A shift in militants’ strategy could shine a more positive light on failed US policy
By James M. Dorsey
A paradigm shift in jihadist thinking suggests that
the US invasion of Afghanistan may prove to have achieved more than many counterterrorism
experts would want policymakers and military strategists to believe.
Similarly, the paradigm shift also hints at the
possibility that the presence in a Taliban-governed Afghanistan of various
militant Islamist and jihadist groups could turn out to be an advantage in
efforts to prevent and contain political violence.
The evolution of tensions and unfolding of differences
in the world of Afghan militancy will constitute a litmus test of the shift and
how history will ultimately judge the United States’ 20-year forever war in Afghanistan
in terms of counterterrorism.
The shift involves a move away from cross-border and
transnational acts of violence towards
local militancy and the garnering of popular support through good governance
based on an ultra-conservative interpretation of Islam.
It is a difference in strategy that constitutes one of the ideological and
strategic differences between Al-Qaeda and the Islamic State.
“This is not because (the jihadists’) ideology has
softened: It is because they have learned that inviting overwhelming reprisals
from modern militaries is the fastest way to forfeit their conquests, squander
their influence and be forced to start all over again,” said scholar and
journalist, Hassan Hassan, in a lengthy
piece of rare up-close reporting on jihadist militancy.
“Contrary to how some understand the US withdrawal in
Afghanistan, the lesson extremists are taking from the Taliban’s success is not
simply that jihad works but that diplomacy and engagement are a necessary part
of the process, which includes reassuring the West about external threats
emerging from their areas. What can be gained from parlays in Doha is more
significant and lasting than any terror attack,” Mr. Hassan went on to say.
The shift amounts to a return to the pattern of
Islamic militancy that historically is rooted in local grievances and conflicts.
Mr. Hassan also describes the Islamic State’s transnational jihadism that targets
the West, long embraced by Al-Qaeda, as
an aberration of that history.
Mr. Hassan’s
analysis is supported by research published by The Soufan Group, a research organization
established by Ali Soufan, a former FBI agent who played an important role in
the interrogation of captured Al-Qaeda officials and was involved in related
cases in the United States and elsewhere.
Analyst
Abdul Sayed noted that Al Qaeda, in an effort to prevent the United States from
driving it out of Afghanistan and Pakistan, has “shifted focus from global
terrorist attacks and external operations to supporting local jihadist groups
throughout South Asia, and fuelling the narratives that underpin their
objectives. This
shift helped build resilience, allowing Al-Qaeda to survive despite the massive
blows inflicted by the United States and its allies.”
The Islamic State’s loss of its proto-state in Syria
and Iraq, and the Taliban victory in Afghanistan appear to vindicate this paradigm
shift.
CNN
correspondent Clarissa Ward said she walked away from an interview in
August with Abdu Munir, the name used by a
commander of the Islamic State-Khorasan, two days before it attacked Kabul
airport, with the impression that “ISIS-Khorasan is very different from ISIS…
in Syria and Iraq. Ms. Ward was referring to the Afghan affiliate as well as
the Islamic State itself using common Western abbreviations for them.
Ms. Ward said
that “the conversation that I had with this commander did not lead me to
believe that they had the same level of transnational ambitions… They’re much
more focussed on the Taliban, honestly, than they are on trying to blow up a
plane…and they’re much more simple, less sophisticated.”
The jihadist strategy shift would be further
vindicated if the Taliban victory also reinforces ultraconservative religious
trends in neighbouring Pakistan.
Ultraconservatives and jihadists may take heart from
recent opposition by Muslim clerics, including Tahir Mehmood Ashrafi, Pakistani
Prime Minister Imran Khan’s special representative for religious harmony, to draft
legislation that would ban forced conversions.
As a result, the shift could become one more argument
to justify a possible future decision by President Joe Biden to pull US troops
out of Iraq and Syria originally dispatched to fight the Islamic State, as part
of the emerging
contours of a Biden doctrine.
“There is no question that the GWOT has not gone as
planned… Yet it would still be wrong – and rash – simply to discard the GWOT as
a strategic failure. The fact that consecutive presidents have found it so
difficult to extricate the United States from ongoing operations in the greater
Middle East reflects the reality of a persistent threat from extremist
organisations and their allies… GWOT
has been considerably more fruitful than it might first appear,”
said analysts Hal Brand and Michael
O’Hanlon, referring to President George W. Bush’s global war on terror launched
in 2001 in the wake of the 9/11 attacks.
Messrs. Brand and O’Hanlon may be painting an overly
optimistic picture. In the best of cases, Taliban-ruled Afghanistan will only
partially live up to their criteria of success laid out in a recent journal
article. The Taliban’s policing of jihadists may prevent them from targeting
the United States and others but will continue to offer them a safe haven, allowing
them to recruit.
“Being a safe
haven for global jihadists and acting as a launchpad for attacks against the
West are not the same thing. Under the Doha Agreement, the
Taliban have committed to preventing attacks being launched from Afghanistan,
but they have not pledged to cut off relations with foreign jihadist groups
altogether, nor to expel them from Afghanistan,” said Afghanistan scholar Antonio
Giustozzi.
Even so, on balance that could turn out to be less of
a problem provided the Taliban can
keep in check the Islamic State, the one jihadist group that refuses to accept
its takeover of Afghanistan or make
Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), the Pakistani Taliban, adopt the shift in
strategy. The fata morgana of a Taliban 2.0 could be shattered if large numbers
of Taliban fighters defect to the Islamic State in protest against the group’s
policing of militants on Afghan soil and/or embracing degrees of social liberalization,
particularly regarding women’s rights.
That could prove to be a big if. Question marks about
the Taliban’s ability to police those groups that have welcomed its victory
and/or pledged allegiance to it have already begun to emerge. Mr. Giustozzi
reports that in contrast to Pakistani militants Lashkar-e Taiba and Lashkar-e
Jhangvi, and the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan; the
TTP and Al-Qaeda have refused to negotiate agreements that would tighten
Taliban control by moving them to different parts of the country. Lashkar-e
Taiba and Lashkar-e Janghvi are groups seen as having close ties to Pakistani
intelligence.
The proposed agreements reportedly stroked with
demands put forward by China that the Taliban ensure that militants on Afghan
soil are prevented from training, raising funds and recruiting.
Suhail Shaheen, a Taliban spokesperson in Qatar, appeared to
acknowledge the demands in an interview with the Global Times, a Chinese Communist Party newspaper. "First, we
will not allow any training on our territory. Second, we will not allow any
fundraising for those who intend to carry out a foreign agenda. Third, we will
not allow the establishment of any recruitment centre in Afghanistan. These are
the main things," Mr. Shaheen said.
Zabihullah
Mujahid, the Taliban’s chief spokesperson in Kabul, however, last month left
the door open on the Taliban’s relationship with the TTP.
"The issue
of the TTP is one that Pakistan will have to deal with, not Afghanistan. It
is up to Pakistan, and Pakistani Islamic scholars and religious figures, not
the Taliban, to decide on the legitimacy or illegitimacy of their war and to
formulate a strategy in response," Mr. Mujahid told a Pakistani television
program. The spokesman stopped short of saying whether the Taliban would abide
by a decision of the scholars.
The TTP is
believed to be responsible for a
recent spike in attacks on Pakistani security forces, including a suicide
attack in Pakistan that killed three paramilitary soldiers and wounded 20 other
people. The stepped-up attacks prompted the New
Zealand cricket team to last week abandon its first tour of Pakistan in 18
years and abruptly leave the country while England
cancelled its visit that had been scheduled for next month.
Similarly, behind
the facades, cracks had already emerged between the Taliban and Al-Qaeda before
the US withdrawal from Afghanistan, prompting the group, like the TTP, according
to Mr. Giustozzi, to refuse to negotiate a deal with the Afghans and build
support among factions of the Taliban that are more sympathetic to the
jihadists.
Al-Qaeda was
wary of what the Taliban’s agreement with the United States would mean for the
group and suspected the Afghans of having a hand in the killing of several of
its senior members in recent years. Al-Qaeda worries, moreover, that Taliban
understandings with China and Russia could put its freedom of movement and/or
existence into further jeopardy.
Apparently anticipating a Taliban failure to control
all jihadists on Afghan soil and/or adoption of the paradigm strategy shift by
some major jihadist groups, US intelligence officials
predicted that Al-Qaeda would be able to reconstitute itself in Afghanistan
and be capable of orchestrating attacks inside the U.S. in one to two years.
Their predictions were bolstered by the return to
Afghanistan of Anwar ul Haq Mujahid, a leader of Osama bin Laden’s former
“Black Guard,” who allegedly helped plan and orchestrate the jihadist leader’s
escape in 2001 as the United States bombed his Tora Bora hideout. Mr. Mujahid,
no family of the Taliban spokesman, reportedly returned
to Jalalabad to command Taliban forces and foreign fighters
in eastern Afghanistan. Several of his associates are said to also be back.
However, Mr. Mujahid’s return does not by definition deny
the potential shift in Al-Qaeda strategy that is supported by the Taliban. It
could be the Taliban’s way of placating the group as well as the more militant
within its own ranks.
“Despite the persistence of the relationship…the Taliban
have a strong interest in holding Al-Qaeda in check... It is not
hard to imagine a scenario in which the Taliban provide space and financial
support for Al-Qaeda to operate while also restricting the activities of the
group to plot and stage attacks,” said scholar Cole Bunzel.
A podcast version of this story is available on Soundcloud, Itunes,
Spotify, Stitcher,
TuneIn,
Spreaker, Pocket Casts, Tumblr,
Podbean, Audecibel, Patreon and Castbox.
Dr. James M. Dorsey is an award-winning journalist and scholar
and a Senior Fellow at the National University of Singapore’s Middle East
Institute.
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