US Qaeda strategy fatally flawed: analysts
PARIS, In its ideological struggle against Al-Qaeda, American
anti-terrorist strategy too often overlooks the basic tenets of the
infamous Chinese warlord Sun Tzu, namely: know your enemy.
That is the fixed view of leading analysts, who conclude that through
ignorance of the enemy it faces, ignorance of its nature, its goals, its
strengths and its weaknesses, the United States is condemned to failure.
"The attention of the US military and intelligence community is
directed almost uniformly towards hunting down militant leaders or
protecting US forces, (and) not towards understanding the enemy we now
face," said Bruce Hoffman, a professor at Georgetown University,
Washington DC.
"This is a monumental failing not only because decapitation
strategies have rarely worked in countering mass-mobilisation terrorist
or insurgent campaigns, but also because Al-Qaeda's ability to continue
this struggle is based absolutely on its capacity to attract new
recruits and replenish its resources.
"Without knowing our enemy, we cannot fulfill the most basic
requirements of an effective counter-terrorist strategy: pre-empting and
preventing terrorist operations and deterring their attacks," Hoffman
added.
Officials said Friday that Abu Laith al-Libi - believed to have been
killed when a missile fired by an unmanned US aircraft hit his Pakistani
hideout - was a top Al-Qaeda commander who led Osama bin Laden's terror
network in Afghanistan.
He was in fifth position on a classified US Central Intelligence
Agency wanted list seen by AFP, with a five-million-dollar (3.5 million
euros) bounty on his head.
But in using the "Al-Qaeda" label when talking about suspects
arrested or armed fighters killed - indiscriminately and sometimes
wrongly, whether in Afghanistan, Iraq or elsewhere - American or Western
forces create and feed a confusion which ultimately makes victims of
themselves, experts say.
"(Using) body-counts as a criterion to measure effectiveness is a bit
like Guantanamo: you produce a tally, you mix up Al-Qaeda members or
just hired hands with people who have only the vaguest of connections,
people who have none at all and finally even pure civilians," added
French academic Jean-Pierre Filiu, author of "Les Frontieres du Jihad"
('The Limits of Jihad').
"When you reach that point, air-strikes and the elimination of
'wanted' individuals not only prove fruitless, but actually become
counter-productive.
"These actions only intensify (Al-Qaeda) recruitment, instead of
weakening the organisation.
"The problem is this innate tendency within all administrations or
bodies to stack up figures, pull out statistics, use them to show how
they are winning, how they are liquidating their enemies, etc," Filiu
added.
The 'body-count' syndrome is actually a "trap" laid by Al-Qaeda into
which the Americans have "fallen" blindly, added Lebanese-American
researcher Fawaz Gerges, an international relations specialist at Sarah
Lawrence College, New York.
"You cannot win this war on the battlefield, because there is none,"
said Gerges. "You're facing an unconventional war. The more you rely on
military might, the more you lose the war of ideas against Al-Qaeda and
the militants.
"In Iraq, we fell into their trap, we gave them more ideological
ammunition. "So many Muslims all over the world are now convinced, and
this feeling is so entrenched, that the war in Iraq is not against
Al-Qaeda, but against Islam."
(AFP) |