From the Los Angeles Times
Target: Bin Laden
by Steven Coll
The shaky politics of Pakistan and doubts
about Al Qaeda could soon put the terrorist leader in our grasp.
April 13, 2008
Osama bin Laden lives among friends, follows news on satellite
television or the Internet and reads books about American foreign
policy; this much can be safely inferred from his periodic audio and
video statements. His latest topical punditry surfaced just a few weeks
ago on jihadi websites when he addressed violence in Gaza and the
pope's travels.
Because of his passable grasp of current events, Bin Laden may well
understand what many Americans do not: that he is more likely to be
killed or captured during the next year or so than at any time since
late 2001, when he escaped U.S. warplanes bombing him in eastern
Afghanistan, at Tora Bora.
This welcome change in probabilities has almost nothing to do with the
Bush administration's counter-terrorism strategy, which remains
rudderless and starved of resources because of the war in Iraq. It is a
consequence, instead, of dramatic political changes in Pakistan, where
Bin Laden is believed to be hiding and where Al Qaeda's local mistakes
and the restoration of civilian democracy have combined to make him
considerably less safe.
Bin Laden's personal approval rating in Pakistan, as measured by a
number of international polls, is plummeting. Beginning last year, Al
Qaeda began to support an unprecedented wave of suicide bombings on
Pakistani soil; the campaign culminated in the murder of two-time
former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto in December. Before, when Bin
Laden targeted the United States and Europe, many Pakistanis saw him as
an Islamic folk hero. But although Pakistanis remain deeply skeptical
about the United States, they have changed their thinking about Al
Qaeda as hundreds of their own innocent civilians have become its
victims.
In a poll released in February, Terror Free Tomorrow, a
Washington-based nonprofit group, found that Bin Laden's popularity had
fallen by half over just six months, to about 24%. In the Northwest
Frontier Province, along the Afghan borderlands where he is most likely
to be hiding, it fell into single digits. Recent British polling in the
most radicalized border areas is less encouraging, but there is no
doubt that the general picture in the Northwest Frontier is one of
increasing anxiety and resentment toward Al Qaeda.
These souring attitudes are important because, in the past, hunts for
terrorists hiding in Pakistan have almost always ended when a
disillusioned (and generally greedy) local resident has dropped a dime
on the fugitive for reward money. During the 1990s, for example, it
took a number of frustrating years until the United States tracked down
Mir Amal Kasi, a Pakistani who killed two CIA workers outside the
agency's headquarters in 1993. It took about as long to locate Ramzi
Ahmed Yousef, the architect of the first World Trade Center bombing;
colleagues ultimately betrayed both men. Now that a larger number of
Pakistanis see Bin Laden as a nihilistic killer, the chances that such
a walk-in informant will surface have grown.
So have the odds that the Pakistani government will act on such
information. For six years after the 9/11 attacks, the Bush
administration undermined the search for Bin Laden by organizing its
alliance with Pakistan in a way that created perverse incentives --
incentives that actually encouraged the Pakistanis not to find him. It
did this by providing unquestioning support to the country's military
leader, President Pervez Musharraf, and by sending more than 90% of its
$10 billion-plus in aid to the Pakistan army or the army-controlled
government. Much of this aid is still paid today as direct "rent" for
counter-terrorism operations by the army and its principal intelligence
branch.
The structure of this U.S.-aid pipeline, set against the decades-long
history of on-again, off-again American support for Pakistan,
encouraged Pakistan's top military commanders to believe that if Bin
Laden were ever captured or killed, the U.S. might reduce its support
or even go home. A fugitive Bin Laden became their meal ticket.
Now these incentives have been at least partly reversed. Musharraf's
popularity and authority have collapsed in Pakistan following a
succession of political blunders. Bhutto's widower, Asif Ali Zardari,
who leads the newly elected civilian government behind the scenes,
claimed before the national vote in February -- both at home and in
Washington -- that the restoration of democracy would be a much more
reliable means to defeat terrorism in Pakistan than America's narrow
reliance on Musharraf. Zardari's more sophisticated advisors, such as
Pakistan's new ambassador at large, Husain Haqqani, a long-time
professor at Boston University, understand that this theory of
democracy-as-counter-terrorism is viewed with considerable skepticism
at the Pentagon and inside Washington's intelligence bureaucracy.
Pakistan's new democratic government should now be motivated to prove
its case. Delivering Bin Laden -- which Musharraf's government so
conspicuously failed to do -- would be a coup of global proportions for
Pakistan's new civilian leaders, and it would bring considerable
political and other rewards to Islamabad. It would demonstrate, in the
most dramatic way possible, that a democratic government can be as
effective a partner in counter-terrorism as the army, if not more so,
and by doing this, it would change debate in Washington and Europe
about the costs and benefits of investing in democracy in Pakistan.
This new equation of incentives inside Pakistan is highly complex --
for example, the army and the intelligence service have their own
institutional interests, and this may lead them to resist entreaties
from civilian leaders to step up the hunt for Bin Laden -- but the
previous stalemate that governed the hunt, and which led to years of
willful and self-conscious passivity in Pakistan's leadership, has at
last been broken. Now, at least somebody in Pakistan's government has a
good reason to find Bin Laden. And striking at a time when the Al Qaeda
leader's local popularity has collapsed reduces the domestic political
risks.
Where would they look? All of the best evidence -- the media pipeline
that delivers Bin Laden's statements; the circumstantial evidence
visible in his videos; fragments of available intelligence reporting
and the known history of his movements -- points to Pakistan. Anything,
of course, is possible -- perhaps we will discover some day that he was
living all along in a suburb of Paris and conducting the most
successful deception operation in history. But that seems unlikely.
Within Pakistan, an urban hideaway cannot be ruled out. Other Al Qaeda
fugitives, such as Abu Zubaydah and Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, have been
discovered in Pakistan's cities. But even if Bin Laden has shaved his
beard and filled his wardrobe with baggy jeans, he would be taking
enormous risks if he set up in a Karachi condo or a Rawalpindi town
house.
By far the most likely scenario, as officials have repeatedly
suggested, is that he has hunkered down in a secluded, mud-walled
tribal compound along the Afghan border. This is territory where he has
had many friends for years and where Pakistan's national government
today has very little presence. The tribal agencies of North Waziristan
and Bajaur seem the most likely sanctuaries. Unfortunately, "narrowing"
the search to such vast and remote places along Pakistan's 1,200-mile
border with Afghanistan is like narrowing a search to Alaska -- if
Alaska's population were deeply hostile to outsiders.
Would it matter much if Bin Laden were killed or caught? Al Qaeda has
grown beyond the point where decapitating its leadership would end the
organization, but Bin Laden has been a charismatic leader, and if he
were killed, the resulting succession struggles might prove problematic
for the organization. If he is not captured, silencing his on-air
commentary would also be moderately helpful.
But the biggest reason to find him is the same as it has been since
November 2001. That month, a video discovered in Afghanistan showed a
notably self-satisfied Bin Laden smiling as he described how, on the
basis of his engineering studies, he had calculated that fire and
explosions from the 9/11 attacks might cause a few interior floors of
the Twin Towers to collapse, crushing those inside, but that he had
been surprised -- and delighted, as his tone of voice conveyed -- that
the World Trade Center buildings had collapsed completely. The simplest
principles of justice remain more than ample in this cause.
Steve Coll, president of the New America Foundation and a staff writer
at the New Yorker, is the author of "The Bin Ladens: An Arabian Family
in the American Century." His previous book, "Ghost Wars," won the
Pulitzer Prize for nonfiction in 2005.
Copyright 2008 Los Angeles Times