Jihadists target Africa and Afghanistan, but also eye China and Russia
By James M. Dorsey
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All Mr. Mohamed wanted was a job and a marriage.
A 22-year-old Somali farmhand, Mr. Mohamed, skeptically retorted,
"is that right?" when Al Shabab recruiters sought to convince him
that the defence of Islam needed him.
"What I really need is a job and a wife,' Mr. Mohamed added.
The farmworker was persuaded when the recruiters for one of
Africa's oldest jihadist movements promised to find him a wife.
The jihadists never did. Instead, when Mr. Mohamed’s battle
injuries disabled him, Al Shabab, an Al Qaeda affiliate, pressured him to
sacrifice himself as a suicide bomber.
Mr. Mohamed fits the profile of an average African rank-and-file
militant recruit who sees jihadism as an opportunity to escape poverty rather
than the fulfillment of a religious command.
The recruits’ lack of religious education works in the militants’
favour. Recruits are in no position to challenge their militant interpretation
of Islam.
A 128-page United Nations Development Programme
(UNDP) survey of 500
former militants showed that 57 per cent knew little or nothing about Islamic
religious texts.
Islamic State recruitment in Afghanistan has proven to be a
different beast.
It benefitted from outflanking Al Qaeda as the primary
transnational jihadist group in the region, independent of and opposed to
Afghanistan's Taliban rulers.
In contrast to Africa, the Islamic State had a more ready-made
pipeline of battle-hardened militants and auxiliaries with its cooptation of
groups like Pakistan's Lashkar-e-Jhangvi and the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan.
The cooptation brought in militants with superior knowledge of
the local and regional landscape. Some were scions of
influential political and warlord families who provided logistical
support by helping the Islamic State gain access to official documentation and
plan attacks.
In addition, Afghanistan's Salafi communities' relations
with the Taliban are strained and former Afghan security force
personnel at risk of persecution by the Taliban after their takeover in the
wake of the US
withdrawal in August 2021 turned out to be equally rich hunting grounds.
Finally, the Islamic State benefitted from its questioning of the
Taliban’s Islamic credentials in contrast to Al Qaeda which supports the Afghan
movement.
In defending the Taliban, Al Qaeda has projected the group’s
declaration of an Islamic Emirate, which the Afghans have not characterized as
a caliphate, as an alternative to the Islamic State’s notion of a caliphate as
declared in 2014 when it controlled swathes of Syrian and Iraq.
“Skepticism of the Taliban has long characterized a certain
segment of the jihadi movement that is more puritanical or
doctrinaire in orientation… The Islamic State provided a home for the more
radical strain of jihadi thought… The group’s rise to
prominence has meant that more and more jihadis have come to view the Taliban
as an apostate movement,” said scholar Cole Bunzel in a recent
study of jihadist attitudes towards the Afghan group.
The distinct profiles of militants in Africa and Afghanistan
suggest different trajectories with divergent geopolitical impacts, at least
for now.
That is not to say that reform is unimportant in Central Asian
nations like Uzbekistan and Tajikistan, targeted by the Islamic State.
For Russia,
Africa generates a significant opportunity to expand its global reach and
influence. Russia capitalised on the tightrope that the United States and
Europe walk as they balance the need for reform with inevitable support for
autocratic partners in the fight against militancy.
The management of that balance by France, long the major external
power in the fight alongside the United States, has ultimately disadvantaged it
and opened doors for Russia.
Countries like Mali and Burkina Faso are cases in point.
Mali highlighted the importance of strengthening good governance.
In 2020, a weak government produced a military coup that ruptured relations
with France and paved the way for the replacement of French troops by the
Wagner Group, Russia's shadowy mercenary force.
France’s departure from Mali signalled an end to its decade-long
fight against Islamic insurgents in the Sahel.
Instead, French President Emmanuel Macron increasingly focused on
reversing Russia's invasion of Ukraine, and declared as much by halving the number of French
forces in Niger, Chad, Burkina Faso, and Mauritania to 2,200 and
limiting their mission.
Mali withdrew six months earlier from the G5 Sahel multi-national
military force, composed of troops from Niger, Chad, Burkina Faso, and
Mauritania, in a further
blow to Western counterterrorism efforts.
The drawdown of French troops spotlighted the inability of the
US-sponsored Trans-Sahara Counterterrorism Partnership (TSCTP), founded in
2005, to effectively assist West and North Africa in the fight against
militancy.
The partnership was designed to adopt a holistic approach to
address the region's political, development, socio-economic, and governance
challenges.
In practice, it was a mismanaged policy tool focused almost
exclusively on security assistance and strengthening local military and
security institutions. As a result, it spent US$1 billion for over a
decade and a half with little to show for itself.
In a bid to bolster US support for the Sahel, Secretary of State
Antony Blinken announced during a visit to Niger in March, the first ever by a
Secretary of State, $150 million
in new humanitarian aid. Mr. Blinken’s message was echoed by Vice
President Kamala Harris during visit this week to three African states, Ghana,
Tanzania, and Zambia.
Nonetheless, despite more than a decade of US and French-led
counterterrorism efforts, militancy is spreading, most
recently to the West African coastal states of Benin and Togo.
In testimony last year to the Senate Armed Forces Committee
before he stepped down as head of the US Africa Command, Gen. Stephen J Townsend,
warned that “seven of the
10 countries with the largest increase in terrorism in 2020 were in sub-Saharan
Africa, with Burkina Faso suffering a 590 per cent increase.”
Desperate to end the violence, many in West Africa welcome Russia
and the Wagner Group, hoping they may succeed where France and the United
States and corrupt regional governments have failed.
In Mali and elsewhere in the region, Russian psychological
warfare helped pave the way for the Wagner Group.
So did Russia's willingness, in contrast to France and the United
States, despite the high cost to civilian life of their actions, to conduct and
allow local governments to wage counterinsurgency and counterterrorism
operations unconstrained by human rights concerns.
Yet, the combination of brutality with no political, social, or
economic component of any significance, and lack of differentiation between
transnational militants in Africa, such as Al Qaeda affiliate Jama’a Nusrat
ul-Islam wa al-Muslimin (JNIM) and the Islamic State in the Greater Sahara
(IS-GS) and various regional self-autonomy movements,
promises to produce short-term results, at best, rather than structural
solutions.
The failure
to distinguish between different types of militants precludes the design of
tailor-made approaches that address specific grievances and reduce the risk of
driving non-jihadist tribal and ethnic movements into the arms of religious
militants.
Moreover, by paying Russia and the Wagner Group for their
services in concessions for natural resources, commercial contracts, and/or
access to critical infrastructure, such as airbases and ports, African
governments enable
Russia to embed itself in their economies and social fabric.
In Burkina Faso, a landlocked nation of 20 million, protesters
waving Russian flags attacked the French embassy and a cultural institute in
Ouagadougou, the capital, after a military takeover in September 2022, the
second in a year.
The head of the Wagner Group, Yevgeny Prigozhin, was among the
first to congratulate the new junta, praising it for doing what “was
necessary.”
Russia was a factor in the coup, even if Russia may not have
instigated it, and despite assurances by Burkina Faso's new president, Captain
Ibrahim Traore, that his country
would not follow in Mali’s footsteps.
West African sources close to Mr. Traore said he had toppled the
leader of Burkina Faso’s first coup, Lt. Col. Paul Henri Sandaogo Damiba,
because he was dragging his feet on turning to Russia after France refused to
sell him military equipment, including helicopters.
The US, France, and Russia’s focus on counterterrorism in West
Africa ignores the north of the continent at their peril.
Officials, strategists, and analysts believe that North Africa's
experience dating to Algeria's bloody war in the 1990s against Islamist
militants and militancy in Libya and Tunisia in the wake of the 2011 popular
Arab revolts, as well as Egypt's brutal crackdown on Islamists in 2013, has, at
least for now, firewalled the region against militancy.
The opposite could be true. The COVID-19 pandemic has thrown
regional economies into chaos. Many perform worse than they were on the eve of
the 20l11 uprisings. Socio-economic disparities, corruption, and unemployment
have increased. Significant segments of the population are angry, frustrated,
and hopeless.
A report in 2021 by the US Institute for Peace and the Carnegie
Endowment for International Peace warned that “frustration with the inability
of regional governments to address these problems boiled over in 2011, leading
to popular revolutions that toppled three of the five regimes in power in North
Africa. Yet, despite these highly visible and destabilising popular uprisings,
reform has been slow. As a result, the social and economic factors that have made the
region so fertile for terrorist recruitment and incitement remain
unaddressed.”
If Europe may be the external power most affected by increasing
instability and political violence on its periphery, China could become the
major power most targeted in Afghanistan and Central Asia.
China has moved more firmly into the Islamic State's crosshairs
in the past year.
At the same time, the Turkistan Islamic Party (TIP), long a
transnational jihadist group aligned with Al Qaeda, has increasingly shifted
from pursuing global jihad to wanting to liberate the north-western Chinese
province of Xinjiang.
The party’s deputy emir, Abdusalam al-Turkistani,
signalled the shift in a seven-page statement on Telegram.
Speaking in Dari, one of Afghanistan’s official languages, rather
than Uyghur or Arabic, Mr. Al-Turkistani, asserted that “we are not from China,
our homeland is East Turkistan… We are your Muslim brothers from East Turkistan
of Central Asia... We are not
terrorists; we are fighters for the freedom of the oppressed Uyghurs in East
Turkistan.”
Mr. Al-Turkistani’s assertion that his group, formerly known as
the East Turkistan Islamic Movement (ETIM), was not a terrorist organisation
was undergirded
by a decision in 2020 by the US State Department to take the
movement off its terrorism list.
China got a taste of what the Islamic State and TIP shifts could
entail when three men stormed a Chinese-owned hotel in the centre of Kabul, the
Afghan capital, in December 2022. The attackers were killed, and five of the
approximately 30 Chinese nationals in the hotel were wounded.
It was the first
attack on a Chinese target since the Taliban came to power in August 2021.
The Islamic State Khurasan Province (ISKP) claimed responsibility.
A day earlier, Chinese
ambassador to Afghanistan Wang Yu expressed “dissatisfaction” about
security and urged the Taliban to improve its protection of the People’s
Republic’s diplomatic mission.
The attack followed a series of anti-Chinese statements and
publications by the Islamic State in which the group
denounced Chinese "imperialism." The renewed focus broke the
Islamic State's five-year silence about China.
It also raised the spectre of the group attacking Chinese targets
in Pakistan as it did in 2017 when it kidnapped
and executed two Chinese nationals in the Pakistani province of
Balochistan, a key node in China's Belt and Road Initiative.
Similarly, the TIP vowed revenge for China's repression of Turkic
Muslims in a statement released a
week before the attack on the hotel.
Western governments, Uyghurs, and human rights activists have
accused China of imprisoning more than one million Turkic Muslims to reshape
their religious and ethnic identity in the mould of the country’s rulers.
The brutal repression of Turkic Muslims in Xinjiang and the
effort to Sinicise Islam in China is one major reason why the People's Republic
is in jihadist crosshairs.
Another is China’s largely unnoticed growing commercial interests
in Afghanistan.
China is one of only a handful of countries to maintain a
diplomatic presence in Kabul, and trade with Afghanistan, even if it, like the
rest of the world, refuses to recognize the Taliban regime.
Nevertheless, China advised its citizens in Afghanistan, Kabul's
largest ex-pat community, to leave the
country "as soon as possible" in the wake of the hotel attack.
Meanwhile, arrivals at Kabul’s airport are greeted by a billboard
beckoning them to Chinatown, a collection of drab 10-storey buildings in the
northwest of the city populated by shops selling Chinese products ranging from
office furniture to appliances, solar panels, toiletries, and clothing.
In addition, China’s
first infrastructural project in Taliban-ruled Afghanistan is a 57-hectar,
$216-million industrial park that sprawls across the northeastern edge of
Kabul. China picked the project up after the
United States abandoned it with US forces' withdrawal and President Ashraf
Ghani's fall.
China has since removed
tariffs on 98 per cent of Afghan goods and revived an air transport service
to import
US$800 million a year worth of pine nuts.
Africa and Afghanistan may be jihadists’ current centres of
gravity, but militants’ ambitions go far beyond.
Islamic State attacks on Afghan mosques near the border with
Central Asia and a purported cross-border missile attack on Uzbekistan have
dashed Central Asian hopes that the Taliban would be able to control the
frontier region and shield former Soviet republics from the jihadists.
Like China, Russia's involvement in the African fight against
extremism will, sooner rather than later, make Russia a jihadist target.
An Islamic
State suicide bombing in September 2022 near the Russian embassy in Kabul
in which two Russian embassy staff were among six people killed may have been a
shot across Moscow’s bow.
Offering alternatives across Africa to men like Mr. Mohamed, the
former Somali militant in search of a job and a wife, would enhance
counterterrorism efforts in Africa and Central Asia, provided the United
States, Europe, and local governments have the political will to implement necessary
reforms.
That will be far more difficult in Afghanistan, where the Taliban
is internationally isolated, desperate to hold on to power, and unwilling to
meet minimal conditions of the international community that wants to see more
inclusive policies.
The 2022 attacks on the hotel and the Russian embassy in Kabul
suggest that Russia and China are increasingly in jihadist crosshairs in ways
that could see militants expand their theatre of operations, and, in the case
of Afghanistan, target others like the United Arab Emirates, that do business
with the Taliban.
An earlier version of this article was first
published by Counter
Terrorist Trends and Analyses
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