[Peace-discuss] A Dwarf Known as Al Qaeda

Lisa Chason chason at shout.net
Fri Dec 3 09:46:40 CST 2004


 
A Dwarf Known as Al Qaeda

The threat posed by the group is hugely overblown.

By Dirk Laabs

11/30/04 "Los Angeles  <http://fairuse.1accesshost.com/news2/dwarf.html>
Times" -- The German federal police, the BKA, was once famous for its
relentless, coolly efficient pursuit of terrorists. Hundreds of BKA
agents eliminated the first three generations of the Red Army Faction, a
terror organization that killed scores of politicians and civilians in
the 1970s and 1980s. Then the hunt was on for the fourth generation.
Hundreds of millions of dollars were invested; again, legions of agents
were dispatched.

But finally, in 1997, BKA experts admitted there may never have been a
fourth-generation Red Army Faction. The experts had been hunting a
phantom. Lone-wolf terrorists or isolated veterans had committed the
few, random attacks that occurred.

It was a striking example of how a police force - and a whole nation -
fell for propaganda from the terrorists, which was pumped up by almost
obsessive media hype. Looking at the current reporting on Al Qaeda, the
question is: Is history repeating itself? 

This month, at the BKA's annual conference, Germany's top investigators
and international experts discussed what they had discovered since Sept.
11 about Al Qaeda and the international Islamist terror network. The
main thing they have learned is that there is less than meets the eye.

Yes, Al Qaeda was once centralized, structured and powerful, but that
was before the U.S. pulverized its camps and leadership in Afghanistan.

In other words, this battle in the war on terror might already be over.
It's as an ex-CIA agent once said: "I quit the agency at the end of the
Cold War because I was tired of politicians making me describe the
Soviet Union as a 20-foot giant - when it was really only a dwarf." 

For more than three years, Al Qaeda has been described by investigators,
academics and self-styled experts as an almost uncontrollable menace. It
was said to work closely with organized crime, to have access to
unlimited funds, to have hidden those funds in gold and diamonds, to be
capable of moving its money with a sophisticated finance system to
whatever country Osama bin Laden chose to attack next.

The media tended to believe the worst and amplify it. The general idea
was that a perfect crime such as 9/11 needed a perfect organization
behind it. Most of the descriptions of Al Qaeda proved more legend than
fact.

Al Qaeda never had a "macro-financing" structure, said Judge Jean-Louis
Bruguiere, the dean of Europe's anti-terrorism investigators. In fact,
analyzing the clusters of activists, he found that there were never
large flows of external money financing any attack. In nearly a decade
of searching, all Bruguiere was able to find was "micro-financing"
activists raising the little money they needed to survive and commit
their crimes through credit card or debit card fraud. They turned out to
be petty thieves, not grand gangsters.

The terrorists did not need a lot of money to finance the attacks in
Madrid, Bali and Tunisia. "They could carry around the money they needed
in cash," said Nikos Passas of Northeastern University in Boston. 

There is, according to Passas, no evidence that Al Qaeda ever invested
in the gold market or in African diamonds. It never moved money around
the world through the traditional and untraceable informal money
transfer systems known as hawalas. It used Western Union. 

That didn't stop the United Nations and the United States from
harnessing the hawalas with rigid controls, which hurt the hundreds of
small businesses in the United States, the Middle East and Pakistan that
rely on them. 

Meanwhile, authorities pay little or no attention to much simpler ways
to transfer money globally. PayPal, for example, which has become the de
facto international bank of the Internet, is open to anyone with a
credit card.

All too often, investigators have fallen for myths - many times fed by
the terrorists themselves. The BKA has constructed profiles of 60
radical Islamists. "There was no pattern, no model . every activist had
individual motives to become radical," a German investigator said.

But being less structured doesn't mean the terrorists are less dangerous
or easier to stop. Quite the contrary. The smaller the fish, the tighter
the net needed to catch it. "We take every case seriously now precisely
because there is no pattern," one German investigator said.

Investigators admit that 3 1/2 years after 9/11, they know next to
nothing about the motives of Islamic terrorists. Knowing so little means
they have few means to predict - or prevent - future acts.

Dirk Laabs is a journalist based in Germany.

Copyright 2004 Los Angeles Times 
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