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Al-Qaeda's Al- by John M. Curtis Copyright
September 22, 2013
Al-Qaeda’s Somali affiliate Al-Shabaab found a
convenient soft target, lashing out at Nairobi’s Westgate shopping mall Sept.
21, killing at least 60 and wounding more than 300. Despite President
Obama’s best efforts to get al-Qaeda operatives around the globe, the late Osama
bin Laden’s criminal gang continues to plague the civilized world. Not
much was known Aug. 7, 1998 when Bin Laden struck the U.S. embassies in Nairobi
and Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, killing 233 embassy employees, largely from Kenya
and Tanzania. Former President Bill Clinton’s throwaway Cruise missile
attacks at Bin Laden’s training camp 200 kilometers from Kabul, Afghanistan did
little to deter the renegade Saudi from striking the U.S.S guided missile
frigate Cole in Oct. 12, 2000 killing 17 and injuring 39 U.S. sailors.
Much more is known today about al-Qaeda’s command-and-control, despite the
horrific attack in one of Nairobi’s posh shopping centers.
U.S. officials know personally the reach of Somalia’s al-Shabaab, whose
terrorists created mayhem Oct. 3-4, 1993 shooting down two U.S. UH-60 Black Hawk
helicopters, killing 18 and injuring 73 in what became known as “The Battle of
Mogadishu” or “Black Hawk Down.” While U.S. officials were asleep at the
switch in 1993 watching the first aborted World Trade Center bombing and Battle
of Mogadishu, al-Qaeda’s reach extended around the globe until brought into
clear focus Sept. 11, 2001, where 2,996 victims, including the hijackers,
fell to Bin Laden’s madness. Yesterday’s attack on Nairobi’s Westgate Mall
exposes vulnerability to so-called soft-targets, frequently traveled
public places lacking the kind of security to prevent such mass killings.
Holed up with hostages at the Westgate Mall, Nairobi police will have to make a
strategic decision knowing that al-Shabaab’s thugs will try to negotiate their
way to safety with their human bargaining chips.
Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta has little room for error as the crisis morphs
into a mop-up operation after more than 24-hours. “Our top priority
remains to safeguard the lives of innocent people held up in this unfortunate
incident,” said Kenyatta, knowing that Western officials find negotiating with
al-Qaeda fruitless. Blasting and shooting their way with grenades and
Kalashnicovs, al-Shabaab won’t go down without massacring the remaining hostages
in al-Qaeda’s expected martyrdom. “It has been quiet. They will be
arranging how to attack,” said an unnamed Kenyan paramilitary officer, believing
Nairobi military and police won’t let al-Shabaab escape. “Ten hours have
passed and the Mujahedeen are still strong inside the Westgate Mall and still
holding their ground. All praise is due to Allah,” wrote al-Shabaab on
their Twitter account. Kenyan officials know this kind of fanaticism that
doesn’t bode well for the remaining hostages.
Since Bin
Laden’s death May 1, 2011, al-Qaeda has fought for its relevance under the
diabolical leadership of 62-year-old physician, former Muslim Brotherhood
devotee Ayman al-Zawahri. When the Chechen Tsarnaev brothers struck the
Boston Marathon April 15 with two pressure cooker bombs killing 5 and injuring
280, al-Zawahri took credit for the mayhem, showing al-Qaeda’s continued global
reach, especially at soft targets. U.S. officials worry that fortifying
airports isn’t the only way to stop al-Qaeda’s attacks, whose sympathies find
lunatics all over the globe ready to sign up. When U.S. Army Maj. Nidal
Malik Hasan was sentenced to death by an Army jury Aug. 28 for the Nov. 5, 2009
Fort Hood, Texas massacre of 13 soldiers, the U.S. government refused to
acknowledge that Hasan’s attack was an act of terrorism. After combing
through his e-mails with the late U.S.-born Yemen al-Qaeda terrorist Anwar
al-Awlaki his motives were obvious.
Al-Qaeda’s latest episode in Nairobi should send a loud message to U.S.
authorities that the war against terrorism goes on. U.S. officials, like
Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), warned Obama that his recent indecisiveness in Syria
could have major implications for future terror attacks on targets inside or
outside the U.S. What McCain and other trigger-happy hawks don’t get is
that there’s linkage between fostering better cooperation with Russian President
Vladimir Putin and dealing with future al-Qaeda strikes. Putin’s main
concern about toppling al-Assad was the very real possibility of uncorking a
hornet’s nest of more terrorism in Syria. McCain knows that there are more
groups than Brig. Gen. Salim Idris’ “Free Syrian Army” trying to topple
al-Assad, including al-Qaeda and other Saudi-backed Islamist groups.
Yesterday’s attack in Nairobi shows the importance of strong
alliances—especially with Putin’s Russia—to help stop acts of global
terrorism. John M. Curtis writes politically neutral commentary analyzing spin in national and global news. He's editor of OnlineColumnist.com.and author of Dodging the Bullet and Operation Charisma. |
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