One of the basic tenets of STRATFOR's analytical model is that
place matters. A country's physical and cultural geography will
force the government of that country to confront certain strategic
imperatives no matter what form the government takes. For example,
Imperial Russia, the Soviet Union and post-Soviet Russia all have
faced the same set of strategic imperatives. Similarly, place can
also have a dramatic impact on the formation and operation of a
militant group, though obviously not in quite the same way that
it affects a government, since militant groups, especially transnational
ones, tend to be itinerant and can move from place to place.
From the perspective of a militant group, geography is important
but there are other critical factors involved in establishing
the suitability of a place. While it is useful to have access
to wide swaths of rugged terrain that can provide sanctuary such
as mountains, jungles or swamps, for a militant group to conduct
large-scale operations, the country in which it is based must
have a weak central government -- or a government that is cooperative
or at least willing to turn a blind eye to the group. A sympathetic
population is also a critical factor in whether an area can serve
as a sanctuary for a militant group. In places without a favorable
mixture of these elements, militants tend to operate more like
terrorists, in small urban-based cells.
For example, although Egypt was one of the ideological cradles
of jihadism, jihadist militants have never been able to gain a
solid foothold in Egypt (as they have been able to do in Algeria,
Yemen and Pakistan). This is because the combination of geography
and government are not favorable to them even in areas of the
country where there is a sympathetic population. When jihadist
organizations have become active in Egypt, the Egyptian government
has been able to quickly hunt them down. Having no place to hide,
those militants who are not immediately arrested or killed frequently
leave the country and end up in places like Sudan, Iraq, Pakistan
(and sometimes Jersey City). Over the past three decades, many
of these itinerant Egyptian militants, such as Ayman al-Zawahiri,
have gone on to play significant roles in the formation and evolution
of al Qaeda -- a stateless, transnational jihadist organization.
Even though al Qaeda and the broader jihadist movement it has
sought to foster are transnational, they are still affected by
the unique dynamics of place, and it is worth examining how these
dynamics will likely affect the movement's future.
The Past
The modern iteration of the jihadist phenomenon that resulted
in the formation of al Qaeda was spawned in the rugged mountainous
area along the Afghan-Pakistani border. This was a remote region
not only filled with refugees -- and militants from all over the
globe -- but also awash in weapons, spies, fundamentalist Islamism
and intrigue. The area proved ideal for the formation of modern
jihadism following the Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan in 1989,
but it was soon plunged into Muslim-on-Muslim violence. After
the fall of the communist regime in Kabul in 1992, Afghanistan
was wracked by near-constant civil war between competing Muslim
warlords until the Taliban seized power in 1996. Even then, the
Taliban-led government remained at war with the Northern Alliance.
In 1992, in the midst of this chaos, al Qaeda began to move many
of its people to Sudan, which had taken a heavy Islamist bent
following a 1989 coup led by Gen. Omar al-Bashir and heavily influenced
by Hasan al-Turabi and his National Islamic Front party. Even
during this time, al Qaeda continued operating established training
camps in Afghanistan like Khaldan, al Farook and Darunta. The
group also maintained its network of Pakistani safe-houses in
places like Karachi and Peshawar that it used to direct prospective
jihadists from overseas to its training camps in Afghanistan.
In many ways, Sudan was a better place for al Qaeda to operate
from, since it offered far more access to the outside world than
the remote camps in Afghanistan. But the access worked both ways,
and the group received far more scrutiny during its time in Sudan
than it had during its stay in Afghanistan. In fact, it was during
the Sudan years (1992-1996) when many in the counterterrorism
world first became conscious of the existence of al Qaeda. Most
people outside of the counterterrorism community were not familiar
with the group until after the August 1998 East Africa embassy
bombings, and it was not really until 9/11 that al Qaeda became
a household name. But this notoriety came with a price. Following
the June 1995 attempt to assassinate Egyptian President Hosni
Mubarak in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia (an attack linked to Egyptian
militants and al Qaeda), the international community -- including
Egypt and the United States -- began to place heavy pressure on
the government of Sudan to either control Osama bin Laden and
al Qaeda or eject them from the country.
In May 1996, bin Laden and company, who were not willing to be
controlled, pulled up stakes and headed back to Afghanistan. The
timing was propitious for al Qaeda, which was able to find sanctuary
in Afghanistan just as the Taliban were preparing for their final
push on Kabul, bringing stability to much of the country. While
the Taliban were never wildly supportive of bin Laden, they at
least tolerated his presence and activities and felt obligated
to protect him as their guest under Pashtunwali, the ancient code
of the Pashtun people. Al Qaeda also shrewdly had many of its
members marry into influential local tribes as an added measure
of security. Shortly after returning to Afghanistan, bin Laden
felt secure enough to issue his August 1996 declaration of war
against the United States.
The rugged and remote region of eastern and northeastern Afghanistan,
bordered by the Pakistani badlands, provided an ideal area in
which to operate. It was also a long way from the ocean and the
United States' ability to project power. While al Qaeda's stay
in Afghanistan was briefly interrupted by a U.S. cruise missile
attack in August 1998 following the East Africa embassy bombings,
the largely ineffective attack demonstrated the limited reach
of the United States, and the group was able to operate pretty
much unmolested in Afghanistan until the October 2001 U.S. invasion
of Afghanistan. During their time in Afghanistan, al Qaeda was
able to provide basic military training to tens of thousands of
men who passed through its training camps. The camps also provided
advanced training in terrorist tradecraft to a smaller number
of selected students.
The U.S. invasion of Afghanistan radically changed the way the
jihadists viewed Afghanistan as a place. U.S. military power was
no longer confined to the Indian Ocean; it had now been brought
right into the heart of Afghanistan. Instead of a place of refuge
and training, Afghanistan once again became a place of active
combat, and the training camps in Afghanistan were destroyed or
relocated to the Pakistani side of the border. Other jihadist
refugees fled Afghanistan for their countries of origin, and still
others, like Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, left Afghanistan for the badlands
of northern Iraq -- which, as part of the U.S. no-fly zone, was
out the reach of Saddam Hussein, who as a secular leader had little
ideological sympathy for the jihadist cause.
Pakistan's rugged and remote Pashtun belt proved a welcoming
refuge for jihadists at first, but U.S. airstrikes turned it into
a dangerous place, and al Qaeda became fractured and hunted. The
group had lost important operational leaders like Mohammed Atef
in Afghanistan, and its losses were multiplied in Pakistan, where
important figures like Khalid Sheikh Mohammed were captured or
killed. Under extreme pressure, the group's apex leadership went
deep underground to stay alive.
Following the U.S. invasion of Iraq in March 2003, Iraq became
an important place for the jihadist movement. Unlike Afghanistan,
which was seen as remote and on the periphery of the Muslim world,
Iraq was at its heart. Baghdad had served as the seat of the Islamic
empire for some five centuries. The 2003 invasion also fit hand-in-glove
with the jihadist narrative, which claimed that the West had declared
war on Islam, and thereby provided a serious boost to efforts
to raise men and money for the jihadist struggle. Soon foreign
jihadists were streaming into Iraq from all over the world, not
only from places like Saudi Arabia and Algeria but also from North
America and Europe. Indeed, we even saw the core al Qaeda group
asking the Iraqi jihadist leader, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, for financial
assistance.
One of the things that made Iraq such a welcoming place was the
hospitality of the Sunni sheikhs in Iraq's Sunni Triangle who
took in the foreign fighters, sheltered them and essentially used
them as a tool. Once the largesse of these tribal leaders dried
up, we saw the Anbar Awakening in 2005-2006, and Iraq became a
far more hostile place for the foreign jihadists. This local hostility
was fanned by the brutality of al-Zarqawi and his recklessness
in attacking other Muslims. The nature of the human terrain had
changed in the Sunni Triangle, and it became a different place.
Al-Zarqawi was killed in June 2006, and the rat lines that had
been moving jihadists into Iraq were severely disrupted.
While some of the jihadists who had served in Iraq, or who had
aspired to travel to Iraq, were forced to go to Pakistan, still
others began focusing on places like Algeria and Yemen. Shortly
after the Anbar Awakening we saw the formation of al Qaeda in
the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) and a revitalization of the jihadists
in Yemen, who had been severely weakened by a November 2002 U.S.
missile strike and a series of arrests in 2002-2003. Similarly,
Somalia also became a destination where foreign jihadists could
receive training and fight, especially those of Somali or other
African heritage.
And this brings us up to today. The rugged borderlands of Pakistan
continue to be a focal point for jihadists, but increasing pressure
by U.S. airstrikes and Pakistani military operations in places
like Bajaur, Swat and South Waziristan have forced many foreign
jihadists to leave Pakistan for safer locations. The al Qaeda
central leadership continues to lay low, and groups like the Taliban
and al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) have taken over the
leadership of the jihadist struggle on the physical battlefield.
As long as the ideology of jihadism persists, transnational and
itinerant jihadist militants will continue to operate. Where their
next geographic center of gravity will be hinges on a number of
factors.
Geographic Factors
When one looks for prime jihadist real estate, one of the first
important factors (as in any real estate transaction) is location.
Unlike most home buyers, though, jihadists don't want a home near
the metro stop or important commuter arteries. Instead, they want
a place that is isolated and relatively free of government authority.
That is why Afghanistan, the Pakistani border region, the Sulu
Archipelago, the African Sahel and Somalia have all proved to
be popular jihadist haunts.
A second important factor is human terrain. Like any militant
or insurgent group, the jihadists need a local population that
is sympathetic to them if they are to operate in numbers larger
than small cells. This is especially true if they hope to run
operations such as training camps that are hard to conceal. Without
local support they would run the risk of being turned in to the
authorities or sold out to countries like the United States that
may have put large bounties on the heads of key leaders. A conservative
Muslim population with a warrior tradition is also a plus, as
seen in Pakistan and Yemen. Indeed, Abu Musab al-Suri, a well-known
jihadist strategist and so-called "architect of global jihad,"
even tried (unsuccessfully) to convince bin Laden in 1989 to relocate
to Yemen precisely because of the favorable human terrain there.
The importance of human terrain is very evident in the Iraq example
described above, in which a change in attitude by the tribal sheikhs
rapidly made once welcoming areas into hostile and dangerous places
for the foreign jihadists. Iraqi jihadists, who were able to fit
in better with the local population, were able to persist in this
hostile environment longer than their foreign counterparts. This
concept of local support is one of the factors that will limit
the ability of Arab jihadists to operate in remote and chaotic
places like sub-Saharan Africa or even the rainforests of South
America. They are not indigenous like members of the Revolutionary
Armed Forces of Colombia or Sendero Luminoso, and differences
in religion and culture will impede their efforts to intermarry
into powerful tribes as they have done in Pakistan and Yemen.
Geography and human terrain are helpful factors, but they are
not the exclusive determinants. You can just as easily train militants
in an open field as in a dense jungle, so long as you are unmolested
by an outside force, and that is why government is so important
to place. A weak government that has a lack of political and physical
control over an area or a local regime that is either cooperative
or at least non-interfering is also important. When we consider
government, we need to focus on the ability and will of the government
at the local level to fight an influx of jihadism. In several
countries, jihadism was allowed to exist and was not countered
by the government as long as the jihadists focused their efforts
elsewhere.
However, the wisdom of pursuing such an approach came into question
in the period following 9/11, when jihadist groups in a number
of places began conducting active operations in their countries
of residence. This occurred in places like Indonesia, Saudi Arabia,
Morocco and even Egypt's Sinai Peninsula, where jihadist groups
joined al Qaeda's call for a global jihad. And this response proved
to be very costly for these groups. The attacks they conducted,
combined with heavy political pressure from the United States,
forced some governments to change the way they viewed the groups
and resulted in some governments focusing the full weight of their
power to destroy them. This resulted in a dynamic where a group
briefly appears, makes a splash with some spectacular attacks,
then is dismantled by the local government, often with foreign
assistance (from countries like the United States). In some countries,
the governments lacked the necessary intelligence-gathering and
tactical capabilities, and it has taken a lot of time and effort
to build up those capabilities for the counterterrorism struggle.
In other places, like Somalia, there has been very little government
to build on.
Since the 9/11 attacks, the U.S. government has paid a lot of
attention to "draining the swamps" where these groups
seek refuge and train new recruits. This effort has spanned the
globe, from the southern Philippines to Central Asia and from
Bangladesh to Mali and Mauritania. And it is paying off in places
like Yemen, where some of the special counterterrorism forces
are starting to exhibit some self-sufficiency and have begun to
make headway against AQAP. If Yemen continues to exhibit the will
to go after AQAP, and if the international community continues
to enable them to do so, it will be able to follow the examples
of Morocco, Saudi Arabia and Indonesia, countries where the jihadist
problem has not been totally eradicated but where the groups are
hunted and their tactical capabilities are greatly diminished.
This will mean that Yemen will no longer be seen as a jihadist
haven and training base. The swamp there will have been mostly
drained. Another significant part of this effort will be to reshape
the human terrain through ideological measures. These include
discrediting jihadism as an ideology, changing the curriculum
at madrassas and re-educating militants.
With swamps such as Yemen and Pakistan slowly being drained,
the obvious question is: Where will the jihadists go next? What
will become the next focal point on the physical battlefield?
One obvious location is Somalia, but while the government there
is a basket case and controls little more than a few neighborhoods
in Mogadishu, the environment is not very conducive for Somalia
to become the next Pakistan or Yemen. While the human terrain
in Somalia is largely made up of conservative Muslims, the tribal
divisions and fractured nature of Somali society -- the same things
that keep the government from being able to develop any sort of
cohesion -- will also work against al-Shabaab and its jihadist
kin. Many of the various tribal chieftains and territorial warlords
see the jihadists as a threat to their power and will therefore
fight them -- or leak intelligence to the United States, enabling
it to target jihadists it views as a threat. Arabs and South Asians
also tend to stick out in Somalia, which is a predominately black
country.
Moreover, Somalia, like Yemen, has broad exposure to the sea,
allowing the United Stated more or less direct access. Having
long shorelines along the Indian Ocean and the Gulf of Aden, it
is comparatively easy to slip aircraft and even special operations
teams into and out of Somalia. With a U.S. base in Djibouti, orbits
of unmanned aerial vehicles are also easy to sustain in Somali
airspace.
The winnowing down of places for jihadists to gather and train
in large numbers continues the long process we have been following
for many years now. This is the transition of the jihadist threat
from one based on al Qaeda the group, or even on its regional
franchise groups, to one based more on a wider movement composed
of smaller grassroots cells and lone-wolf operatives. Going forward,
the fight against jihadism will also have to adapt, because the
changes in the threat will force a shift in focus from merely
trying to drain the big swamps to mopping up the little pools
of jihadists in places like London, Brooklyn, Karachi and even
cyberspace. As discussed last week, this fight will present its
own set of challenges.
Attributed to www.stratfor.com
25th March 2010 |