From the Los Angeles Times
Libyans advance in Al Qaeda network
The death of leader Abu Laith al Libi
highlights the nationality's rise in a group dominated by Egyptians and
Saudis.
By Sebastian Rotella
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
February 4, 2008
MADRID —
The death of Abu Laith al Libi, a Libyan Al Qaeda chief, has cast a
spotlight on the rise of Libyan militants in a network dominated by
Egyptians and Saudis, Western anti-terrorism investigators say.
Al Libi was killed last week in an American missile strike on a
hide-out in Pakistan near the border with Afghanistan, officials say.
In addition to overseeing a paramilitary campaign in Afghanistan, Al
Libi had become a top figure in a propaganda barrage on the Internet,
according to experts.
The emergence of the Libyans, traditionally a strong but
low-profile group, is a result of developments on three fronts: Iraq,
Pakistan and Afghanistan. Although Al Qaeda has suffered setbacks in
Iraq, Libyan militants there have proved resilient and adept at moving
fighters into combat, experts say. Libyans have become the
second-biggest foreign insurgent contingent in Iraq after the Saudis,
according to a U.S. military analysis of seized documents.
Al Qaeda's leaders in Pakistan have rewarded the Libyans with increased
power and media presence, experts say.
"There is a rising leadership cadre of Libyans in Al Qaeda," said
J. Vahid Brown, an analyst at the Combating Terrorism Center at West
Point. "Egyptians have really dominated strategic and military
operations. The Egyptians are good at keeping control of that, because
many of them have military training. Now you have Libyan faces
appearing in videos."
Al Qaeda's chief, Osama bin Laden, is a Saudi, and his deputy, Ayman
Zawahiri, is Egyptian. Their dominance has made Egyptians, especially,
and Gulf Arabs the organization's most powerful players.
Western investigators say Al Qaeda's structure is paradoxically fluid
and bureaucratic at the same time. The multiethnic alliance survives by
evolving on the run, but it also has a penchant for titles, budgets and
paperwork.
"What is curious about Al Qaeda is the contradictory nature of the
organization," said a senior British anti- terrorism official. "It is
curiously bureaucratic."
And the network has its share of infighting.
Some rifts have been ideological, such as a debate over Bin
Laden's decision to launch the Sept. 11 attacks and the crushing
retaliation it provoked. In addition, conflicts have resulted from
resentment of the Egyptians as well as tensions between Arabs and
Central Asians, experts said.
The network has an ethnic pecking order of sorts. In the late
1990s, Libyans were quiet but influential. They played the role of
mentors for fellow North Africans, particularly Moroccans who were seen
as "little foot soldiers," according to a Spanish law enforcement chief.
The Libyan Islamic Fighting Group, which has waged a longtime
campaign against Moammar Kadafi's regime, ran a camp in Afghanistan
that groomed the founders of the Moroccan Islamic Combatant Group,
according to Spanish court documents. Al Libi became a revered figure
among the Moroccans.
A captured Moroccan extremist named Nourredine Nafia told interrogators
about meetings in Turkey in 1998 at which Libyans provided expertise
about communications and organizing cells, according to Italian court
documents.
After the U.S.-led military strikes in Afghanistan in retaliation for
the Sept. 11 attacks, the damaged Al Qaeda leadership scattered to
refuges in northwest Pakistan and elsewhere. Mid-level chiefs moved up
to replace slain or captured veterans.
They now operate mainly in tribal areas in Pakistan's Waziristan region
out of village compounds such as the one hit by the missile strike last
week, investigators say.
Although the organizational lines are not always sharp, Egyptians have
tended to run an "external operations" wing that targets the West.
Libyans have concentrated on paramilitary combat and attacks on Western
and local targets in Pakistan and Afghanistan, experts say.
A Libyan named Abu Faraj Farj who was based in the Bajaur tribal
area allegedly masterminded two assassination attempts in 2003 against
Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf as Al Qaeda tried to reconstitute
itself, said Singapore-based terrorism expert Rohan Gunaratna, author
of "Inside Al Qaeda."
With Bin Laden and Zawahiri isolated to avoid detection, Farj was
among a select few who met with the two fugitives and transmitted
messages and directives to commanders in Waziristan, according to U.S.
intelligence officials.
Farj was captured in 2005 in Pakistan and is being held at the
U.S. military prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. It is believed he was
betrayed by a Central Asian faction competing with Arab leaders for
turf and allegiances in the tribal areas, said Brown, the West Point
analyst.
As they work with a resurgent Taliban in Afghanistan and Pakistan,
Libyans have stepped up in the Iraqi theater. Libyan strategists tried
to smooth the difficult long-distance relationship with Abu Musab
Zarqawi, the Jordanian whose campaign of bombings and beheadings in
Iraq came to be seen as counterproductive, experts say.
After the 2006 slaying of Zarqawi in a U.S. strike, the number of
foreign fighters entering Iraq declined and his group, Al Qaeda in
Iraq, lost support among Iraqis.
Disillusioned by Sunni- Shiite bloodshed in Iraq, some foreign
militants have headed to other combat zones such as Afghanistan and
Somalia, according to European intelligence officials.
But Libyan militants have demonstrated tenacity in reaching Iraq
despite increased border controls in Syria and other neighboring
countries, according to a study released in December by the West Point
center.
Hard numbers are elusive in war zones. But the study is based on
detailed personnel records kept by Al Qaeda in Iraq of about 600
fighters who entered Iraq between August 2006 and last August. The
documents were seized last October by U.S. troops near the Syrian
border.
The study found that Libyans constituted 18% of the foreign
fighters in Iraq, second only to Saudis at 41%. Previous studies
estimated a much smaller percentage of Libyans, suggesting that the
ethnic composition has shifted over time, the report says.
Most of the militants cited in the West Point study are from the Libyan
towns of Darnah and Benghazi, traditional hotbeds of Islamic extremism,
and made their way to Iraq through Egypt and Syria.
Zawahiri and other leaders have gone out of their way to praise
the prowess of Libyan fighters, Brown said. In a video released in
November by As Sahab, the media wing of Al Qaeda, Al Libi extols fellow
militants as the heirs of those whose "blood was spilled in the
mountains of Darnah" and "the streets of Benghazi."
The video was significant because Al Libi used it to announce the
formal incorporation of the Libyan group into Al Qaeda's anti-Western
struggle.
The merger has caused divisions because of ethnic resentment and
because some militants fear the struggle against the Libyan government
will be overshadowed by Al Qaeda's global agenda, according to the
senior British anti-terrorism official.
"That was a controversial move," the official said. "As Al Qaeda
expands its franchises, there is an increase in capability, but also in
vulnerability. There are concerns about being subordinated to a load of
Egyptians in Afghanistan and Pakistan."
Power brings vulnerability for individuals as well. Al Libi has
joined a growing list of slain or captured Al Qaeda bosses whom U.S.
security forces and their allies targeted as they moved to the
forefront.
Although Bin Laden and Zawahiri are the most notorious and elusive
prey, the hunt has focused most urgently on Al Qaeda figures seen as
top strategists and hands-on masterminds of plots against Western
targets. Al Libi's fall confirms the significance of his rise.
Copyright 2008 Los Angeles Times