriate tier of the organization. Because of Al Qaeda’s strict policy of sharing information only on a need-to-know basis, sleepers—who serve as a kind of reserve army in the targeted country—are unlikely to know precisely for what
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they have been recruited until immediately before an attack.
Some of the most important revelations of the trial were contained in an Al Qaeda instruction manual called the “Declaration of Jihad against the Country’s Tyrants,” which was entered into evidence. The manual makes clear that intelli- gence and counterintelligence (avoiding detec- tion by the enemy intelligence agencies) are a priority for Al Qaeda. It instructs sleepers in the art of disappearing in enemy territory by shaving their beards, avoiding typical Muslim dress or expressions, not chatting too much (especially with taxi drivers, who may work for the enemy government), and wearing cologne. Sleepers are urged to find residences in new apartment buildings, where neighbors are less likely to know one another. Found by the Manchester (England) Metropolitan Police during a search of an Al Qaeda member’s home, the manual was located in a computer file described as “the military series” and was subsequently translated into English.27 In the “first lesson,” the manual describes the “main mission for which the Military Organization is responsible” as “the overthrow of the godless regimes and their replacement with an Islamic regime.”28 The sec- ond lesson spells out the “necessary qualifications and characteristics” of the organization’s members, which include a commitment to Islam and to the organization’s ideology, maturity, sacrifice, lis- tening and obedience, keeping secrets, health, patience, “tranquillity and unflappability,” intelli- gence and insights, caution and prudence, truth- fulness and counsel, ability to observe and analyze, and the “ability to act,”29 Subsequent “lessons” teach the trainee how to forge documents, establish safe houses and hiding places, establish safe communications, procure weapons, and gather intelligence. A large number of training manuals have been discovered in Afghanistan and elsewhere.30
Witnesses at the trial explained the structure of the organization in some detail. Bin Laden was known as the “emir,” or leader. Directly under him was the Shura Council, which consisted of a dozen or so members.3 The Shura oversaw the committees. The Military Committee was responsible for training camps and for procure- ment of weapons. The Islamic Study Committee issued fatwas and other religious rulings. The Media Committee published the newspapers. The Travel Committee was responsible for the
procurement of both tickets and false-identity papers and came under the purview of the Finance Committee. The Finance Committee oversaw bin Laden’s businesses.32 Al Qaeda had extensive dealings with charitable organizations. First, it used them to provide cover and for money laundering. Second, money donated to charitable organizations to provide humanitarian relief often ended up in Al Qaeda’s coffers. Finally, and perhaps most importantly, Al Qaeda provided an important social-welfare function. It was simultaneously a recipient of “charitable funds” and a provider of humanitarian relief, a kind of terrorist United Way.
In this sense, Al Qaeda is similar to Pakistani and Indonesian Jihadi groups. Al Qaeda has a clear hierarchy. There are commanders, man- agers, and cadres; and cadres consist of both skilled and unskilled labor. Foot soldiers are likely to be found in schools or mosques, and only the best and brightest make it to the top. Some midlevel operatives are paid enough inside the organization that they may find it difficult to leave, while for others—generally those who come from wealthier families—the spiritual and psychological attractions of Jihad are sufficient. Information is shared on a need- to-know basis, as in an intelligence agency.
Several Al Qaeda functions are worth dis- cussing in somewhat more detail: planning operations, relations with states, recruitment, training, developing the mission, and weapons acquisition.
PLANNING OPERATIONS
Some Al Qaeda operations take years to plan and implement, and sometimes the group reat- tempts attacks that failed the first time around. The idea to attack the World Trade Center appears to have originated well before the 1993 attack. Ramzi Yousef, who spent three years in a safe house provided by bin Laden prior to his arrest,33 made clear to the FBI that he intended to knock the two buildings down, but that lack of funds had prevented him from achieving his ambitious goals. He had also plotted, together with his right-hand man, Abdul Hakim Murad, as well as Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, his uncle, to destroy eleven American airplanes midair, a plot that was successfully tested on a Philippine airliner in December 1994, killing one passenger
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and injuring at least six others.34 The plot became known as the Bojinka Plot, which is Serbo-Croat for “the explosion.”35 Numerous reports have emerged that Al Qaeda had consid- ered using airplanes as weapons before, includ- ing the widely reported plot to attack the CIA headquarters. Bin Laden admitted on videotape that he had not expected the Trade Center build- ings to collapse, but that he had rejoiced in the surprising effectiveness of the attack.
For some operations, leaders are involved in detailed planning. Ali Muhammad, an Egyptian- born naturalized U.S. citizen who admitted con- ducting photographic surveillance of the U.S. embassy in Nairobi, told American investigators that bin Laden himself had looked at surveil- lance photographs and selected the spot where the suicide truck should explode in the 1998 attack.36 But not all plots receive this level of oversight. Members of Al Qaeda in Jordan, for instance, who were arrested while preparing for attacks to be carried out during the millennium, were providing for themselves, rather than receiving lavish sums. Ahmed Ressam testified that he had been given what amounted to seed money for his planned attack in Los Angeles during the millennium. During the trial of Mokhtar Haouari, a coconspirator in the “mil- lennium plot,” Ressam testified that he had had to raise most of the funds on his own, which he did by making use of his long-standing expertise in credit-card, immigration, and welfare fraud; as well as other criminal activities such as theft and robbery.37
The attack on the USS Cole was originally planned on another U.S. destroyer, The Sullivans. The suggested target date for the attack on The Sullivans had been January 3, 2000, at the height of Ramadan. This first attempt to sink a U.S. warship failed when the explosives-laden boat sank.38
Al Qaeda is patient. A senior counterterrorism official of the FBI observes, “They plan their oper- ations well in advance and have the patience to wait to conduct the attack at the right time. Prior to carrying out the operation, Al Qaeda conducts surveillance of the target, sometimes on multiple occasions, often using nationals of the target they are surveying to enter the location without suspi- cion. The results of the surveillance are forwarded to Al Qaeda HQ as elaborate ‘ops plans’ or ‘target- ing packages’ prepared using photographs, CAD- CAM (computer-aided design/computer-aided
mapping) software, and the operative’s notes.”39
This sophistication, coupled with a wealth of financial and material resources, allows bin Laden’s terrorist network to stage spectacular attacks.
RELATIONS WITH STATES
Jihadi groups build up strong relationships with individual politicians, intelligence agencies, or various factions of divided governments. The Pakistani Jihadis were long sustained by Pakistan’s ISI and are still assisted by former ISI agents, who serve as trainers at terrorist-training camps. It is likely that some current ISI agents still support the Jihadi groups, even after President Musharraf ’s post-September 11 promise to force pro-Jihadi elements out.40 Active-duty military personnel helped to train Laskar Jihad mujahideen in Indonesia and have had a long-standing relation- ship with the leader of Jamaah Islamiyah, now closely associated with Al Qaeda.41 Saddam Hussein offered cash payments to the families of Palestinian suicide bombers, and Saudi charities, purportedly unconnected to the government, do the same. Iran provides funding to a variety of Jihadi groups around the world including Sunni ones, as well as safe haven. Ali Mohamed, a witness for the U.S. government in the African-embassies bombing trial held in 2001, testified that Al Qaeda maintained close ties to Iranian security forces. The security forces provided Al Qaeda with bombs “disguised to took like rocks,” he said, and arranged for the group to receive training in explosives at Hezbollah-run camps in Lebanon.42
But bin Laden went beyond cooperating with states and state agents. He made himself so indispensable to leaders willing to provide him sanctuary that the assets of the state became his to use. He built a major highway in Sudan. Bin Laden’s businesses became major employers of Sudanese citizens. For example, Al-Damazine Farms, which manufactured sesame oil and grew peanuts and corn, employed some four thousand people.43
Bin Laden established a close personal rela- tionship with Hassan al-Turabi, leader of the National Islamic Front in Sudan and a leading Islamist intellectual who was educated in the West. Al-Turabi was trying to establish an Islamic state in Sudan based on a strict interpretation of
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lslamic law. Bin Laden also worked closely with Sudan’s intelligence agency and military. As a result of these relationships—and Sudan’s finan- cial dependence on bin Laden—he was able to build training camps, establish safe houses, and plan terrorist operations from Sudanese terri- tory. The National Islamic Front supplied bin Laden with communications equipment, radios, rifles, and fake passports for his personnel.
Bin Laden made important foreign contacts while living in Sudan. During an Islamic People’s Congress in Sudan in 1995, he met leaders of other radical Islamist groups, including Hamas and PIJ (Palestinian Islamic Jihad), as well as extremist organizations from Algeria, Pakistan, and Tunisia. Al Qaeda further extended its worldwide network of contacts through training, arms smuggling, or providing financial support to groups based in the Philippines, Jordan, Eritrea, Egypt, Yemen, and elsewhere.
After the U.S. government pressured Sudan to expel bin Laden in mid-May 1996, he moved his operation to Jalalabad, Afghanistan. He report- edly lost $300 million in investments that he was forced to leave behind. Despite these losses, soon after his arrival in Afghanistan, bin Laden began buying the services of the Taliban. He offered up members of his elite unit, the 055 Brigade, to assist the Taliban in its efforts to destroy the Northern Alliance.44 Over five years, he gave the Taliban regime some $100 million, according to U.S. officials.45 In return, he received the Taliban’s hospitality and loyalty. According to Mohammed Khaksar, who served as the Taliban’s chief of intelligence, then as deputy minister of the interior prior to his defection to the Northern Alliance in 2001, “Al Qaeda was very important for the Taliban because they had so much money. . . . They gave a lot of money. And the Taliban trusted them.”46
Does Al Qaeda need the services of a state to continue to function as it did prior to September 11? I think the answer is that it probably does. But there is no reason to think that Al Qaeda and the International Islamic Front (IIF)47 can’t change their way of functioning so that the services of a state are no longer as critical. The IIF is a learning organization. The movement is encouraging resisters, virtual networks, and lone-wolf avengers. The IIF is also increasingly relying on what I will call franchises—groups that have their own regional agendas, but are
willing to contribute (including financially) to Al Qaeda’s global, anti-American project when invited; and groups or individuals who may not be formal members but were trained at Al Qaeda’s camps and are willing to work as freelancers.
WEAPONS ACQUISITION
Conventional
The Al Qaeda body responsible for the procure- ment of weapons is the Military Committee—one of four committees that are subordinate to the Shura Majlis, the consultative council of the net- work. Apart from being responsible for the devel- opment and acquisition of both conventional and unconventional weapons, the Military Committee is also in charge of recruitment and training, as well as the planning and execution phase of Al Qaeda’s military operations.48
Al Qaeda acquires weapons and explosives from a variety of sources, depending on the type of operation and its location. The 055 Brigade, for instance—Al Qaeda’s guerrilla organization that fought alongside the Taliban against the Northern Alliance—used weapons left behind by the Red Army. It also received weapons from the Taliban and the Pakistani intelligence service, the ISI.
During the 1990s, many of Al Qaeda’s pro- curement officers obtained weapons in Western countries. During bin Laden’s stay in Sudan, from 1991 to 1996, the establishment of busi- nesses in the East African country provided much of the cover for the network’s procurement of weapons.49 Al Qaeda’s global reach has enabled it to establish a worldwide network of procurement officers. One of them, according to terrorism expert Rohan Gunaratna, was bin Laden’s personal pilot, Essam al-Ridi, a U.S. citi- zen who obtained communication equipment from Japan; scuba gear and range finders from Britain; satellite phones from Germany; night- vision goggles, .50-caliber sniping rifles, and a T- 389 plane from America.50 Al Qaeda has also procured weapons from Russian and Ukrainian organized criminal rings. Al Qaeda’s and the IIF’s links with organized criminal groups are likely to grow stronger in the aftermath of September 11, as many Western states are stepping up the pres- sure against Al Qaeda cells operating in some of these countries.
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Unconventional Weapons
Bin Laden has repeatedly made clear his desire to acquire unconventional weapons. In January 1999 he told a reporter, “Acquiring weapons for the defense of Muslims is a religious duty. If I have indeed acquired these weapons, then I thank God for enabling me to do so. And if I seek to acquire these weapons, I am carrying out a duty. It would be a sin for Muslims not to try to possess the weapons that would prevent the infidels from inflicting harm on Muslims.”51 After September 11, he pronounced that he already possessed chemical and nuclear weapons.52 Bin Laden’s deputy Ayman Zawahiri wrote in his memoirs that “the targets and the type of weapons must be selected carefully to cause damage to the enemy’s structure and deter it enough to make it stop its brutality,” probably in reference to unconven- tional weapons.53
Chemical and Biological Weapons. Iraqi chemical- weapons experts shifted some of their opera- tions to Sudan after the Gulf War, according to CIA assessments released to the press. Bin Laden moved to Sudan at about the same time. Beginning in 1995, the CIA began receiving reports that Sudanese leaders had approved bin Laden’s request to begin production of chemical weapons to use against U.S. troops stationed in Saudi Arabia.54 Khidhir Hamza, the director of the Iraqi nuclear weapons program from 1987 to 1990, claimed that bin Laden’s agents had contacted Iraq agents with the aim of purchas- ing weapons components from Iraq. Sad dam Hussein reportedly sent Ansar al-Islam, the ter- rorist group that attempted to assassinate the prime minister of the Kurdistan Regional Government, Barham Salih, to train in Al Qaeda camps.
Ahmed Ressam, one of the Al Qaeda opera- tives apprehended in the millennium plots, described crude chemical-weapons training at camps in Afghanistan, including experiments on animals.55 In December 2000, special units of the Italian and German police arrested several Al Qaeda agents based in Milan, Italy, and Frankfurt, Germany, who had plotted to bomb the European Parliament building in Strasbourg, France, using sarin, a nerve agent.56
Other evidence of the group’s interest in chemi- cal and biological weapons includes a manual
that provides instructions for using chemical weapons;57 a manual that provides recipes for producing chemical and biological agents from readily available ingredients;58 and inter- cepted phone conversations between Al Qaeda operatives who were discussing unconventional agents.59
In August 2002, CNN bought a cache of Al Qaeda videotapes in Afghanistan that showed Al Qaeda’s gruesome chemical-weapons experi- ments, substantiating earlier reports about experiments on animals. On one of these video- tapes, several men are seen rushing from an enclosed room, shouting at each other to hurry; they leave behind a dog. After the men leave, a white liquid on the floor forms a noxious gas. The dog is seen convulsing and eventually dies.
A large cache of documents and other mate- rials was found during the raid that led to the capture of Al Qaeda’s operational planner, Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, in March 2003. The seized documents revealed that Al Qaeda had acquired the necessary materials for producing botulinum and salmonella toxin and the chemi- cal agent cyanide—and was close to developing a workable plan for producing anthrax, a far more lethal agent. Mohammed had been staying at the home of Abdul Quoddoos Khan, a member of Jamaat-i-Islami. Khan is reportedly a bacteriologist with access to production materi- als and facilities.60
The greatest worry, however, is that the International Islamic Front, possibly working together with Hezbollah or other terrorist groups, will acquire assistance from persons who have access to a sophisticated biological-weapons pro- gram, possibly, but not necessarily, one that is state run.
Nuclear Weapons. The U.S. government has been concerned about Al Qaeda’s interest in acquiring nuclear weapons since the mid- 1990s. In early February 2001, Jamal Ahmad al- Fadl admitted that one of bin Laden’s top lieutenants ordered him to try to buy uranium from a former Sudanese military officer named Salah Abdel Mobtuk. The uranium was offered for $1.5 million. Documents described the material as originating in South Africa. Al-Fadl received a $10,000 bonus for arranging the deal. He testified that he does not know the outcome.61
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U.S. government officials reportedly believe that Al Qaeda successfully purchased uranium from South Africa.62 Mamdouh Mahmud Salim, a senior deputy to bin Laden, was extradited from Germany to the United States in 1998. The U.S. government accuses Salim of attempting to obtain material that could be used to develop nuclear weapons.63
Numerous reports have emerged that bin Laden has forged links with organized criminal groups based in the former Soviet Union, Central Asia, and the Caucasus in his attempts to acquire nuclear weapons.64 Russian authorities suspect the August 2002 murder of a nuclear chemist may have been linked to a clandestine effort to steal the country’s nuclear technology.65
They also report that they had observed terror- ists staking out a secret nuclear-weapons storage facility on two occasions, and that they had thwarted an organized criminal group’s attempt to steal 18.5 kilograms of highly enriched ura- nium.66 This last claim is unusual and alarming, in part because of the quantity—enough to make several nuclear weapons—and in part because the material was actually weapons-usable. Most press reporting about nuclear thefts turn out, after investigation, to refer to caches of low- enriched uranium or radioactive but not nuclear-weapons-usable materials.
American officials are suspicious about the activities of two Pakistani nuclear scientists, Sultan Bashiruddin Mahmood and Abdul Majid, who reportedly met with bin Laden, Ayman Zawahiri, and two other Al Qaeda offi- cials several times during August 2001. Pakistani officials insist that despite Mahmood’s experi- ence in uranium enrichment and plutonium production, the two scientists had “neither the knowledge nor the experience to assist in the construction of any type of nuclear weapon.”67
The two scientists, who were eventually released, reported that during one meeting. Osama bin Laden declared he possessed “some type of radi- ological material” and was interested in learning how he could use it in a weapon.68
If Al Qaeda builds a nuclear weapon or already has one, it is probably a relatively crude device. An extensive study conducted by the Institute for Science and International Security in Washington found “no credible evidence that either bin Laden or Al Qaeda possesses nuclear weapons or sufficient fissile material to make them,” but that if Al Qaeda obtained sufficient
nuclear-weapons-usable material, it would be capable of building a crude nuclear explosive.69
RECRUITMENT
In the years following the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, Al Qaeda’s recruitment was con- ducted by the Maktab al-Khidamat (MAK— Services office). Osama bin Laden and his spiritual mentor, the Palestinian head of the Muslim Brotherhood, Abdullah Azzam, established the MAK in 1984. The MAK recruited young Muslims to come to Afghanistan to fight the Soviet infidels. With branches in over thirty countries, including Europe and the United States, and a sizable budget, the MAK was responsible for propaganda, fund-raising, and coordinating recruitment. While bin Laden cov- ered the costs for transporting the new recruits, the Afghan government provided the land, and training camps were soon established.70
Most Al Qaeda operatives appear to have been recruited by Islamist organizations in their home countries. A Spanish investigation in November 2001, for example, concluded that a group known in Spain as Soldiers of Allah gradually assumed control over the Abu Bakr mosque in 1994. It had financial ties with Al Qaeda and regularly sent volunteers for training in Bosnia, Pakistan, and the Philippines.71 Surveillance of a key recruitment officer based in Italy, Abu Hamza, revealed a tightly linked network of Al Qaeda recruitment officers in Europe, which included Abu Hamza and Sami Ben Khemais in Italy, Tarek Maaroufi in Belgium, and Abu Dahdah in Spain.72 In Germany, in addition to recruitment through mainstream Islamic associations and charitable agencies, Al Qaeda recruiting officers used amateur videos of fighting in Chechnya to attract recruits.73 One two-hour-long recruiting video that was probably produced in the summer of 2001 showed a mock assassination of former president Clinton, along with footage of training bases in Afghanistan. Methodically, the film moves from picture frames of Palestinian children killed or wounded by Israeli soldiers and Muslim women being beaten, to pictures of “great Muslim victories” in Chechnya, Somalia, and against the USS Cole. The video concludes with a call for Muslims to embark on the hegira, or migration, to Afghanistan.74
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In Pakistan, Indonesia, and Malaysia, semi- naries are often fertile ground for recruitment. Many of them promote the excitement of joining the Jihad as much as they do the horror stories of atrocities against Muslims. In Malaysia, a school associated with Al Qaeda issued brochures exhorting young radicals to forgo Palestine for Afghanistan, where they were promised three thousand kilometers of open borders and the friendship of many like-minded colleagues, who had made Afghanistan the international center of Islamic militancy. Abu Bakar Ba’asyir, the spiri- tual leader of Jamaah Islamiyah, a Southeast Asian terrorist group closely affiliated with Al Qaeda, championed bin Laden and exhorted students in Indonesia and Malaysia to carry on a “personal Jihad” following bin Laden’s lead.75
The way Khalfan Khamis Mohamed was recruited is typical for foot soldiers. Recruiters locate raw talent in a seminary or a mosque. The raw talent is then sent to a camp, where it is assessed on various dimensions: commitment to Islam, psychological reliability, intelligence, and physical prowess. Identifying reliable recruits is considered the most difficult job. Among Al Qaeda’s most well-known and successful recruiters of elite operatives are Muhammad Atef, who was reportedly killed by U.S. bombs in November 2002, and Abu Zubaydah, a Palestinian born in Saudi Arabia, now in U.S. custody.
TRAINING
Osama bin Laden provided training camps and guesthouses in Afghanistan for the use of Al Qaeda and its affiliated groups beginning in 1989. Western intelligence agencies estimate that by September 11, 2001, between 70,000 and 110,000 radical Muslims had graduated from Al Qaeda training camps such as Khalden, Derunta, Khost, Siddiq, or Jihad Wal.76 Of those, only a few thousand graduates—who distin- guished themselves spiritually, physically, or psychologically—were invited to join Al Qaeda. The difficulty of making the cut as a full-fledged recruit meant that Islamists from all over the world regarded joining Al Qaeda as the highest possible honor, Gunaratna explains.77
The exact number of training camps in Afghanistan that are associated with Osama bin Laden is unknown, and estimates range from
one dozen to over fifty such camps.78 In the mid- 1990s, Al Qaeda shifted its headquarters to Khartoum and established or assisted in the establishment of an estimated twenty training camps in Sudan. Other training camps have been identified in lawless corners of Somalia, Yemen, Indonesia, Chechnya, and other countries. The camps serve a variety of purposes in addition to training members and reserves. They create social ties, so that operatives feel committed to the cause on both ideological and solidarity grounds. Specialists then funnel recruits into the right level of the organization and into the right job: public-relations officer, regional manager, trainer, sleeper, or other.
John Walker Lindh told investigators that the camp he attended near Kandahar offered both basic and advanced training. After the basic training course, trainees can select different tracks to follow, one involving battlefield train- ing and the other “civilian warfare training.” The battlefield course includes “advanced topogra- phy, ambushes, tactics, battlefield formations, trench warfare . . . practicing assassinations with pistols and rifles, and shooting from motorcycles and cars.” The civilian warfare course includes “terrorism, forgery of passports and documents, poisons, mine explosions, and an intelligence course which teaches trainees how to avoid detection by police.” Most of the trainees were Saudi, he said. He also said that the leader of the camp approached all foreign trainees to recruit them for “foreign operations.” The foreign recruits were instructed not to discuss the con- versation about foreign operations with their fel- low trainees, and they were not given any details about what the foreign terrorist operations might entail.79 Trainees were also asked whether they were willing to work in their own country. Lindh said that the leader of the camp, Al Musri, interviewed him personally.
Tapes reportedly captured by the U.S. army in Afghanistan show Al Qaeda members training to carry out operations in the West. The tapes show a level of professionalism that suggests that Al Qaeda had received significant assistance from a professional military, according to an analyst who read the army’s assessment and viewed the tapes himself. On one tape, opera- tives are trained to carry out an ambush near a six-lane high-way similar to those that are found in the United States and Europe. Hostage sce- narios include raids of large buildings with
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many occupants. Trainees playing the role of terrorists dictate commands to the hostages in English, and the trainees playing the hostages respond in English. Operatives are trained to determine whether soldiers or other armed per- sonnel are among the hostages so that those with weapons can be segregated from the rest. The armed hostages are then executed in front of television cameras. Another scenario prepares operatives for assassinating dignitaries—possibly national leaders—on a golf course. It is clear from the tapes that Al Qaeda is training its oper- atives to maximize media coverage, according to the army’s assessment.80
The most important aspect of training, how- ever, is mental training and religious indoctrina- tion. Religious indoctrination includes Islamic law and history and how to wage a holy war. The story that recruits must learn is about identity— it is about who we are as distinct from them, to whom Zawahiri, bin Laden’s deputy, refers to as the “new Crusaders.”81
Most importantly, camps are used to inculcate “the story” into young men’s heads. The story is about an evil enemy who, in the words of Zawahiri, is waging a “new Crusade” against the lands of Islam. This enemy must be fought mili- tarily, Zawahiri explains, because that is the only language the West understands. The enemy is easily frightened by small groups of fighters, and trainees learn how to function in small cells.82
THE MISSION OF TERRORIST ORGANIZATIONS: THE TERRORIST “PRODUCT”
A professional terrorist chooses his mission carefully. He is able to read popular opinion and is likely to change his mission over time. Astute leaders may find new missions—or emphasize new aspects of the mission—when they realize they can no longer “sell” the old one to sponsors and potential recruits, either because the origi- nal mission was achieved or, more commonly, because the impossibility of achieving the mis- sion has become obvious.
Terrorism grows out of seductive solutions to grievances. When revolutions succeed, which happens occasionally, the imperative to address the problems of the aggrieved group comes to be accepted by a wider population. But the
techniques of terror—the deliberate murder of innocent civilians—are counter to every main- stream religious tradition. This is why the mission—the articulation of the grievance—is so important. It must be so compellingly described that recruits are willing to violate normal moral rules in its name.
The people on whose behalf the terrorists aim to fight must be portrayed as worthy of heroic acts of martyrdom. In his memoir, Zawahiri says that an alliance of Jihadi groups and “liberated states” is anxious to seek retri- bution for the blood of the martyrs, the grief of the mothers, the deprivation of the orphans, the suffering of the detainees, and the sores of the tortured people throughout the land of Islam. He says that this age is witnessing a new phe- nomenon of mujaheed youths who have aban- doned their families, countries, wealth, studies, and jobs in search of Jihad arenas for the sake of God.83
The enemy must be portrayed as a monstrous threat, Zawahiri warns his followers that the new Crusaders respect no moral boundaries and understand only the language of violence. The enemy is characterized by “brutality, arrogance, and disregard for all taboos and customs.” He urges Jihadis to choose weapons and tactics capable of inflicting maximum casualties on the enemy at minimal cost to the mujahideen. He warns followers that the enemy makes use of a variety of tools and proxies, including the United Nations, friendly rulers of the Muslim peoples, multinational corporations, interna- tional communications and data exchange sys- tems, international news agencies and satellite media channels. The enemy also uses interna- tional relief agencies as a cover for espionage, proselytizing, coup planning, and the transfer of weapons.84 John Walker Lindh told interrogators that he had decided to “join the fight of the Pakistani people in Kashmir” when he was in a madrassah in Pakistan, where he heard reports of “torture, rape, and massacre of the Pakistani people by India.” He said that he was over- whelmed by the “guilt of sitting idle while these atrocities were committed,” and he volun- teered for training, first in Pakistan, then in Afghanistan, ultimately ending up fighting with the Taliban.85 A trainer for HUM who was inter- viewed for this book said that he decided to join the Jihad when he was in eleventh grade, after hearing about two Muslim women who were
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raped by Indian forces.86 Ironically, the enemy’s existence—and even his atrocities—help terror- ist groups prove the importance of their mis- sion. The Lashkar e Taiba public-affairs director told me he felt “happy” about the growth of the Hindu extremist group Bajrang Dal, the arch- nemesis of the Pakistani militant groups. It pro- vides a raison d’etre for Islamic fundamentalism in Pakistan, he said. “What is the logic for stop- ping the Jihadi groups’ activities if the Indian government supports groups like Bajrang Dal?” he asked.87
Peter Verkhovensky, a character in Dostoyevsky’s 1871 novel The Demons, claims to be a socialist but is ultimately exposed as a cheat and a fraud. But the real villains in the novel are the bad ideas that seduced young men to join revolutionary movements. Leaders, who may have been true believers in their youth, cynically take advantage of their zealous recruits, manipulating them with an enticing mission, ultimately using these true believers as their weapons. Joseph Conrad described terrorists as “fools victimized by ideas they cannot possibly believe. . . . While they mouth slogans or even practice anarchist beliefs, their motives are the result of self-display, power plays, class confusion, acting out roles.”88
Both Dostoyevsky and Conrad understood that the prospect of playing a seemingly heroic role can persuade young men to become ruth- less killers in the service of bad ideas, but the bad ideas must be seductively packaged. Terrorist groups have to raise money by “selling” their mission to supporters—including donors, per- sonnel (both managers and followers), and the broader public. Selecting and advertising a mis- sion that will attract donations—of time, talent, money, and for suicide operations, lives—is thus critically important to the group’s survival.
Zawahiri observes that the New World Order is a source of humiliation for Muslims. It is better for the youth of Islam to carry arms and defend their religion with pride and dignity than to submit to this humiliation, he says.
Violence, in other words, restores the dig- nity of humiliated youth. This idea is similar to Franz Fanon’s notion that violence is a “cleansing force,” which frees the oppressed youth from his “inferiority complex,” “despair,” and “inaction,” making him fearless and restor- ing his self-respect.89 Fanon also warned of the dangers of globalization for the underdevel- oped world, where youth, who are especially
susceptible to the seductive pastimes offered by the West, comprise a large proportion of the population.90
Part of the mission of Jihad is thus to restore Muslims’ pride in the face of a humiliating New World Order. The purpose of violence, according to this way of thinking, is to restore dignity and to help ward off dangerous temptations. Its target audience is not necessarily the victims and their sympathizers, but the perpetrators and their sym- pathizers. Violence is a way to strengthen support for the organization and the movement it repre- sents. It is a marketing device and a method for rousing the troops.
In this regard, Zawahiri is conforming also with the views of Sayyid Qutb, whom Zawahiri describes as “the most prominent theoretician of the fundamentalist movements” and Islam’s most influential contemporary “martyr.” Qutb’s outlook on the West changed dramatically after his first visit to America, where he was repulsed by Americans’ materialism, racism, promiscuity, and feminism. Americans behave like animals, he said. They justify their vulgarity under the ban- ner of emancipation of women and “free mixing of the sexes.” They love freedom, but eschew responsibility for their families.91 He saw the West as the historical enemy of Islam, citing the Crusades, European colonialism, and the Cold War as evidence. Qutb emphasized the need to cleanse Islam from impurities resulting from its exposure to Western and capitalist influence.
Western values have infiltrated the Muslim elites, who rule according to corrupt Western principles. The enemy’s weapons are political, economic, and religio-cultural. They must be fought at every level, Qutb warned.92 The twin purposes of Jihad are to cleanse Islam of the impurifying influence of the West, and to fight the West using political, economic, and religio- cultural weapons—the same weapons the West allegedly uses against Islam.
ADVERTISING THE MISSION
Like more traditional humanitarian relief organizations, terrorists have to advertise their mission to potential donors and volunteers, and they tend to use similar techniques. As we have seen, they hold auctions, fund-raising dinners, and press conferences. They put up posters and
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put out newspapers. They cultivate journalists hoping for favorable press coverage. They openly solicit donations in houses of worship, at least where the state allows it. They send leaders on fund-raising missions abroad and arrange for private meetings between leaders and major donors. They make heavy use of the mail, the telephone, and the Internet, often providing their bank account numbers and the bank’s address. They demonstrate their effectiveness with sophisticated Web sites, often including photographs or streaming-video recordings of successful operations and of the atrocities per- petrated against the group they aim to help. All of these techniques are practiced by humanitar- ian organizations. Terrorist groups also adver- tise the kind of weapons that recruits will learn to use, in some cases including cyberwar. Person-to-person contacts, however, remain a critical component of fund-raising and recruit- ment drives.93
CHANGING THE MISSION
Astute terrorist leaders often realize that to attract additional funding, they may need to give up their original mission. The original mission of Egyptian Islamic Jihad, for example, was to turn Egypt into an Islamic state. By the late 1990s, the group had fallen on hard times. Sheik Omi Abdel Rahman was imprisoned in the United States for his involvement in a plot to bomb New York City landmarks in 1993. Other leaders had been killed or forced to move abroad. Zawahiri reportedly considered moving the group to Chechnya, but when he traveled there to check out the situation, he was arrested and imprisoned for traveling without an entry permit.94 After his release in May 1997, Zawahiri decided that it would be practical to shift his sights away from the “near enemy,” the secular rulers of Egypt, toward the “far enemy,” the West and the United States. Switching goals in this way would mean a large inflow of cash from bin Laden, which the group desperately needed. Islamists see Egyptian presi- dent Hosni Mubarak, who is supported by the United States, as a traitor to Islam on numerous grounds. He has continued his (assassinated) predecessor’s controversial policy of appeasing Israel at the expense of the Palestinians. His administration is widely viewed as corrupt and
repressive. He has expelled or imprisoned most members of the Islamic resistance to his rule. Egyptian human rights organizations estimate that some sixteen thousand people with sus- pected links to Islamic organizations remain jailed in Egypt.95
The alliance between Zawahiri and bin Laden was a “marriage of convenience,” according to Lawrence Wright. One of Zawahiri’s chief assis- tants testified in Cairo that Zawahiri had con- fided in him that “joining with bin Laden [was] the only solution to keeping the Jihad organiza- tion alive.”96 “These men were not mercenaries, they were highly motivated idealists, many of whom had turned their backs on middle-class careers. . . . They faced a difficult choice: whether to maintain their allegiance to a bootstrap orga- nization that was always struggling financially or to join forces with a wealthy Saudi who had long- standing ties to the oil billionaires in the Persian Gulf,” Wright explains.
After Zawahiri shifted his focus away from Egypt, some of his followers left in protest, forming a splinter faction named Vanguards of Conquest (Talaa’ al-Fateh), which was weakened as a result of the Egyptian government’s clamp- down on Islamists. In return for bin Laden’s assistance, Zawahiri provided him some two hundred loyal, disciplined and well-trained fol- lowers, who became the core of Al Qaeda’s lead- ership. Zawahiri describes the new mission as a “global battle” against the “disbelievers,” who have “united against the mujahideen.” He adds, “The battle today cannot be fought on a regional level without taking into account the global hos- tility towards us.”
Another example of a group that changed its mission over time to secure a more reliable source of funding is the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan. Its original mission was to fight the post-Soviet ruler of Uzbekistan, Islam Katimov, whose authoritarian rule is characterized by cor- ruption and repression.97 When Juma Namangani, leader of the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, was forced underground, together with his followers, they eventually made their way to Afghanistan, where they made contacts with Al Qaeda. Abdujabar Abduvakhitov, an Uzbek scholar who has studied the group since its incep- tion, explains that the group found that by adopt- ing Islamist slogans it could “make more money and get weapons.”98 The IMU shifted its mission from fighting injustice in Uzbekistan to inciting
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Islamic extremism and global Jihad, thereby gain- ing access to financial supporters in Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, and Iran, Abduvakhitov explains. The group’s new literature promoted the Taliban’s agenda, reviling America and the West, but also music, cigarettes, sex, and drink. Its new slogans made the movement repulsive to its original sup- porters in Uzbekistan, however.99
When the IMU terrorists returned to Uzbekistan in 2000, they had medical kits, tacti- cal radios, and night-vision goggles. “All of this speaks to better funding, it speaks to better con- tacts,” an unnamed intelligence officer told the New York Times. “They made an impression on bin Laden.”100
In the spring of 2001 the group entered into an agreement with Mullah Omar, the leader of the Taliban, to delay its Central Asian campaign and to fight the Northern Alliance. Namangani became commander of the 055 Brigade, bin Laden’s group of foreign fighters. After September 11, Namangani found himself at war with America. He had alienated his original supporters in his country, and the financial backers he attracted with his turn toward Islamism were no longer able to fund him because they were dis- persed and largely broke. He was killed during the war in Afghanistan in November 2001.101
Changing the mission can cause a variety of problems. Volunteers may be wedded to the orig- inal mission and may resent the need to kowtow to donors, rather than focusing on the needs of the beneficiaries, as happened with the part of Egyptian Islamic Jihad that refused to join forces with bin Laden. Managers are vulnerable to the charge of mission creep. From the viewpoint of the original stakeholders in the organization, there is a principal-agent problem if the group’s mission shifts. An important example of this is when a state (or agencies within in a divided state) fund insurgent groups in the belief that they will have total control over the groups’ activities. But if a group diversifies its revenue stream, the state may find itself losing control. This is the case with regard to the militant and sectarian groups in Pakistan, which were largely created by the ISI. Now that a significant fraction of these groups’ income comes from other enti- ties, the groups are increasingly engaging in activities that are counter to the state’s interests. Similarly, Indonesian Jihadi groups that raise money from sources in the Gulf are slipping out of the control of their original backers in the
Indonesian military. (In both these cases, it is important to point out again that the state is not a monolithic entity and that individual agents, or even agencies, may be acting in violation of state policy.)
Osama bin Laden himself has changed his mission over time. He inherited an organization devoted to fighting Soviet forces and turned that organization into a flexible group of ruthless warriors ready to fight on behalf of multiple causes. His first call to holy war, issued in 1992, urged believers to kill American soldiers in Saudi Arabia, the Horn of Africa, and Somalia. There was virtually no mention of Palestine. His second, in 1996, was a forty-page document list- ing atrocities and injustices committed against Muslims, mainly by Western powers. His third, in February 1998, for the first time urged followers deliberately to target American civilians, rather than soldiers. Although that fatwa mentioned the Palestinian struggle, it was only one of a litany of Muslim grievances. America’s “crimes” against Saudi Arabia (by stationing troops near Islam’s holiest sites), Iraq, and the other Islamic states of the region constituted a clear declaration of war by the Americans against God, his Prophet, and the Muslims . . . By God’s leave, we call on every Muslim who believes in God and hopes for reward to obey God’s command to kill the Americans and plunder their possessions wher- ever he finds them and wherever he can,” bin he wrote.102 On October 7, 2001, in a message released on Al Jazeera television immediately after U.S. forces began bombing in Afghanistan, bin Laden issued his fourth call for Jihad. This time he emphasized Israel’s occupation of Palestinian lands and the suffering of Iraqi children under UN sanctions, concerns broadly shared in the Islamic world. While most Muslims reject bin Laden’s interpretation of their religion, he felt the moment was ripe to win many over to his anti-Western cause. Bin Laden was compet- ing for the hearts and minds of ordinary Muslims. He said that the September 11 “events” had split the world into two “camps,” the Islamic world and “infidels”—and that the time had come for “every Muslim to defend his religion” (echoing President Bush’s argument that from now on “either you are with us, or you are with the terrorists”103).
Bin Laden’s aim was to turn America’s response to the September 11 attack into a war between Islam and the West. With this new
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fatwa, bin Laden was striking at the “very core of the grievances that the common Arab man in the street has toward his respective govern- ment, especially in Saudi Arabia,” Nawaf Obaid, a Saudi analyst, explained.104 John Walker “Lindh told U.S. investigators that Al Qaeda had come to believe that it, was more effective to “attack the head of the snake” than to attack sec- ular rulers in the Islamic world.
EXPANDING THE NETWORK
Al Qaeda and the IIF are not only changing their mission over time in response to new situations and new needs, but also their organizational style. With its corporate headquarters in shatters, Al Qaeda and the alliance are now relying on an ever shifting network of sympathetic groups and individuals, including the Southwest Asian Jihadi groups that signed bin Laden’s February 1998 fatwa; franchise outfits in Southeast Asia; sleeper cells trained in Afghanistan and dispersed abroad; and freelancers such as Richard Reid, the con- victed “shoe bomber,” who attempted to blow up a plane. Lone wolves are also beginning to take action on their own, without having been for- mally recruited or trained by Al Qaeda.
The Al Qaeda organization is learning that to evade law-enforcement detection in the West, it will need to adopt some of the qualities of the virtual network style. Coordination of major attacks in the post-September 11 world, in which law-enforcement and intelligence agencies have formed their own networks in response, will be difficult. Al Qaeda is adapting by communicat- ing over the Internet and by issuing messages intended to frighten Americans and boost the morale of followers. The leadership of Al Qaeda appears to be functioning less as a group of commanders and more as inspirational leaders. A Web site that appeared after September 11 (but is no longer available) offered a special on-line training course that teaches the reader how to make time bombs and detonate enemy command centers. The site invited visitors to read a chapter on the production of explosives, saying, “We want deeds, not words. What counts is implementation.” Other sites made reference to the Encyclopedia of Jihad, which provides instruc- tions for creating a “clandestine activity cell,” including intelligence, supply, planning and
preparation, and implementation.105 In an article on the “culture of Jihad,” a Saudi Islamist urges bin Laden’s sympathizers to take action on their own. “I do not need to meet the Sheikh and ask his permission to carry out some operation, the same as I do not need permission to pray, or to think about killing the Jews and the Crusaders that gather on our lands.” He accuses the enemies of Islam of attempting to alter the Saudi educa- tion system to describe Jihad as a way of thinking rather than as mode of action. Nor does it make any difference whether bin Laden is alive or dead. “If Osama bin Laden is alive or God forbid he is killed, there are thousand Bin Ladens in this nation. We should not abandon our way, which the Sheikh has paved for you, regardless of the existence of the Sheikh or his absence.”106
An anonymous article in another Islamist forum, “The lovers of Jihad,” argues, “The Islamist view of the confrontation with the United States is settled. Furthermore, it is going to be the new ideology of the second generation of the Jihadi movements around the world. They do not need the existence of bin Laden, after he fulfilled his role in the call and agitation for this project.”107
As with any network, the challenge for the Al Qaeda network of groups is to balance the needs for resilience and for capacity. Resilience refers to the ability of a network to withstand the loss of a node or nodes. To maximize resilience, the network has to maximize redundancy. Functions are not centralized. (This decreases the efficiency of the organization, but terrorist networks are unlikely to optimize efficiency as they do not have to answer to shareholders and they tend to view the “muscle” as expendable.) Capacity— the ability to optimize the scale of the attack— requires coordination, which makes the group less resilient because communication is required. Effectiveness is a function of both capacity and resilience.
Network theorists suggest that a network of networks is a resilient organization. Within each cluster, every node is connected to every other node in what is known as an “all channel” net- work. But only certain members of the cluster communicate with other clusters, and the ties between clusters are weak, to minimize the risk of penetration.
The strength of ties is not static, however; it varies over time. Training together in camps establishes trust, the glue that holds a network
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together. (Recall Fahid’s claim that he would not be able to trust Mohamed unless he trained in Afghanistan.) But task ties, the term network theorists use for relationships needed to accom- plish particular tasks, are likely to be weak or even nonexistent until a leader brings a group together to carry out an operation.
In a law-enforcement-rich environment, the most effective terrorist organization probably consists of many clusters of varying size and complexity held together by trust and a shared mission rather than a hierarchical superstruc- ture. Individual clusters may find their own funding through licit or illicit businesses, dona- tions from wealthy industrialists, wealthy diaspo- ras, or the relationships they develop with states or state agents. Individual groups may even com- pete for funds in what is known as a chaordic network.108 They may recruit and arm their groups separately. Innovation—such as attempts to acquire or use unconventional weapons—is promoted at all levels. Some of the clusters will remain dormant until a concrete operation is being planned. Those that are active in failing states where the state either supports them or cannot fight them will be able to remain active full-time. The only thing the sub-networks must have in common is a shared mission and goals.
In this network of networks, leadership style will vary. Complex tasks require hierarchies—the commander cadre-type organization. For very small operations, of the kind that are carried out by the Army of God, little coordination or lead- ership is required: small cells or lone wolves inspired by the movement can act on their own. Individual operatives can have a powerful effect, as the sniper in suburban Washington in the fall of 2002 made clear. As more powerful weapons become available to smaller groups, virtual net- works will become more dangerous.
The use of sleepers can make an organiza- tion significantly more resilient. Sleepers are informed of their tasks immediately before the operation. They are likely to be told only what they need to know: information is strictly com- partmentalized.109
Technology has greatly increased the capacity of networks. Networks can now be decentralized but also highly focused. Members can travel nearly anywhere and communicate with one another anywhere. Money is also easily shipped.110
This is especially true for organizations like Al
Qaeda, which utilize informal financial transac- tions and convert their cash into gems or gold.
Since September 11 and the war in Afghanistan, Al Qaeda and the IIF have been forming the kind of network of networks connected by weak ties that network theorists argue is the most effective style of organization, and making use of sleepers and freelancers, which increases the resilience of the alliance.
SOURCES OF FUNDS
As is the case for many terrorist groups, Al Qaeda raises money in four ways: criminal activities, businesses, financial or in-kind assistance from states or state agents, and charitable donations.
Businesses
Al-Fadl testified that bin Laden set up a large number of companies in Sudan, including Wadi-al-Aqiq, a corporate shell that he referred to as the “mother” of all the other companies: Al Hijra Construction, a company that built roads and bridges; Taba Investment, Ltd., a currency trading group; Themar al-Mubaraka, an agricul- ture company; Quadarat, a transport company; Laden International, an import-export business. Al-Fadl said the group controlled the Islamic bank al-Shamal and held accounts at Barclays Bank in London as well as unnamed banks in Sudan, Malaysia, Hong Kong, Cyprus, the United States, and Dubai.111 According to the U.S. indictment, “These companies were operated to provide income and to support Al Qaeda, and to provide cover for the procurement of explosives, weapons, and chemicals, and for the travel of Al Qaeda operatives.”112
Like many terrorist groups, Al Qaeda is involved in both licit and illicit enterprises. Bin Laden attempted to develop a more potent strain of heroin to export to the United States and Western Europe, in retaliation for the 1998 air strikes in Sudan and Afghanistan. He provided protection to processing plants and transport for the Taliban’s drug businesses, which financed training camps and supported extremists in neighboring countries, according to the United Nations.113 Al Qaeda used informal financial transactions known as hawala, which are based largely on trust and extensive use of family or
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regional connections,114 and a network of honey shops, to transfer funds around the world.115 It is now converting cash into diamonds and gold.
Charitable Donations
Charities, purportedly unaffiliated with the terrorist groups, seek funding for humanitarian relief operations, some of which is used for that purpose, and some of which is used to fund ter- rorist operations. Many Jihadi groups use chari- ties for fund-raising abroad or as a front for terrorist activities. Al Qaeda members testified that they received ID cards issued by a humani- tarian relief organization based in Nairobi called Mercy International Relief Agency. The organi- zation was involved in humanitarian relief efforts, as its name suggests, but it also served as a front organization for operatives during the period they were planning the Africa embassy bombings.116
By soliciting charitable donations abroad, groups draw attention to the cause among diaspora populations. The Gulf States, North America, the United Kingdom, and European countries are important sources of funding for terrorist groups. The U.S. government looked the other way when the IRA engaged in fund-raising dinners in the United States, but began to see the downside to such a policy when the groups being funded began killing American citizens.
But perhaps even more importantly, by solic- iting money from the people, a terrorist organi- zation (or terrorist-affiliated organization) can establish its bona fides as a group devoted to the interests of “the people.” While much of the group’s money may actually come from criminal activities, business operations, or government assistance, charitable donations are important as a “defining source of revenue,” a point made in regard to more traditional NGOs by Mark Moore, a specialist in non-profits at Harvard University. In my interviews, leaders tend to emphasize char- itable donations as the most important source of revenue for their groups; while operatives, pre- sumably less attuned to the public-relations implications of their words, admit that smuggling, government funding or large-scale donations by wealthy industrialists are the main sources of funding.117 Money flows into Jihadi groups through charities; but money also flows out to the needy. Sophisticated Jihadi organizations function very much like the United Way.
LEADERLESS RESISTERS, FREELANCERS, AND FRANCHISES
The New World Order and its instruments—Al Qaeda’s new foes—are attractive targets to a sur- prising array of groups. By emphasizing the New World Order as its enemy, Al Qaeda will be able to attract a variety of groups that oppose Western hegemony and international institutions.
White supremacists and Identity Christians are applauding Al Qaeda’s goals and actions and may eventually take action on the Al Qaeda network’s behalf as freelancers or lone-wolf avengers. A Swiss neo-Nazi named Huber, who is popular with both Aryan youth and radical Muslims, is calling for neo-Nazis and Islamists to join forces. Huber was on the board of directors of the Al-Taqwa Foundation, which the U.S. gov- ernment says was a major donor to Al Qaeda.118
The late William Pierce, who wrote The Turner Diaries, the book that inspired the Oklahoma City bombing, applauded the September 11 bombers. Pierce’s organization, the Alliance Nahad, urged its followers to celebrate the one- year anniversary of September 11 by printing out and disseminating flyers from its Web site. One of the flyers included a photograph of bin Laden and the World Trade Center and the caption, “Let’s stop being human shields for Israel.”119
Matt Hale, leader of the World Church of the Creator, a white supremacist organization one of whose members killed a number of blacks and Jews, is disseminating a book that exposes the “sinister machinations” that led to September 11, including the involvement of Jews and Israelis, in particular, the Mossad.120
Horst Mahler, a founder of the radical leftist German group the Red Army Faction, has moved from the extreme left to radical right. He too rejoiced at the news of the September 11 attacks, saying that they presage “the end of the American Century, the end of Global Capitalism, and thus the end of the secular Yahweh cult, of Mammonism.” He accuses the “one-World strategists” of trying to create a smoke screen to prevent ordinary people from understanding the real cause of September 11, which America brought on itself through its arrogance. “This is war,” he says, “with invisible fronts at present, and worldwide.” September 11 was just the first blow against the Globalists, whose true aim is to exterminate national cultures, he says. “It is not
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a war of material powers,” he says. “It is a spiritual struggle the war of Western civilization, which is barbarism, against the cultures of the national peoples. . . . The oncoming crisis in the World Economy—independent of the air attacks of 11 September 2001—is now taking the enchantment from ‘The American Way of Life.’ The absolute merchandisability of human exis- tence—long felt as a sickness—is lost, along with the loss of external objects, in which human beings seek recognition and validation—but cannot find them.”121
The racist right is also applauding the efforts of other “antiglobalists” in addition to bin Laden. Louis Beam, author of a leaderless-resistance essay, is urging all antiglobalists, from all political persuasions, to join forces against the New World Order (NWO). He applauds the participants of the Battle of Seattle, who, he says, faced, “real invasion of black booted, black suited” thugs, while the racist right continued talking endlessly about the impending invasion of foreign troops in United Nations submarines.
“Mark my words,” Beam says, “this is but the first confrontation, there will be many more such confrontations as intelligent, caring people begin to face off the Waco thugs of the New World Order here in the United States. The New American Patriot will be neither left nor right, just a freeman fighting for liberty. New alliances will form between those who have in the past thought of themselves as ‘right-wingers,’ conser- vatives, and patriots with many people who have thought of themselves as ‘left-wingers,’ progres- sives, or just ‘liberal.’ ”122
Perhaps the most articulate proponent of forming an anti-NWO coalition is Keith Preston, a self-described veteran of numerous libertarian, anarchist, leftist, labor, and patriot organizations and an active anarchist. He argues that the war between the “U.S. and the Muslim world” is one front in a larger war, “namely, the emerging global conflict between those interests wishing to subordinate the entire world to the so-called ‘New World Order’ of global gover- nance by elite financial interests in the advanced countries on one side and all those various national, regional, ethnic, cultural, religious, lin- guistic, and economic groups who wish to remain independent of such a global order.” He believes that the rapid drive to create this NWO must be reversed or it will likely produce a system of totalitarian oppression similar to that
of the Nazi and Soviet regimes of the twentieth century only with infinitely greater amounts of economic, technological, and military resources. All forces throughout the world seeking to resist this development must join together, regardless of their other differences, and provide mutual support to one another in the common struggle. The current U.S.-led ‘coalition’ against so-called ‘terrorism’ is simply a cover for continuing the process of global consolidation of power and crushing all efforts at resistance. Islamic funda- mentalists, he says, are fighting the same global interests seeking to impose “global government, international currency systems, firearms confis- cation, international police forces, NAFTA, and other regressive economic policies on the American people.” He proposes joining forces even with Jewish fundamentalist sects, “such as the Neturei Karta, who have condemned Israeli imperialism and expansionism.” He urges the “bandits and anarchists” to join together with the “tribes, sects, warlords, and criminals” to assert themselves forcefully.123
While the threat these groups pose is nowhere near as significant as that of current members of the Al Qaeda alliance, some of their members may decide to support Al Qaeda’s goals, as lone wolves or leaderless resisters, giving it a new source of Western recruits.
The tri-border area where Argentina, Brazil, and Paraguay meet is becoming the new Libya: The place where terrorists with widely disparate ideologies—the Marxist groups FARC and ELN, American white supremacists, Hamas, Hezbollah, and members of bin Laden’s International Islamic Front—meet to swap tradecraft. Authorities worry that the more sophisticated groups could make use of the Americans as participants in their plots, possibly to bring in materials.
Perhaps the best example of a freelancer—an individual trained by Al Qaeda who takes action largely on his own—is Richard Reid. In October 2002, Richard Reid pled guilty to the charge that he tried to blow up a plane with a bomb hidden in his shoe in December 2001. He also admitted that he was trained at an Al Qaeda camp and said that he was a member of Al Qaeda, a state- ment that some experts suspect is not literally true. Reid gave in to his interrogators almost immediately, suggesting that he had not under- gone the kind of rigorous psychological training that is typical for Al Qaeda members. Magnus Ranstorp, a terrorism expert who has studied
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the Islamist community in London, from which Reid was apparently recruited, argues that Reid is most likely a fringe amateur inspired by what he saw in Afghanistan and by the movement in general. Others point out that Reid was in con- tact with Al Qaeda members by e-mail.124
Jamaah Islamiyah—The Franchise
The group known as Jamaah Islamiyah grew out of Islamic opposition to Soeharto’s regime. Its goal was to establish an Islamic community, jamaah Islamiyah, throughout Southeast Asia. Its spiritual leader, Abu Bakar Ba’asyir, founded and runs a pesantren (seminary) called Ngruki near Solo, Java, close to the pesantren we discussed in chapter 3. Ba’asyir and his closest followers fled to Malaysia in 1985 to escape Soeharto’s suppres- sion of the group. Some members returned after Soeharto’s resignation in 1998, and some remained in Malaysia. Although some members of Jamaah Islamiyah (JI) have clear links to Al Qaeda, JI is the violent wing of a broader move- ment that supports Ba’asyir. The movement, known as the Ngruki network, named after Ba’asyir’s school, includes a broad range of prominent individuals, some of whom are active in the Indonesian government. Many Indonesians are deeply concerned that the war on terrorism, and the U.S. push to arrest suspects without clear evidence, could radicalize the Muslim community.125
THE POST-INDUSTRIAL-AGE TERRORIST ORGANIZATION
Mobilizing terrorist recruits and supporters requires an effective organization. Effectiveness requires resources, recruits, hierarchies, and logistics. It requires adopting the mission to appeal to the maximum number of recruits and financial backers.126 As we have seen, contestants often choose to call competition for natural resources or political power a religious conflict when they believe it will make their grievances more attractive to a broader set of potential fighters or financial backers. (Governments may do the same by labeling opposition groups reli- gious extremists to win international support for crushing them.)
Money—used to buy goods and services—is a critical component of what distinguishes groups
that are effective from those that disappear or fail to have an impact. The terrorists discussed in these pages raise money in a variety of ways. They run licit and illicit businesses. They auction off “relics.” They run their own informal banks, which take a “charitable donation” in lieu of inter- est. They solicit donations on the Internet, on the streets, and in houses of worship. They appeal to wealthy industrialists, sympathetic diasporas, and to governments or their agents. By functioning as a foundation that provides social services, the groups spread their ideas to donors as well as the recipients of their largesse. Recipients of charita- ble assistance may be more willing to donate their sons to the group’s cause.
But terrorist organizations need to balance the requirements for optimizing capacity with those of resilience. Resilience (the ability to withstand the loss of personnel) requires redun- dancy and minimal or impenetrable communi- cation, making coordination difficult absent cutting-edge encryption technologies. The most resilient group discussed in this book is the save-the-babies group Army of God, a virtual network whose members meet only to discuss the mission, not concrete plans. The drawback from the terrorists’ perspective to this maximally resilient style organization is that it requires individuals or small groups :to act on their own, making large-scale operations difficult.127
The best way to balance these competing objectives is to form a network of networks, which includes hierarchical structures (commanders and cadres); leaderless resisters who are inspired through virtual contacts; and franchises, which may donate money in return for the privilege of participating.128 The networks are held together mainly by their common mission (although some may be pursuing multiple missions, including local agendas of little interest to the rest of the net- work). By expanding his mission statement, bin Laden was able to expand his network to include most of the Islamist groups. Groups that are not Islamist but oppose globalization may be willing to donate money or operatives to the anti-New World Order cause.
The Al Qaeda network of networks is at the cutting edge of organizations today. Law- enforcement authorities will continue to discover new cells or clusters, but they will not be able to shut down the movement until bin Laden, his successors, and his sympathizers’ call to destroy the New World Order loses its appeal among populations made vulnerable by perceived
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humiliation and violations of human rights, per- ceived economic deprivation, confused identities, and poor governance.
There is a trade-off for policy makers between the need to destroy the adversary that is about to strike and the need to fight the movement over the long term. Our military action becomes the evidence our enemies need to prove the dangers of the New World Order they aim to fight. It cre- ates a sense of urgency for the terrorists seeking to purify the world through murder.
It is part of the human condition to lack cer- tainty about our identities; the desire to see our- selves in opposition to some Other is appealing to all of us. That is part—but only part—of what religion is all about. One of our goals must be to make the terrorists’ purification project seem less urgent: to demonstrate the humanity that binds us, rather than allow our adversaries to emphasize and exploit our differences to pro- vide a seemingly clear (but false) identity, at the expense of peace.
NOTES
1. Hidaya Rubea Juma, mother of Khalfan Khamis Mohamed. Quoted in “Special Assignment,” SABC Africa News, date unavailable.
2. R. F. Burton, Zanzibar: City, Island, and Coast (London: Tinsley Brothers, 1872), 117. The monsoon between December and February blows north, northeast from the Arabian peninsula and the west coast of India, then reverses direction in April. This remarkable pattern of winds made oceangoing trade possible before overland commerce was possible. Michael F. Lofchie, Zanzibar: Background to Revolution (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1965), 21.
3. Lofchie, Zanzibar, 24. Lofchie explains the Persians mingled completely with the Africans and were no longer detectable as a separate group. Arabs, who arrived later, became the upper classes in Zanzibar, while immigrants from the Indian subcontinent were traders, and the Africans became the lowest class.
4. Nathalie Arnold, telephone conversation with the author, 14 October 2002. Bruce McKim, telephone conversation with the author, 16 October 2002; Human Rights Watch, “Tanzania: ‘The Bullets Were Raining’—The January 2001 Attack on Peaceful Demonstrators in Zanzibar.” Human Rights Watch Report, 14, no. 3 (A) (April 2002), last accessed 16 October 2002, www.hrw.org/ reports/2002/tanzania/ zanz0402.pdf.
5. Arnold, telephone conversation. McKim, telephone conversation.
6. Quoted in “Pemba Island,” All About Zanzibar Web site, last accessed 16 October 2002, www.allaboutzanzibar.com/indepth/guidebook/ pb00–01–11.htm.
7. Alice Werner, Myths and Legends of the Bantu (London: Cass, 1968). See chapter 16, “Doctors, Prophets, and Witches,” available in the book’s on-line version at the Najaco Web site, last accessed 16 October 2002, www.najaco.com/books/myths/bantu/16.htm.
8. Werner, Myths and Legends. See also John, E. E. Craster, Pemba: The Splee Island of Zanzibar (London: T. F. Unwin, 1913). Werner believes that some of these stories reflect the prejudices of white Christians.
9. United States of America v. Usama bin Laden, et al., S(7) 98 Cr. 1023 (27 June 2001), 8321.
10. Ibid., 8324–25. 11. This material summarizes Federal Bureau
of Investigation, FD-302a, of Khalfan Khamis Mohamed, 10/5–7/99 at Cape Town, South Africa. Marked “particularly sensitive.” This document was entered into evidence at Mohamed’s trial.
12. Ibid. 13. Ibid. 14. Ibid. 15. United States of America v. Usama bin
Laden (27 June 2001), 8327–28. 16. Ibid., 8329. 17. Ibid., 8328. 18. This material summarizes Federal Bureau
of Investigation, FD-302a. 19. United States of America v. Usama bin
Laden, (2 May 2001), 5437. 20. This material summarizes Federal Bureau
of Investigation, FD-302a. 21. Ibid. 22. United States of America v. Usama bin
Laden, (28 June 2001), 8431. 23. Ibid., 8431–32. 24. Ibid., (3 July 2001), 8740. 25. Quoted in Benjamin Weiser and Tim
Golden, “Al Qaeda: Sprawling, Hard-to-Spot Web of Terrorists-in-Waiting,” New York Times, 30 September 2001, 1B4.
26. Testimony of Jerrold Post, United States of America v. Usama bin Laden (27 June 2001), 8311–62.
27. Excerpts of the Al Qaeda training manual are available at the Web site of the U.S. Department of Justice, last accessed 14 January 2003, www.usdoj .gov/ag /trainingmanual.htm.
28. See the Web site of the U.S. Department of Justice, last accessed 11 October 2002, www.usdoj .gov/ag/manualpart1_1.pdf, “Declaration of Jihad (Holy War) against the Country’s Tyrants—Military Series,” First Lesson, p. 13 (translated version).
29. Ibid., Second Lesson, pp. 15–20 (translated version).
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30. Copies of the more extensive Encyclopedia of the Afghan Jihad were found from Al Qaeda members arrested in Asia, the Middle East, and Europe. The Encyclopedia covers tactics, security, intelligence, handguns, first aid, explosives, topography, land surveys and weapons, and has been compiled since Soviet troops withdrew from Afghanistan in 1989. Originally designed as a record of the Afghan fighters’ knowledge and experience in guerrilla warfare, it gradually came to include terrorist tactics, as Al Qaeda developed into a terrorist organization. A work of several thousand pages written and translated over five years, the Encyclopedia also appeared in CD-ROM in 1996. For more information on the Encyclopedia of the Afghan Jihad, see Rohan Gunaratna, Inside Al Qaeda: Global Network of Terror (New York: Columbia University Press, 2002), 70.
31. Well-known members of the Shura Council include Muhammed Atef, an Egyptian who served as military commander and was reportedly killed in Afghanistan in late 2001 and Ayman al-Zawzhiri, a surgeon who runs the Egyptian Islamic Jihad, responsible for the 1981 assassination of President Anwar el-Sadat of Egypt. For other members of the council, see testimony of Jamal Ahmad al-Fadl, United States of America v. Usama bin Laden (6 February 2001), 204–07.
32. Ibid., 204–214. 33. Bruce R. Auster et al., “The Recruiter for
Hate,” U.S. News & World Report, 31 August 1998, 48. 34. The explosion blew a hole in the fuselage,
and only an extraordinary flight performance by the pilot enabled an emergency landing at Naha airport in Okinawa. Gunaratna, Inside Al Qaeda, 175.
35. For more on the Bojinka Plot—also known as Oplan Bojinka—see Simon Reeye, The New Jackals: Ramzi Yousef, Osama bin Laden and the Future of Terrorism (Boston, Mass.: Northeastern University Press, 1999), 71–93; and Gunaratna, Inside Al Qaeda, 175–77.
36. Judy Aita, “U.S. Completes Presentation of Evidence in Embassy Bombing Trial: Defense Expected to Begin Its Case April 16,” The Washington File, Office of International Information Programs, U.S, Department of State, April 2002, last accessed 2 October 2002, www.usinfo.state.gov/regional/af/ security/a1040558.htm.
37. See, for example, United States of America v. Mokhtar Haouari, S(4) 00 Cr. 15 (3 July 2001), 630–35 (www.news.findlaw.com/cnn/docs/ haouari/ushaouari70301rassamtt.pdf ).
38. Peter L. Bergen, Holy War, Inc.: Inside the Secret World of Osama bin Laden (New York: Free Press, 2001), 185.
39. Statement for the Record of J. T. Caruso, Acting Assistant Director, Counter-Terrorism Division, Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), on Al-Qaeda International Before the Subcommittee on International
Operations and Terrorism Committee on Foreign Relations, United States Senate, Washington, D.C., 18 December 2001. Available on the Web site of the FBI, last accessed 2 October 2002, www.fbi.gov/congress/ congress01/carus0121801.htm.
40. For a summary of President Musharraf ’s 12 January 2002 speech, see “Musharraf Declares War on Extremism,” BBC News Online, 12 January 2002, last accessed 18 October 2002, www.news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/ world/south_asia/1756965.stm. See also “Pakistan’s Leader Comes Down Hard on Extremists,” CNN.com, 12 January 2002, last accessed 18 October 2002, www.cnn.com/2002/WORLD/asiapef/south/01/12/ pakistan.india/.
41. See, for example, “Confessions of an Al-Qaeda Terrorist,” Time, 23 September 2002, 34.
42. Kit R. Roanet, David E. Kaplan, Chitra Ragavan, “Putting Terror Inc. on Trial in New York,” U.S. News & World Report, 8 January 2001, 25.
43. See, for example, Bergen, Holy War, Inc., 80. 44. Gunaratna, Inside Al Qaeda, 58–59. 45. Peter Baker, “Defector Says bin Laden Had
Cash, Taliban in His Pocket,” Washington Post, 30 November 2001, Al. See also Molly Moore and Peter Baker, “Inside Al Qaeda’s Secret World; bin Laden Bought Precious Autonomy,” Washington Post, 23 December 2001, A1.
46. Baker, “Defector Says bin Laden Had Cash,” Al. 47. Osama bin Laden established the
International Islamic Front in a statement calling for a Jihad against the Jews and Crusaders on 23 February 1998. Signatories other than Osama bin Laden were Ayman al-Zawahri, leader of Egypt’s Jihad group, Rifai Taha, head of Egypt’s Gama’s al-Islamiya, Mir Hamza, secretary general of Pakistan’s Ulema Society, and Fazlul Rahman, head of the Jihad Movement in Bangladesh. Other organizations whose membership in the IIF has been publicized include the Partisans Movement in Kashmir (Harkat ul-Ansar), Jihad Movement in Bangladesh, and the Afghan military wing of the “Advice and Reform” commission led by Osama bin Laden, last accessed 21 March 2003, http://ww.satp.org/satporgtp/usa/IIF.htm.
48. Gunaratna, Inside Al Qaeda, 57–58. 49. United States of America v. Usama bin
Laden (4 June 2001), 7007. 50. Gunaratna, Inside Al Qaeda, 60. 51. “Exclusive Interview: Conversation with
Terror,” Time, 11 January 1999, available on-line at Time Asia last accessed 8 October 2002, www.time.com/ time/asia/news/interview/0,9754,174550–1,00.html.
52. Pamela Constable, “Bin Laden Tells Interviewer He Has Nuclear Weapons,” Washington Post, 11 November 2001, A32.
53. Ayman al-Zawahirl, Knights under the Prophet’s Banner, chap. 11. Excerpts of the book were translated by FBIS. See “Al-Sharq al-Awsat Publishes Extracts from Al-Jihad Leader Al-Zawahiri’s New
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Book,” Al-Sharq al-Awsat (London), 2 December 2001, in FBIS-NES-2002–0108, Document ID GMP20020108000197.
54. James Risen, “Question of Evidence: A Special Report: To Bomb Sudan Plant, or Not: A Year Later, Debates Rankle,” New York Times, 26 October 1999, A1.
55. Testimony by Ahmed Ressam, United States of America v. Mokhlar Haouari (5 July 2001), 620–22.
56. See, for example, Peter Finn, “Five Linked to Al Qaeda Face Trial in Germany; Prosecutors Focus on Alleged Bombing Plans,” Washington Post, 15 April 2002, A13.
57. This manual was found in the house of a Libyan Al Qaeda member who lived in Manchester, England. Benjamin Weiser, “A Nation Challenged: The Jihad, Captured, Terrorist Manual Suggests Hijackers Did a Lot by the Book,” New York Times, 28 October 2001, A8.
58. The manual was part of the so-called Encyclopedia of the Afghan Jihad, a seven-thousand- pages-long collection, which used to consist of ten volumes, of guidelines for terrorist attacks against targets worldwide. See Gunaratna, Inside Al Qaeda, 70. See also Mark Boettcher, “Evidence Suggests Al Qaeda Pursuit of Biological, Chemical Weapons,” CNN.com, 14 November 2001, last accessed 8 October 2002, www.cnn.com/2001/WORLD/ asiapcf/central/11/14/chemical.bio/.
59. On 13 March 2001, Italian authorities bugged a conversation in which a Milan-based Al Qaeda cell led by a Tunisian, Essid Sami Ben Khomais, spoke of “an extremely efficient liquid that suffocates people” and that was to be “tried out” in France. The liquids, one cell member was overheard saying, could secretly be placed in tomato cans and would be dispersed when the cans were opened. See Peter Finn and Sarah Delaney, “Al Qaeda’s Tracks Deepen in Europe; Surveillance Reveals More Plots, Links,” Washington Post, 22 October 2001, Al. See also “Disturbing Scenes of Death Show Capability with Chemical Gas,” CNN.com, 19 August 2002, last accessed 8 October 2002, www.cnn.com/2002/US/ 08/19/terror.tape.chemical/index.html.
60. Barton Gellman, “Al Qaeda Near Biological, Chemical Arms Production,” Washington Post, 23 March 2003, A1.
61. United States of America v. Usama bin Laden, (7 February 2001), 357–365.
62. Gunaratna, Inside Al Qaeda, 36. 63. United States of America v. Usama bin
Laden (19 June 2001), 7464. 64. “Report Links bin Laden, Nuclear
Weapons,” Al-Watan al-Arabi, 13 November 1998; available from FBIS, Document ID FTS19981113001081. Quoted in Kimberly McCloud and Matthew Osborne, “CNS Reports: WMD Terrorism and Usama bin Laden,” Web site of the
Center for Nonproliferation Studies, Monterey Institute of International Studies, last accessed 8 October 2002, www.cns.miis.edu/pubs/ reports/binladen.htm. The November report in Al-Watan followed that in another Arabic newspaper, the London-based Al-Hayat, which declared that bin Laden had already acquired nuclear weapons. “An Aide to the Taliban Leader Renews His Refusal to Give Information on Nuclear Weapons to bin Laden from Central Asia,” Al-Hayat, 6 October 1998, quoted in McCloud and Oshorne, “CNS Reports.” See also Joseph, “Chemical Labs Show Al Qaeda Still Active.”
65. Joseph, “Chemical Labs Show Al Qaeda Still Active.”
66. Steven Erlanger, “Lax Nuclear Security in Russia Is Cited as Way for bin Laden to Get Arms,” New York Times, November 12, 2001.
67. Kamran Khan and Molly Moore, “2 Nuclear Experts Briefed bin Laden, Pakistanis Say,” Washington Post, 12 December 2001, Al. See also Peter Baker and Kamran Khan, “Pakistan to Forgo Charges Against 2 Nuclear Scientists; Ties to Bin Laden Suspected,” Washington Post, 30 January 2002, A1.
68. Ibid. 69. David Albright, Kathryn Buchler, and Holly
Higgins, “Bin Laden and the Bomb,” Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, January/February 2002, 23.
70. ICT, “Al-Qa’ida (The Base),” International Policy Institute for Counter-Terrorism (ICT), Herzliyya, Israel, last accessed 9 October 2002, www .icr.org.il/inter_ter/orgdet.cfm?orgid=74.
71. “Bin Laden’s Martyrs for the Cause: Thousands of Terrorists. Dozens of Cells, One Mission,” Financial Times, 28 November 2001, 17.
72. The information about the European recruiters is taken from The Recruiters, produced by Alex Shprintsen, edited by Annie Chartrand, June 2002, CBC News, Canada. A summary of the documentary is available on the Web site of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, last accessed 10 October 2002, www.cbc.ca/national/news/ recruiters/network .html/.
73. “Bin Laden’s Martyrs for the Cause,” 17. 74. Michael Powell, “Bin Laden Recruits with
Graphic Video,” Washington Post, 27 September 2001, A19.
75. “Alliance Says It Has Found a School Run by a Tiran of Terrorism,” New York Times, 1 December 2001: Jane Perlez, “School in Indonesia Urges ‘Personal Jihad’ in Steps of Bin Laden,” New York Times, 3 February 2002.
76. The German Bundeskriminalamt, the Federal Criminal Agency, estimates the number of militant Islamic trainees at Al Qaeda training camps at 70,000. See “Bin Laden’s Martyrs for the Cause,” 17. The CIA estimates the number at 110,000. Quoted in Gunaratna, Inside Al Qaeda, 8. Of the 6–7 million Al Qaeda supporters, some 120,000 are willing to take up
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arms. Estimates of the Central Intelligence Agency, quoted in Gunaratna, Inside Al Qaeda, 95.
77. Gunaratna, Inside Al Qaeda, 8. 78. Walter Pincus and Vernon Locb, “Former
Recruits Provide Best Knowledge of Camps; Intelligence on Targeted bin Laden Training Sites Sketchy,” Washington Post, 8 October 2001, A16.
79. Department of Defense, Interrogation Report of John Walker Lindh, JPWL- 000389–000407, 402–03. Declassified 5 March 2002.
80. Bryan Preston, “Inside Al Qaeda’s Training Camps,” National Review, 1 October 2002. Available at the Web site of National Review Online, last accessed 19 October 2002, www .nationalreview .com/comment/ comment-preston100102.asp.
81. “Al-Sharq al-Awsat Publishes Extracts.” Parts one through eleven of serialized excerpts from Egyptian Al-Jihad Organization leader Ayman al- Zawahiri’s book, “Knights under the Prophet’s Banner” (FBIS translated text, henceforth: Ayman al-Zawahiri, “Knights under the Prophet’s Banner Part: 1).
82. Ibid. Part I 83. Ibid. Part XI 84. Ibid. Part XI 85. Department of Defense, Interrogation
Report of John Walker Lindh. 86. Interview with HM-1, Pakistan, 2002.
Interviewer: Muzamal Suherwardy. 87. Lashkar e Taiba public affairs officer,
interview with the author, 3 August 2001. This interview was attended by a Pakistani journalist who writes under a pseudonym for tehelka.com, an electronic newspaper published in India. He wrote an article that highlighted this surprising admission.
88. Frederick R. Karl, Introduction to Joseph Conrad, The Secret Agent (New York and London: Penguin, 1983 edition).
89. Franz Fanon, The Wretched of the Earth (New York: Grove Press, 1963), 94.
90. Ibid., 195–97. 91. See John Esposito, Unholy War: Terror in
the Name of Islam (New York: Oxford University Press, 2002), 43.
92. Ibid. 93. Based on interviews in the United States,
Lebanon, Gaza, Israel, Pakistan, and Indonesia, 1998–2001.
94. Andrew Higgins and Allan Cullison, “Saga of Dr. Zawahiri Sheds Light on the Roots of Al Qaeda Terror: How a Secret, Failed Trip to Chechnya Turned Key Plotter’s Focus to America and bin Laden,” Wall Street Journal, 2 July 2002.
95. Neil MacFarquhar, “Islamic Jihad, Forged in Egypt, Is Seen as bin Laden’s Backbone,” New York Times, 4 October 2001, B4.
96. Lawrence Wright, “The Man behind bin- Laden,” New Yorker, 16 September 2002, 77.
97. See, for example, Ahmed Rashid, “The Taliban: Exporting Extremism,” Foreign Affairs, November/December 1999; Ahmed Rashid, Jihad: The Rise of Militant Islam in Central Asia (New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 2002); and Gunaratna, Inside Al Qaeda, 168–72.
98. C. J. Chlvers, “Uzbek Militants Decline Provides Clues to U.S.,” New York Times, 8 October 2002, A15.
99. Ibid. 100. Ibid. 101. Ibid. 102. Bernard Lewis, “License to Kill,” Foreign
Affairs, November/December 1998, 15. 103. John F. Burns, “Bin Laden Taunts U.S. and
Praises Hijackers,” New York Times, 8 October 2001, A1. A transcript of President Bush’s 20 September 2002 speech is available at the Web site of the White House. “Address to a Joint Session of Congress and the American People,” United States Capital, Washington, D.C., 20 September 2002, Last accessed 19 October 2002, www.whitehouse.gov/news/ releases/2001/09/20010920–8.html.
104. Judith Miller, “Bin Laden’s Media Savvy: Expert Timing of Threats,” New York Times, 9 October 2001, B6.
105. “UK-Based Paper Notes Al-Qa’ida Military Training on internet Site, Encyclopedia in Al-Sharq al-Awsat (London), 16 February 2002. Available in FBIS-NES-2002–0216, Article ID GMP20020216000057.
106. Thaqafat al-Jihad, placed by “OBL2003.” http://members.lycos.co.uk/himmame/vb/printthrea d.php?threadid=1881. Printed (in translation) in Reuven Paz, editor. The Project for the Research of Islamist Movements (PRISM), Occasional Papers, Volume 1 (2003), Number 3 (March 2003).
107. Bayan U-Taliban yu’akid an bin Laden taliq walam yu’takjal (A statement by Taliban confirms that Bin Laden is free and has not been arrested). See on-line In: http://www .o-alshahada.nct/vb/printhead .phb?s=& threadid=82. Printed (in translation) in Reuven Paz, editor. The Project for the Research of Islamist Movements (PRISM), Occasional Papers, Volume 1 (2003), Number 3 (March 2003).
108. Dec Hock, Birth of the Chsordic Age (San Francisco: Barrott Koehler Publishers, 1999).
109. Virtual networks of leaderless resisters make sense for groups that will be satisfied with the kind of attacks that can be carried out by small groups or individuals acting on their own. The mission is openly communicated, but detailed plans are not discussed with the leadership of the movement or among groups. The need for secrecy and the need for inspirational leaders to be able to plausibly deny their knowledge of past or present plots distort the communication flow.
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110. Manuel Castells, The Rise of the Network Society (Cambridge, Mass.: Blackwell Publishers, 1996). Quoted in Joel Garreau, “Disconnect the Dots,” Washington Post, 17 September 2001, C1.
111. Richard Wolfe, Carola Hoyos, and Harvey Morris, “Bin Laden’s Wealth Put in Doubt by Saudi Dissidents,” Financial Times, 24 September 2001, 5.
112. Paul McKay, “The Cost of Fanatical Loyalty,” Ottauid Citizen, 23 September 2001, A8.
113. Barry Meler, “ ‘Super’ Heroin Was Planned by bin Laden, Reports Say,” New York Times, 4 October 2001, B3.
114. For more information on the remittance system of hawala, see the Web site of Interpol, last accessed 7 January 2003, www.interpol.inr/Public/ FinancialCrime/MoneyLaundering/hawala/default .asp#2.
115. Douglas Frantz, “Ancient Secret System Moves Money Globally,” New York Times, 3 October 2001, B5. See also Judith Miller and Jeff Gerth, “Business Fronts: Honey Trade Said to Provide Funds and Cover to bin Laden,” New York Times, 11 October 2001, A1.
116. United States of America v. Usama bin Laden (26 February 2001), 1415.
117. Interviews with Laskar Jihad, Jakarta, 9 August 2001, and Yogyakarra, 11 August 2001; questionnaires administered in Pakistan.
118. Mark Hosenball, “Terror’s Cash Flow,” Newsweek, 25 March 2002, 28.
119. See for example, “Hate Literature Blitz Planned by Neo-Nazi Groups to Coincide with Jewish Holidays and 9/11,” Anti-Defamation League (ADL) press release, 27 August 2002. Available at the ADL Web site, last accessed 13 January 2003, www.adl.org/ PresRele/ASUS_12/4148_12.asp. The flyer can be viewed at the National Alliance Chicago Web site, last accessed 13 January 2003, www.natallchicago.com/ Human-Shields2.pdf.
120. See the Web site of the World Church of the Creator, last accessed 13 January 2003, www .creator.org/.
121. The article can be found in German at www.cleutsches-reich.de, last accessed 17 March 2003.
122. Louis Beam, “Battle in Seattle: Americans Face Off the Police State,” last accessed 14 January 2003, www.louisbeam.com/seattle.htm.
123. See Web site of the American Revolutionary Vanguard, last accessed 14 January 2003, www.attackthesystem.com/islam.html.
124. Thanassis Cambanis and Charles M. Sennott, quoting Magnus Rarustorp et al., “Fighting Terror: Going After the Network Cells; Qaeda Seen Still Dangerous,” Boston Globe, 6 October 2002, A17.
125. In December 2001, Singapore authorities arrested fifteen Islamist militants who had plotted to bomb U.S. targets, including naval vessels in Singapore. The commander of the group was an
Indonesian based in Malaysia named Ruduan Lamuddin (known as Hambali), whom Senior Minister Lee Kuan Yew referred to as Bashir’s “right- hand man.” The same group was accused of planning to bomb U.S. embassies in Southeast Asia on the anniversary of September 11. Details of the plot, and the relationship of Jamaah Islamiyah to Al Qaeda, were revealed to U.S. investigators by Al Qaeda’s regional manager in Southeast Asia, Omar al Faruq.
Jamaah Islamiyah has been involved in a series of failed attempts to attack Western targets in Singapore, and information about its planned attacks led the Untied States to shut embassies in Southeast Asia on several occasions. The group has also attempted several times to assassinate Megawati. Singaporean investigators have learned about how JI functions from the operatives they took into custody in December 2001 and August 2002. Several JI members had been trained in Al Qaeda camps in Afghanistan. Others were trained in Mindanao by the Moro Islamic Liberation Front. JI leaders were instructed by Al Qaeda to stay away from mainstream Muslim life in Singapore to avoid drawing attention to themselves. They were not active in madrassaht.
126. A good example of a broad mission statement is the one that was used to mobilize participants in the Battle of Seattle. Groups opposed the World Trade Organization (WTO) for multiple reasons. American unions, supporters of Ralph Nader, and environmentalists were on the same side for completely different reasons. They demanded that WTO members adopt mandatory standards regarding pollution and protecting workers—in the case of the unions, because it would help them compete with their third-world rivals, and in the case of the environmentalists and “Naderites” because it would reduce worldwide emissions and promote workers’ health. Developing countries opposed the WTO because they feared it would impose precisely those standards, which would help rich companies in the West at the expense of the poor in the third world.
127. The Battle of Seattle is perhaps the best example of an operation that succeeded despite the inherent difficulties of surmounting this problem. Individuals came to Seattle for their own reasons.
128. Ronfeldt and Arquilla argue, in contrast, that swarming is the ideal approach for networked terrorist organizations. But I argue that the requirement for secrecy will make large-scale swarming difficult for terrorist organizations, absent impenetrable communication systems. For their argument, see David Ronfeldt and John Arquilla, “Networks, Netwars, and the Fight for the Future,” last accessed 15 August 2002, www.firstmonday.dk/issues .issue6_10/ronfeldt/.
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