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Dr. Walid Phares
After Mumbai the Terror Attacks Will Be Worse
December 5, 2008
Mumbai’s "bloody week” has ended with shock and awe
in India and around the world. Since 9/11, and even before, the jihadists
have been leaping from one massacre to another, scarring democracies and
civil societies with their violent imprints.
From New York and Washington to Madrid and London; from Beslan and
Baghdad to Islamabad and Bali, the seekers of a Taliban-like "Caliphate”
continue to adapt their tactics and while staying the course. No
civilization or continent has escaped their designs.
But after Mumbai, one has to expect more and worse. Let’s look at what’s
on the the horizon:
Urban Jihad is Open for Business
My initial assessment of the Mumbai terror attacks leads me to predict
that the Mumbai model is now a frame of reference for copycats. These
attack can unfortunately happen again, in India, in the region and
around the globe. "Urban jihad,” the termed I’ve used in my last three
books and in recent op-ed pieces, is a combination of terror activities
by Salafists or other adherents of Jihadism aimed at shocking,
paralyzing, and seizing part of a city or neighborhood.
The goal of "urban jihad” is to take the battle inside the cities of the
enemy, in this case India. But the Beslan school massacre in Russia in
September 2004, the terror attacks in Saudi Arabia in November, 2003 the
multiple killings in Iraq, Afghanistan and Algeria, as well as the
similar scenarios in Israel over several decades, tell us that this form
of urban terrorism is now open for business. In the near future I will
make more predictions jihadi copycats worldwide.
Real Jihadi Claims Beyond Kashmir
Interestingly, the jihadi propaganda machine reacted instantly to the
attacks by invoking the issue of Kashmir. So did many in the
international media. But the reality is –- using the words of the
jihadists –- the goals have mutated and now extend beyond the classical
ethnic conflict in Kashmir. The aim is now to establish a Taliban state
covering half of India, all of Pakistan and also Afghanistan. It is more
the Caliphate then self-determination that the terrorists seek.
Trans-Regional Forces Trump Local Forces
As I write, many experts and authorities on terror have been trying to
determine if the Mumbai "perpetrators” are the Pakistan-based Laskar e
Taiba, the Indian Mujahideen, Taliban inspired factions or simply Al
Qaeda. Strategically, we don’t need to wonder too much: all four of
these groups are all part of the same web. It’s a web that stretches
from Kabul to Mumbai: these are the subcontinent’s jihadists. Decisions
are made at a high level with coordination between the big bosses and
terrorist actions are carried out by the designated organizations,
teams, and cells. The rest is left for our media and commentators to
guess and juggle. While it is very useful from an intelligence
perspective to determine the chain of command and the entity directly
involved in the Mumbai terror attacks, from a global perspective it is
important for the public and decision makers from around the world to
realize that the three south Asian democracies are all threatened by the
same enemy, appearing in different shapes and showing multiple faces.
Preempting the Forthcoming Offensive in Afghanistan
Beyond the
investigation regarding the Mumbai attackers and their networks, it is
equally important for strategic planners inside NATO to read the attacks
as a preemptive strike against the forthcoming reinforcement of U.S. and
allied troops in Afghanistan. It seems to me that the Mumbai attack, and
possibly the other attacks that may follow, are actions designed to
break down precarious relationships between the three democratic
governments in that region and to weaken the efforts promised by
President-elect Obama against Al Qaeda and its regional allies in 2009. |