Issue 379
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WASHINGTON, April 28,
2009 — There is growing evidence that battle-hardened extremists are
filtering out of safe havens along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border and
into East Africa, bringing sophisticated terrorist tactics that include
suicide attacks.
The alarming shift, according to U.S. military and counterterrorism
officials, fuels concern that Somalia is increasingly on a path to
become the next Afghanistan — a sanctuary where al-Qaida-linked groups
could train and plan their threatened attacks against the western world.
So far, officials say the number of foreign fighters who have moved from
southwest Asia and the Afghanistan-Pakistan border region to the Horn of
Africa is small, perhaps two to three dozen.
But a similarly small cell of militant plotters was responsible for the
devastating 1998 bombings of U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania. And
the cluster of militants now believed to be operating inside East Africa
could pass on sophisticated training and attack techniques gleaned from
seven years at war against the U.S. and allies in Iraq and Afghanistan,
U.S. officials said.
"There is a level of activity that is troubling, disturbing," Gen.
William "Kip" Ward, head of U.S. Africa Command, told The Associated
Press. "When you have these vast spaces that are just not governed it
provides a haven for support activities, for training to occur."
Ward added that American officials already are seeing extremist factions
in East Africa sharing information and techniques.
Several military and counterterrorism officials who spoke on condition
of anonymity to discuss sensitive intelligence matters cautioned that
the movements of the al-Qaida militants do not suggest an abandonment of
the ungoverned Pakistan border region as a safe haven.
Instead, the shift is viewed by the officials more as an expansion of
al-Qaida's influence, and a campaign to gather and train more recruits
in a region already rife with militants.
Last month, Osama bin Laden made it clear in a newly released audiotape
that al-Qaida has set its sights on Somalia, an impoverished and largely
lawless country in the Horn of Africa. In the 11-minute tape released to
Internet sites, bin Laden is heard urging Somalis to overthrow their new
moderate Islamist president and to support their jihadist "brothers" in
Afghanistan, Pakistan, Palestine and Iraq.
Officials said that in recent years they have seen occasional signs that
sophisticated al-Qaida terror techniques are gaining ground in East
Africa. Those harbingers include a coordinated series of suicide
bombings in Somalia in October.
In the past, officials said, suicide attacks tended to be frowned on by
African Muslims, creating something of an impediment to al-Qaida's
efforts to sell that aspect of its terrorism tactics.
But on Oct. 29, 2008, suicide bombers killed more than 20 people in five
attacks targeting a U.N. compound, the Ethiopian consulate, the
presidential palace in Somaliland's capital and two intelligence
facilities in Puntland.
The coordinated assaults, officials said, amounted to a watershed
moment, suggesting a new level of sophistication and training. The
incident also marked the first time that a U.S. citizen — a young Somali
man from Minneapolis — carried out a suicide bombing.
The foreign fighters moving into East Africa complicate an
already-rising crescendo of terror threats in the region. Those threats
have come from the Somalia-based al-Shabab extremist Islamic faction and
from al-Qaida in East Africa, a small, hard-core group also known by the
acronym EEAQ.
While not yet considered an official al-Qaida franchise, EEAQ has
connections to the top terror leaders and was implicated in the August
1998 embassy bombings in Tanzania and Kenya that killed 225 people. The
bombings were al-Qaida's precursors to the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, a
plot spawned by a small cell of operatives as far back as 1992. Four men
accused as al-Qaida plotters were later convicted in federal court in
New York for those bombings.
Fazul Abdullah Mohammed and several other EEAQ members remain under
indictment in the United States for their alleged participation in those
bombings. Mohammed is on the FBI's most wanted terrorist list with a
reward of up to $5 million on his head.
Al-Qaida has the skills while al-Shabab has the manpower, said one
senior military official familiar with the region. The official said
EEAQ appears to be a small cell of a few dozen operatives who rarely
sleep in the same place twice and are adept at setting up temporary
training camps that vanish days later.
What worries U.S. military leaders, the official said, is the that EEAQ
and al-Shabab may merge in training and operations, potentially
spreading al-Qaida's more extremist jihadist beliefs to thousands of
clan-based Somali militants, who so far have been engaged in internal
squabbling.
The scenario could become even more worrisome, the officials said, if
the foreign fighters transplant their skills at bomb-making and
insurgency tactics to the training camps in East Africa.
Africa experts, however, said it won't be easy for Islamic extremists to
win many converts in East Africa.
Francois Grignon, Africa program director for the International Crisis
Group, a Brussels-based research organization, said in an interview that
many clan members generally practice a more moderate Islam, and
militants are not inclined to join a fight they do not see as their own.
The U.S., he said, needs to encourage the new government in Somalia to
deal with the growing terror threats there and to marginalize the
jihadists so they are not able to sustain their activities in Somalia.
Ward said U.S. Africa Command is working with a number of nations to
build their ability to maintain security. But he said commanders are
less able to do much in Somalia, where the new government is still
fragile.
Meanwhile, he said, officials continue to watch as the ties between the
terror groups grow.
"I think they're all a threat," said Ward. "Right now it's clearly a
threat that the Africans have, but in today's global society that threat
can be exported anywhere with relative ease."
Source: AP
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