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Al-Qaeda

Al-Qaeda (/ælˈkdə, ˌælkɑːˈdə/; Arabic: القاعدة, romanizedal-Qāʿidah, lit.'the Base', IPA: [alˈqaː.ʕi.da]) is a pan-Islamist militant organization led by Sunni Jihadists who self-identify as a vanguard spearheading a global Islamist revolution to unite the Muslim world under a supra-national Islamic state known as the Caliphate.[78][79] Its members are mostly composed of Arabs, but also include people from other ethnic groups.[80] Al-Qaeda has mounted attacks on civilian, economic and military targets of the US and its allies; such as the 1998 US embassy bombings, the USS Cole bombing and the September 11 attacks. The organization is designated as a terrorist group by NATO, UN Security Council, the European Union, and various countries around the world.

Al-Qaeda
القاعدة
Flag used by various al-Qaeda factions
FounderOsama bin Laden 
Leaders
Dates of operation11 August 1988 – present
Allegiance Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan[1]
Group(s)
 
Ideology
Size
 
Allies
Opponents
 
Battles and wars
Designated as a terrorist group bySee below
Preceded by
Maktab al-Khidamat

The organization was founded in a series of meetings held in Peshawar during 1988, attended by Abdullah Azzam, Osama bin Laden, Muhammad Atef, Ayman al-Zawahiri and other veterans of the Soviet–Afghan War.[81] Building upon the networks of Maktab al-Khidamat, the founding members decided to create an organization named "Al-Qaeda" to serve as a "vanguard" for jihad.[81][82] When Saddam Hussein invaded and occupied Kuwait in 1990, bin Laden offered to support Saudi Arabia by sending his Mujahideen fighters. His offer was rebuffed by the Saudi government, which instead sought the aid of the United States. The stationing of U.S. troops in Arabian Peninsula prompted bin Laden to declare a jihad against the Saudi Arabian rulers, whom he denounced as murtadd (apostates), and against the US. During 1992–1996, Al-Qaeda established its headquarters in Sudan until it was expelled in 1996. It shifted its base to the Taliban-ruled Afghanistan and later expanded to other parts of the world, primarily in the Middle East and South Asia. In 1996 and 1998, bin Laden issued two fatāwā that demanded the withdrawal of U.S. troops from Saudi Arabia.

In 1998, Al-Qaeda conducted the US embassy bombings in Kenya and Tanzania, which killed 224 people. The U.S. retaliated by launching Operation Infinite Reach, against al-Qaeda targets in Afghanistan and Sudan. In 2001, Al-Qaeda carried out the September 11 attacks, resulting in nearly 3,000 deaths, long-term health consequences of nearby residents, damaging global economic markets, triggering drastic geo-political changes as well as generating profound cultural influence across the world. The U.S. launched the war on terror in response and invaded Afghanistan to depose the Taliban and destroy al-Qaeda. In 2003, a U.S.-led coalition invaded Iraq, overthrowing the Ba'athist regime which they falsely accused of having ties with al-Qaeda. In 2004, al-Qaeda launched its Iraqi regional branch. After pursuing him for almost a decade, the U.S. military killed bin Laden in Pakistan in May 2011.

Al-Qaeda members believe that a Judeo-Christian alliance (led by the United States) is waging a war against Islam and conspiring to destroy Islam.[83][84] Al-Qaeda also opposes man-made laws, and seek to implement sharīʿah (Islamic law) in Muslim countries.[85] AQ fighters characteristically deploy tactics such as suicide attacks (Inghimasi and Istishhadi operations) involving simultaneous bombing of several targets in battle-zones.[86] Al-Qaeda's Iraq branch, which later morphed into the Islamic State of Iraq after 2006, was responsible for numerous sectarian attacks against Shias during its Iraqi insurgency.[87][88] Al-Qaeda ideologues envision the violent removal of all foreign and secularist influences in Muslim countries, which it denounces as corrupt deviations.[39][89][90][91] Following the death of bin Laden in 2011, al-Qaeda vowed to avenge his killing. The group was then led by Egyptian Ayman al-Zawahiri until his death in 2022. As of 2021, they have reportedly suffered from a deterioration of central command over its regional operations.[92]

Organization

Al-Qaeda only indirectly controls its day-to-day operations. Its philosophy calls for the centralization of decision making, while allowing for the decentralization of execution.[93] The top leaders of Al-Qaeda have defined the organization's ideology and guiding strategy, and they have also articulated simple and easy-to-receive messages. At the same time, mid-level organizations were given autonomy, but they had to consult with top management before large-scale attacks and assassinations. Top management included the shura council as well as committees on military operations, finance, and information sharing. Through the information committees of Al-Qaeda, Zawahiri placed special emphasis on communicating with his groups.[94] However, after the war on terror, Al-Qaeda's leadership has become isolated. As a result, the leadership has become decentralized, and the organization has become regionalized into several Al-Qaeda groups.[95][96]

Many Western analysts do not believe that the global jihadist movement is driven at every level by Al-Qaeda's leadership. However, bin Laden held considerable ideological influence over revolutionary Islamist movements across the world. Experts argue that Al-Qaeda has fragmented into a number of disparate regional movements, and that these groups bear little connection with one another.[97]

This view mirrors the account given by Osama bin Laden in his October 2001 interview with Tayseer Allouni:

this matter isn't about any specific person and ... is not about the al-Qa'idah Organization. We are the children of an Islamic Nation, with Prophet Muhammad as its leader, our Lord is one ... and all the true believers [mu'mineen] are brothers. So the situation isn't like the West portrays it, that there is an 'organization' with a specific name (such as 'al-Qa'idah') and so on. That particular name is very old. It was born without any intention from us. Brother Abu Ubaida ... created a military base to train the young men to fight against the vicious, arrogant, brutal, terrorizing Soviet empire ... So this place was called 'The Base' ['Al-Qa'idah'], as in a training base, so this name grew and became. We aren't separated from this nation. We are the children of a nation, and we are an inseparable part of it, and from those public demonstrations which spread from the far east, from the Philippines to Indonesia, to Malaysia, to India, to Pakistan, reaching Mauritania ... and so we discuss the conscience of this nation.[98]

As of 2010 however, Bruce Hoffman saw Al-Qaeda as a cohesive network that was strongly led from the Pakistani tribal areas.[97]

 
Al-Qaeda militant in Sahel armed with a Type 56 assault rifle, 2012

Affiliates

Al-Qaeda has the following direct affiliates:

The following are presently believed to be indirect affiliates of Al-Qaeda:

Al-Qaeda's former affiliates include the following:

Leadership

Osama bin Laden (1988 – May 2011)

 
Osama bin Laden (left) and Ayman al-Zawahiri (right) photographed in 2001

Osama bin Laden served as the emir of Al-Qaeda from the organization's founding in 1988 until his assassination by US forces on May 1, 2011.[109] Atiyah Abd al-Rahman was alleged to be second in command prior to his death on August 22, 2011.[110]

Bin Laden was advised by a Shura Council, which consists of senior Al-Qaeda members.[111] The group was estimated to consist of 20–30 people.

After May 2011

Ayman al-Zawahiri had been Al-Qaeda's deputy emir and assumed the role of emir following bin Laden's death. Al-Zawahiri replaced Saif al-Adel, who had served as interim commander.[112]

On June 5, 2012, Pakistani intelligence officials announced that al-Rahman's alleged successor as second in command, Abu Yahya al-Libi, had been killed in Pakistan.[113]

Nasir al-Wuhayshi was alleged to have become Al-Qaeda's overall second in command and general manager in 2013. He was concurrently the leader of Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) until he was killed by a US airstrike in Yemen in June 2015.[114] Abu Khayr al-Masri, Wuhayshi's alleged successor as the deputy to Ayman al-Zawahiri, was killed by a US airstrike in Syria in February 2017.[115] Al Qaeda's next alleged number two leader, Abdullah Ahmed Abdullah, was killed by Israeli agents. His pseudonym was Abu Muhammad al-Masri, who was killed in November 2020 in Iran. He was involved in the 1998 bombings of the US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania.[116]

Al-Qaeda's network was built from scratch as a conspiratorial network which drew upon the leadership of a number of regional nodes.[117] The organization divided itself into several committees, which include:

  • The Military Committee, which is responsible for training operatives, acquiring weapons, and planning attacks.
  • The Money/Business Committee, which funds the recruitment and training of operatives through the hawala banking system. US-led efforts to eradicate the sources of "terrorist financing"[118] were most successful in the year immediately following the September 11 attacks.[119] Al-Qaeda continues to operate through unregulated banks, such as the 1,000 or so hawaladars in Pakistan, some of which can handle deals of up to US$10 million.[120] The committee also procures false passports, pays Al-Qaeda members, and oversees profit-driven businesses.[121] In the 9/11 Commission Report, it was estimated that Al-Qaeda required $30 million per year to conduct its operations.
  • The Law Committee reviews Sharia law, and decides upon courses of action conform to it.
  • The Islamic Study/Fatwah Committee issues religious edicts, such as an edict in 1998 telling Muslims to kill Americans.
  • The Media Committee ran the now-defunct newspaper Nashrat al Akhbar (English: Newscast) and handled public relations.
  • In 2005, Al-Qaeda formed As-Sahab, a media production house, to supply its video and audio materials.

After Al-Zawahiri (2022 – present)

Al-Zawahiri was killed on July 31, 2022 in a drone strike in Afghanistan.[122] In February 2023, a report from the United Nations, based on member state intelligence, concluded that de facto leadership of Al-Qaeda had passed to Saif al-Adel, who was operating out of Iran. Adel, a former Egyptian army officer, became a military instructor in Al-Qaeda camps in the 1990s and was known for his involvement in the Battle of Mogadishu. The report stated that al-Adel's leadership could not officially be declared by al-Qaeda because of "political sensitivities" of Afghan government in acknowledging the death of Al-Zawahiri as well as due to "theological and operational" challenges posed by the location of al-Adel in Iran.[123][124]

Command structure

Most of Al Qaeda's top leaders and operational directors were veterans who fought against the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in the 1980s. Osama bin Laden and his deputy, Ayman al-Zawahiri, were the leaders who were considered the operational commanders of the organization.[125] Nevertheless, Al-Qaeda is not operationally managed by Ayman al-Zawahiri. Several operational groups exist, which consult with the leadership in situations where attacks are in preparation.[126] Al-Qaeda central (AQC) is a conglomerate of expert committees, each in supervision of distinct tasks and objectives. Its membership is mostly composed of Egyptian Islamist leaders who participated in the anti-communist Afghan Jihad. Assisting them are hundreds of Islamic field operatives and commanders, based in various regions of the Muslim World. The central leadership assumes control of the doctrinal approach and overall propaganda campaign; while the regional commanders were empowered with independence in military strategy and political maneuvering. This novel hierarchy made it possible for the organisation to launch wide-range offensives.[127]

When asked in 2005 about the possibility of Al-Qaeda's connection to the July 7, 2005 London bombings, Metropolitan Police Commissioner Sir Ian Blair said: "Al-Qaeda is not an organization. Al-Qaeda is a way of working ... but this has the hallmark of that approach ... Al-Qaeda clearly has the ability to provide training ... to provide expertise ... and I think that is what has occurred here."[128] On August 13, 2005, The Independent newspaper, reported that the July 7 bombers had acted independently of an Al-Qaeda mastermind.[129]

Nasser al-Bahri, who was Osama bin Laden's bodyguard for four years in the run-up to 9/11 wrote in his memoir a highly detailed description of how the group functioned at that time. Al-Bahri described Al-Qaeda's formal administrative structure and vast arsenal.[130] However, the author Adam Curtis argued that the idea of Al-Qaeda as a formal organization is primarily an American invention. Curtis contended the name "Al-Qaeda" was first brought to the attention of the public in the 2001 trial of bin Laden and the four men accused of the 1998 US embassy bombings in East Africa. Curtis wrote:

The reality was that bin Laden and Ayman al-Zawahiri had become the focus of a loose association of disillusioned Islamist militants who were attracted by the new strategy. But there was no organization. These were militants who mostly planned their own operations and looked to bin Laden for funding and assistance. He was not their commander. There is also no evidence that bin Laden used the term "al-Qaeda" to refer to the name of a group until after September 11 attacks, when he realized that this was the term the Americans had given it.[131]

During the 2001 trial, the US Department of Justice needed to show that bin Laden was the leader of a criminal organization in order to charge him in absentia under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act. The name of the organization and details of its structure were provided in the testimony of Jamal al-Fadl, who said he was a founding member of the group and a former employee of bin Laden.[132] Questions about the reliability of al-Fadl's testimony have been raised by a number of sources because of his history of dishonesty, and because he was delivering it as part of a plea bargain agreement after being convicted of conspiring to attack US military establishments.[133][134] Sam Schmidt, a defense attorney who defended al-Fadl said:

There were selective portions of al-Fadl's testimony that I believe was false, to help support the picture that he helped the Americans join together. I think he lied in a number of specific testimony about a unified image of what this organization was. It made al-Qaeda the new Mafia or the new Communists. It made them identifiable as a group and therefore made it easier to prosecute any person associated with al-Qaeda for any acts or statements made by bin Laden.[131]

Field operatives

 
Pakistani journalist Hamid Mir interviewing Osama bin Laden in Afghanistan, 1997

The number of individuals in the group who have undergone proper military training, and are capable of commanding insurgent forces, is largely unknown. Documents captured in the raid on bin Laden's compound in 2011 show that the core Al-Qaeda membership in 2002 was 170.[135] In 2006, it was estimated that Al-Qaeda had several thousand commanders embedded in 40 countries.[136] As of 2009, it was believed that no more than 200–300 members were still active commanders.[137]

According to the 2004 BBC documentary The Power of Nightmares, Al-Qaeda was so weakly linked together that it was hard to say it existed apart from bin Laden and a small clique of close associates. The lack of any significant numbers of convicted Al-Qaeda members, despite a large number of arrests on terrorism charges, was cited by the documentary as a reason to doubt whether a widespread entity that met the description of Al-Qaeda existed.[138] Al-Qaeda's commanders, as well as its sleeping agents, are hiding in different parts of the world to this day. They are mainly hunted by the American and Israeli secret services.

Insurgent forces

According to author Robert Cassidy, Al-Qaeda maintains two separate forces which are deployed alongside insurgents in Iraq and Pakistan. The first, numbering in the tens of thousands, was "organized, trained, and equipped as insurgent combat forces" in the Soviet–Afghan war.[136] The force was composed primarily of foreign mujahideen from Saudi Arabia and Yemen. Many of these fighters went on to fight in Bosnia and Somalia for global jihad. Another group, which numbered 10,000 in 2006, live in the West and have received rudimentary combat training.[136]

Other analysts have described Al-Qaeda's rank and file as being "predominantly Arab" in its first years of operation, but that the organization also includes "other peoples" as of 2007.[139] It has been estimated that 62 percent of Al-Qaeda members have a university education.[140] In 2011 and the following year, the Americans successfully settled accounts with Osama bin Laden, Anwar al-Awlaki, the organization's chief propagandist, and Abu Yahya al-Libi's deputy commander. The optimistic voices were already saying it was over for Al-Qaeda. Nevertheless, it was around this time that the Arab Spring greeted the region, the turmoil of which came great to Al-Qaeda's regional forces. Seven years later, Ayman al-Zawahiri became arguably the number one leader in the organization, implementing his strategy with systematic consistency. Tens of thousands loyal to Al-Qaeda and related organizations were able to challenge local and regional stability and ruthlessly attack their enemies in the Middle East, Africa, South Asia, Southeast Asia, Europe and Russia alike. In fact, from Northwest Africa to South Asia, Al-Qaeda had more than two dozen "franchise-based" allies. The number of Al-Qaeda militants was set at 20,000 in Syria alone, and they had 4,000 members in Yemen and about 7,000 in Somalia. The war was not over.[141]

In 2001, Al-Qaeda had around 20 functioning cells and 70,000 insurgents spread over sixty nations.[142] According to latest estimates, the number of active-duty soldiers under its command and allied militias have risen to approximately 250,000 by 2018.[143]

Financing

Al-Qaeda usually does not disburse funds for attacks, and very rarely makes wire transfers.[144] In the 1990s, financing came partly from the personal wealth of Osama bin Laden.[145] Other sources of income included the heroin trade and donations from supporters in Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and other Islamic Gulf states.[145] A 2009 leaked diplomatic cable stated that "terrorist funding emanating from Saudi Arabia remains a serious concern."[146]

Among the first pieces of evidence regarding Saudi Arabia's support for Al-Qaeda was the so-called "Golden Chain", a list of early Al-Qaeda funders seized during a 2002 raid in Sarajevo by Bosnian police.[147] The hand-written list was validated by Al-Qaeda defector Jamal al-Fadl, and included the names of both donors and beneficiaries.[147][148] Osama bin-Laden's name appeared seven times among the beneficiaries, while 20 Saudi and Gulf-based businessmen and politicians were listed among the donors.[147] Notable donors included Adel Batterjee, and Wael Hamza Julaidan. Batterjee was designated as a terror financier by the US Department of the Treasury in 2004, and Julaidan is recognized as one of Al-Qaeda's founders.[147]

Documents seized during the 2002 Bosnia raid showed that Al-Qaeda widely exploited charities to channel financial and material support to its operatives across the globe.[149] Notably, this activity exploited the International Islamic Relief Organization (IIRO) and the Muslim World League (MWL). The IIRO had ties with Al-Qaeda associates worldwide, including Al-Qaeda's deputy Ayman al Zawahiri. Zawahiri's brother worked for the IIRO in Albania and had actively recruited on behalf of Al-Qaeda.[150] The MWL was openly identified by Al-Qaeda's leader as one of the three charities Al-Qaeda primarily relied upon for funding sources.[150]

Allegations of Qatari support

Several Qatari citizens have been accused of funding Al-Qaeda. This includes Abd Al-Rahman al-Nuaimi, a Qatari citizen and a human-rights activist who founded the Swiss-based non-governmental organization (NGO) Alkarama. On December 18, 2013, the US Treasury designated Nuaimi as a terrorist for his activities supporting Al-Qaeda.[151] The US Treasury has said Nuaimi "has facilitated significant financial support to Al-Qaeda in Iraq, and served as an interlocutor between Al-Qaeda in Iraq and Qatar-based donors".[151]

Nuaimi was accused of overseeing a $2 million monthly transfer to Al-Qaeda in Iraq as part of his role as mediator between Iraq-based Al-Qaeda senior officers and Qatari citizens.[151][152] Nuaimi allegedly entertained relationships with Abu-Khalid al-Suri, Al-Qaeda's top envoy in Syria, who processed a $600,000 transfer to Al-Qaeda in 2013.[151][152] Nuaimi is also known to be associated with Abd al-Wahhab Muhammad 'Abd al-Rahman al-Humayqani, a Yemeni politician and founding member of Alkarama, who was listed as a Specially Designated Global Terrorist (SDGT) by the US Treasury in 2013.[153] The US authorities claimed that Humayqani exploited his role in Alkarama to fundraise on behalf of Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP).[151][153] A prominent figure in AQAP, Nuaimi was also reported to have facilitated the flow of funding to AQAP affiliates based in Yemen. Nuaimi was also accused of investing funds in the charity directed by Humayqani to ultimately fund AQAP.[151] About ten months after being sanctioned by the US Treasury, Nuaimi was also restrained from doing business in the UK.[154]

Another Qatari citizen, Kalifa Mohammed Turki Subayi, was sanctioned by the US Treasury on June 5, 2008, for his activities as a "Gulf-based Al-Qaeda financier". Subayi's name was added to the UN Security Council's Sanctions List in 2008 on charges of providing financial and material support to Al-Qaeda senior leadership.[152][155] Subayi allegedly moved Al-Qaeda recruits to South Asia-based training camps.[152][155] He also financially supported Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, a Pakistani national and senior Al-Qaeda officer who is believed to be the mastermind behind the September 11 attack according to the 9/11 Commission Report.[156]

Qataris provided support to al-Qaeda through the country's largest NGO, the Qatar Charity. Al-Qaeda defector al-Fadl, who was a former member of Qatar Charity, testified in court that Abdullah Mohammed Yusef, who served as Qatar Charity's director, was affiliated to Al-Qaeda and simultaneously to the National Islamic Front, a political group that gave al-Qaeda leader Osama Bin Laden harbor in Sudan in the early 1990s.[148]

It was alleged that in 1993 Osama bin Laden was using Middle East based Sunni charities to channel financial support to Al-Qaeda operatives overseas. The same documents also report Bin Laden's complaint that the failed assassination attempt of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak had compromised the ability of Al-Qaeda to exploit charities to support its operatives to the extent it was capable of before 1995.[157]

Qatar financed Al-Qaeda's enterprises through Al-Qaeda's former affiliate in Syria, Jabhat al-Nusra. The funding was primarily channeled through kidnapping for ransom.[158] The Consortium Against Terrorist Finance (CATF) reported that the Gulf country has funded al-Nusra since 2013.[158] In 2017, Asharq Al-Awsat estimated that Qatar had disbursed $25 million in support of al-Nusra through kidnapping for ransom.[159] In addition, Qatar has launched fundraising campaigns on behalf of al-Nusra. Al-Nusra acknowledged a Qatar-sponsored campaign "as one of the preferred conduits for donations intended for the group".[160][161]

Strategy

In the disagreement over whether Al-Qaeda's objectives are religious or political, Mark Sedgwick describes Al-Qaeda's strategy as political in the immediate term but with ultimate aims that are religious.[162] On March 11, 2005, Al-Quds Al-Arabi published extracts from Saif al-Adel's document "Al Qaeda's Strategy to the Year 2020".[9][163] Abdel Bari Atwan summarizes this strategy as comprising five stages to rid the Ummah from all forms of oppression:

  1. Provoke the United States and the West into invading a Muslim country by staging a massive attack or string of attacks on US soil that results in massive civilian casualties.
  2. Incite local resistance to occupying forces.
  3. Expand the conflict to neighboring countries and engage the US and its allies in a long war of attrition.
  4. Convert Al-Qaeda into an ideology and set of operating principles that can be loosely franchised in other countries without requiring direct command and control, and via these franchises incite attacks against the US and countries allied with the US until they withdraw from the conflict, as happened with the 2004 Madrid train bombings, but which did not have the same effect with the July 7, 2005 London bombings.
  5. The US economy will finally collapse by 2020, under the strain of multiple engagements in numerous places. This will lead to a collapse in the worldwide economic system, and lead to global political instability. This will lead to a global jihad led by Al-Qaeda, and a Wahhabi Caliphate will then be installed across the world.

Atwan noted that, while the plan is unrealistic, "it is sobering to consider that this virtually describes the downfall of the Soviet Union."[9]

According to Fouad Hussein, a Jordanian journalist and author who has spent time in prison with Al-Zarqawi, Al-Qaeda's strategy consists of seven phases and is similar to the plan described in Al Qaeda's Strategy to the year 2020. These phases include:[164]

  1. "The Awakening." This phase was supposed to last from 2001 to 2003. The goal of the phase is to provoke the United States to attack a Muslim country by executing an attack that kills many civilians on US soil.
  2. "Opening Eyes." This phase was supposed to last from 2003 to 2006. The goal of this phase was to recruit young men to the cause and to transform the Al-Qaeda group into a movement. Iraq was supposed to become the center of all operations with financial and military support for bases in other states.
  3. "Arising and Standing up", was supposed to last from 2007 to 2010. In this phase, Al-Qaeda wanted to execute additional attacks and focus their attention on Syria. Hussein believed other countries in the Arabian Peninsula were also in danger.
  4. Al-Qaeda expected a steady growth among their ranks and territories due to the declining power of the regimes in the Arabian Peninsula. The main focus of attack in this phase was supposed to be on oil suppliers and cyberterrorism, targeting the US economy and military infrastructure.
  5. The declaration of an Islamic Caliphate, which was projected between 2013 and 2016. In this phase, Al-Qaeda expected the resistance from Israel to be heavily reduced.
  6. The declaration of an "Islamic Army" and a "fight between believers and non-believers", also called "total confrontation".
  7. "Definitive Victory", projected to be completed by 2020.

According to the seven-phase strategy, the war is projected to last less than two years.

According to Charles Lister of the Middle East Institute and Katherine Zimmerman of the American Enterprise Institute, the new model of Al-Qaeda is to "socialize communities" and build a broad territorial base of operations with the support of local communities, also gaining income independent of the funding of sheiks.[165]

Name

The English name of the organization is a simplified transliteration of the Arabic noun al-qāʿidah (‏القاعدة‎), which means "the foundation" or "the base". The initial al- is the Arabic definite article "the", hence "the base".[166] In Arabic, Al-Qaeda has four syllables (/alˈqaː.ʕi.da/). However, since two of the Arabic consonants in the name are not phones found in the English language, the common naturalized English pronunciations include /ælˈkdə/, /ælˈkdə/ and /ˌælkɑːˈdə/. Al-Qaeda's name can also be transliterated as al-Qaida, al-Qa'ida, or el-Qaida.[167]

The doctrinal concept of "Al-Qaeda" was first coined by the Palestinian Islamist scholar and Jihadist leader Abdullah Azzam in an April 1988 issue of Al-Jihad magazine to describe a religiously committed vanguard of Muslims who wage armed Jihad globally to liberate oppressed Muslims from foreign invaders, establish sharia (Islamic law) across the Islamic World by overthrowing the ruling secular governments; and thus restore the past Islamic prowess. This was to be implemented by establishing an Islamic state that would nurture generations of Muslim soldiers that would perpetually attack United States and its allied governments in the Muslim World. Numerous historical models were cited by Azzam as successful examples of his call; starting from the early Muslim conquests of the 7th century to the recent anti-Soviet Afghan Jihad of 1980s.[168][169][170] According to Azzam's world-view:

It is about time to think about a state that would be a solid base for the distribution of the (Islamic) creed, and a fortress to host the preachers from the hell of the Jahiliyyah [the pre-Islamic period].[170]

Bin Laden explained the origin of the term in a videotaped interview with Al Jazeera journalist Tayseer Alouni in October 2001:

The name 'al-Qaeda' was established a long time ago by mere chance. The late Abu Ebeida El-Banashiri established the training camps for our mujahedeen against Russia's terrorism. We used to call the training camp al-Qaeda. The name stayed.[171]

It has been argued that two documents seized from the Sarajevo office of the Benevolence International Foundation prove the name was not simply adopted by the mujahideen movement and that a group called Al-Qaeda was established in August 1988. Both of these documents contain minutes of meetings held to establish a new military group, and contain the term "Al-Qaeda".[172]

Former British Foreign Secretary Robin Cook wrote that the word Al-Qaeda should be translated as "the database", because it originally referred to the computer file of the thousands of mujahideen militants who were recruited and trained with CIA help to defeat the Russians.[173] In April 2002, the group assumed the name Qa'idat al-Jihad (قاعدة الجهاد qāʿidat al-jihād), which means "the base of Jihad". According to Diaa Rashwan, this was "apparently as a result of the merger of the overseas branch of Egypt's al-Jihad, which was led by Ayman al-Zawahiri, with the groups Bin Laden brought under his control after his return to Afghanistan in the mid-1990s."[174]

Ideology

 
Sayyid Qutb, the Egyptian Islamic scholar and Jihadist theorist who inspired Al-Qaeda

The militant Islamist Salafist movement of Al-Qaeda developed during the Islamic revival and the rise of the Islamist movement after the Iranian Revolution (1978–1979) and the Afghan Jihad (1979–1989). Many scholars have argued that the writings of Islamic author and thinker Sayyid Qutb inspired the Al-Qaeda organization.[175] In the 1950s and 1960s, Qutb preached that because of the lack of sharia law, the Muslim world was no longer Muslim, and had reverted to the pre-Islamic ignorance known as jahiliyyah. To restore Islam, Qutb argued that a vanguard of righteous Muslims was needed in order to establish "true Islamic states", implement sharia, and rid the Muslim world of any non-Muslim influences. In Qutb's view, the enemies of Islam included "world Jewry", which "plotted conspiracies" and opposed Islam.[176] Qutb envisioned this vanguard to march forward to wage armed Jihad against tyrannical regimes after purifying from the wider Jahili societies and organising themselves under a righteous Islamic leadership; which he viewed as the model of early Muslims in the Islamic state of Medina under the leadership of Islamic Prophet Muhammad. This idea would directly influence many Islamist figures such as Abdullah Azzam and Usama Bin Laden; and became the core rationale for the formulation of "Al-Qaeda" concept in the near future.[177] Outlining his strategy to topple the existing secular orders, Qutb argued in Milestones:

[It is necessary that] a Muslim community to come into existence which believes that ‘there is no deity except God,’ which commits itself to obey none but God, denying all other authority, and which challenges the legality of any law which is not based on this belief.. . It should come into the battlefield with the determination that its strategy, its social organization, and the relationship between its individuals should be firmer and more powerful than the existing jahili system.[177][178]

In the words of Mohammed Jamal Khalifa, a close college friend of bin Laden:

Islam is different from any other religion; it's a way of life. We [Khalifa and bin Laden] were trying to understand what Islam has to say about how we eat, who we marry, how we talk. We read Sayyid Qutb. He was the one who most affected our generation.[179]

Qutb also influenced Ayman al-Zawahiri.[180] Zawahiri's uncle and maternal family patriarch, Mafouz Azzam, was Qutb's student, protégé, personal lawyer, and an executor of his estate. Azzam was one of the last people to see Qutb alive before his execution.[181] Zawahiri paid homage to Qutb in his work Knights under the Prophet's Banner.[182]

Qutb argued that many Muslims were not true Muslims. Some Muslims, Qutb argued, were apostates. These alleged apostates included leaders of Muslim countries, since they failed to enforce sharia law.[183] He also alleged that the West approaches the Muslim World with a "crusading spirit"; in spite of the decline of religious values in the 20th century Europe. According to Qutb; the hostile and imperialist attitudes exhibited by Europeans and Americans towards Muslim countries, their support for Zionism, etc. reflected hatred amplified over a millennia of wars such as the Crusades and was born out of Roman materialist and utilitarian outlooks that viewed the world in monetary terms.[184]

Formation

The Afghan jihad against the pro-Soviet government further developed the Salafist Jihadist movement which inspired Al-Qaeda.[185] During this period, Al-Qaeda embraced the ideals of the Indian Muslim militant revivalist Syed Ahmad Barelvi (d. 1831) who led a Jihad movement against British India from the frontiers of Afghanistan and Khyber-Pakhtunkwa in the early 19th century. Al-Qaeda readily adopted Sayyid Ahmad's doctrines such as returning to the purity of early generations (Salaf as-Salih), antipathy towards Western influences and restoration of Islamic political power.[186][187] According to Pakistani journalist Hussain Haqqani,

Sayyid Ahmed's revival of the ideology of jihad became the prototype for subsequent Islamic militant movements in South and Central Asia and is also the main influence over the jihad network of Al Qaeda and its associated groups in the region.[186][187]

Objectives

The long-term objective of Al-Qaeda is to unite the Muslim World under a supra-national Islamic state known as the Khilafah (Caliphate), headed by an elected Caliph descended from the Ahl al-Bayt (Prophetic family). The immediate objectives include the expulsion of American troops from the Arabian Peninsula, waging armed Jihad to topple US-allied governments in the region, etc.[188][189]

The following are the goals and some of the general policies outlined in Al-Qaeda's Founding Charter "Al-Qaeda's Structure and Bylaws" issued in the meetings in Peshawar in 1988.:[190][188]

"General Goals

i. To promote jihad awareness in the Islamic world
ii. To prepare and equip the cadres for the Islamic world through trainings and by participating in actual combat
iii. To support and sponsor the jihad movement as much as possible
iv. To coordinate Jihad movements around the world in an effort to create a unified international Jihad movement.

General Policies
1. Complete commitment to the governing rules and controls of Shari‘a in all the beliefs and actions and according to the book [Qur’an] and Sunna as well as per the interpretation of the nation’s scholars who serve in this domain
2. Commitment to Jihad as a fight for God’s cause and as an agenda of change and to prepare for it and apply it whenever we find it possible...
4. Our position with respect to the tyrants of the world, secular and national parties and the like is not to associate with them, to discredit them and to be their constant enemy till they believe in God alone. We shall not agree with them on half-solutions and there is no way to negotiate with them or appease them
5. Our relationships with truthful Islamic jihadist movements and groups is to cooperate under the umbrella of faith and belief and we shall always attempt to at uniting and integrating with them...
6. We shall carry a relationship of love and affection with the Islamic movements who are not aligned with Jihad...
7. We shall sustain a relationship of respect and love with active scholars...
9. We shall reject the regional fanatics and will pursue Jihad in an Islamic country as needed and when possible
10. We shall care about the role of Muslim people in the Jihad and we shall attempt to recruit them...
11. We shall maintain our economic independence and will not rely on others to secure our resources.
12. Secrecy is the main ingredient of our work except for what the need deems necessary to reveal

13. our policy with the Afghani Jihad is support, advise and coordination with the Islamic Establishments in Jihad arenas in a manner that conforms with our policies"

— Al-Qa`ida’s Structure and Bylaws, p.2, [191][188]

Theory of Islamic State

Al-Qaeda aims to establish an Islamic state in the Arab World, modelled after the Rashidun Caliphate, by initiating a global Jihad against the "International Jewish-Crusader Alliance" led by the United States, which it sees as the "external enemy" and against the secular governments in Muslim countries, that are described as "the apostate domestic enemy".[192] Once foreign influences and the secular ruling authorities are removed from Muslim countries through Jihad; al-Qaeda supports elections to choose the rulers of its proposed Islamic states. This is to be done through representatives of leadership councils (Shura) that would ensure the implementation of Shari'a (Islamic law). However, it opposes elections that institute parliaments which empower Muslim and non-Muslim legislators to collaborate in making laws of their own choosing.[193] In the second edition of his book Knights Under the Banner of the Prophet, Ayman Al Zawahiri writes:

We demand... the government of the rightly guiding caliphate, which is established on the basis of the sovereignty of sharia and not on the whims of the majority. Its ummah chooses its rulers....If they deviate, the ummah brings them to account and removes them. The ummah participates in producing that government's decisions and determining its direction. ... [The caliphal state] commands the right and forbids the wrong and engages in jihad to liberate Muslim lands and to free all humanity from all oppression and ignorance.[194]

Grievances

A recurring theme in al-Qaeda's ideology is the perpetual grievance over the violent subjugation of Islamic dissidents by the authoritarian, secularist regimes allied to the West. Al-Qaeda denounces these post-colonial governments as a system led by Westernised elites designed to advance neo-colonialism and maintain Western hegemony over the Muslim World. The most prominent topic of grievance is over the American foreign policy in the Arab World; especially over its strong economic and military support to Israel. Other concerns of resentment include presence of NATO troops to support allied regimes; injustices committed against Muslims in Kashmir, Chechnya, Xinjiang, Syria, Afghanistan, Iraq etc.[195]

Religious compatibility

Abdel Bari Atwan wrote that:

While the leadership's own theological platform is essentially Salafi, the organization's umbrella is sufficiently wide to encompass various schools of thought and political leanings. Al-Qaeda counts among its members and supporters people associated with Wahhabism, Shafi'ism, Malikism, and Hanafism. There are even some Al-Qaeda members whose beliefs and practices are directly at odds with Salafism, such as Yunis Khalis, one of the leaders of the Afghan mujahedin. He was a mystic who visited the tombs of saints and sought their blessings – practices inimical to bin Laden's Wahhabi-Salafi school of thought. The only exception to this pan-Islamic policy is Shi'ism. Al-Qaeda seems implacably opposed to it, as it holds Shi'ism to be heresy. In Iraq it has openly declared war on the Badr Brigades, who have fully cooperated with the US, and now considers even Shi'i civilians to be legitimate targets for acts of violence.[196]

On the other hand, Professor Peter Mandaville states that Al-Qaeda follows a pragmatic policy in forming its local affiliates, with various cells being sub-contracted to Shia Muslim and non-Muslim members. The top-down chain of command means that each unit is answerable directly to central leadership, while they remain ignorant of their counterparts' presence or activities. These transnational networks of autonomous supply chains, financiers, underground militias and political supporters were set up during the 1990s, when Bin Laden's immediate aim was the expulsion of American troops from the Arabian Peninsula.[197]

Attacks on civilians

Under the leadership of Osama Bin Laden and Ayman al-Zawahiri, Al-Qaeda organization adopted the strategy of targeting non-combatant civilians of enemy states that indiscriminately attacked Muslims. Following the September 11 attacks, al-Qaeda provided a justification for the killing of non-combatants/civilians, entitled, "A Statement from Qaidat al-Jihad Regarding the Mandates of the Heroes and the Legality of the Operations in New York and Washington". According to a couple of critics, Quintan Wiktorowicz and John Kaltner, it provides "ample theological justification for killing civilians in almost any imaginable situation."[198]

Among these justifications are that America is leading the west in waging a War on Islam so that attacks on America are a defense of Islam and any treaties and agreements between Muslim majority states and Western countries that would be violated by attacks are null and void. According to the tract, several conditions allow for the killing of civilians including:

  • retaliation for the American war on Islam which al-Qaeda alleges has targeted "Muslim women, children and elderly";
  • when it is too difficult to distinguish between non-combatants and combatants when attacking an enemy "stronghold" (hist) and/or non-combatants remain in enemy territory, killing them is allowed;
  • those who assist the enemy "in deed, word, mind" are eligible for killing, and this includes the general population in democratic countries because civilians can vote in elections that bring enemies of Islam to power;
  • the necessity of killing in the war to protect Islam and Muslims;
  • the prophet Muhammad, when asked whether the Muslim fighters could use the catapult against the village of Taif, replied affirmatively, even though the enemy fighters were mixed with a civilian population;
  • if the women, children and other protected groups serve as human shields for the enemy;
  • if the enemy has broken a treaty, killing of civilians is permitted.[198]

Under the leadership of Sayf al-Adel, Al-Qaeda's strategy has underwent transformation and the organization has officially renounced the tactic of attacking civilian targets of enemies. In his book Free Reading of 33 Strategies of War published in 2023, Sayf al-Adel counselled Islamist fighters to prioritize attacking the police forces, military soldiers, state assets of enemy governments, etc. which he described as acceptable targets in military operations. Asserting that attacking women and children of enemies are contrary to Islamic values, Sayf al-Adel asked: "If we target the general public, how can we expect their people to accept our call to Islam?"[199]

History

Attacks

 
Nairobi, Kenya: August 7, 1998
Dar es Salaam, Tanzania: August 7, 1998
Aden, Yemen: October 12, 2000
World Trade Center, US: September 11, 2001
The Pentagon, US: September 11, 2001
Istanbul, Turkey: November 15 and 20, 2003

Al-Qaeda has carried out a total of six major attacks, four of them in its jihad against America. In each case the leadership planned the attack years in advance, arranging for the shipment of weapons and explosives and using its businesses to provide operatives with safehouses and false identities.[200]

1991

To prevent the former Afghan king Mohammed Zahir Shah from coming back from exile and possibly becoming head of a new government, bin Laden instructed a Portuguese convert to Islam, Paulo Jose de Almeida Santos, to assassinate Zahir Shah. On November 4, 1991, Santos entered the king's villa in Rome posing as a journalist and tried to stab him with a dagger. A tin of cigarillos in the king's breast pocket deflected the blade and saved Zahir Shah's life. Santos was apprehended and jailed for 10 years in Italy.[201]

1992

On December 29, 1992, Al-Qaeda launched the 1992 Yemen hotel bombings. Two bombs were detonated in Aden, Yemen. The first target was the Movenpick Hotel and the second was the parking lot of the Goldmohur Hotel.[202]

The bombings were an attempt to eliminate American soldiers on their way to Somalia to take part in the international famine relief effort, Operation Restore Hope. Internally, Al-Qaeda considered the bombing a victory that frightened the Americans away, but in the US, the attack was barely noticed. No American soldiers were killed because no soldiers were staying in the hotel at the time it was bombed, however, an Australian tourist and a Yemeni hotel worker were killed in the bombing. Seven others, who were mostly Yemeni, were severely injured.[202] Two fatwas are said to have been appointed by Al-Qaeda's members, Mamdouh Mahmud Salim, to justify the killings according to Islamic law. Salim referred to a famous fatwa appointed by Ibn Taymiyyah, a 13th-century scholar admired by Wahhabis, which sanctioned resistance by any means during the Mongol invasions.[203][unreliable source?]

Late 1990s

 
1998 Nairobi embassy bombing

In 1996, bin Laden personally engineered a plot to assassinate United States President Bill Clinton while the president was in Manila for the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation. However, intelligence agents intercepted a message before the motorcade was to leave, and alerted the US Secret Service. Agents later discovered a bomb planted under a bridge.[204]

On August 7, 1998, Al-Qaeda bombed the US embassies in East Africa, killing 224 people, including 12 Americans. In retaliation, a barrage of cruise missiles launched by the US military devastated an Al-Qaeda base in Khost, Afghanistan. The network's capacity was unharmed. In late 1999 and 2000, Al-Qaeda planned attacks to coincide with the millennium, masterminded by Abu Zubaydah and involving Abu Qatada, which would include the bombing of Christian holy sites in Jordan, the bombing of Los Angeles International Airport by Ahmed Ressam, and the bombing of the USS The Sullivans (DDG-68).

On October 12, 2000, Al-Qaeda militants in Yemen bombed the missile destroyer USS Cole in a suicide attack, killing 17 US servicemen and damaging the vessel while it lay offshore. Inspired by the success of such a brazen attack, Al-Qaeda's command core began to prepare for an attack on the US itself.

September 11 attacks

 
Aftermath of the September 11 attacks

The September 11 attacks on America by Al-Qaeda killed 2,996 people – 2,507 civilians, 343 firefighters, 72 law enforcement officers, 55 military personnel as well as 19 hijackers who committed murder-suicide. Two commercial airliners were deliberately flown into the twin towers of the World Trade Center, a third into the Pentagon, and a fourth, originally intended to target either the United States Capitol or the White House, crashed in a field in Stonycreek Township near Shanksville, Pennsylvania after passengers revolted. It was the deadliest foreign attack on American soil since the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, and to this day remains the deadliest terrorist attack in human history.

The attacks were conducted by Al-Qaeda, acting in accord with the 1998 fatwa issued against the US and its allies by persons under the command of bin Laden, al-Zawahiri, and others.[31] Evidence points to suicide squads led by Al-Qaeda military commander Mohamed Atta as the culprits of the attacks, with bin Laden, Ayman al-Zawahiri, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, and Hambali as the key planners and part of the political and military command.

Messages issued by bin Laden after September 11, 2001, praised the attacks, and explained their motivation while denying any involvement.[205] Bin Laden strongly supported the attacks by identifying numerous grievances of Muslims, such as the general perception that the US was actively oppressing Muslims.[206] In his "Letter to the American people" published in 2002, Osama Bin Laden stated:

Why are we fighting and opposing you? The answer is very simple:

(1) Because you attacked us and continue to attack us. ....

The American government and press still refuses to answer the question: Why did they attack us in New York and Washington?

If Sharon is a man of peace in the eyes of Bush, then we are also men of peace!!! America does not understand the language of manners and principles, so we are addressing it using the language it understands.[207][208]

Bin Laden asserted that America was massacring Muslims in "Palestine, Chechnya, Kashmir and Iraq" and Muslims should retain the "right to attack in reprisal". He also claimed the 9/11 attacks were not targeted at people, but "America's icons of military and economic power", despite the fact he planned to attack in the morning when most of the people in the intended targets were present and thus generating the maximum number of human casualties.[209]

Evidence later came to light that the original targets for the attack may have been nuclear power stations on the US East Coast. The targets were later altered by Al-Qaeda, as it was feared that such an attack "might get out of hand".[210][211]

Designation as a terrorist group

Al-Qaeda is deemed a designated terrorist group by the following countries and international organizations:

War on terror

 
US troops in Afghanistan

In the immediate aftermath of the 9/11 attacks, the US government responded, and began to prepare its armed forces to overthrow the Taliban, which it believed was harboring Al-Qaeda. The US offered Taliban leader Mullah Omar a chance to surrender bin Laden and his top associates. The first forces to be inserted into Afghanistan were paramilitary officers from the CIA's elite Special Activities Division (SAD).

The Taliban offered to turn over bin Laden to a neutral country for trial if the US would provide evidence of bin Laden's complicity in the attacks. US President George W. Bush responded by saying: "We know he's guilty. Turn him over",[251] and British Prime Minister Tony Blair warned the Taliban regime: "Surrender bin Laden, or surrender power."[252]

Soon thereafter the US and its allies invaded Afghanistan, and together with the Afghan Northern Alliance removed the Taliban government as part of the war in Afghanistan. As a result of the US special forces and air support for the Northern Alliance ground forces, a number of Taliban and Al-Qaeda training camps were destroyed, and much of the operating structure of Al-Qaeda is believed to have been disrupted. After being driven from their key positions in the Tora Bora area of Afghanistan, many Al-Qaeda fighters tried to regroup in the rugged Gardez region of the nation.

 
Khalid Sheikh Mohammed after his arrest in Rawalpindi, Pakistan, in March 2003

By early 2002, Al-Qaeda had been dealt a serious blow to its operational capacity, and the Afghan invasion appeared to be a success. Nevertheless, a significant Taliban insurgency remained in Afghanistan.

Debate continued regarding the nature of Al-Qaeda's role in the 9/11 attacks. The US State Department released a videotape showing bin Laden speaking with a small group of associates somewhere in Afghanistan shortly before the Taliban was removed from power.[253] Although its authenticity has been questioned by a couple of people,[254] the tape definitively implicates bin Laden and Al-Qaeda in the September 11 attacks. The tape was aired on many television channels, with an accompanying English translation provided by the US Defense Department.[255]

In September 2004, the 9/11 Commission officially concluded that the attacks were conceived and implemented by al-Qaeda operatives.[256] In October 2004, bin Laden appeared to claim responsibility for the attacks in a videotape released through Al Jazeera, saying he was inspired by Israeli attacks on high-rises in the 1982 invasion of Lebanon: "As I looked at those demolished towers in Lebanon, it entered my mind that we should punish the oppressor in kind and that we should destroy towers in America in order that they taste some of what we tasted and so that they be deterred from killing our women and children."[257]

By the end of 2004, the US government proclaimed that two-thirds of the most senior Al-Qaeda figures from 2001 had been captured and interrogated by the CIA: Abu Zubaydah, Ramzi bin al-Shibh and Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri in 2002;[258] Khalid Sheikh Mohammed in 2003;[259] and Saif al Islam el Masry in 2004.[260] Mohammed Atef and several others were killed. The West was criticized for not being able to handle Al-Qaeda despite a decade of the war.[261]

Activities

 
Main countries of activity of Al-Qaeda

Africa

 
Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (formerly GSPC) area of operations

Al-Qaeda involvement in Africa has included a number of bombing attacks in North Africa, while supporting parties in civil wars in Eritrea and Somalia. From 1991 to 1996, bin Laden and other Al-Qaeda leaders were based in Sudan.

Islamist rebels in the Sahara calling themselves Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb have stepped up their violence in recent years.[262][263][264] French officials say the rebels have no real links to the Al-Qaeda leadership, but this has been disputed. It seems likely that bin Laden approved the group's name in late 2006, and the rebels "took on the al Qaeda franchise label", almost a year before the violence began to escalate.[265]

In Mali, the Ansar Dine faction was also reported as an ally of Al-Qaeda in 2013.[266] The Ansar al Dine faction aligned themselves with the AQIM.[267]

In 2011, Al-Qaeda's North African wing condemned Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi and declared support for the Anti-Gaddafi rebels.[268][269]

Following the Libyan Civil War, the removal of Gaddafi and the ensuing period of post-civil war violence in Libya, various Islamist militant groups affiliated with Al-Qaeda were able to expand their operations in the region.[270] The 2012 Benghazi attack, which resulted in the death of US Ambassador J. Christopher Stevens and three other Americans, is suspected of having been carried out by various Jihadist networks, such as Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, Ansar al-Sharia and several other Al-Qaeda affiliated groups.[271][272] The capture of Nazih Abdul-Hamed al-Ruqai, a senior Al-Qaeda operative wanted by the United States for his involvement in the 1998 United States embassy bombings, on October 5, 2013, by US Navy Seals, FBI and CIA agents illustrates the importance the US and other Western allies have placed on North Africa.[273]

Europe

Prior to the September 11 attacks, Al-Qaeda was present in Bosnia and Herzegovina, and its members were mostly veterans of the El Mudžahid detachment of the Bosnian Muslim Army of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Three Al-Qaeda operatives carried out the Mostar car bombing in 1997. The operatives were closely linked to and financed by the Saudi High Commission for Relief of Bosnia and Herzegovina founded by then-prince King Salman of Saudi Arabia.[citation needed]

Before the 9/11 attacks and the US invasion of Afghanistan, westerners who had been recruits at Al-Qaeda training camps were sought after by Al-Qaeda's military wing. Language skills and knowledge of Western culture were generally found among recruits from Europe, such was the case with Mohamed Atta, an Egyptian national studying in Germany at the time of his training, and other members of the Hamburg Cell. Osama bin Laden and Mohammed Atef would later designate Atta as the ringleader of the 9/11 hijackers. Following the attacks, Western intelligence agencies determined that Al-Qaeda cells operating in Europe had aided the hijackers with financing and communications with the central leadership based in Afghanistan.[156][274]

In 2003, Islamists carried out a series of bombings in Istanbul killing fifty-seven people and injuring seven hundred. Seventy-four people were charged by the Turkish authorities. Some had previously met bin Laden, and though they specifically declined to pledge allegiance to Al-Qaeda they asked for its blessing and help.[275][276]

In 2009, three Londoners, Tanvir Hussain, Assad Sarwar and Ahmed Abdullah Ali, were convicted of conspiring to detonate bombs disguised as soft drinks on seven airplanes bound for Canada and the US The MI5 investigation regarding the plot involved more than a year of surveillance work conducted by over two hundred officers.[277][278][279] British and US officials said the plot – unlike many similar homegrown European Islamic militant plots – was directly linked to Al-Qaeda and guided by senior Al-Qaeda members in Pakistan.[280][281]

In 2012, Russian Intelligence indicated that Al-Qaeda had given a call for "forest jihad" and has been starting massive forest fires as part of a strategy of "thousand cuts".[282]

Arab world

 
USS Cole after the October 2000 attack

Following Yemeni unification in 1990, Wahhabi networks began moving missionaries into the country. Although it is unlikely bin Laden or Saudi Al-Qaeda were directly involved, the personal connections they made would be established over the next decade and used in the USS Cole bombing.[283] Concerns grew over al-Qaeda's group in Yemen.[284]

In Iraq, al-Qaeda forces loosely associated with the leadership were embedded in the Jama'at al-Tawhid wal-Jihad group commanded by Abu Musab al-Zarqawi. Specializing in suicide operations, they have been a "key driver" of the Sunni insurgency.[285] Although they played a small part in the overall insurgency, between 30% and 42% of all suicide bombings which took place in the early years were claimed by Zarqawi's group.[286][287] Reports have indicated that oversights such as the failure to control access to the Qa'qaa munitions factory in Yusufiyah have allowed large quantities of munitions to fall into the hands of al-Qaida.[288] In November 2010, the militant group Islamic State of Iraq, which is linked to al-Qaeda in Iraq, threatened to "exterminate all Iraqi Christians".[289][290]

Al-Qaeda did not begin training Palestinians until the late 1990s.[291] Large groups such as Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad have rejected an alliance with al-Qaeda, fearing that al-Qaeda will co-opt their cells. This may have changed recently. The Israeli security and intelligence services believe al-Qaeda has managed to infiltrate operatives from the Occupied Territories into Israel, and is waiting for an opportunity to attack.[291]

As of 2015, Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Turkey are openly supporting the Army of Conquest,[292][293] an umbrella rebel group fighting in the Syrian Civil War against the Syrian government that reportedly includes an al-Qaeda linked al-Nusra Front and another Salafi coalition known as Ahrar al-Sham.[294]

Kashmir

Bin Laden and Ayman al-Zawahiri consider India to be a part of an alleged Crusader-Zionist-Hindu conspiracy against the Islamic world.[295] According to a 2005 report by the Congressional Research Service, bin Laden was involved in training militants for Jihad in Kashmir while living in Sudan in the early 1990s. By 2001, Kashmiri militant group Harkat-ul-Mujahideen had become a part of the al-Qaeda coalition.[296] According to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), al-Qaeda was thought to have established bases in Pakistan administered Kashmir (in Azad Kashmir, and to some extent in Gilgit–Baltistan) during the 1999 Kargil War and continued to operate there with tacit approval of Pakistan's Intelligence services.[297]

Many of the militants active in Kashmir were trained in the same madrasahs as Taliban and Al-Qaeda. Fazlur Rehman Khalil of Kashmiri militant group Harkat-ul-Mujahideen was a signatory of al-Qaeda's 1998 declaration of Jihad against America and its allies.[298] In a 'Letter to American People' (2002), bin Laden wrote that one of the reasons he was fighting America was because of its support to India on the Kashmir issue.[299] In November 2001, Kathmandu airport went on high alert after threats that bin Laden planned to hijack a plane and crash it into a target in New Delhi.[300] In 2002, US Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, on a trip to Delhi, suggested that Al-Qaeda was active in Kashmir though he did not have any evidence.[301][302] Rumsfeld proposed hi-tech ground sensors along the Line of Control to prevent militants from infiltrating into Indian-administered Kashmir.[302] An investigation in 2002 found evidence that al-Qaeda and its affiliates were prospering in Pakistan-administered Kashmir with tacit approval of Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence.[303] In 2002, a special team of Special Air Service and Delta Force was sent into Indian-administered Kashmir to hunt for bin Laden after receiving reports that he was being sheltered by Kashmiri militant group Harkat-ul-Mujahideen, which had been responsible for kidnapping western tourists in Kashmir in 1995.[304] Britain's highest-ranking al-Qaeda operative Rangzieb Ahmed had previously fought in Kashmir with the group Harkat-ul-Mujahideen and spent time in Indian prison after being captured in Kashmir.[305]

US officials believe al-Qaeda was helping organize attacks in Kashmir in order to provoke conflict between India and Pakistan.[306] Their strategy was to force Pakistan to move its troops to the border with India, thereby relieving pressure on al-Qaeda elements hiding in northwestern Pakistan.[307] In 2006 al-Qaeda claimed they had established a wing in Kashmir.[298][308] However Indian Army General H. S. Panag argued that the army had ruled out the presence of al-Qaeda in Indian-administered Jammu and Kashmir. Panag also said al-Qaeda had strong ties with Kashmiri militant groups Lashkar-e-Taiba and Jaish-e-Mohammed based in Pakistan.[309] It has been noted that Waziristan has become a battlefield for Kashmiri militants fighting NATO in support of al-Qaeda and Taliban.[310][311][312] Dhiren Barot, who wrote the Army of Madinah in Kashmir[313] and was an al-Qaeda operative convicted for involvement in the 2004 financial buildings plot, had received training in weapons and explosives at a militant training camp in Kashmir.[314]

Maulana Masood Azhar, the founder of Kashmiri group Jaish-e-Mohammed, is believed to have met bin Laden several times and received funding from him.[298] In 2002, Jaish-e-Mohammed organized the kidnapping and murder of Daniel Pearl in an operation run in conjunction with al-Qaeda and funded by bin Laden.[315] According to American counter-terrorism expert Bruce Riedel, al-Qaeda and Taliban were closely involved in the 1999 hijacking of Indian Airlines Flight 814 to Kandahar which led to the release of Maulana Masood Azhar and Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh from an Indian prison. This hijacking, Riedel said, was rightly described by then Indian Foreign Minister Jaswant Singh as a 'dress rehearsal' for September 11 attacks.[316] Bin Laden personally welcomed Azhar and threw a lavish party in his honor after his release.[317][318] Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh, who had been in prison for his role in the 1994 kidnappings of Western tourists in India, went on to murder Daniel Pearl and was sentenced to death in Pakistan. Al-Qaeda operative Rashid Rauf, who was one of the accused in 2006 transatlantic aircraft plot, was related to Maulana Masood Azhar by marriage.[319]

Lashkar-e-Taiba, a Kashmiri militant group which is thought to be behind 2008 Mumbai attacks, is also known to have strong ties to senior al-Qaeda leaders living in Pakistan.[320] In late 2002, top Al-Qaeda operative Abu Zubaydah was arrested while being sheltered by Lashkar-e-Taiba in a safe house in Faisalabad.[321] The FBI believes al-Qaeda and Lashkar have been 'intertwined' for a long time while the CIA has said that al-Qaeda funds Lashkar-e-Taiba.[321] Jean-Louis Bruguière told Reuters in 2009 that "Lashkar-e-Taiba is no longer a Pakistani movement with only a Kashmir political or military agenda. Lashkar-e-Taiba is a member of al-Qaeda."[322][323]

In a video released in 2008, American-born senior al-Qaeda operative Adam Yahiye Gadahn said that "victory in Kashmir has been delayed for years; it is the liberation of the jihad there from this interference which, Allah willing, will be the first step towards victory over the Hindu occupiers of that Islam land."[324]

In September 2009, a US drone strike reportedly killed Ilyas Kashmiri who was the chief of Harkat-ul-Jihad al-Islami, a Kashmiri militant group associated with al-Qaeda.[325] Kashmiri was described by Bruce Riedel as a 'prominent' Al-Qaeda member[326] while others have described him as head of military operations for al-Qaeda.[327][328] Kashmiri was also charged by the US in a plot against Jyllands-Posten, the Danish newspaper which was at the center of Jyllands-Posten Muhammad cartoons controversy.[329] US officials also believe that Kashmiri was involved in the Camp Chapman attack against the CIA.[330] In January 2010, Indian authorities notified Britain of an al-Qaeda plot to hijack an Indian airlines or Air India plane and crash it into a British city. This information was uncovered from interrogation of Amjad Khwaja, an operative of Harkat-ul-Jihad al-Islami, who had been arrested in India.[331]

In January 2010, US Defense secretary Robert Gates, while on a visit to Pakistan, said that al-Qaeda was seeking to destabilize the region and planning to provoke a nuclear war between India and Pakistan.[332]

Internet

Al-Qaeda and its successors have migrated online to escape detection in an atmosphere of increased international vigilance. The group's use of the Internet has grown more sophisticated, with online activities that include financing, recruitment, networking, mobilization, publicity, and information dissemination, gathering and sharing.[333]

Abu Ayyub al-Masri's al-Qaeda movement in Iraq regularly releases short videos glorifying the activity of jihadist suicide bombers. In addition, both before and after the death of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi (the former leader of al-Qaeda in Iraq), the umbrella organization to which Al-Qaeda in Iraq belongs, the Mujahideen Shura Council, has a regular presence on the Web.

The range of multimedia content includes guerrilla training clips, stills of victims about to be murdered, testimonials of suicide bombers, and videos that show participation in jihad through stylized portraits of mosques and musical scores. A website associated with Al-Qaeda posted a video of captured American entrepreneur Nick Berg being decapitated in Iraq. Other decapitation videos and pictures, including those of Paul Johnson, Kim Sun-il, and Daniel Pearl, were first posted on jihadist websites.[citation needed]

In December 2004 an audio message claiming to be from bin Laden was posted directly to a website, rather than sending a copy to al Jazeera as he had done in the past. Al-Qaeda turned to the Internet for release of its videos in order to be certain they would be available unedited, rather than risk the possibility of al Jazeera editing out anything critical of the Saudi royal family.[334]

Alneda.com and Jehad.net were perhaps the most significant al-Qaeda websites. Alneda was initially taken down by American Jon Messner, but the operators resisted by shifting the site to various servers and strategically shifting content.[citation needed]

The US government charged a British information technology specialist, Babar Ahmad, with terrorist offences related to his operating a network of English-language al-Qaeda websites, such as Azzam.com. He was convicted and sentenced to 12+12 years in prison.[335][336][337]

Online communications

In 2007, al-Qaeda released Mujahedeen Secrets, encryption software used for online and cellular communications. A later version, Mujahideen Secrets 2, was released in 2008.[338]

Aviation network

al-Qaeda is believed to be operating a clandestine aviation network including "several Boeing 727 aircraft", turboprops and executive jets, according to a 2010 Reuters story. Based on a US Department of Homeland Security report, the story said al-Qaeda is possibly using aircraft to transport drugs and weapons from South America to various unstable countries in West Africa. A Boeing 727 can carry up to ten tons of cargo. The drugs eventually are smuggled to Europe for distribution and sale, and the weapons are used in conflicts in Africa and possibly elsewhere. Gunmen with links to al-Qaeda have been increasingly kidnapping Europeans for ransom. The profits from the drug and weapon sales, and kidnappings can, in turn, fund more militant activities.[339]

Involvement in military conflicts

The following is a list of military conflicts in which al-Qaeda and its direct affiliates have taken part militarily.

Start of conflict End of conflict Conflict Continent Location Branches involved
1991 ongoing Somali Civil War Africa Somalia Al-Shabaab
1992 1996 Civil war in Afghanistan (1992–1996) Asia Islamic State of Afghanistan Al-Qaeda Central
1992 ongoing Al-Qaeda insurgency in Yemen Asia Yemen Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula
1996 2001 Civil war in Afghanistan (1996–2001) Asia Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan Al-Qaeda Central
2001 2021 War in Afghanistan (2001–2021) Asia Afghanistan Al-Qaeda Central
2002 ongoing Insurgency in the Maghreb (2002–present) Africa Algeria
Chad
Mali
Mauritania
Morocco
Niger
Tunisia
Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb
2003 2011 Iraq War Asia Iraq Al-Qaeda in Iraq

Islamic State of Iraq

2004 ongoing War in North-West Pakistan Asia Pakistan Al-Qaeda Central
2009 2017 Insurgency in the North Caucasus Asia Russia Caucasus Emirate
2011 ongoing Syrian Civil War Asia Syria al-Nusra Front
2015 ongoing Saudi Arabian-led intervention in Yemen Asia Yemen Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula[340][341][342]

Alleged CIA involvement

Experts debate the notion that the al-Qaeda attacks were an indirect consequence of the American CIA's Operation Cyclone program to help the Afghan mujahideen. Robin Cook, British Foreign Secretary from 1997 to 2001, has written that al-Qaeda and bin Laden were "a product of a monumental miscalculation by western security agencies", and that "Al-Qaida, literally 'the database', was originally the computer file of the thousands of mujahideen who were recruited and trained with help from the CIA to defeat the Russians."[343]

Munir Akram, Permanent Representative of Pakistan to the United Nations from 2002 to 2008, wrote in a letter published in The New York Times on January 19, 2008:

The strategy to support the Afghans against Soviet military intervention was evolved by several intelligence agencies, including the C.I.A. and Inter-Services Intelligence, or ISI. After the Soviet withdrawal, the Western powers walked away from the region, leaving behind 40,000 militants imported from several countries to wage the anti-Soviet jihad. Pakistan was left to face the blowback of extremism, drugs and guns.[344]

CNN journalist Peter Bergen, Pakistani ISI Brigadier Mohammad Yousaf, and CIA operatives involved in the Afghan program, such as Vincent Cannistraro,[345] deny that the CIA or other American officials had contact with the foreign mujahideen or bin Laden, or that they armed, trained, coached or indoctrinated them. In his 2004 book Ghost Wars, Steve Coll writes that the CIA had contemplated providing direct support to the foreign mujahideen, but that the idea never moved beyond discussions.[346]

Bergen and others[who else?] argue that there was no need to recruit foreigners unfamiliar with the local language, customs or lay of the land since there were a quarter of a million local Afghans willing to fight.[346][failed verification] Bergen further argues that foreign mujahideen had no need for American funds since they received several million dollars per year from internal sources. Lastly, he argues that Americans could not have trained the foreign mujahideen because Pakistani officials would not allow more than a handful of them to operate in Pakistan and none in Afghanistan, and the Afghan Arabs were almost invariably militant Islamists reflexively hostile to Westerners whether or not the Westerners were helping the Muslim Afghans.

According to Bergen, who conducted the first television interview with bin Laden in 1997: the idea that "the CIA funded bin Laden or trained bin Laden ... [is] a folk myth. There's no evidence of this ... Bin Laden had his own money, he was anti-American and he was operating secretly and independently ... The real story here is the CIA didn't really have a clue about who this guy was until 1996 when they set up a unit to really start tracking him."[347]

Jason Burke also wrote:

Some of the $500 million the CIA poured into Afghanistan reached [Al-Zawahiri's] group. Al-Zawahiri has become a close aide of bin Laden ... Bin Laden was only loosely connected with the [Hezb-i-Islami faction of the mujahideen led by Gulbuddin Hekmatyar], serving under another Hezb-i-Islami commander known as Engineer Machmud. However, bin Laden's Office of Services, set up to recruit overseas for the war, received some US cash.[348]

Broader influence

Anders Behring Breivik, the perpetrator of the 2011 Norway attacks, was inspired by al-Qaeda, calling it "the most successful revolutionary movement in the world." While admitting different aims, he sought to "create a European version of Al-Qaida."[349][350]

The appropriate response to offshoots is a subject of debate. A journalist reported in 2012 that a senior US military planner had asked: "Should we resort to drones and Special Operations raids every time some group raises the black banner of al Qaeda? How long can we continue to chase offshoots of offshoots around the world?"[351]

Criticism

According to CNN journalists Peter Bergen and Paul Cruickshank, a number of "religious scholars, former fighters and militants" who previously supported Islamic State of Iraq (ISI) had turned against the Al-Qaeda-supported Iraqi insurgency in 2008; due to ISI's indiscriminate attacks against civilians while targeting US-led coalition forces. American military analyst Bruce Riedel wrote in 2008 that "a wave of revulsion" arose against ISI, which enabled US-allied Sons of Iraq faction to turn various tribal leaders in the Anbar region against the Iraqi insurgency. In response, Bin Laden and Zawahiri issued public statements urging Muslims to rally behind ISI leadership and support the armed struggle against American forces.[352]

In November 2007, former Libyan Islamic Fighting Group (LIFG) member Noman Benotman responded with a public, open letter of criticism to Ayman al-Zawahiri, after persuading the imprisoned senior leaders of his former group to enter into peace negotiations with the Libyan regime. While Ayman al-Zawahiri announced the affiliation of the group with Al-Qaeda in November 2007, the Libyan government released 90 members of the group from prison several months after "they were said to have renounced violence."[353]

In 2007, on the anniversary of the September 11 attacks,[354] the Saudi sheikh Salman al-Ouda delivered a personal rebuke to bin Laden. Al-Ouda addressed Al-Qaeda's leader on television asking him:

My brother Osama, how much blood has been spilt? How many innocent people, children, elderly, and women have been killed ... in the name of al-Qaeda? Will you be happy to meet God Almighty carrying the burden of these hundreds of thousands or millions [of victims] on your back?[355]

According to Pew polls, support for Al-Qaeda had dropped in the Muslim world in the years before 2008.[356] In Saudi Arabia, only ten percent had a favorable view of Al-Qaeda, according to a December 2007 poll by Terror Free Tomorrow, a Washington-based think tank.[357]

In 2007, the imprisoned Dr. Fadl, who was an influential Afghan Arab and former associate of Ayman al-Zawahiri, withdrew his support from al-Qaeda and criticized the organization in his book Wathiqat Tarshid Al-'Aml Al-Jihadi fi Misr w'Al-'Alam (English: Rationalizing Jihad in Egypt and the World). In response, Al-Zawahiri accused Dr. Fadl of promoting "an Islam without jihad" that aligns with Western interests and wrote a nearly two hundred pages long treatise, titled "The Exoneration" which appeared on the Internet in March 2008. In his treatise, Zawahiri justified military strikes against US targets as retaliatory attacks to defend Muslim community against American aggression.[354]

In an online town hall forum conducted in December 2007, Zawahiri denied that al-Qaeda deliberately targeted innocents and accused the American coalition of killing innocent people.[358] Although once associated with al-Qaeda, in September 2009 LIFG completed a new "code" for jihad, a 417-page religious document entitled "Corrective Studies". Given its credibility and the fact that several other prominent Jihadists in the Middle East have turned against Al-Qaeda, the LIFG's reversal may be an important step toward staunching Al-Qaeda's recruitment.[359]

Other criticisms

Bilal Abdul Kareem, an American journalist based in Syria created a documentary about al-Shabab, Al-Qaeda's affiliate in Somalia. The documentary included interviews with former members of the group who stated their reasons for leaving al-Shabab. The members made accusations of segregation, lack of religious awareness and internal corruption and favoritism. In response to Kareem, the Global Islamic Media Front condemned Kareem, called him a liar, and denied the accusations from the former fighters.[360]

In mid-2014 after the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant declared that they had restored the Caliphate, an audio statement was released by the then-spokesman of the group Abu Muhammad al-Adnani claiming that "the legality of all emirates, groups, states, and organizations, becomes null by the expansion of the Caliphate's authority." The speech included a religious refutation of Al-Qaeda for being too lenient regarding Shiites and their refusal to recognize the authority Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, al-Adnani specifically noting: "It is not suitable for a state to give allegiance to an organization." He also recalled a past instance in which Osama bin Laden called on Al-Qaeda members and supporters to give allegiance to Abu Omar al-Baghdadi when the group was still solely operating in Iraq, as the Islamic State of Iraq, and condemned Ayman al-Zawahiri for not making this same claim for Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi. Zawahiri was encouraging factionalism and division between former allies of ISIL such as the al-Nusra Front.[361][362]

See also

Publications

Notes

References

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qaeda, other, uses, disambiguation, ɑː, arabic, القاعدة, romanized, qāʿidah, base, alˈqaː, islamist, militant, organization, sunni, jihadists, self, identify, vanguard, spearheading, global, islamist, revolution, unite, muslim, world, under, supra, national, i. For other uses see Al Qaeda disambiguation Al Qaeda ae l ˈ k aɪ d e ˌ ae l k ɑː ˈ iː d e Arabic القاعدة romanized al Qaʿidah lit the Base IPA alˈqaː ʕi da is a pan Islamist militant organization led by Sunni Jihadists who self identify as a vanguard spearheading a global Islamist revolution to unite the Muslim world under a supra national Islamic state known as the Caliphate 78 79 Its members are mostly composed of Arabs but also include people from other ethnic groups 80 Al Qaeda has mounted attacks on civilian economic and military targets of the US and its allies such as the 1998 US embassy bombings the USS Cole bombing and the September 11 attacks The organization is designated as a terrorist group by NATO UN Security Council the European Union and various countries around the world Al Qaedaالقاعدة Flag used by various al Qaeda factionsFounderOsama bin Laden LeadersOsama bin Laden 1988 2011 Ayman al Zawahiri 2011 2022 Saif al Adel de facto 2022 present Dates of operation11 August 1988 presentAllegianceIslamic Emirate of Afghanistan 1 Group s Al Shabaab AQAP AQIS Hurras al Din AQIM JNIMFormer groups AQI 2004 2006 ISI 2006 2013 Al Nusra Front 2012 2017 Ideology Sunni Islamism 4 5 6 7 Pan Islamism 8 9 10 Qutbism 6 11 12 4 Jihadism 13 14 15 Muslim unity 16 17 18 Sunni Shia alliance 19 20 21 Islamic fundamentalism 22 Anti Americanism 23 Anti communism 24 Anti imperialism 25 26 Anti Hinduism 27 28 Anti LGBT 29 30 Antisemitism 31 32 30 33 34 29 Anti Western imperialism 35 Anti Zionism 32 30 31 Factions Wahhabism 36 37 Salafism 5 6 38 39 40 Salafi jihadism 5 6 41 38 Anti shi ism alleged 42 officially denied 43 19 20 Size In Afghanistan 800 2018 44 In the Maghreb 1 000 5 000 2015 45 46 In Yemen 3 000 2022 47 In Somalia 7 000 12 000 2023 48 49 In Syria 1 000 3 000 2019 50 51 Allies State allies Sudan 1989 1996 Afghanistan 1996 2001 2021 present 52 53 54 55 Iran alleged denied 43 56 57 58 59 Pakistan alleged denied 60 61 62 Qatar alleged denied 63 Saudi Arabia alleged denied 64 North Korea alleged 65 Non state allies Ansar al Islam Egyptian Islamic Jihad Boko Haram until 2015 Pakistani Taliban Turkistan Islamic Party Hamas sometimes 66 67 68 Lashkar e Taiba Jaish e Mohammed Harkat ul Mujahideen Harkat ul Jihad al Islami Jemaah Islamiyah Houthis sometimes 57 Taliban 69 53 Haqqani network Hezbollah sometimes 70 Opponents State opponents Iran sometimes 71 72 43 Iraq Lebanon Syria United States United Kingdom France Israel India Russia Yemen Saudi Arabia 73 Turkey 74 China 75 Afghanistan 1988 1992 2002 2021 Soviet Union 1988 1989 Non state opponents Islamic State Hezbollah sometimes Houthis sometimes 57 76 Peshmerga YPG Southern Movement Southern Transitional CouncilBattles and wars War on Terror In Afghanistan Afghan Civil War 1989 1992 Battle of Jalalabad 1989 Afghan Civil War 1996 2001 War in Afghanistan 2001 2021 In Tajikistan Civil war in Tajikistan In Chechnya Second Chechen War In Yemen al Qaeda insurgency in Yemen Yemeni Civil War 2015 present In the Maghreb Maghreb insurgency Northern Mali conflict In Iraq Iraq War Iraqi insurgency In Pakistan Insurgency in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa In Somalia Somalia War 2006 2009 Somali Civil War 2009 present In Syria Syrian Civil War Military intervention against ISIL American led intervention in Syria In Egypt Sinai insurgency Egyptian Crisis 2011 2014 In India Insurgency in Jammu and Kashmir 77 Designated as a terrorist group bySee belowPreceded byMaktab al KhidamatThe organization was founded in a series of meetings held in Peshawar during 1988 attended by Abdullah Azzam Osama bin Laden Muhammad Atef Ayman al Zawahiri and other veterans of the Soviet Afghan War 81 Building upon the networks of Maktab al Khidamat the founding members decided to create an organization named Al Qaeda to serve as a vanguard for jihad 81 82 When Saddam Hussein invaded and occupied Kuwait in 1990 bin Laden offered to support Saudi Arabia by sending his Mujahideen fighters His offer was rebuffed by the Saudi government which instead sought the aid of the United States The stationing of U S troops in Arabian Peninsula prompted bin Laden to declare a jihad against the Saudi Arabian rulers whom he denounced as murtadd apostates and against the US During 1992 1996 Al Qaeda established its headquarters in Sudan until it was expelled in 1996 It shifted its base to the Taliban ruled Afghanistan and later expanded to other parts of the world primarily in the Middle East and South Asia In 1996 and 1998 bin Laden issued two fatawa that demanded the withdrawal of U S troops from Saudi Arabia In 1998 Al Qaeda conducted the US embassy bombings in Kenya and Tanzania which killed 224 people The U S retaliated by launching Operation Infinite Reach against al Qaeda targets in Afghanistan and Sudan In 2001 Al Qaeda carried out the September 11 attacks resulting in nearly 3 000 deaths long term health consequences of nearby residents damaging global economic markets triggering drastic geo political changes as well as generating profound cultural influence across the world The U S launched the war on terror in response and invaded Afghanistan to depose the Taliban and destroy al Qaeda In 2003 a U S led coalition invaded Iraq overthrowing the Ba athist regime which they falsely accused of having ties with al Qaeda In 2004 al Qaeda launched its Iraqi regional branch After pursuing him for almost a decade the U S military killed bin Laden in Pakistan in May 2011 Al Qaeda members believe that a Judeo Christian alliance led by the United States is waging a war against Islam and conspiring to destroy Islam 83 84 Al Qaeda also opposes man made laws and seek to implement shariʿah Islamic law in Muslim countries 85 AQ fighters characteristically deploy tactics such as suicide attacks Inghimasi and Istishhadi operations involving simultaneous bombing of several targets in battle zones 86 Al Qaeda s Iraq branch which later morphed into the Islamic State of Iraq after 2006 was responsible for numerous sectarian attacks against Shias during its Iraqi insurgency 87 88 Al Qaeda ideologues envision the violent removal of all foreign and secularist influences in Muslim countries which it denounces as corrupt deviations 39 89 90 91 Following the death of bin Laden in 2011 al Qaeda vowed to avenge his killing The group was then led by Egyptian Ayman al Zawahiri until his death in 2022 As of 2021 update they have reportedly suffered from a deterioration of central command over its regional operations 92 Contents 1 Organization 1 1 Affiliates 1 2 Leadership 1 2 1 Osama bin Laden 1988 May 2011 1 2 2 After May 2011 1 2 3 After Al Zawahiri 2022 present 1 3 Command structure 1 4 Field operatives 1 5 Insurgent forces 1 6 Financing 1 6 1 Allegations of Qatari support 2 Strategy 3 Name 4 Ideology 4 1 Formation 4 2 Objectives 4 3 Theory of Islamic State 4 4 Grievances 5 Religious compatibility 5 1 Attacks on civilians 6 History 7 Attacks 7 1 1991 7 2 1992 7 3 Late 1990s 7 4 September 11 attacks 8 Designation as a terrorist group 9 War on terror 10 Activities 10 1 Africa 10 2 Europe 10 3 Arab world 10 4 Kashmir 10 5 Internet 10 5 1 Online communications 10 6 Aviation network 10 7 Involvement in military conflicts 11 Alleged CIA involvement 12 Broader influence 13 Criticism 13 1 Other criticisms 14 See also 14 1 Publications 15 Notes 16 References 17 Sources 17 1 Bibliography 17 2 Reviews 17 3 Government reports 18 External linksOrganizationAl Qaeda only indirectly controls its day to day operations Its philosophy calls for the centralization of decision making while allowing for the decentralization of execution 93 The top leaders of Al Qaeda have defined the organization s ideology and guiding strategy and they have also articulated simple and easy to receive messages At the same time mid level organizations were given autonomy but they had to consult with top management before large scale attacks and assassinations Top management included the shura council as well as committees on military operations finance and information sharing Through the information committees of Al Qaeda Zawahiri placed special emphasis on communicating with his groups 94 However after the war on terror Al Qaeda s leadership has become isolated As a result the leadership has become decentralized and the organization has become regionalized into several Al Qaeda groups 95 96 Many Western analysts do not believe that the global jihadist movement is driven at every level by Al Qaeda s leadership However bin Laden held considerable ideological influence over revolutionary Islamist movements across the world Experts argue that Al Qaeda has fragmented into a number of disparate regional movements and that these groups bear little connection with one another 97 This view mirrors the account given by Osama bin Laden in his October 2001 interview with Tayseer Allouni this matter isn t about any specific person and is not about the al Qa idah Organization We are the children of an Islamic Nation with Prophet Muhammad as its leader our Lord is one and all the true believers mu mineen are brothers So the situation isn t like the West portrays it that there is an organization with a specific name such as al Qa idah and so on That particular name is very old It was born without any intention from us Brother Abu Ubaida created a military base to train the young men to fight against the vicious arrogant brutal terrorizing Soviet empire So this place was called The Base Al Qa idah as in a training base so this name grew and became We aren t separated from this nation We are the children of a nation and we are an inseparable part of it and from those public demonstrations which spread from the far east from the Philippines to Indonesia to Malaysia to India to Pakistan reaching Mauritania and so we discuss the conscience of this nation 98 As of 2010 update however Bruce Hoffman saw Al Qaeda as a cohesive network that was strongly led from the Pakistani tribal areas 97 nbsp Al Qaeda militant in Sahel armed with a Type 56 assault rifle 2012Affiliates Al Qaeda has the following direct affiliates Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula AQAP Al Qaeda in the Indian Subcontinent AQIS Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb AQIM Al Shabaab Hurras al Din Jama at Nasr al Islam wal Muslimin JNIM The following are presently believed to be indirect affiliates of Al Qaeda Caucasus Emirate factions Fatah al Islam 99 Islamic Jihad Union 100 Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan Jaish e Mohammed 101 Jemaah Islamiyah 102 Lashkar e Taiba 103 Moroccan Islamic Combatant Group 104 Al Qaeda s former affiliates include the following Abu Sayyaf pledged allegiance to ISIL in 2014 105 Al Mourabitoun joined JNIM in 2017 106 Al Qaeda in Iraq became the Islamic State of Iraq which later seceded from al Qaeda and became ISIL Al Qaeda in the Lands Beyond the Sahel inactive since 2015 107 Ansar al Islam majority merged with ISIL in 2014 Ansar Dine joined JNIM in 2017 106 Islamic Jihad of Yemen became AQAP Movement for Oneness and Jihad in West Africa merged with Al Mulathameen to form Al Mourabitoun in 2013 Rajah Sulaiman movement 108 Al Nusra Front dissolved in 2017 merged with other Islamist organizations to form Hayat Tahrir al Sham and split ties Leadership Osama bin Laden 1988 May 2011 nbsp Osama bin Laden left and Ayman al Zawahiri right photographed in 2001Osama bin Laden served as the emir of Al Qaeda from the organization s founding in 1988 until his assassination by US forces on May 1 2011 109 Atiyah Abd al Rahman was alleged to be second in command prior to his death on August 22 2011 110 Bin Laden was advised by a Shura Council which consists of senior Al Qaeda members 111 The group was estimated to consist of 20 30 people After May 2011 Ayman al Zawahiri had been Al Qaeda s deputy emir and assumed the role of emir following bin Laden s death Al Zawahiri replaced Saif al Adel who had served as interim commander 112 On June 5 2012 Pakistani intelligence officials announced that al Rahman s alleged successor as second in command Abu Yahya al Libi had been killed in Pakistan 113 Nasir al Wuhayshi was alleged to have become Al Qaeda s overall second in command and general manager in 2013 He was concurrently the leader of Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula AQAP until he was killed by a US airstrike in Yemen in June 2015 114 Abu Khayr al Masri Wuhayshi s alleged successor as the deputy to Ayman al Zawahiri was killed by a US airstrike in Syria in February 2017 115 Al Qaeda s next alleged number two leader Abdullah Ahmed Abdullah was killed by Israeli agents His pseudonym was Abu Muhammad al Masri who was killed in November 2020 in Iran He was involved in the 1998 bombings of the US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania 116 Al Qaeda s network was built from scratch as a conspiratorial network which drew upon the leadership of a number of regional nodes 117 The organization divided itself into several committees which include The Military Committee which is responsible for training operatives acquiring weapons and planning attacks The Money Business Committee which funds the recruitment and training of operatives through the hawala banking system US led efforts to eradicate the sources of terrorist financing 118 were most successful in the year immediately following the September 11 attacks 119 Al Qaeda continues to operate through unregulated banks such as the 1 000 or so hawaladars in Pakistan some of which can handle deals of up to US 10 million 120 The committee also procures false passports pays Al Qaeda members and oversees profit driven businesses 121 In the 9 11 Commission Report it was estimated that Al Qaeda required 30 million per year to conduct its operations The Law Committee reviews Sharia law and decides upon courses of action conform to it The Islamic Study Fatwah Committee issues religious edicts such as an edict in 1998 telling Muslims to kill Americans The Media Committee ran the now defunct newspaper Nashrat al Akhbar English Newscast and handled public relations In 2005 Al Qaeda formed As Sahab a media production house to supply its video and audio materials After Al Zawahiri 2022 present Al Zawahiri was killed on July 31 2022 in a drone strike in Afghanistan 122 In February 2023 a report from the United Nations based on member state intelligence concluded that de facto leadership of Al Qaeda had passed to Saif al Adel who was operating out of Iran Adel a former Egyptian army officer became a military instructor in Al Qaeda camps in the 1990s and was known for his involvement in the Battle of Mogadishu The report stated that al Adel s leadership could not officially be declared by al Qaeda because of political sensitivities of Afghan government in acknowledging the death of Al Zawahiri as well as due to theological and operational challenges posed by the location of al Adel in Iran 123 124 Command structure Most of Al Qaeda s top leaders and operational directors were veterans who fought against the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in the 1980s Osama bin Laden and his deputy Ayman al Zawahiri were the leaders who were considered the operational commanders of the organization 125 Nevertheless Al Qaeda is not operationally managed by Ayman al Zawahiri Several operational groups exist which consult with the leadership in situations where attacks are in preparation 126 Al Qaeda central AQC is a conglomerate of expert committees each in supervision of distinct tasks and objectives Its membership is mostly composed of Egyptian Islamist leaders who participated in the anti communist Afghan Jihad Assisting them are hundreds of Islamic field operatives and commanders based in various regions of the Muslim World The central leadership assumes control of the doctrinal approach and overall propaganda campaign while the regional commanders were empowered with independence in military strategy and political maneuvering This novel hierarchy made it possible for the organisation to launch wide range offensives 127 When asked in 2005 about the possibility of Al Qaeda s connection to the July 7 2005 London bombings Metropolitan Police Commissioner Sir Ian Blair said Al Qaeda is not an organization Al Qaeda is a way of working but this has the hallmark of that approach Al Qaeda clearly has the ability to provide training to provide expertise and I think that is what has occurred here 128 On August 13 2005 The Independent newspaper reported that the July 7 bombers had acted independently of an Al Qaeda mastermind 129 Nasser al Bahri who was Osama bin Laden s bodyguard for four years in the run up to 9 11 wrote in his memoir a highly detailed description of how the group functioned at that time Al Bahri described Al Qaeda s formal administrative structure and vast arsenal 130 However the author Adam Curtis argued that the idea of Al Qaeda as a formal organization is primarily an American invention Curtis contended the name Al Qaeda was first brought to the attention of the public in the 2001 trial of bin Laden and the four men accused of the 1998 US embassy bombings in East Africa Curtis wrote The reality was that bin Laden and Ayman al Zawahiri had become the focus of a loose association of disillusioned Islamist militants who were attracted by the new strategy But there was no organization These were militants who mostly planned their own operations and looked to bin Laden for funding and assistance He was not their commander There is also no evidence that bin Laden used the term al Qaeda to refer to the name of a group until after September 11 attacks when he realized that this was the term the Americans had given it 131 During the 2001 trial the US Department of Justice needed to show that bin Laden was the leader of a criminal organization in order to charge him in absentia under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act The name of the organization and details of its structure were provided in the testimony of Jamal al Fadl who said he was a founding member of the group and a former employee of bin Laden 132 Questions about the reliability of al Fadl s testimony have been raised by a number of sources because of his history of dishonesty and because he was delivering it as part of a plea bargain agreement after being convicted of conspiring to attack US military establishments 133 134 Sam Schmidt a defense attorney who defended al Fadl said There were selective portions of al Fadl s testimony that I believe was false to help support the picture that he helped the Americans join together I think he lied in a number of specific testimony about a unified image of what this organization was It made al Qaeda the new Mafia or the new Communists It made them identifiable as a group and therefore made it easier to prosecute any person associated with al Qaeda for any acts or statements made by bin Laden 131 Field operatives nbsp Pakistani journalist Hamid Mir interviewing Osama bin Laden in Afghanistan 1997The number of individuals in the group who have undergone proper military training and are capable of commanding insurgent forces is largely unknown Documents captured in the raid on bin Laden s compound in 2011 show that the core Al Qaeda membership in 2002 was 170 135 In 2006 it was estimated that Al Qaeda had several thousand commanders embedded in 40 countries 136 As of 2009 update it was believed that no more than 200 300 members were still active commanders 137 According to the 2004 BBC documentary The Power of Nightmares Al Qaeda was so weakly linked together that it was hard to say it existed apart from bin Laden and a small clique of close associates The lack of any significant numbers of convicted Al Qaeda members despite a large number of arrests on terrorism charges was cited by the documentary as a reason to doubt whether a widespread entity that met the description of Al Qaeda existed 138 Al Qaeda s commanders as well as its sleeping agents are hiding in different parts of the world to this day They are mainly hunted by the American and Israeli secret services Insurgent forces According to author Robert Cassidy Al Qaeda maintains two separate forces which are deployed alongside insurgents in Iraq and Pakistan The first numbering in the tens of thousands was organized trained and equipped as insurgent combat forces in the Soviet Afghan war 136 The force was composed primarily of foreign mujahideen from Saudi Arabia and Yemen Many of these fighters went on to fight in Bosnia and Somalia for global jihad Another group which numbered 10 000 in 2006 live in the West and have received rudimentary combat training 136 Other analysts have described Al Qaeda s rank and file as being predominantly Arab in its first years of operation but that the organization also includes other peoples as of 2007 update 139 It has been estimated that 62 percent of Al Qaeda members have a university education 140 In 2011 and the following year the Americans successfully settled accounts with Osama bin Laden Anwar al Awlaki the organization s chief propagandist and Abu Yahya al Libi s deputy commander The optimistic voices were already saying it was over for Al Qaeda Nevertheless it was around this time that the Arab Spring greeted the region the turmoil of which came great to Al Qaeda s regional forces Seven years later Ayman al Zawahiri became arguably the number one leader in the organization implementing his strategy with systematic consistency Tens of thousands loyal to Al Qaeda and related organizations were able to challenge local and regional stability and ruthlessly attack their enemies in the Middle East Africa South Asia Southeast Asia Europe and Russia alike In fact from Northwest Africa to South Asia Al Qaeda had more than two dozen franchise based allies The number of Al Qaeda militants was set at 20 000 in Syria alone and they had 4 000 members in Yemen and about 7 000 in Somalia The war was not over 141 In 2001 Al Qaeda had around 20 functioning cells and 70 000 insurgents spread over sixty nations 142 According to latest estimates the number of active duty soldiers under its command and allied militias have risen to approximately 250 000 by 2018 143 Financing Al Qaeda usually does not disburse funds for attacks and very rarely makes wire transfers 144 In the 1990s financing came partly from the personal wealth of Osama bin Laden 145 Other sources of income included the heroin trade and donations from supporters in Kuwait Saudi Arabia and other Islamic Gulf states 145 A 2009 leaked diplomatic cable stated that terrorist funding emanating from Saudi Arabia remains a serious concern 146 Among the first pieces of evidence regarding Saudi Arabia s support for Al Qaeda was the so called Golden Chain a list of early Al Qaeda funders seized during a 2002 raid in Sarajevo by Bosnian police 147 The hand written list was validated by Al Qaeda defector Jamal al Fadl and included the names of both donors and beneficiaries 147 148 Osama bin Laden s name appeared seven times among the beneficiaries while 20 Saudi and Gulf based businessmen and politicians were listed among the donors 147 Notable donors included Adel Batterjee and Wael Hamza Julaidan Batterjee was designated as a terror financier by the US Department of the Treasury in 2004 and Julaidan is recognized as one of Al Qaeda s founders 147 Documents seized during the 2002 Bosnia raid showed that Al Qaeda widely exploited charities to channel financial and material support to its operatives across the globe 149 Notably this activity exploited the International Islamic Relief Organization IIRO and the Muslim World League MWL The IIRO had ties with Al Qaeda associates worldwide including Al Qaeda s deputy Ayman al Zawahiri Zawahiri s brother worked for the IIRO in Albania and had actively recruited on behalf of Al Qaeda 150 The MWL was openly identified by Al Qaeda s leader as one of the three charities Al Qaeda primarily relied upon for funding sources 150 Allegations of Qatari support See also Qatar and state sponsored terrorism and Qatar diplomatic crisis Several Qatari citizens have been accused of funding Al Qaeda This includes Abd Al Rahman al Nuaimi a Qatari citizen and a human rights activist who founded the Swiss based non governmental organization NGO Alkarama On December 18 2013 the US Treasury designated Nuaimi as a terrorist for his activities supporting Al Qaeda 151 The US Treasury has said Nuaimi has facilitated significant financial support to Al Qaeda in Iraq and served as an interlocutor between Al Qaeda in Iraq and Qatar based donors 151 Nuaimi was accused of overseeing a 2 million monthly transfer to Al Qaeda in Iraq as part of his role as mediator between Iraq based Al Qaeda senior officers and Qatari citizens 151 152 Nuaimi allegedly entertained relationships with Abu Khalid al Suri Al Qaeda s top envoy in Syria who processed a 600 000 transfer to Al Qaeda in 2013 151 152 Nuaimi is also known to be associated with Abd al Wahhab Muhammad Abd al Rahman al Humayqani a Yemeni politician and founding member of Alkarama who was listed as a Specially Designated Global Terrorist SDGT by the US Treasury in 2013 153 The US authorities claimed that Humayqani exploited his role in Alkarama to fundraise on behalf of Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula AQAP 151 153 A prominent figure in AQAP Nuaimi was also reported to have facilitated the flow of funding to AQAP affiliates based in Yemen Nuaimi was also accused of investing funds in the charity directed by Humayqani to ultimately fund AQAP 151 About ten months after being sanctioned by the US Treasury Nuaimi was also restrained from doing business in the UK 154 Another Qatari citizen Kalifa Mohammed Turki Subayi was sanctioned by the US Treasury on June 5 2008 for his activities as a Gulf based Al Qaeda financier Subayi s name was added to the UN Security Council s Sanctions List in 2008 on charges of providing financial and material support to Al Qaeda senior leadership 152 155 Subayi allegedly moved Al Qaeda recruits to South Asia based training camps 152 155 He also financially supported Khalid Sheikh Mohammed a Pakistani national and senior Al Qaeda officer who is believed to be the mastermind behind the September 11 attack according to the 9 11 Commission Report 156 Qataris provided support to al Qaeda through the country s largest NGO the Qatar Charity Al Qaeda defector al Fadl who was a former member of Qatar Charity testified in court that Abdullah Mohammed Yusef who served as Qatar Charity s director was affiliated to Al Qaeda and simultaneously to the National Islamic Front a political group that gave al Qaeda leader Osama Bin Laden harbor in Sudan in the early 1990s 148 It was alleged that in 1993 Osama bin Laden was using Middle East based Sunni charities to channel financial support to Al Qaeda operatives overseas The same documents also report Bin Laden s complaint that the failed assassination attempt of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak had compromised the ability of Al Qaeda to exploit charities to support its operatives to the extent it was capable of before 1995 157 Qatar financed Al Qaeda s enterprises through Al Qaeda s former affiliate in Syria Jabhat al Nusra The funding was primarily channeled through kidnapping for ransom 158 The Consortium Against Terrorist Finance CATF reported that the Gulf country has funded al Nusra since 2013 158 In 2017 Asharq Al Awsat estimated that Qatar had disbursed 25 million in support of al Nusra through kidnapping for ransom 159 In addition Qatar has launched fundraising campaigns on behalf of al Nusra Al Nusra acknowledged a Qatar sponsored campaign as one of the preferred conduits for donations intended for the group 160 161 StrategyThis section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information August 2016 In the disagreement over whether Al Qaeda s objectives are religious or political Mark Sedgwick describes Al Qaeda s strategy as political in the immediate term but with ultimate aims that are religious 162 On March 11 2005 Al Quds Al Arabi published extracts from Saif al Adel s document Al Qaeda s Strategy to the Year 2020 9 163 Abdel Bari Atwan summarizes this strategy as comprising five stages to rid the Ummah from all forms of oppression Provoke the United States and the West into invading a Muslim country by staging a massive attack or string of attacks on US soil that results in massive civilian casualties Incite local resistance to occupying forces Expand the conflict to neighboring countries and engage the US and its allies in a long war of attrition Convert Al Qaeda into an ideology and set of operating principles that can be loosely franchised in other countries without requiring direct command and control and via these franchises incite attacks against the US and countries allied with the US until they withdraw from the conflict as happened with the 2004 Madrid train bombings but which did not have the same effect with the July 7 2005 London bombings The US economy will finally collapse by 2020 under the strain of multiple engagements in numerous places This will lead to a collapse in the worldwide economic system and lead to global political instability This will lead to a global jihad led by Al Qaeda and a Wahhabi Caliphate will then be installed across the world Atwan noted that while the plan is unrealistic it is sobering to consider that this virtually describes the downfall of the Soviet Union 9 According to Fouad Hussein a Jordanian journalist and author who has spent time in prison with Al Zarqawi Al Qaeda s strategy consists of seven phases and is similar to the plan described in Al Qaeda s Strategy to the year 2020 These phases include 164 The Awakening This phase was supposed to last from 2001 to 2003 The goal of the phase is to provoke the United States to attack a Muslim country by executing an attack that kills many civilians on US soil Opening Eyes This phase was supposed to last from 2003 to 2006 The goal of this phase was to recruit young men to the cause and to transform the Al Qaeda group into a movement Iraq was supposed to become the center of all operations with financial and military support for bases in other states Arising and Standing up was supposed to last from 2007 to 2010 In this phase Al Qaeda wanted to execute additional attacks and focus their attention on Syria Hussein believed other countries in the Arabian Peninsula were also in danger Al Qaeda expected a steady growth among their ranks and territories due to the declining power of the regimes in the Arabian Peninsula The main focus of attack in this phase was supposed to be on oil suppliers and cyberterrorism targeting the US economy and military infrastructure The declaration of an Islamic Caliphate which was projected between 2013 and 2016 In this phase Al Qaeda expected the resistance from Israel to be heavily reduced The declaration of an Islamic Army and a fight between believers and non believers also called total confrontation Definitive Victory projected to be completed by 2020 According to the seven phase strategy the war is projected to last less than two years According to Charles Lister of the Middle East Institute and Katherine Zimmerman of the American Enterprise Institute the new model of Al Qaeda is to socialize communities and build a broad territorial base of operations with the support of local communities also gaining income independent of the funding of sheiks 165 NameThe English name of the organization is a simplified transliteration of the Arabic noun al qaʿidah القاعدة which means the foundation or the base The initial al is the Arabic definite article the hence the base 166 In Arabic Al Qaeda has four syllables alˈqaː ʕi da However since two of the Arabic consonants in the name are not phones found in the English language the common naturalized English pronunciations include ae l ˈ k aɪ d e ae l ˈ k eɪ d e and ˌ ae l k ɑː ˈ iː d e Al Qaeda s name can also be transliterated as al Qaida al Qa ida or el Qaida 167 The doctrinal concept of Al Qaeda was first coined by the Palestinian Islamist scholar and Jihadist leader Abdullah Azzam in an April 1988 issue of Al Jihad magazine to describe a religiously committed vanguard of Muslims who wage armed Jihad globally to liberate oppressed Muslims from foreign invaders establish sharia Islamic law across the Islamic World by overthrowing the ruling secular governments and thus restore the past Islamic prowess This was to be implemented by establishing an Islamic state that would nurture generations of Muslim soldiers that would perpetually attack United States and its allied governments in the Muslim World Numerous historical models were cited by Azzam as successful examples of his call starting from the early Muslim conquests of the 7th century to the recent anti Soviet Afghan Jihad of 1980s 168 169 170 According to Azzam s world view It is about time to think about a state that would be a solid base for the distribution of the Islamic creed and a fortress to host the preachers from the hell of the Jahiliyyah the pre Islamic period 170 Bin Laden explained the origin of the term in a videotaped interview with Al Jazeera journalist Tayseer Alouni in October 2001 The name al Qaeda was established a long time ago by mere chance The late Abu Ebeida El Banashiri established the training camps for our mujahedeen against Russia s terrorism We used to call the training camp al Qaeda The name stayed 171 It has been argued that two documents seized from the Sarajevo office of the Benevolence International Foundation prove the name was not simply adopted by the mujahideen movement and that a group called Al Qaeda was established in August 1988 Both of these documents contain minutes of meetings held to establish a new military group and contain the term Al Qaeda 172 Former British Foreign Secretary Robin Cook wrote that the word Al Qaeda should be translated as the database because it originally referred to the computer file of the thousands of mujahideen militants who were recruited and trained with CIA help to defeat the Russians 173 In April 2002 the group assumed the name Qa idat al Jihad قاعدة الجهاد qaʿidat al jihad which means the base of Jihad According to Diaa Rashwan this was apparently as a result of the merger of the overseas branch of Egypt s al Jihad which was led by Ayman al Zawahiri with the groups Bin Laden brought under his control after his return to Afghanistan in the mid 1990s 174 IdeologyMain article Jihadism Further information Qutbism and Egyptian Islamism nbsp Sayyid Qutb the Egyptian Islamic scholar and Jihadist theorist who inspired Al QaedaThe militant Islamist Salafist movement of Al Qaeda developed during the Islamic revival and the rise of the Islamist movement after the Iranian Revolution 1978 1979 and the Afghan Jihad 1979 1989 Many scholars have argued that the writings of Islamic author and thinker Sayyid Qutb inspired the Al Qaeda organization 175 In the 1950s and 1960s Qutb preached that because of the lack of sharia law the Muslim world was no longer Muslim and had reverted to the pre Islamic ignorance known as jahiliyyah To restore Islam Qutb argued that a vanguard of righteous Muslims was needed in order to establish true Islamic states implement sharia and rid the Muslim world of any non Muslim influences In Qutb s view the enemies of Islam included world Jewry which plotted conspiracies and opposed Islam 176 Qutb envisioned this vanguard to march forward to wage armed Jihad against tyrannical regimes after purifying from the wider Jahili societies and organising themselves under a righteous Islamic leadership which he viewed as the model of early Muslims in the Islamic state of Medina under the leadership of Islamic Prophet Muhammad This idea would directly influence many Islamist figures such as Abdullah Azzam and Usama Bin Laden and became the core rationale for the formulation of Al Qaeda concept in the near future 177 Outlining his strategy to topple the existing secular orders Qutb argued in Milestones It is necessary that a Muslim community to come into existence which believes that there is no deity except God which commits itself to obey none but God denying all other authority and which challenges the legality of any law which is not based on this belief It should come into the battlefield with the determination that its strategy its social organization and the relationship between its individuals should be firmer and more powerful than the existing jahili system 177 178 In the words of Mohammed Jamal Khalifa a close college friend of bin Laden Islam is different from any other religion it s a way of life We Khalifa and bin Laden were trying to understand what Islam has to say about how we eat who we marry how we talk We read Sayyid Qutb He was the one who most affected our generation 179 Qutb also influenced Ayman al Zawahiri 180 Zawahiri s uncle and maternal family patriarch Mafouz Azzam was Qutb s student protege personal lawyer and an executor of his estate Azzam was one of the last people to see Qutb alive before his execution 181 Zawahiri paid homage to Qutb in his work Knights under the Prophet s Banner 182 Qutb argued that many Muslims were not true Muslims Some Muslims Qutb argued were apostates These alleged apostates included leaders of Muslim countries since they failed to enforce sharia law 183 He also alleged that the West approaches the Muslim World with a crusading spirit in spite of the decline of religious values in the 20th century Europe According to Qutb the hostile and imperialist attitudes exhibited by Europeans and Americans towards Muslim countries their support for Zionism etc reflected hatred amplified over a millennia of wars such as the Crusades and was born out of Roman materialist and utilitarian outlooks that viewed the world in monetary terms 184 Formation See also Afghan JihadThe Afghan jihad against the pro Soviet government further developed the Salafist Jihadist movement which inspired Al Qaeda 185 During this period Al Qaeda embraced the ideals of the Indian Muslim militant revivalist Syed Ahmad Barelvi d 1831 who led a Jihad movement against British India from the frontiers of Afghanistan and Khyber Pakhtunkwa in the early 19th century Al Qaeda readily adopted Sayyid Ahmad s doctrines such as returning to the purity of early generations Salaf as Salih antipathy towards Western influences and restoration of Islamic political power 186 187 According to Pakistani journalist Hussain Haqqani Sayyid Ahmed s revival of the ideology of jihad became the prototype for subsequent Islamic militant movements in South and Central Asia and is also the main influence over the jihad network of Al Qaeda and its associated groups in the region 186 187 Objectives The long term objective of Al Qaeda is to unite the Muslim World under a supra national Islamic state known as the Khilafah Caliphate headed by an elected Caliph descended from the Ahl al Bayt Prophetic family The immediate objectives include the expulsion of American troops from the Arabian Peninsula waging armed Jihad to topple US allied governments in the region etc 188 189 The following are the goals and some of the general policies outlined in Al Qaeda s Founding Charter Al Qaeda s Structure and Bylaws issued in the meetings in Peshawar in 1988 190 188 General Goalsi To promote jihad awareness in the Islamic world ii To prepare and equip the cadres for the Islamic world through trainings and by participating in actual combat iii To support and sponsor the jihad movement as much as possible iv To coordinate Jihad movements around the world in an effort to create a unified international Jihad movement General Policies 1 Complete commitment to the governing rules and controls of Shari a in all the beliefs and actions and according to the book Qur an and Sunna as well as per the interpretation of the nation s scholars who serve in this domain 2 Commitment to Jihad as a fight for God s cause and as an agenda of change and to prepare for it and apply it whenever we find it possible 4 Our position with respect to the tyrants of the world secular and national parties and the like is not to associate with them to discredit them and to be their constant enemy till they believe in God alone We shall not agree with them on half solutions and there is no way to negotiate with them or appease them 5 Our relationships with truthful Islamic jihadist movements and groups is to cooperate under the umbrella of faith and belief and we shall always attempt to at uniting and integrating with them 6 We shall carry a relationship of love and affection with the Islamic movements who are not aligned with Jihad 7 We shall sustain a relationship of respect and love with active scholars 9 We shall reject the regional fanatics and will pursue Jihad in an Islamic country as needed and when possible 10 We shall care about the role of Muslim people in the Jihad and we shall attempt to recruit them 11 We shall maintain our economic independence and will not rely on others to secure our resources 12 Secrecy is the main ingredient of our work except for what the need deems necessary to reveal13 our policy with the Afghani Jihad is support advise and coordination with the Islamic Establishments in Jihad arenas in a manner that conforms with our policies Al Qa ida s Structure and Bylaws p 2 191 188 Theory of Islamic State See also Islamic State Theory Al Qaeda aims to establish an Islamic state in the Arab World modelled after the Rashidun Caliphate by initiating a global Jihad against the International Jewish Crusader Alliance led by the United States which it sees as the external enemy and against the secular governments in Muslim countries that are described as the apostate domestic enemy 192 Once foreign influences and the secular ruling authorities are removed from Muslim countries through Jihad al Qaeda supports elections to choose the rulers of its proposed Islamic states This is to be done through representatives of leadership councils Shura that would ensure the implementation of Shari a Islamic law However it opposes elections that institute parliaments which empower Muslim and non Muslim legislators to collaborate in making laws of their own choosing 193 In the second edition of his book Knights Under the Banner of the Prophet Ayman Al Zawahiri writes We demand the government of the rightly guiding caliphate which is established on the basis of the sovereignty of sharia and not on the whims of the majority Its ummah chooses its rulers If they deviate the ummah brings them to account and removes them The ummah participates in producing that government s decisions and determining its direction The caliphal state commands the right and forbids the wrong and engages in jihad to liberate Muslim lands and to free all humanity from all oppression and ignorance 194 Grievances A recurring theme in al Qaeda s ideology is the perpetual grievance over the violent subjugation of Islamic dissidents by the authoritarian secularist regimes allied to the West Al Qaeda denounces these post colonial governments as a system led by Westernised elites designed to advance neo colonialism and maintain Western hegemony over the Muslim World The most prominent topic of grievance is over the American foreign policy in the Arab World especially over its strong economic and military support to Israel Other concerns of resentment include presence of NATO troops to support allied regimes injustices committed against Muslims in Kashmir Chechnya Xinjiang Syria Afghanistan Iraq etc 195 Religious compatibilityAbdel Bari Atwan wrote that While the leadership s own theological platform is essentially Salafi the organization s umbrella is sufficiently wide to encompass various schools of thought and political leanings Al Qaeda counts among its members and supporters people associated with Wahhabism Shafi ism Malikism and Hanafism There are even some Al Qaeda members whose beliefs and practices are directly at odds with Salafism such as Yunis Khalis one of the leaders of the Afghan mujahedin He was a mystic who visited the tombs of saints and sought their blessings practices inimical to bin Laden s Wahhabi Salafi school of thought The only exception to this pan Islamic policy is Shi ism Al Qaeda seems implacably opposed to it as it holds Shi ism to be heresy In Iraq it has openly declared war on the Badr Brigades who have fully cooperated with the US and now considers even Shi i civilians to be legitimate targets for acts of violence 196 On the other hand Professor Peter Mandaville states that Al Qaeda follows a pragmatic policy in forming its local affiliates with various cells being sub contracted to Shia Muslim and non Muslim members The top down chain of command means that each unit is answerable directly to central leadership while they remain ignorant of their counterparts presence or activities These transnational networks of autonomous supply chains financiers underground militias and political supporters were set up during the 1990s when Bin Laden s immediate aim was the expulsion of American troops from the Arabian Peninsula 197 Attacks on civilians Under the leadership of Osama Bin Laden and Ayman al Zawahiri Al Qaeda organization adopted the strategy of targeting non combatant civilians of enemy states that indiscriminately attacked Muslims Following the September 11 attacks al Qaeda provided a justification for the killing of non combatants civilians entitled A Statement from Qaidat al Jihad Regarding the Mandates of the Heroes and the Legality of the Operations in New York and Washington According to a couple of critics Quintan Wiktorowicz and John Kaltner it provides ample theological justification for killing civilians in almost any imaginable situation 198 Among these justifications are that America is leading the west in waging a War on Islam so that attacks on America are a defense of Islam and any treaties and agreements between Muslim majority states and Western countries that would be violated by attacks are null and void According to the tract several conditions allow for the killing of civilians including retaliation for the American war on Islam which al Qaeda alleges has targeted Muslim women children and elderly when it is too difficult to distinguish between non combatants and combatants when attacking an enemy stronghold hist and or non combatants remain in enemy territory killing them is allowed those who assist the enemy in deed word mind are eligible for killing and this includes the general population in democratic countries because civilians can vote in elections that bring enemies of Islam to power the necessity of killing in the war to protect Islam and Muslims the prophet Muhammad when asked whether the Muslim fighters could use the catapult against the village of Taif replied affirmatively even though the enemy fighters were mixed with a civilian population if the women children and other protected groups serve as human shields for the enemy if the enemy has broken a treaty killing of civilians is permitted 198 Under the leadership of Sayf al Adel Al Qaeda s strategy has underwent transformation and the organization has officially renounced the tactic of attacking civilian targets of enemies In his book Free Reading of 33 Strategies of War published in 2023 Sayf al Adel counselled Islamist fighters to prioritize attacking the police forces military soldiers state assets of enemy governments etc which he described as acceptable targets in military operations Asserting that attacking women and children of enemies are contrary to Islamic values Sayf al Adel asked If we target the general public how can we expect their people to accept our call to Islam 199 HistoryMain article History of al QaedaAttacksFor a chronological guide see Timeline of al Qaeda attacks nbsp Nairobi Kenya August 7 1998 Dar es Salaam Tanzania August 7 1998 Aden Yemen October 12 2000 World Trade Center US September 11 2001 The Pentagon US September 11 2001 Istanbul Turkey November 15 and 20 2003Al Qaeda has carried out a total of six major attacks four of them in its jihad against America In each case the leadership planned the attack years in advance arranging for the shipment of weapons and explosives and using its businesses to provide operatives with safehouses and false identities 200 1991 To prevent the former Afghan king Mohammed Zahir Shah from coming back from exile and possibly becoming head of a new government bin Laden instructed a Portuguese convert to Islam Paulo Jose de Almeida Santos to assassinate Zahir Shah On November 4 1991 Santos entered the king s villa in Rome posing as a journalist and tried to stab him with a dagger A tin of cigarillos in the king s breast pocket deflected the blade and saved Zahir Shah s life Santos was apprehended and jailed for 10 years in Italy 201 1992 On December 29 1992 Al Qaeda launched the 1992 Yemen hotel bombings Two bombs were detonated in Aden Yemen The first target was the Movenpick Hotel and the second was the parking lot of the Goldmohur Hotel 202 The bombings were an attempt to eliminate American soldiers on their way to Somalia to take part in the international famine relief effort Operation Restore Hope Internally Al Qaeda considered the bombing a victory that frightened the Americans away but in the US the attack was barely noticed No American soldiers were killed because no soldiers were staying in the hotel at the time it was bombed however an Australian tourist and a Yemeni hotel worker were killed in the bombing Seven others who were mostly Yemeni were severely injured 202 Two fatwas are said to have been appointed by Al Qaeda s members Mamdouh Mahmud Salim to justify the killings according to Islamic law Salim referred to a famous fatwa appointed by Ibn Taymiyyah a 13th century scholar admired by Wahhabis which sanctioned resistance by any means during the Mongol invasions 203 unreliable source Late 1990s nbsp 1998 Nairobi embassy bombingMain articles 1998 United States embassy bombings 2000 millennium attack plots and USS Cole bombing In 1996 bin Laden personally engineered a plot to assassinate United States President Bill Clinton while the president was in Manila for the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation However intelligence agents intercepted a message before the motorcade was to leave and alerted the US Secret Service Agents later discovered a bomb planted under a bridge 204 On August 7 1998 Al Qaeda bombed the US embassies in East Africa killing 224 people including 12 Americans In retaliation a barrage of cruise missiles launched by the US military devastated an Al Qaeda base in Khost Afghanistan The network s capacity was unharmed In late 1999 and 2000 Al Qaeda planned attacks to coincide with the millennium masterminded by Abu Zubaydah and involving Abu Qatada which would include the bombing of Christian holy sites in Jordan the bombing of Los Angeles International Airport by Ahmed Ressam and the bombing of the USS The Sullivans DDG 68 On October 12 2000 Al Qaeda militants in Yemen bombed the missile destroyer USS Cole in a suicide attack killing 17 US servicemen and damaging the vessel while it lay offshore Inspired by the success of such a brazen attack Al Qaeda s command core began to prepare for an attack on the US itself September 11 attacks Main article September 11 attacks Further information Motives for the September 11 attacks nbsp Aftermath of the September 11 attacksThe September 11 attacks on America by Al Qaeda killed 2 996 people 2 507 civilians 343 firefighters 72 law enforcement officers 55 military personnel as well as 19 hijackers who committed murder suicide Two commercial airliners were deliberately flown into the twin towers of the World Trade Center a third into the Pentagon and a fourth originally intended to target either the United States Capitol or the White House crashed in a field in Stonycreek Township near Shanksville Pennsylvania after passengers revolted It was the deadliest foreign attack on American soil since the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7 1941 and to this day remains the deadliest terrorist attack in human history The attacks were conducted by Al Qaeda acting in accord with the 1998 fatwa issued against the US and its allies by persons under the command of bin Laden al Zawahiri and others 31 Evidence points to suicide squads led by Al Qaeda military commander Mohamed Atta as the culprits of the attacks with bin Laden Ayman al Zawahiri Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and Hambali as the key planners and part of the political and military command Messages issued by bin Laden after September 11 2001 praised the attacks and explained their motivation while denying any involvement 205 Bin Laden strongly supported the attacks by identifying numerous grievances of Muslims such as the general perception that the US was actively oppressing Muslims 206 In his Letter to the American people published in 2002 Osama Bin Laden stated Why are we fighting and opposing you The answer is very simple 1 Because you attacked us and continue to attack us The American government and press still refuses to answer the question Why did they attack us in New York and Washington If Sharon is a man of peace in the eyes of Bush then we are also men of peace America does not understand the language of manners and principles so we are addressing it using the language it understands 207 208 Bin Laden asserted that America was massacring Muslims in Palestine Chechnya Kashmir and Iraq and Muslims should retain the right to attack in reprisal He also claimed the 9 11 attacks were not targeted at people but America s icons of military and economic power despite the fact he planned to attack in the morning when most of the people in the intended targets were present and thus generating the maximum number of human casualties 209 Evidence later came to light that the original targets for the attack may have been nuclear power stations on the US East Coast The targets were later altered by Al Qaeda as it was feared that such an attack might get out of hand 210 211 Designation as a terrorist groupAl Qaeda is deemed a designated terrorist group by the following countries and international organizations nbsp Australia 212 nbsp Azerbaijan 213 nbsp Bahrain 214 nbsp Belarus 215 nbsp Brazil 216 nbsp Canada 217 nbsp China 75 218 nbsp European Union 219 nbsp France 220 nbsp India 221 nbsp Indonesia 222 nbsp Iran 223 nbsp Ireland 224 nbsp Israel 225 226 nbsp Japan 227 nbsp Kazakhstan 228 nbsp Kyrgyzstan 229 nbsp NATO 230 231 nbsp Malaysia 232 nbsp Netherlands 233 nbsp New Zealand 234 nbsp Pakistan 235 nbsp Philippines 236 nbsp Russia 237 nbsp Saudi Arabia 238 nbsp South Korea 239 nbsp Sweden 240 nbsp Switzerland 241 nbsp Tajikistan 242 nbsp Turkey designated Al Qaeda s Turkish branch 243 nbsp United Arab Emirates 244 nbsp United Kingdom 245 nbsp United Nations Security Council 246 nbsp United States 247 nbsp Uzbekistan 248 249 nbsp Vietnam 250 War on terrorMain articles War on terror and List of wars and battles involving al Qaeda nbsp US troops in AfghanistanIn the immediate aftermath of the 9 11 attacks the US government responded and began to prepare its armed forces to overthrow the Taliban which it believed was harboring Al Qaeda The US offered Taliban leader Mullah Omar a chance to surrender bin Laden and his top associates The first forces to be inserted into Afghanistan were paramilitary officers from the CIA s elite Special Activities Division SAD The Taliban offered to turn over bin Laden to a neutral country for trial if the US would provide evidence of bin Laden s complicity in the attacks US President George W Bush responded by saying We know he s guilty Turn him over 251 and British Prime Minister Tony Blair warned the Taliban regime Surrender bin Laden or surrender power 252 Soon thereafter the US and its allies invaded Afghanistan and together with the Afghan Northern Alliance removed the Taliban government as part of the war in Afghanistan As a result of the US special forces and air support for the Northern Alliance ground forces a number of Taliban and Al Qaeda training camps were destroyed and much of the operating structure of Al Qaeda is believed to have been disrupted After being driven from their key positions in the Tora Bora area of Afghanistan many Al Qaeda fighters tried to regroup in the rugged Gardez region of the nation nbsp Khalid Sheikh Mohammed after his arrest in Rawalpindi Pakistan in March 2003By early 2002 Al Qaeda had been dealt a serious blow to its operational capacity and the Afghan invasion appeared to be a success Nevertheless a significant Taliban insurgency remained in Afghanistan Debate continued regarding the nature of Al Qaeda s role in the 9 11 attacks The US State Department released a videotape showing bin Laden speaking with a small group of associates somewhere in Afghanistan shortly before the Taliban was removed from power 253 Although its authenticity has been questioned by a couple of people 254 the tape definitively implicates bin Laden and Al Qaeda in the September 11 attacks The tape was aired on many television channels with an accompanying English translation provided by the US Defense Department 255 In September 2004 the 9 11 Commission officially concluded that the attacks were conceived and implemented by al Qaeda operatives 256 In October 2004 bin Laden appeared to claim responsibility for the attacks in a videotape released through Al Jazeera saying he was inspired by Israeli attacks on high rises in the 1982 invasion of Lebanon As I looked at those demolished towers in Lebanon it entered my mind that we should punish the oppressor in kind and that we should destroy towers in America in order that they taste some of what we tasted and so that they be deterred from killing our women and children 257 By the end of 2004 the US government proclaimed that two thirds of the most senior Al Qaeda figures from 2001 had been captured and interrogated by the CIA Abu Zubaydah Ramzi bin al Shibh and Abd al Rahim al Nashiri in 2002 258 Khalid Sheikh Mohammed in 2003 259 and Saif al Islam el Masry in 2004 260 Mohammed Atef and several others were killed The West was criticized for not being able to handle Al Qaeda despite a decade of the war 261 Activities nbsp Main countries of activity of Al Qaeda Africa Main article Al Qaeda involvement in Africa nbsp Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb formerly GSPC area of operationsAl Qaeda involvement in Africa has included a number of bombing attacks in North Africa while supporting parties in civil wars in Eritrea and Somalia From 1991 to 1996 bin Laden and other Al Qaeda leaders were based in Sudan Islamist rebels in the Sahara calling themselves Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb have stepped up their violence in recent years 262 263 264 French officials say the rebels have no real links to the Al Qaeda leadership but this has been disputed It seems likely that bin Laden approved the group s name in late 2006 and the rebels took on the al Qaeda franchise label almost a year before the violence began to escalate 265 In Mali the Ansar Dine faction was also reported as an ally of Al Qaeda in 2013 266 The Ansar al Dine faction aligned themselves with the AQIM 267 In 2011 Al Qaeda s North African wing condemned Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi and declared support for the Anti Gaddafi rebels 268 269 Following the Libyan Civil War the removal of Gaddafi and the ensuing period of post civil war violence in Libya various Islamist militant groups affiliated with Al Qaeda were able to expand their operations in the region 270 The 2012 Benghazi attack which resulted in the death of US Ambassador J Christopher Stevens and three other Americans is suspected of having been carried out by various Jihadist networks such as Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb Ansar al Sharia and several other Al Qaeda affiliated groups 271 272 The capture of Nazih Abdul Hamed al Ruqai a senior Al Qaeda operative wanted by the United States for his involvement in the 1998 United States embassy bombings on October 5 2013 by US Navy Seals FBI and CIA agents illustrates the importance the US and other Western allies have placed on North Africa 273 Europe Main article Al Qaeda activities in Europe Prior to the September 11 attacks Al Qaeda was present in Bosnia and Herzegovina and its members were mostly veterans of the El Mudzahid detachment of the Bosnian Muslim Army of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina Three Al Qaeda operatives carried out the Mostar car bombing in 1997 The operatives were closely linked to and financed by the Saudi High Commission for Relief of Bosnia and Herzegovina founded by then prince King Salman of Saudi Arabia citation needed Before the 9 11 attacks and the US invasion of Afghanistan westerners who had been recruits at Al Qaeda training camps were sought after by Al Qaeda s military wing Language skills and knowledge of Western culture were generally found among recruits from Europe such was the case with Mohamed Atta an Egyptian national studying in Germany at the time of his training and other members of the Hamburg Cell Osama bin Laden and Mohammed Atef would later designate Atta as the ringleader of the 9 11 hijackers Following the attacks Western intelligence agencies determined that Al Qaeda cells operating in Europe had aided the hijackers with financing and communications with the central leadership based in Afghanistan 156 274 In 2003 Islamists carried out a series of bombings in Istanbul killing fifty seven people and injuring seven hundred Seventy four people were charged by the Turkish authorities Some had previously met bin Laden and though they specifically declined to pledge allegiance to Al Qaeda they asked for its blessing and help 275 276 In 2009 three Londoners Tanvir Hussain Assad Sarwar and Ahmed Abdullah Ali were convicted of conspiring to detonate bombs disguised as soft drinks on seven airplanes bound for Canada and the US The MI5 investigation regarding the plot involved more than a year of surveillance work conducted by over two hundred officers 277 278 279 British and US officials said the plot unlike many similar homegrown European Islamic militant plots was directly linked to Al Qaeda and guided by senior Al Qaeda members in Pakistan 280 281 In 2012 Russian Intelligence indicated that Al Qaeda had given a call for forest jihad and has been starting massive forest fires as part of a strategy of thousand cuts 282 Arab world Main articles Al Qaeda involvement in Asia Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula and USS Cole bombing nbsp USS Cole after the October 2000 attackFollowing Yemeni unification in 1990 Wahhabi networks began moving missionaries into the country Although it is unlikely bin Laden or Saudi Al Qaeda were directly involved the personal connections they made would be established over the next decade and used in the USS Cole bombing 283 Concerns grew over al Qaeda s group in Yemen 284 In Iraq al Qaeda forces loosely associated with the leadership were embedded in the Jama at al Tawhid wal Jihad group commanded by Abu Musab al Zarqawi Specializing in suicide operations they have been a key driver of the Sunni insurgency 285 Although they played a small part in the overall insurgency between 30 and 42 of all suicide bombings which took place in the early years were claimed by Zarqawi s group 286 287 Reports have indicated that oversights such as the failure to control access to the Qa qaa munitions factory in Yusufiyah have allowed large quantities of munitions to fall into the hands of al Qaida 288 In November 2010 the militant group Islamic State of Iraq which is linked to al Qaeda in Iraq threatened to exterminate all Iraqi Christians 289 290 Al Qaeda did not begin training Palestinians until the late 1990s 291 Large groups such as Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad have rejected an alliance with al Qaeda fearing that al Qaeda will co opt their cells This may have changed recently The Israeli security and intelligence services believe al Qaeda has managed to infiltrate operatives from the Occupied Territories into Israel and is waiting for an opportunity to attack 291 As of 2015 update Saudi Arabia Qatar and Turkey are openly supporting the Army of Conquest 292 293 an umbrella rebel group fighting in the Syrian Civil War against the Syrian government that reportedly includes an al Qaeda linked al Nusra Front and another Salafi coalition known as Ahrar al Sham 294 Kashmir Main article Kashmir conflict Bin Laden and Ayman al Zawahiri consider India to be a part of an alleged Crusader Zionist Hindu conspiracy against the Islamic world 295 According to a 2005 report by the Congressional Research Service bin Laden was involved in training militants for Jihad in Kashmir while living in Sudan in the early 1990s By 2001 Kashmiri militant group Harkat ul Mujahideen had become a part of the al Qaeda coalition 296 According to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees UNHCR al Qaeda was thought to have established bases in Pakistan administered Kashmir in Azad Kashmir and to some extent in Gilgit Baltistan during the 1999 Kargil War and continued to operate there with tacit approval of Pakistan s Intelligence services 297 Many of the militants active in Kashmir were trained in the same madrasahs as Taliban and Al Qaeda Fazlur Rehman Khalil of Kashmiri militant group Harkat ul Mujahideen was a signatory of al Qaeda s 1998 declaration of Jihad against America and its allies 298 In a Letter to American People 2002 bin Laden wrote that one of the reasons he was fighting America was because of its support to India on the Kashmir issue 299 In November 2001 Kathmandu airport went on high alert after threats that bin Laden planned to hijack a plane and crash it into a target in New Delhi 300 In 2002 US Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld on a trip to Delhi suggested that Al Qaeda was active in Kashmir though he did not have any evidence 301 302 Rumsfeld proposed hi tech ground sensors along the Line of Control to prevent militants from infiltrating into Indian administered Kashmir 302 An investigation in 2002 found evidence that al Qaeda and its affiliates were prospering in Pakistan administered Kashmir with tacit approval of Pakistan s Inter Services Intelligence 303 In 2002 a special team of Special Air Service and Delta Force was sent into Indian administered Kashmir to hunt for bin Laden after receiving reports that he was being sheltered by Kashmiri militant group Harkat ul Mujahideen which had been responsible for kidnapping western tourists in Kashmir in 1995 304 Britain s highest ranking al Qaeda operative Rangzieb Ahmed had previously fought in Kashmir with the group Harkat ul Mujahideen and spent time in Indian prison after being captured in Kashmir 305 US officials believe al Qaeda was helping organize attacks in Kashmir in order to provoke conflict between India and Pakistan 306 Their strategy was to force Pakistan to move its troops to the border with India thereby relieving pressure on al Qaeda elements hiding in northwestern Pakistan 307 In 2006 al Qaeda claimed they had established a wing in Kashmir 298 308 However Indian Army General H S Panag argued that the army had ruled out the presence of al Qaeda in Indian administered Jammu and Kashmir Panag also said al Qaeda had strong ties with Kashmiri militant groups Lashkar e Taiba and Jaish e Mohammed based in Pakistan 309 It has been noted that Waziristan has become a battlefield for Kashmiri militants fighting NATO in support of al Qaeda and Taliban 310 311 312 Dhiren Barot who wrote the Army of Madinah in Kashmir 313 and was an al Qaeda operative convicted for involvement in the 2004 financial buildings plot had received training in weapons and explosives at a militant training camp in Kashmir 314 Maulana Masood Azhar the founder of Kashmiri group Jaish e Mohammed is believed to have met bin Laden several times and received funding from him 298 In 2002 Jaish e Mohammed organized the kidnapping and murder of Daniel Pearl in an operation run in conjunction with al Qaeda and funded by bin Laden 315 According to American counter terrorism expert Bruce Riedel al Qaeda and Taliban were closely involved in the 1999 hijacking of Indian Airlines Flight 814 to Kandahar which led to the release of Maulana Masood Azhar and Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh from an Indian prison This hijacking Riedel said was rightly described by then Indian Foreign Minister Jaswant Singh as a dress rehearsal for September 11 attacks 316 Bin Laden personally welcomed Azhar and threw a lavish party in his honor after his release 317 318 Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh who had been in prison for his role in the 1994 kidnappings of Western tourists in India went on to murder Daniel Pearl and was sentenced to death in Pakistan Al Qaeda operative Rashid Rauf who was one of the accused in 2006 transatlantic aircraft plot was related to Maulana Masood Azhar by marriage 319 Lashkar e Taiba a Kashmiri militant group which is thought to be behind 2008 Mumbai attacks is also known to have strong ties to senior al Qaeda leaders living in Pakistan 320 In late 2002 top Al Qaeda operative Abu Zubaydah was arrested while being sheltered by Lashkar e Taiba in a safe house in Faisalabad 321 The FBI believes al Qaeda and Lashkar have been intertwined for a long time while the CIA has said that al Qaeda funds Lashkar e Taiba 321 Jean Louis Bruguiere told Reuters in 2009 that Lashkar e Taiba is no longer a Pakistani movement with only a Kashmir political or military agenda Lashkar e Taiba is a member of al Qaeda 322 323 In a video released in 2008 American born senior al Qaeda operative Adam Yahiye Gadahn said that victory in Kashmir has been delayed for years it is the liberation of the jihad there from this interference which Allah willing will be the first step towards victory over the Hindu occupiers of that Islam land 324 In September 2009 a US drone strike reportedly killed Ilyas Kashmiri who was the chief of Harkat ul Jihad al Islami a Kashmiri militant group associated with al Qaeda 325 Kashmiri was described by Bruce Riedel as a prominent Al Qaeda member 326 while others have described him as head of military operations for al Qaeda 327 328 Kashmiri was also charged by the US in a plot against Jyllands Posten the Danish newspaper which was at the center of Jyllands Posten Muhammad cartoons controversy 329 US officials also believe that Kashmiri was involved in the Camp Chapman attack against the CIA 330 In January 2010 Indian authorities notified Britain of an al Qaeda plot to hijack an Indian airlines or Air India plane and crash it into a British city This information was uncovered from interrogation of Amjad Khwaja an operative of Harkat ul Jihad al Islami who had been arrested in India 331 In January 2010 US Defense secretary Robert Gates while on a visit to Pakistan said that al Qaeda was seeking to destabilize the region and planning to provoke a nuclear war between India and Pakistan 332 Internet Al Qaeda and its successors have migrated online to escape detection in an atmosphere of increased international vigilance The group s use of the Internet has grown more sophisticated with online activities that include financing recruitment networking mobilization publicity and information dissemination gathering and sharing 333 Abu Ayyub al Masri s al Qaeda movement in Iraq regularly releases short videos glorifying the activity of jihadist suicide bombers In addition both before and after the death of Abu Musab al Zarqawi the former leader of al Qaeda in Iraq the umbrella organization to which Al Qaeda in Iraq belongs the Mujahideen Shura Council has a regular presence on the Web The range of multimedia content includes guerrilla training clips stills of victims about to be murdered testimonials of suicide bombers and videos that show participation in jihad through stylized portraits of mosques and musical scores A website associated with Al Qaeda posted a video of captured American entrepreneur Nick Berg being decapitated in Iraq Other decapitation videos and pictures including those of Paul Johnson Kim Sun il and Daniel Pearl were first posted on jihadist websites citation needed In December 2004 an audio message claiming to be from bin Laden was posted directly to a website rather than sending a copy to al Jazeera as he had done in the past Al Qaeda turned to the Internet for release of its videos in order to be certain they would be available unedited rather than risk the possibility of al Jazeera editing out anything critical of the Saudi royal family 334 Alneda com and Jehad net were perhaps the most significant al Qaeda websites Alneda was initially taken down by American Jon Messner but the operators resisted by shifting the site to various servers and strategically shifting content citation needed The US government charged a British information technology specialist Babar Ahmad with terrorist offences related to his operating a network of English language al Qaeda websites such as Azzam com He was convicted and sentenced to 12 1 2 years in prison 335 336 337 Online communications In 2007 al Qaeda released Mujahedeen Secrets encryption software used for online and cellular communications A later version Mujahideen Secrets 2 was released in 2008 338 Aviation network al Qaeda is believed to be operating a clandestine aviation network including several Boeing 727 aircraft turboprops and executive jets according to a 2010 Reuters story Based on a US Department of Homeland Security report the story said al Qaeda is possibly using aircraft to transport drugs and weapons from South America to various unstable countries in West Africa A Boeing 727 can carry up to ten tons of cargo The drugs eventually are smuggled to Europe for distribution and sale and the weapons are used in conflicts in Africa and possibly elsewhere Gunmen with links to al Qaeda have been increasingly kidnapping Europeans for ransom The profits from the drug and weapon sales and kidnappings can in turn fund more militant activities 339 Involvement in military conflicts This section has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed August 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message The following is a list of military conflicts in which al Qaeda and its direct affiliates have taken part militarily Start of conflict End of conflict Conflict Continent Location Branches involved1991 ongoing Somali Civil War Africa Somalia Al Shabaab1992 1996 Civil war in Afghanistan 1992 1996 Asia Islamic State of Afghanistan Al Qaeda Central1992 ongoing Al Qaeda insurgency in Yemen Asia Yemen Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula1996 2001 Civil war in Afghanistan 1996 2001 Asia Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan Al Qaeda Central2001 2021 War in Afghanistan 2001 2021 Asia Afghanistan Al Qaeda Central2002 ongoing Insurgency in the Maghreb 2002 present Africa AlgeriaChadMaliMauritaniaMoroccoNigerTunisia Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb2003 2011 Iraq War Asia Iraq Al Qaeda in Iraq Islamic State of Iraq2004 ongoing War in North West Pakistan Asia Pakistan Al Qaeda Central2009 2017 Insurgency in the North Caucasus Asia Russia Caucasus Emirate2011 ongoing Syrian Civil War Asia Syria al Nusra Front2015 ongoing Saudi Arabian led intervention in Yemen Asia Yemen Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula 340 341 342 Alleged CIA involvementMain article Allegations of CIA assistance to Osama bin Laden Experts debate the notion that the al Qaeda attacks were an indirect consequence of the American CIA s Operation Cyclone program to help the Afghan mujahideen Robin Cook British Foreign Secretary from 1997 to 2001 has written that al Qaeda and bin Laden were a product of a monumental miscalculation by western security agencies and that Al Qaida literally the database was originally the computer file of the thousands of mujahideen who were recruited and trained with help from the CIA to defeat the Russians 343 Munir Akram Permanent Representative of Pakistan to the United Nations from 2002 to 2008 wrote in a letter published in The New York Times on January 19 2008 The strategy to support the Afghans against Soviet military intervention was evolved by several intelligence agencies including the C I A and Inter Services Intelligence or ISI After the Soviet withdrawal the Western powers walked away from the region leaving behind 40 000 militants imported from several countries to wage the anti Soviet jihad Pakistan was left to face the blowback of extremism drugs and guns 344 CNN journalist Peter Bergen Pakistani ISI Brigadier Mohammad Yousaf and CIA operatives involved in the Afghan program such as Vincent Cannistraro 345 deny that the CIA or other American officials had contact with the foreign mujahideen or bin Laden or that they armed trained coached or indoctrinated them In his 2004 book Ghost Wars Steve Coll writes that the CIA had contemplated providing direct support to the foreign mujahideen but that the idea never moved beyond discussions 346 Bergen and others who else argue that there was no need to recruit foreigners unfamiliar with the local language customs or lay of the land since there were a quarter of a million local Afghans willing to fight 346 failed verification Bergen further argues that foreign mujahideen had no need for American funds since they received several million dollars per year from internal sources Lastly he argues that Americans could not have trained the foreign mujahideen because Pakistani officials would not allow more than a handful of them to operate in Pakistan and none in Afghanistan and the Afghan Arabs were almost invariably militant Islamists reflexively hostile to Westerners whether or not the Westerners were helping the Muslim Afghans According to Bergen who conducted the first television interview with bin Laden in 1997 the idea that the CIA funded bin Laden or trained bin Laden is a folk myth There s no evidence of this Bin Laden had his own money he was anti American and he was operating secretly and independently The real story here is the CIA didn t really have a clue about who this guy was until 1996 when they set up a unit to really start tracking him 347 Jason Burke also wrote Some of the 500 million the CIA poured into Afghanistan reached Al Zawahiri s group Al Zawahiri has become a close aide of bin Laden Bin Laden was only loosely connected with the Hezb i Islami faction of the mujahideen led by Gulbuddin Hekmatyar serving under another Hezb i Islami commander known as Engineer Machmud However bin Laden s Office of Services set up to recruit overseas for the war received some US cash 348 Broader influenceAnders Behring Breivik the perpetrator of the 2011 Norway attacks was inspired by al Qaeda calling it the most successful revolutionary movement in the world While admitting different aims he sought to create a European version of Al Qaida 349 350 The appropriate response to offshoots is a subject of debate A journalist reported in 2012 that a senior US military planner had asked Should we resort to drones and Special Operations raids every time some group raises the black banner of al Qaeda How long can we continue to chase offshoots of offshoots around the world 351 CriticismAccording to CNN journalists Peter Bergen and Paul Cruickshank a number of religious scholars former fighters and militants who previously supported Islamic State of Iraq ISI had turned against the Al Qaeda supported Iraqi insurgency in 2008 due to ISI s indiscriminate attacks against civilians while targeting US led coalition forces American military analyst Bruce Riedel wrote in 2008 that a wave of revulsion arose against ISI which enabled US allied Sons of Iraq faction to turn various tribal leaders in the Anbar region against the Iraqi insurgency In response Bin Laden and Zawahiri issued public statements urging Muslims to rally behind ISI leadership and support the armed struggle against American forces 352 In November 2007 former Libyan Islamic Fighting Group LIFG member Noman Benotman responded with a public open letter of criticism to Ayman al Zawahiri after persuading the imprisoned senior leaders of his former group to enter into peace negotiations with the Libyan regime While Ayman al Zawahiri announced the affiliation of the group with Al Qaeda in November 2007 the Libyan government released 90 members of the group from prison several months after they were said to have renounced violence 353 In 2007 on the anniversary of the September 11 attacks 354 the Saudi sheikh Salman al Ouda delivered a personal rebuke to bin Laden Al Ouda addressed Al Qaeda s leader on television asking him My brother Osama how much blood has been spilt How many innocent people children elderly and women have been killed in the name of al Qaeda Will you be happy to meet God Almighty carrying the burden of these hundreds of thousands or millions of victims on your back 355 According to Pew polls support for Al Qaeda had dropped in the Muslim world in the years before 2008 356 In Saudi Arabia only ten percent had a favorable view of Al Qaeda according to a December 2007 poll by Terror Free Tomorrow a Washington based think tank 357 In 2007 the imprisoned Dr Fadl who was an influential Afghan Arab and former associate of Ayman al Zawahiri withdrew his support from al Qaeda and criticized the organization in his book Wathiqat Tarshid Al Aml Al Jihadi fi Misr w Al Alam English Rationalizing Jihad in Egypt and the World In response Al Zawahiri accused Dr Fadl of promoting an Islam without jihad that aligns with Western interests and wrote a nearly two hundred pages long treatise titled The Exoneration which appeared on the Internet in March 2008 In his treatise Zawahiri justified military strikes against US targets as retaliatory attacks to defend Muslim community against American aggression 354 In an online town hall forum conducted in December 2007 Zawahiri denied that al Qaeda deliberately targeted innocents and accused the American coalition of killing innocent people 358 Although once associated with al Qaeda in September 2009 LIFG completed a new code for jihad a 417 page religious document entitled Corrective Studies Given its credibility and the fact that several other prominent Jihadists in the Middle East have turned against Al Qaeda the LIFG s reversal may be an important step toward staunching Al Qaeda s recruitment 359 Other criticisms Bilal Abdul Kareem an American journalist based in Syria created a documentary about al Shabab Al Qaeda s affiliate in Somalia The documentary included interviews with former members of the group who stated their reasons for leaving al Shabab The members made accusations of segregation lack of religious awareness and internal corruption and favoritism In response to Kareem the Global Islamic Media Front condemned Kareem called him a liar and denied the accusations from the former fighters 360 In mid 2014 after the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant declared that they had restored the Caliphate an audio statement was released by the then spokesman of the group Abu Muhammad al Adnani claiming that the legality of all emirates groups states and organizations becomes null by the expansion of the Caliphate s authority The speech included a religious refutation of Al Qaeda for being too lenient regarding Shiites and their refusal to recognize the authority Abu Bakr al Baghdadi al Adnani specifically noting It is not suitable for a state to give allegiance to an organization He also recalled a past instance in which Osama bin Laden called on Al Qaeda members and supporters to give allegiance to Abu Omar al Baghdadi when the group was still solely operating in Iraq as the Islamic State of Iraq and condemned Ayman al Zawahiri for not making this same claim for Abu Bakr al Baghdadi Zawahiri was encouraging factionalism and division between former allies of ISIL such as the al Nusra Front 361 362 See alsoAl Qaeda involvement in Asia Al Qaeda Network Exord Allegations of support system in Pakistan for Osama bin Laden Belligerents in the Syrian civil war Bin Laden Issue Station former CIA unit for tracking bin Laden Steven Emerson Fatawa of Osama bin Laden International propagation of Salafism and Wahhabism by region Iran Alleged Al Qaeda ties Islamic Military Counter Terrorism Coalition Operation Cannonball Psychological warfare Religious terrorism Takfir wal Hijra Videos and audio recordings of Osama bin Laden Violent extremism Publications Al Qaeda Handbook Management of SavageryNotesReferences Driss El Bay September 21 2021 The pledge of allegiance of al Qaeda BBC Retrieved September 21 2021 Centanni Evan May 31 2013 War in Somalia Map of Al Shabaab Control June 2013 Political Geography Now Retrieved August 18 2014 Aden intelligence service building targeted AFP Gulf News August 22 2015 Retrieved August 22 2015 a b Gallagher amp Willsky Ciollo 2021 p 14 a b c Bokhari Kamran Senzai Farid eds 2013 Rejector Islamists al Qaeda and Transnational Jihadism Political Islam in the Age of Democratization New York Palgrave Macmillan pp 101 118 doi 10 1057 9781137313492 6 ISBN 978 1 137 31349 2 a b c d Moussalli Ahmad S 2012 Sayyid Qutb Founder of Radical Islamic Political Ideology In Akbarzadeh Shahram ed Routledge Handbook of Political Islam 1st ed London and New York Routledge pp 24 26 ISBN 978 1 138 57782 4 LCCN 2011025970 O Bagy Elizabeth 2012 Middle East Security Report Al Qaeda Sunni Islamist Rebels Jihad in Syria PDF Vol 6 Washington D C p 27 Archived from the original PDF on March 27 2014 Retrieved September 21 2012 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link A Geltzer Joshua 2010 4 The al Qaeda world view US Counter Terrorism Strategy and Al Qaeda 270 Madison Avenue New York NY 100016 USA Routledge pp 83 84 ISBN 978 0 203 87023 5 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link a b c Atwan Abdel Bari March 11 2005 The Secret History of Al Qaeda University of California Press p 221 ISBN 0 520 24974 7 Retrieved May 8 2011 via Internet Archive Gunaratna 2002 Introduction pp 12 87 Aydinli Ersel 2018 2016 The Jihadists pre 9 11 Violent Non State Actors From Anarchists to Jihadists Routledge Studies on Challenges Crises and Dissent in World Politics 1st ed London and New York Routledge p 66 ISBN 978 1 315 56139 4 LCCN 2015050373 Wright 2006 p 79 Giustozzi Antonio 2023 2 The strategies of global jihadists in Pakistan after 2001 Jihadism in Pakistan New York NY 10018 USA I B tauris pp 27 52 ISBN 978 0 7556 4735 4 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Celso Anthony 2014 1 Al Qaeda s Jihadist Worldview Al Qaeda s Post 9 11 Devolution New York NY 10018 USA Bloomsbury Academic pp 15 29 ISBN 978 1 4411 5589 4 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Holbrook Donald 2017 Al Qaeda 2 0 198 Madison Avenue New York NY 10016 Oxford University Press pp viii 2 3 ISBN 9780190856441 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link A Geltzer Joshua 2010 4 The al Qaeda world view US Counter Terrorism Strategy and Al Qaeda 270 Madison Avenue New York NY 100016 USA Routledge pp 83 84 ISBN 978 0 203 87023 5 Al Qaeda s pan Islamic ideology seeks to unify the umma not only by emphasising Islam over nationalism but also by specifically calling for unity among all Muslims including the often hostile Sunnis and Shiites For an organization led by a Sunni fundamentalist to make common cause with Shiite terrorists and then with potential Shiite supporters more broadly was considered extraordinary yet doing so was central to al Qaeda s vision of Islamic unity against America a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Byman Daniel 2015 3 Strategy and Tactics Al Qaeda the Islamic State and the Global Jihadist Movement 198 Madison Avenue New York NY 100016 USA Oxford University Press p 53 ISBN 978 0 19 021725 9 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Gunaratna 2002 p 87 a b Nabil Rahmatullah Iran Al Qaeda and the Taliban Close Relations between Shiite and Sunni Fundamentalists A Strategic Move or a Matter of Expediency Afghan Institute for Strategic Studies Archived from the original on June 19 2023 Ayman Al Zawahiri became the leader of Al Qaeda a leader who was in favour of forging an alliance between the Shia and the Sunni against their common enemy Al Qaeda developed deeper relations with the IRGC Aly Sergie Mohammed April 27 2023 The Sunni Shia Divide Council on Foreign Relations Archived from the original on June 10 2023 Sunni al Qaeda and Shia Hezbollah have not defined their movements in sectarian terms and have favored using anti imperialist anti Zionist and anti American frameworks to define their jihad or struggle Lupsha Jonny December 8 2022 What Is the Islamic State Wondrium Daily Archived from the original on February 6 2023 Bin Laden a Sunni Muslim saw cooperation between Islam s two sects Sunni and Shia as essential to Al Qaeda s success a b Devji Faisal 2005 Landscapes of the Jihad Militancy Morality Modernity London United Kingdom Hurst amp Company p 53 ISBN 1 85065 775 0 Al Qaeda leaders like Osama Bin Laden or Ayman al Zawahiri have never been known either to preach or practice anti Shia politics indeed the opposite with Bin Laden repeatedly urging Muslims to ignore internal differences and even appearing to uphold the religious credentials of Shiite Iran by comparing the longed for ouster of the Saudi monarch to the expulsion of the Shah The spider in the web The Economist September 20 2001 Archived from the original on June 6 2023 Bin Laden has insisted that differences within the Islamic world should be set aside for the sake of the broader struggle against western and Jewish interests American officials say there is clear evidence of tactical co operation between his organisation al Qaeda the government of Iran and Iran s proxies in Lebanon the Hizbullah group From the early 1990s members of his group and its Egyptian allies were being sent to Lebanon to receive training from Hizbullah an unusual example of Sunni Shia co operation in the broader anti western struggle al Aloosy Massaab 2020 The changing ideology of Hezbollah Palgrave Macmillan p 79 ISBN 978 3 030 34846 5 according to the 9 11 Commission Report Hezbollah allowed Al Qaeda activists to train in their camps involved in terrorist attacks against the American embassies in Kenya and Tanzania in September 1998 Osama Bin Laden mentioned Hezbollah in a 2003 speech or as he called them the resistance in a positive light as the group that compelled the US marines to withdraw from Lebanon Gunaratna 2002 p 12 Bergen Peter L Holy war Inc Inside the Secret World of Osama bin Laden New York Free Press 2001 pp 70 71 Text of Fatwah Urging Jihad Against Americans Archived from the original on April 22 2006 Retrieved May 15 2006 United States v Usama bin Laden et al S 7 98 Cr 1023 Testimony of Jamal Ahmed Mohamed al Fadl SDNY February 6 2001 Lawrence Bruce 2005 Messages to the World The Statements of Osama Bin Laden Verso ISBN 9781844670451 Archived from the original on April 8 2022 Borowski Audrey 2015 Al Qaeda and ISIS From Revolution to Apocalypse Philosophy Now Archived from the original on May 26 2022 Ansar ut Tawhid wal Jihad in Kashmir Expresses Support for AQIS SITE Institute October 10 2014 Archived from the original on December 23 2014 Retrieved December 22 2014 Al Qaeda in Indian subcontinent threatens to attack India after Prophet controversy The Hindu June 7 2022 ISSN 0971 751X Retrieved January 4 2024 a b Al Qaeda s Urges Muslims to Shun World Cup Stops Short of Threats Voice of America November 19 2022 Al Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula the militant group s Yemen based branch criticized Qatar for bringing immoral people homosexuals sowers of corruption and atheism into the Arabian Peninsula and said the event served to divert attention from the occupation of Muslim countries and their oppression a b c Full text bin Laden s letter to America World news The Observer August 26 2013 Archived from the original on August 26 2013 a b c Jihad Against Jews and Crusaders February 23 1998 Retrieved June 16 2010 a b Conversation with Terror Time January 1999 Retrieved March 22 2015 frontline the terrorist and the superpower who is bin laden interview with osama bin laden in may 1998 pbs org Archived from the original on May 8 1999 New ISIS and Al Qaeda propaganda prioritize the US and Jews as targets Anti Defamation League Sherlock Ruth December 2 2012 Inside the most extreme wing The Daily Telegraph London Archived from the original on January 10 2022 Retrieved December 2 2012 Ghanmi Elyes Punzet Agnieszka June 11 2013 The involvement of Salafism Wahhabism in the support and supply of arms to rebel groups around the world PDF European Parliament Hudson Valerie June 30 2015 The Hillary Doctrine Columbia University p 154 ISBN 978 0 231 53910 4 Retrieved January 15 2016 a b Livesey Bruce January 25 2005 Special Reports The Salafist Movement Al Qaeda s New Front PBS Frontline WGBH Retrieved October 18 2011 Geltzer Joshua A 2011 US Counter Terrorism Strategy and al Qaeda Signalling and the Terrorist World View Reprint ed Routledge p 83 ISBN 978 0 415 66452 3 a b The Future of Terrorism What al Qaida Really Wants Der Spiegel August 12 2005 Archived from the original on March 7 2012 Retrieved October 18 2011 Al Qaeda seeks global dominance The Daily Telegraph London Archived from the original on January 12 2012 Jihadists Want Global Caliphate ThePolitic com July 27 2005 Archived from the original on September 30 2011 Retrieved October 18 2011 Burke Jason March 21 2004 What exactly does al Qaeda want The Guardian London Moghadam Assaf 2008 The Globalization of Martyrdom Al Qaeda Salafi Jihad and the Diffusion of Suicide Attacks Johns Hopkins University Press p 48 ISBN 978 0 8018 9055 0 Glenn Cameron September 28 2015 Al Qaeda v ISIS Ideology amp Strategy Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars a b c Making Sense of Iran and al Qaeda s Relationship The Lawfare Institute March 21 2021 Retrieved May 10 2021 Hoffman Bruce March 6 2018 Al Qaeda s Resurrection Council on Foreign Relations Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb AQIM Council on Foreign Relations March 27 2015 Archived from the original on May 11 2015 Retrieved July 2 2015 Profile Al Qaeda in North Africa BBC January 17 2013 Retrieved July 2 2015 UN report indicates al Qaeda and ISIS enjoy safe haven in Turkish controlled Idlib Nordic Monitor February 9 2022 Archived from the original on February 15 2022 Retrieved February 15 2022 S 2023 95 United Nations Security Council Retrieved February 15 2023 Who are Somalia s al Shabab BBC News December 22 2017 Mohammad Abdulssattar Ibrahim September 22 2019 Is HTS benefitting from Coalition airstrikes against foreign jihadists Syria Direct Archived from the original on September 24 2019 Retrieved October 1 2019 Bozkurt Abdullah February 9 2022 UN report indicates al Qaeda and ISIS enjoy safe haven in Turkish controlled Idlib Nordic Monitor Retrieved February 15 2022 Fourteenth report of the Analytical Support and Sanctions Monitoring Team PDF UN Security Council June 1 2023 pp 3 22 Archived from the original PDF on July 12 2023 via ecoi net The link between the Taliban and both Al Qaida and Tehrik e Taliban Pakistan TTP remains strong and symbiotic The relationship between the Taliban and Al Qaida remained close and symbiotic with Al Qaida viewing Taliban administered Afghanistan a safe haven Al Qaida still aims to strengthen its position in Afghanistan and has been interacting with the Taliban supporting the regime and protecting senior Taliban figures Al Qaida maintains a low profile focusing on using the country as an ideological and logistical hub to mobilize and recruit new fighters while covertly rebuilding its external operations capability a b UN report finds strong and symbiotic links between Afghan Taliban TTP Dawn June 11 2023 Archived from the original on June 11 2023 Mir Asfandyar October 2020 Afghanistan s Terrorism Challenge The Political Trajectories of al Qaeda the Afghan Taliban and the Islamic State PDF Middle East Institute Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Roggio Bill September 2 2021 National Resistance Front repels multi day Taliban assault on Panjshir FDD s Long War Journal www longwarjournal org Archived from the original on September 3 2021 Retrieved September 3 2021 The Growing Relationship between Iran and al Shabab Movement in Somalia Motives and Potential Consequences Emirates Policy Center Retrieved July 27 2020 a b c Hussam Radman Assim al Sabri February 28 2023 Leadership from Iran How Al Qaeda in Yemen Fell Under the Sway of Saif al Adel Sana a Center For Strategic Studies Retrieved April 4 2023 Study questions Iran al Qaeda ties despite U S allegations Reuters September 7 2018 via www reuters com Treasury Targets Al Qaida Operatives in Iran treasury gov The airlift of evil NBC News December 11 2003 Pakistan military denies BBC report on Taliban links October 27 2011 Gall Carlotta March 19 2014 What Pakistan Knew About Bin Laden The New York Times Haaretz Press The Associated July 11 2017 Fact Check Is Qatar Supporting Terrorism A Look at Its Ties to Iran ISIS and the Muslim Brotherhood Haaretz Thomas Carls The Saudis channel the mafia Fears of Saudi retaliation deter truth about 9 11 The Washington Times Retrieved April 28 2016 Tisdall Simon July 26 2010 Afghanistan war logs reveal hand of Osama bin Laden The Guardian London Al Qaeda s North and West African branches respond to the Hamas led invasion of Israel FDD s Long War Journal October 13 2023 Retrieved October 17 2023 Al Shabaab jihadists praise Hamas attack Kenya s counter terrorism unit is on alert Agenzia Nova October 12 2023 Archived from the original on October 12 2023 Retrieved October 12 2023 Somalia Al Shabaab praises Hamas attack on Israel Somali guardian October 12 2023 Archived from the original on October 12 2023 Retrieved October 12 2023 Fourteenth report of the Analytical Support and Sanctions Monitoring Team PDF UN Security Council June 1 2023 pp 3 22 Archived from the original PDF on July 12 2023 via ecoi net The link between the Taliban and both Al Qaida and Tehrik e Taliban Pakistan TTP remains strong and symbiotic The relationship between the Taliban and Al Qaida remained close and symbiotic with Al Qaida viewing Taliban administered Afghanistan a safe haven Gunaratna 2002 pp 12 86 By forging a tactical relationship with Hezbollah Al Qaeda mastered the art of bombing buildings Andrew Jeong Militant in Iran identified as al Qaeda s probable new chief in U N report The Washington Post Iran denies U S claims linking Tehran to Al Qaeda s leader foreign minister Reuters February 16 2023 Retrieved February 16 2023 Byman Daniel L November 30 2001 The U S Saudi Arabia counterterrorism relationship Brookings Retrieved June 8 2021 Saudi Arabia considers Al Qaeda to be a mortal enemy Why is Al Qaeda attacking Turkish forces Why is Al Qaeda attacking Turkish forces a b The Chinese regime and the Uyghur dilemma Summary of Castets Remi 2003 The Uyghurs in Xinjiang The Malaise Grows China Perspectives 2003 5 doi 10 4000 chinaperspectives 648 Retrieved June 10 2012 In rare admission Yemen s Houthis confirm they released Al Qaeda terrorists Arab news February 20 2023 Retrieved February 20 2023 Al Qaeda calls for liberation of Kashmir via YouTube Klausen Jytte 2021 2 The Founder Western Jihadism A Thirty Year History Great Clarendon Street Oxford ox2 6dp United Kingdom Oxford University Press pp 53 54 ISBN 978 0 19 887079 1 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link J Tompkins Crossett Paul Chuck Spitaletta Marshal Jason Shana 2012 19 Al Qaeda 1988 2001 Casebook on Insurgency and Revolutionary Warfare Volume II 1962 2009 Fort Liberty North Carolina US United States Army Special Operations Command pp 533 544 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Immenkamp Beatrix Latici Tania October 2021 Security situation in Afghanistan PDF European Parliament Archived PDF from the original on April 9 2022 a b Klausen Jytte 2021 2 The Founder Western Jihadism A Thirty Year History Great Clarendon Street Oxford ox2 6dp United Kingdom Oxford University Press pp 47 51 ISBN 978 0 19 887079 1 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Mcgregor Andrew 2003 Jihad and the Rifle Alone Abdullah Azzam and the Islamist Revolution Journal of Conflict Studies 23 2 92 113 Fu ad Husayn Al Zarqawi The Second Generation of al Qa ida Part Fourteen Al Quds al Arabi July 13 2005 Wiktorowicz Quintan Kaltner John 2003 Killing in the Name of Islam Al Qaeda s Justification for September 11 mafhoum com Middle East Policy Council Archived from the original on September 10 2021 Retrieved September 10 2021 Wright 2006 p 246 Wright 2006 pp 107 108 185 270 271 Brahimi Alia 2010 Jihad and Just War in the War on Terror Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 956296 1 Atwan Abdel Bari March 20 2006 Al Qaeda s hand in tipping Iraq toward civil war The Christian Science Monitor al Qaida s Ideology MI5 Archived from the original on February 28 2009 Retrieved May 19 2012 Dreaming of a caliphate The Economist August 6 2011 Archived from the original on August 21 2018 Retrieved May 19 2012 Al Qaeda Statements and Evolving Ideology CRS Report February 4 2005 Archived from the original on September 10 2021 Retrieved September 10 2021 Zakaria Fareed April 29 2021 Opinion Ten years later Islamist terrorism isn t the threat it used to be The Washington Post Archived from the original on November 16 2021 Retrieved May 4 2021 al Hammadi Khalid The Inside Story of al Qa ida part 4 Al Quds al Arabi March 22 2005 Glenn Cameron September 28 2015 Al Qaeda v ISIS Leaders amp Structure Wilson Center Retrieved March 3 2021 J Feiser Evolution of the al Qaeda brand name Asia Times August 13 2004 Archived from the original on April 23 2005 Retrieved March 22 2010 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Atran Scott Spring 2006 The Moral Logic and Growth of Suicide Terrorism PDF Archived from the original PDF on June 23 2015 Retrieved March 22 2010 a b Blitz James January 19 2010 A threat transformed Financial Times Archived from the original on May 2 2011 Retrieved December 11 2022 A Discussion on the New Crusader Wars Tayseer Allouni with Usamah bin Laden IslamicAwakening com Archived from the original on June 21 2013 U S designates Fatah al Islam terrorist group Reuters August 13 2007 Retrieved August 11 2019 Roggio Bill Weiss Caleb April 10 2018 Islamic Jihad Union conducts joint raid with the Taliban Long War Journal Retrieved August 11 2019 Jaish e Mohammed Center for International Security and Cooperation CISAC Stanford University July 2018 Archived from the original on July 17 2019 Retrieved August 11 2019 Gordon David 2011 Jemaah Islamiyah PDF Homeland Security amp Counterterrorism Program Transnational Threats Project Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 via Center for Strategic amp International Studies Roggio Bill July 12 2019 Pakistan charges 13 Lashkar e Taiba leaders under Anti Terrorism Act Long War Journal Retrieved August 12 2019 Jesus Carlos Echeverria March 2009 The Current State of the Moroccan Islamic Combatant Group CTC Sentinel 2 3 Archived from the original on December 16 2020 Retrieved August 12 2019 BIFF Abu Sayyaf pledge allegiance to Islamic State jihadists GMA News Online August 16 2014 Retrieved April 12 2016 a b Joscelyn Thomas March 13 2017 Analysis Al Qaeda groups reorganize in West Africa Long War Journal Retrieved August 16 2019 Zenn Jacob December 9 2017 Electronic Jihad in Nigeria How Boko Haram Is Using Social Media Jamestown Foundation Retrieved July 16 2018 Banlaoi Rommel C April 1 2009 Media and Terrorism in the Philippines The Rajah Solaiman Islamic Movement Journal of Policing Intelligence and Counter Terrorism 4 1 64 75 doi 10 1080 18335300 2009 9686924 S2CID 144035702 Ardolino Bill Roggio Bill May 1 2011 Al Qaeda emir Osama bin Laden confirmed killed by US forces in Pakistan Long War Journal Retrieved August 5 2019 Balz Dan August 27 2011 Al Qaidas No 2 leader Atiyah Abd al Rahman killed in Pakistan The Washington Post dead link Glenn Cameron September 28 2015 Al Qaeda v ISIS Leaders amp Structure Wilson Center Retrieved August 5 2019 Al Qaida Says Al Zawahri Has Succeeded Bin Laden The New York Times Associated Press June 16 2011 Retrieved June 6 2011 Walsh Declan Schmitt Eric June 5 2012 Drone Strike Killed No 2 in Al Qaeda U S Officials Say The New York Times Archived from the original on January 1 2022 Al Qaeda Confirms U S Strike Killed Nasser al Wuhayshi Its Leader in Yemen The New York Times Kareem Fahim June 16 2015 Joscelyn Thomas March 3 2017 Zawahiri s deputy sought to unify Syrian rebels Long War Journal Retrieved August 5 2019 Report Israeli agents assassinated Al Qaeda s No 2 in Iran JNS org November 15 2020 Retrieved March 3 2021 Gunaratna 2002 p 54 State 2003 Basile 2004 p 177 Wechsler 2001 p 135 cited in Gunaratna 2002 p 63 Businesses are run from below with the council only being consulted on new proposals and collecting funds See Hoffman 2002 Engelbrecht Cora Ward Euan August 2 2022 The Killing of Ayman al Zawahri What We Know The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved August 2 2022 Jeong Andrew Militant in Iran identified as al Qaeda s probable new chief in U N report Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Archived from the original on February 15 2023 Retrieved February 15 2023 United Nations report identifies new al Qaeda leader with 10 million bounty The Hill February 15 2023 Archived from the original on February 15 2023 Al Qaeda Anti Defamation League Retrieved March 3 2021 C Glenn The Islamists The Wilson Centre September 28 2015 Accessed June 15 2017 Zawahiri does not claim to have direct hierarchical control over al Qaeda s vast networked structure Al Qaeda s core leadership seeks to centralize the organization s messaging and strategy rather than to manage the daily operations of its franchises But formal affiliates are required to consult with al Qaeda s core leadership before carrying out large scale attacks J Tompkins Crossett Paul Chuck Spitaletta Marshal Jason Shana 2012 19 Al Qaeda 1988 2001 Casebook on Insurgency and Revolutionary Warfare Volume II 1962 2009 Fort Liberty North Carolina USA United States Army Special Operations Command pp 544 545 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Cops London Attacks Were Homicide Blasts Fox News Channel July 15 2005 Archived from the original on April 20 2008 Retrieved June 15 2008 Bennetto Jason Herbert Ian August 13 2005 London bombings the truth emerges The Independent UK Archived from the original on October 26 2006 Retrieved December 3 2006 Al Bahri Nasser Guarding bin Laden My Life in al Qaeda p 185 Thin Man Press London ISBN 9780956247360 a b The Power of Nightmares BBC Documentary McCloud Kimberly Osborne Matthew March 7 2001 WMD Terrorism and Usama bin Laden CNS Reports James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies Archived from the original on May 6 2011 Retrieved May 4 2011 McGeary 2001 Witness Bin Laden planned attack on U S embassy in Saudi Arabia CNN February 13 2001 Retrieved June 12 2007 Secret Osama bin Laden files reveal al Qaeda membership The Telegraph accessed July 26 2013 a b c Cassidy 2006 p 9 Noah Timothy February 25 2009 The Terrorists Are Dumb Theory Don t mistake these guys for criminal masterminds Slate Archived from the original on February 27 2009 Gerges Fawaz A September 5 2005 The Far Enemy Why Jihad Went Global Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 79140 5 Jihad s New Leaders by Daveed Gartenstein Ross and Kyle Dabruzzi Middle East Quarterly Summer 2007 Today s jihadists educated wealthy and bent on killing Canada com July 3 2007 Archived from the original on September 29 2007 Retrieved March 22 2010 Al Qaeda s Resurrection Council on Foreign Relations Retrieved March 3 2021 J Tompkins Crossett Paul Chuck Spitaletta Marshal Jason Shana 2012 19 Al Qaeda 1988 2001 Casebook on Insurgency and Revolutionary Warfare Volume II 1962 2009 Fort Liberty North Carolina USA United States Army Special Operations Command p 544 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Klausen Jytte 2021 1 Introduction Western Jihadism A Thirty Year History Great Clarendon Street Oxford ox2 6dp United Kingdom Oxford University Press p 1 ISBN 978 0 19 887079 1 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Eichenwald Kurt December 10 2001 A Nation Challenged The Money Terror Money Hard to Block Officials Find The New York Times Retrieved May 4 2011 a b Who is Bin Laden Retrieved May 5 2011 Eric Lichtbau and Eric Schmitt Cash Flow to Terrorists Evades U S Efforts The New York Times December 5 2010 a b c d History Commons Archived from the original on August 5 2016 Retrieved June 21 2016 a b United States of America v Usama bin Laden Wikisource Retrieved June 10 2016 Simpson Glenn R March 19 2003 List of Early al Qaeda Donors Points to Saudi Elite Charities Wall Street Journal Retrieved June 21 2016 a b Emerson Steve 2006 Jihad Incorporated A Guide to Militant Islam in the US Prometheus Books p 382 a b c d e f Treasury Designates Al Qa ida Supporters in Qatar and Yemen Retrieved June 21 2016 a b c d How Qatar Is Funding al Qaeda and Why That Could Help the US Retrieved June 21 2016 a b Ban Ki Moon shakes hands with alleged al Qaeda emir The Long War Journal June 23 2015 Retrieved June 21 2016 Terrorist paymaster targeted by Britain October 18 2014 Archived from the original on January 10 2022 Retrieved June 21 2016 a b Security Council Al Qaida Sanctions Committee Amends One Entry on Its Sanctions List Meetings Coverage and Press Releases Retrieved June 21 2016 a b The 9 11 Commission Report PDF Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Osama bin Laden Biography al Qaeda Terrorist Attacks Death amp Facts Britannica www britannica com January 1 2024 Retrieved January 28 2024 a b Reports CATF Funding Al Nusra Through Ransom Qatar and the Myth of Humanitarian Principle stopterrorfinance org Archived from the original on October 9 2017 Retrieved June 6 2017 صفقة العسكريين 25 مليون دولار لـ النصرة وهامش تحرك في عرسال الشرق الأوسط Syrian conflict said to fuel sectarian tensions in Persian Gulf The Washington Post Retrieved June 21 2016 Analysis Qatar still negligent on terror finance The Long War Journal Retrieved June 21 2016 SEDGWICK MARK August 10 2010 Al Qaeda and the Nature of Religious Terrorism Terrorism and Political Violence 16 4 795 814 doi 10 1080 09546550590906098 S2CID 143323639 single The Jamestown Foundation Retrieved April 12 2016 permanent dead link Musharbash Yassir August 12 2005 The Future of Terrorism What al Qaida Really Wants Der Spiegel Retrieved January 15 2015 What has happened to al Qaeda BBC News April 5 2016 Retrieved August 29 2022 Arabic Computer Dictionary English Arabic Arabic English By Ernest Kay Multi lingual International Publishers 1986 Listen to the U S pronunciation Archived from the original RealPlayer on December 11 2005 Haniff Hassan Muhammad 2014 The Father of Jihad Abd Allah Azzam s Jihad Ideas and Implications to National Security 57 Shelton Street Covent Garden London WC2H 9HE Imperial College Press pp 133 134 ISBN 978 1 78326 287 8 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Aboul Enein Youssef January 1 2008 The Late Sheikh Abdullah Azzam s Books Part III Radical Theories on Defending Muslim Land through Jihad Combating Terrorism Center via JSTOR a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b Paz Reuven 2001 The Brotherhood of Global Jihad SATP Archived from the original on August 4 2022 Retrieved August 4 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Transcript of Bin Laden s October interview CNN February 5 2002 Archived from the original on December 6 2006 Retrieved October 22 2006 Bergen 2006 p 75 Wright indirectly quotes one of the documents based on an exhibit from the Tareek Osama document presented in United States v Enaam M Arnaout Archived February 3 2016 at the Wayback Machine Cook Robin July 8 2005 Robin Cook The struggle against terrorism cannot be won by military means The Guardian UK Archived from the original on May 14 2011 Retrieved May 8 2011 After Mombassa Archived May 14 2013 at the Wayback Machine Al Ahram Weekly Online January 2 8 2003 Issue No 619 Retrieved September 3 2006 Wright 2006 p 332 Qutb 2003 pp 63 69 a b R Halverson Goodall Jr R Corman Jeffry H L and Steven 2011 3 The Jahiliyya Master Narratives of Islamist Extremism New York USA Palgrave Macmillan pp 45 46 ISBN 978 0 230 10896 7 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Qutb Sayyid Al Mehri A B 2006 Milestones Ma alim fi l tareeq 384 Stratford Rd Sparkhill Birmingham B11 4AB England Maktabah Book Sellers and Publishers pp 46 57 ISBN 0 9548665 1 7 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Wright 2006 p 79 How Did Sayyid Qutb Influence Osama bin Laden Gemsofislamism tripod com Archived from the original on October 17 2010 Retrieved March 22 2010 Mafouz Azzam cited in Wright 2006 p 36 Sayyid Qutb s Milestones footnote 24 Gemsofislamism tripod com Retrieved March 22 2010 EIKMEIER DALE C Spring 2007 Qutbism An Ideology of Islamic Fascism Parameters pp 85 98 Archived from the original on June 9 2007 R Halverson Goodall Jr R Corman Jeffry H L and Steven 2011 9 The Infidel Invaders Master Narratives of Islamist Extremism New York USA Palgrave Macmillan pp 114 122 ISBN 978 0 230 10896 7 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Kepel Gilles 2002 Jihad The Trail of Political Islam Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 01090 1 a b Haqqani Hussain 2005 The Ideologies of South Asian Jihadi Groups Current Trends in Islamist Ideology 1 13 ProQuest 1437302091 via ProQuest a b Marquardt Heffelfinger Erich Christopher 2008 Terrorism amp Political Islam Origins Ideologies and Methods a Counter Terrorism Textbook 2nd Edition Combating Terrorism Center Department of Social Sciences pp 37 38 42 150 151 153 ASIN B004LJQ8O8 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b c Klausen Jytte 2021 2 The Founder Western Jihadism A Thirty Year History Great Clarendon Street Oxford ox2 6dp United Kingdom Oxford University Press pp 53 54 ISBN 978 0 19 887079 1 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link J Tompkins Crossett Paul Chuck Spitaletta Marshal Jason Shana 2012 19 Al Qaeda 1988 2001 Casebook on Insurgency and Revolutionary Warfare Volume II 1962 2009 Fort Liberty North Carolina USA United States Army Special Operations Command pp 543 544 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Al Qa ida s Structure and Bylaws PDF CTC Archived from the original PDF on October 13 2022 Al Qa ida s Structure and Bylaws PDF CTC Archived from the original PDF on October 13 2022 McCants William September 2011 Al Qaeda s Challenge The Jihadists War With Islamist Democrats Foreign Affairs 90 5 20 32 JSTOR 23041773 via JSTOR Two months before 9 11 Zawahiri who had become al Qaeda s second in command published Knigbts Under the Banner of the Prophet which offers insight into why al Qacda decided to attack the United States within its borders In it he stated that al Qaeda aimed to establish an Islamic state in the Arab world Just as victory is not achieved for an army unless its foot soldiers occupy land the mujahid lslamic movement will not achieve victory against the global infdel alliance unless it possesses a base in the heart of the Islamic world Every plan and method we consider to rally and mobilize the ummab will be hanging in the air with no concrete result or tangible return unless it leads to the establishment of the caliphal state in the heart of the Islamic world Achieving this goal Zawahiri explained elsewhere in the book would require a global jihad It is not possible to incite a conflict for the establishment of a Muslim state if it is a regional conflict The international Jewish Crusader alliance led by America will not allow any Muslim force to obtain power in any of the Muslim lands It will impose sanctions on whoever helps it even if it does not declare war against them altogether Therefore to adjust to this new reality we must prepare ourselves for a battle that is not confined to a single region but rather includes the apostate domestic enemy and the Jewish Crusader external enemy To confront this insidious alliance Zawahiri argued al Qaeda had to first root out U S infuence in the region McCants William September 2011 Al Qaeda s Challenge The Jihadists War With Islamist Democrats Foreign Affairs 90 5 20 32 JSTOR 23041773 via JSTOR Zawahiri does not oppose all elections for example he supports elections for the rulers of Islamic states and for representatives on leadership councils which would ensure that these governments implemented Islamic law properly But he opposes any system in which elections empower legislators to make laws of their own choosing Bin Laden agreed with Zawahiri s take on elections stating in January 2009 that once foreign influence and local tyrants have been removed from Islamic countries true Muslims can elect their own presidents And like Zawahiri bin Laden argued that elections should not create parliaments that allow Muslims and non Muslims to collaborate on making laws McCants William September 2011 Al Qaeda s Challenge The Jihadists War With Islamist Democrats Foreign Affairs 90 5 20 32 JSTOR 23041773 via JSTOR J Tompkins Crossett Paul Chuck Spitaletta Marshal Jason Shana 2012 19 Al Qaeda 1988 2001 Casebook on Insurgency and Revolutionary Warfare Volume II 1962 2009 Fort Liberty North Carolina USA United States Army Special Operations Command pp 539 544 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Abdel Bari Atwan The Secret History of Al Qaeda p 233 University of California Press 2006 ISBN 0 520 24974 7 Mandaville Peter 2014 Islam and Politics 2nd ed 711 Third Avenue New York NY 10017 USA Routledge pp 344 347 ISBN 978 0 415 78256 2 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link a b Wiktorowicz Quintan Kaltner John Summer 2003 Killing in the Name of Islam Al Qaeda s Justification for September 11 PDF Middle East Policy X 2 86 Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved August 12 2019 Haid Haid September 26 2023 A book by al Qaeda s new leader reveals shifting strategies Al Majalla Archived from the original on October 28 2023 Tierney Dominic August 23 2016 Al Qaeda Has Been at War With the United States for 20 Years The Atlantic Bergen Peter 2021 The Rise and Fall of Osama bin Laden New York Simon amp Schuster pp 60 61 ISBN 978 1 982170 52 3 a b Wright 2006 p 174 Jansen 1997 Leonard Tom December 25 2009 Osama bin Laden came within minutes of killing Bill Clinton The Daily Telegraph London Archived 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