August 1, 2012
Al-Qaeda affiliates pose a rising threat
exploiting poverty and upheavals in the world's most vulnerable regions even as
the core network is on the decline, the US State Department warned Tuesday.
In its Country Reports on Terrorism 2011, the
department also branded Iran "the world's leading sponsor of terrorist
activity" providing funds and support "for terrorist and militant
groups throughout the Middle East."
Both Iran and Al-Qaeda are helping to foment
unrest by spreading "violent extremist ideology and rhetoric" in some
of the world's most restive regions, the report to Congress maintained.
Hailing the killing of Al-Qaeda leader Osama
bin Laden in a US commando raid on his Pakistani compound in May 2011, the
report noted he had "remained deeply involved in directing (the group's)
operations and setting its strategy."
"The loss of bin Laden and these other key
operatives puts the network on a path of decline that will be difficult to
reverse," it said.
But, while the core group of Al-Qaeda may have
been weakened over the past year, "we have seen the rise of affiliated
groups around the world."
"There's no question there's cause for
concern," ambassador at large from the department's bureau of
counterterrorism, Daniel Benjamin, told journalists.
He stressed though that the core Al-Qaeda group
had been the most "capable part of the organization" with the ability
to carry out "catastrophic attacks on a scale that none of the affiliates
have been able to show."
He pointed to Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula
as "the most dangerous of the affiliates," although he praised the
efforts of new President Abdrabuh Mansur Hadi to crack down on the militants.
AQAP had gained territory in southern Yemen,
and "was exploiting unrest in that country to advance plots against
regional and Western interests," the report charged.
Meanwhile Al-Qaeda's north African branch,
known as AQIM, "historically the weakest of the affiliates, saw its
coffers filled in 2011 with kidnapping ransoms," it added.
Al-Qaeda affiliates were also at work in Iraq,
capitalizing on the withdrawal of US forces from there, despite suffering
recent leadership losses.
The Iraqi branch was "resilient" and
"believed to be extending its reach into Syria and seeking to exploit the
popular uprising against the dictatorship of Bashar al-Assad."
According to the report there were more 10,000
terror attacks around the globe in 2011 in 70 countries and leading to over
12,500 deaths. However the figures represent a five-year low, having dropped by
almost 12 percent from 2010 and by 29 percent from 2007.
Benjamin called 2011 "an extremely
significant year in counterterrorism" not just because of the death of bin
Laden, but also because of the Arab Spring, with millions demanding change in
the Middle East without reference to "Al-Qaeda's incendiary
worldview."
He warned of "attendant perils"
though in which "terrorists could still cause significant disruptions for
states undergoing" significant transformations.
The other main terror threat to the United
States remained Iran, which was designated by the US as a State Sponsor of
Terrorism in 1984.
"Iran remained an active state sponsor of
terrorism in 2011 and increased its terrorist-related activity," the
report said.
The Islamic Republic's aim was "likely in
an effort to exploit the uncertain political conditions resulting from the Arab
Spring, as well as in response to perceived increasing external pressure on
Tehran."
A plot uncovered in September to kill Saudi
Arabia's ambassador to the US "underscored anew Iran's interest in using
international terrorism -- including in the United States -- to further its
foreign policy goals."
Tehran was also continuing to provide arms and
training to militant groups such as Hamas and other Palestinian extremist
groups, as well as Hezbollah.
And Iran's Revolutionary Guards had provided
training to Taliban militants in Afghanistan.
The report also charged that Iran was allowing
Al-Qaeda members to use its territory as a pipeline to funnel funds and
operatives into South Asia.
The report also highlighted concerns about Boko
Haram militants in Nigeria, said to have Al-Qaeda ties, and highlighted the
situation in Egypt's Sinai Peninsula where "a number of loosely knit
militant groups have formed... with some claiming ties and allegiance to Al-Qaeda."
Source: Bangkok Post
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