Al-Qaeda's roots grow deeper in Pakistan
ISLAMABAD - Ten years after the 9/11 terrorist attacks on New York City's twin World Trade Center towers and the Pentagon and the subsequent "war
on terror" launched by United Stated-led forces against al-Qaeda, the terrorist group continues to pose a serious threat to the world as it keeps
surviving and thriving mainly on the Pakistan-Afghanistan tribal belt.
In these rugged areas it has established an effective jihadi network that increasingly exploits its Pakistani affiliates to carry on the global jihadi
agenda of Osama bin Laden, despite his May 2 killing in a United States military raid in Abbottabad in Pakistan.
Since US president George W Bush's declaration of war against global terrorism in September 2001, the US and its allies claim to have killed or
captured over 75% of senior al-Qaeda leaders, the latest being Younis al-Mauritania, suspected of directing attacks against the US and Europe, who was
arrested on September 5, 2011, during a raid in Quetta, the capital of Balochistan province in Pakistan.
Yet, the frequency of terror attacks worldwide being attributed to the al-Qaeda network has increased, as compared to the pre-9/11 period
Pakistani terrorism experts believe that the current spate of high-intensity attacks, despite Bin Laden's death four months ago, make obvious that
al-Qaeda's core elements are still resilient and that the outfit is cultivating stronger operational connections that radiate outward from hideouts in
Pakistan to affiliates scattered throughout the Middle East, North Africa and Europe.
Therefore, as things stand, it appears that al-Qaeda not only remains in business in its traditional stronghold in the Waziristan tribal region on the
largely lawless Pakistan-Afghanistan tribal belt border, it has also clearly advanced to the urban areas in all the four provinces of
Pakistan.
A solid base Al-Qaeda, which means "The Base" in Arabic, was founded in 1988 by Bin Laden with the aim of overthrowing the US-dominated world
order.
The general notion that al-Qaeda is getting stronger even after the decade-long "war on terror", can be gauged from the fact that Pakistan,
despite being a key US ally during all those years, is undergoing a radical change, moving from the phase of Talibanization of its society to the
Pakistanization of al-Qaeda.
Many of the key Pakistani jihadi organizations, which are both anti-American and anti-state, have already joined hands with al-Qaeda to let loose
a reign of terror across Pakistan.
The Pakistani intelligence findings on the Mehran attack clearly demonstrate that al-Qaeda and the TTP have teamed up with the Punjabi Taliban in
recent years to form a triangular syndicate of militancy,
The three organizations initially came together at the time the US invaded Afghanistan post-9/11,
Conclusion
The death of Bin Laden was unquestionably a major blow to al-Qaeda. Yet, terrorism experts say long before he was killed, al-Qaeda had adapted
itself to survive and operate without him, ensuring that the threat his terror network posed lived well beyond his demise.
Therefore, a decade after the US unleashed its much-trumpeted "war on terror", and despite the death of Bin Laden, there is no reason to believe that
the terrorist outfit he launched more than two decades ago is anywhere near defeat.
Found this excellent article about Al-Qaeda
Looks like the U.S has created huge problem for themselves
Ten years 75% caught or dead but The frequency of attacks keep on increasing,
I really am hoping everybody remains safe on sep11, but by the looks of it some bad ass stuff is going to go down
Heaps more in the article it quite long. Check it out
Here
Twin Suicide Bomb Blasts Kill 22 in SW Pakistan, edit on 9/9/11 by
Freedom_is_Slavery because: Link