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Killing of OBL: Payback time for al-Qaida?

Europe lauds Osama's death, urges caution
Berlin (UPI) May 2, 2011 - European leaders welcomed the news of Osama bin Laden's death but warned that the fight against terrorism isn't over.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel said she welcomed bin Laden's death, saying it was an important strike against terrorism.

"Bin Laden was the symbol of international terrorism … now it's clear that he can't order any additional attacks and that's simply good news," she said Monday in Berlin.

NATO Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen hailed the killing but added that the alliance would continue its military mission in Afghanistan, where several European nations have troops as part of the International Security Assistance Force.

European leaders also gave signs of caution, suggesting that terrorists may retaliate for the U.S. operation in Pakistan that involved the targeted killing of the world's most wanted man.

Prime Minister David Cameron of Britain, one of Washington's closes allies in the U.S.-led military campaigns in Iraq and Afghanistan, called bin Laden's death "a massive step forward."

"Of course, it does not mark the end of the threat we face from extremist terror," he said in televised remarks. "We will have to be particularly vigilant in the weeks ahead."

French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe said the terror threat wouldn't disappear with bin Laden.

"There are decentralized groups, who claim links to al-Qaida but have a certain autonomy, that will continue their work," Juppe told French radio.

The last major terrorist attack, the one that hit Mumbai in 2008, is believed to have been the work not of al-Qaida but Pakistani extremist group Lashkar-e-Toiba.

While bin Laden is mainly linked to the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001 in the United States, which killed nearly 3,000 people, he has also been blamed for ordering the 2004 train bombings in Madrid and the attacks on London's subway system in 2005, which killed 191 and 52 people, respectively.

Terrorists linked to al-Qaida have kidnapped Europeans in Africa and the Middle East and Europe has been battling with "homegrown terrorism," a phenomenon dominated by young Muslims who grew up or were born in Europe and have become radicalized.

In Germany, three men in their 20s -- two of them German nationals, one Turk -- in 2007 plotted to execute a series of bomb attacks against U.S. and other targets in Germany.

They received training at a camp of the Islamic Jihad Union, an al-Qaida offshoot, in Pakistan's Waziristan region. The men said they wanted to join active fighting in Iraq or Chechnya but were convinced to return to Europe to plot terror attacks.

by Staff Writers
Beirut, Lebanon (UPI) May 2, 2011
With Osama bin Laden killed in a U.S. Special Forces raid in Pakistan, it's likely that a cadre of battle-hardened field commanders and planners will direct al-Qaida's loose-knit global network against the United States to avenge him.

But they will pick the time and the place.

It is, as always, difficult to predict what a terrorist organization such as al-Qaida in its multiple manifestations, primarily in the Middle East and Asia, will do.

The implications of bin Laden's death at the hands of the Americans are far from clear so soon after the U.S. strike against his Pakistani hideout.

Bin Laden and his deputy, veteran Egyptian militant Ayman al-Zawahiri, have long been isolated from al-Qaida's operational forces in Afghanistan, Pakistan and elsewhere because of the U.S. manhunt for them since 2001.

So bin Laden's sudden demise will likely have little impact on al-Qaida's operational affairs, since he has become an inspirational rather than a hands-on leader.

His assassination, while a massive symbolic and emotional victory for the Americans who vowed to avenge 9/11, is unlikely to change how al-Qaida now functions, except that it could mean its field commanders and planners will have greater control over the organization's operations.

While killing bin Laden was "among the most significant operational successes for U.S. intelligence in the past decade," observed the U.S. security think tank Stratfor, "bin Laden's elimination will have very little effect on al-Qaida as a whole and the wider jihadist movement …

"The reality of the situation is that the al-Qaida core -- the central group including leaders like bin Laden and al-Zawahiri -- has been eclipsed by other jihadist actors on the physical battlefield."

Stratfor and others see the al-Qaida affiliates in Yemen and North Africa as the main threats. They are certainly the most active.

The Yemen-based al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula has mounted two abortive attacks on the continental United States since December 2009.

But there has emerged in Pakistan's North Waziristan region, a jihadist stronghold where even the Pakistani army fears to tread, a collection of veterans of al-Qaida and other militant Islamist groups that should be giving the Americans and their friends nightmares.

Al-Qaida's current operational leadership, despite heavy losses from U.S. airstrikes, has been built around two groups of veterans, longtime al-Qaida veterans and battle-hardened Pakistani or Asian veterans of the two-decade-old Islamist campaign in Indian-administered Kashmir who now fight alongside al-Qaida.

These men include Mohammed Ilyas Kashmiri, who heads al-Qaida's

Lashkar-e Zil, or the Shadow Army; Saif al-Adel, a top al-Qaida military chieftain who is a former Egyptian Special Forces colonel; Mahfouz Ould Walid, aka Abu Hafs the Mauritanian, a seasoned field commander.

There are others, like Adnan Shukrijumah, Saudi-born but raised in the United States where he lived for 15 years and is believed to be heading al-Qaida's global operations with the United States firmly in his sights.

There's Fazul Abdullah Mohammed, a will-o'-the-wisp organizer from the Comoros Islands whose operational career included the simultaneous bombings of two U.S. embassies East Africa in August 1998 that killed 200 people.

Kashmiri is considered one of al-Qaida's top strategists and his worldview, as articulated in the few interviews he has given, indicate he has moved away from a wholly regional focus, as in Kashmir, to center firmly on hitting the West.

"Analyzing the situation in any narrow regional political perspective was an incorrect approach," he told an interviewer in 2009.

"This is a different ball game altogether … The defeat of American global hegemony is a must if I want the liberation of my homeland, Kashmir."

The Shadow Army now appears to be a central node of al-Qaida's global operations. In the last few years, these seasoned leaders have, as bin Laden's command authority waned, displayed operational ferocity, innovative adaptability and meticulous planning that makes them dangerous.

They all want to hit the Americans hard -- possibly not on the scale of 9/11, because that kind of surprise attack is hard to replicate, but with enormous casualties in one or more U.S. cities.

Kashmiri, Asian intelligence sources say, is training Western converts to Islam and European-born Arabs to carry out suicide bombings in Europe.



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Osama killed with shot to head by Navy SEALs: official
Washington (AFP) May 2, 2011
US Navy SEALs led the commando operation in Pakistan that ended the life of 9/11 mastermind Osama bin Laden with a bullet to the head, a US official told AFP. The SEALs, which stands for Sea, Air, Land, are elite troops used for some of the riskiest anti-terrorism missions, as well as behind-the-lines reconnaissance and unconventional warfare. On loan to the CIA for the mission Sunday ni ... read more







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