Same people, same threat
by Scott Shane
Nearly six years after the Sept. 11 attacks, the hundreds of billions
of dollars and thousands of lives expended in the name of the war on
terror pose a single, insistent question: Are we safer?
On Tuesday, in a dark and strikingly candid two pages, the nation's
intelligence agencies offered an implicit answer, and it was not
encouraging. In many respects, the National Intelligence Estimate
suggests, the threat of terrorist violence against the United States is
growing worse, fueled by the Iraq war and spreading Islamic extremism.
The conclusions were not new, echoing the private comments of
government officials and independent experts for many months.
But the stark declassified summary contrasted sharply with the more
positive emphasis of President Bush and his top aides for years: that
two-thirds of Al Qaeda's leadership had been killed or captured; that
the Iraq invasion would reduce the terrorist menace; and that the United
States had its enemies "on the run," as Mr. Bush has frequently put it.
After years of war in Afghanistan and Iraq and targeted killings in
Yemen, Pakistan and elsewhere, the major threat to the United States has
the same name and the same basic look as in 2001: Al Qaeda, led by Osama
bin Laden and Ayman al-Zawahri, plotting attacks from mountain hide-outs
near the Afghan-Pakistani border.
The headline on the intelligence estimate, said Daniel L. Byman, a
former intelligence officer and the director of the Center for Peace and
Security Studies at Georgetown University, might just as well have been
the same as on the now famous presidential brief of Aug. 6, 2001: "Bin
Laden Determined to Strike in U.S."
The new estimate does cite some gains; known plots against the United
States have been disrupted, it says, thanks to increased vigilance and
countermeasures.
But the new estimate takes note of sources of worry that have arisen
only since 2001. The Iraq war has spawned Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia as the
"most visible and capable affiliate" of the original terrorist group,
inspiring jihadists around the world and drawing money and recruits to
their cause.
The explosion of radical Internet sites has created self-generating
cells of would-be terrorists in many Western countries. Lebanese
Hezbollah, rarely considered likely to attack in the United States, now
"may be more likely to consider" doing just that in response to a
perceived threat from American forces to itself or its sponsor, Iran.
And if there had been progress after 9/11 in isolating and
immobilizing Al Qaeda's leaders in the tribal areas of Pakistan, some of
it has come apart in the past year, with Pakistani troops abandoning
patrols in North Waziristan and allowing greater freedom of movement to
Al Qaeda's core.
All told, despite the absence of any new attack on American soil
since 2001, the conclusion that Al Qaeda "will continue to enhance its
capabilities" to attack the United States suggests some miscalculation
in the administration's basic formula against terrorism: that attacking
the jihadists overseas would protect the homeland.
"I guess we have to fight them over here even though we're fighting
them over there," said Steven Simon, a terrorism expert who served in
the Clinton administration and is the co-author of "The Next
Attack."Democrats proclaimed the document a "devastating indictment" of
Bush administration policies, in the words of Senator Joseph R. Biden
Jr., the Democratic chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee and a
presidential candidate.
The document's pessimism was striking; it may reflect a determination
of the intelligence agencies, accused of skewing some reports to back
the president's Iraq invasion plans in 2003, to make clear that their
findings have not been tailored to suit the White House this time
around.
But Max Boot, a security analyst who has generally supported the
president, said the estimate "cuts both ways" politically.
Even if some administration policies have been ineffective or have
backfired, the estimate also concludes that Al Qaeda will probably try
to capitalize on the network built up by its affiliate in Iraq, lending
some support to the argument that a rapid exit from Iraq might prove
dangerous for American security, said Mr. Boot, a senior fellow at the
Council on Foreign Relations and the author of "War Made New."
"It makes clear that the threat from Al Qaeda in Iraq is not just to
Iraqis - it's to the U.S. homeland as well," he said.
The new assessment in some respects harks back to a National
Intelligence Estimate in July 1995, which predicted terrorist attacks in
the United States, specifying Wall Street, the White House and the
Capitol as potential targets. It described "a worldwide network of
training facilities and safe havens."
An update of that N.I.E. in 1997 was the last such assessment issued
before Sept. 11, a gap that the 9/11 commission decried in its review of
the attacks. A new estimate earlier in 2001, as the spy agencies' alarm
about a possible attack increased, might have better focused government
efforts to detect a plot, the commission argued in its report.
An estimate of the global terrorist threat last September described
the emergence of the Iraq war as a "cause c‚lŠbre" for jihadists around
the world. But that document also highlighted American actions it said
had "seriously damaged the leadership of Al Qaeda and disrupted its
operations."
The New York Times
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