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Showing posts with label Scott Stewart. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Scott Stewart. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Jihadism in 2010: The Threat Continues, Islam,Terrorism and Jihad, NewAgeIslam.com

Islam,Terrorism and Jihad
Jihadism in 2010: The Threat Continues
By Scott Stewart
January 6, 2010

For the past several years, STRATFOR has published an annual forecast on al Qaeda and the jihadist movement. Since our first jihadist forecast in January 2006, we have focused heavily on the devolution of jihadism from a phenomenon primarily involving the core al Qaeda group to one based mainly on the wider jihadist movement and the devolving, decentralized threat it poses.

The central theme of last year’s forecast was that al Qaeda was an important force on the ideological battlefield, but that the efforts of the United States and its allies had marginalized the group on the physical battlefield and kept it bottled up in a limited geographic area. Because of this, we forecast that the most significant threat in terms of physical attacks stemmed from regional jihadist franchises and grassroots operatives and not the al Qaeda core. We also wrote that we believed the threat posed by such attacks would remain tactical and not rise to the level of a strategic threat. To reflect this reality, we even dropped al Qaeda from the title of our annual forecast and simply named it Jihadism in 2009: The Trends Continue.

The past year proved to be very busy in terms of attacks and thwarted plots emanating from jihadist actors. But, as forecast, the primary militants involved in carrying out these terrorist plots were almost exclusively from regional jihadist groups and grassroots operatives, and not militants dispatched by the al Qaeda core. We anticipate that this dynamic will continue, and if anything, the trend will be for some regional franchise groups to become even more involved in transnational attacks, thus further usurping the position of al Qaeda prime at the vanguard of jihadism on the physical battlefield.

http://newageislam.com/jihadism-in-2010--the-threat-continues/islam,terrorism-and-jihad/d/2369


Friday, June 15, 2012

Pakistan: Biting the Hand that Feeds You, The War within Islam, NewAgeIslam.com

The War within Islam
Pakistan: Biting the Hand that Feeds You
By Scott Stewart
October 7, 2009

In his Oct. 6 call to The Associated Press and other media outlets to claim responsibility for the attack, TTP spokesman Azam Tariq said the group is planning additional attacks against similar targets. “The WFP is promoting the U.S. agenda,” Tariq said, and “such types of suicide attacks will continue in the future. We will target all people and offices working for American interests. We have sent more suicide bombers in various parts of the country and they have been given targets.”

The WFP office in Islamabad is located in an upscale part of town but outside of the diplomatic enclave. While the roads leading into the area are blocked by police checkpoints, the sector is not nearly as heavily locked down as the diplomatic enclave, which made it easier for an attacker to approach the WFP office. The office does have an exterior security wall, but that wall provides very little standoff — in other words, there is not much distance between the building and the road. From an attacker’s perspective, the WFP is a far softer target than a facility such as the U.S. Embassy, which has a significant standoff.

http://newageislam.com/pakistan--biting-the-hand-that-feeds-you-/the-war-within-islam/d/1866


Thursday, June 14, 2012

Lessons from La-Qaeda's use of a human Trojan horse to try killing a Saudi prince, Islam,Terrorism and Jihad, NewAgeIslam.com

Islam,Terrorism and Jihad
Lessons from La-Qaeda's use of a human Trojan horse to try killing a Saudi prince
AQAP: Paradigm Shifts and Lessons Learned
By Scott Stewart
Sept 2, 2009

One of the highlights of the Friday gathering was supposed to be the prince's meeting with Abdullah Hassan Taleh al-Asiri, a Saudi man who was a wanted militant from al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP). Al-Asiri had allegedly renounced terrorism and had requested to meet the prince in order to repent and then be accepted into the kingdom's amnesty program. Such surrenders are not unprecedented — and they serve as great press events for the kingdom's ideological battle against jihadists. Prince Mohammed, who is responsible for the Saudi rehabilitation program for militants, is a key figure in that ideological battle.

In February, a man who appeared with al-Asiri on Saudi Arabia's list of most-wanted militants — former Guantanamo Bay inmate Mohammed al-Awfi — surrendered in Yemen and was transported to Saudi Arabia where he renounced terrorism and entered into the kingdom's amnesty program. Al-Awfi, who had appeared in a January 2009 video issued by the newly created AQAP after the merger of the Saudi and Yemeni nodes of the global jihadist network, was a senior AQAP leader, and his renouncement was a major blow against AQAP.

http://newageislam.com/lessons-from-la-qaeda-s-use-of-a-human-trojan-horse-to-try-killing-a-saudi-prince-/islam,terrorism-and-jihad/d/1716