The Iraq Effect
War Has Increased Terrorism Sevenfold Worldwide
By Peter Bergen and Paul Cruickshank
02/21/07 "Mother
Jones" - -- "If we were not
fighting and destroying this enemy in Iraq, they
would not be idle. They would be plotting and
killing Americans across the world and within our
own borders. By fighting these terrorists in Iraq,
Americans in uniform are defeating a direct threat
to the American people." So said President Bush on
November 30, 2005, refining his earlier call to
"bring them on." Jihadist terrorists, the
administration’s argument went, would be drawn to
Iraq like moths to a flame, and would perish there
rather than wreak havoc elsewhere in the world.
The president’s argument conveyed two important
assumptions: first, that the threat of jihadist
terrorism to U.S. interests would have been greater
without the war in Iraq, and second, that the war is
reducing the overall global pool of terrorists.
However, the White House has never cited any
evidence for either of these assumptions, and none
appears to be publicly available.
The administration’s own National Intelligence
Estimate on "Trends in Global Terrorism:
implications for the United States," circulated
within the government in April 2006 and partially
declassified in October, states that "the Iraq War
has become the ‘cause celebre’ for jihadists...and
is shaping a new generation of terrorist leaders and
operatives."
Yet administration officials have continued to
suggest that there is no evidence any greater
jihadist threat exists as a result of the Iraq War.
"Are more terrorists being created in the world?"
then-Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld
rhetorically asked during a press conference in
September. "We don’t know. The world doesn’t know.
There are not good metrics to determine how many
people are being trained in a radical madrasa school
in some country." In January 2007 Director of
National Intelligence John Negroponte in
congressional testimony stated that he was "not
certain" that the Iraq War had been a recruiting
tool for Al Qaeda and played down the likely impact
of the war on jihadists worldwide: "I wouldn’t say
there has been a widespread growth in Islamic
extremism beyond Iraq. I really wouldn’t."
Indeed, though what we will call "The Iraq Effect"
is a crucial matter for U.S. national security, we
have found no statistical documentation of its
existence and gravity, at least in the public
domain. In this report, we have undertaken what we
believe to be the first such study, using
information from the world’s premier database on
global terrorism. The results are being published
for the first time by Mother Jones, the news and
investigative magazine, as part of a broader "Iraq
101" package in the magazine’s March/April 2007
issue.
Our study shows that the Iraq War has generated a
stunning sevenfold increase in the yearly rate of
fatal jihadist attacks, amounting to literally
hundreds of additional terrorist attacks and
thousands of civilian lives lost; even when
terrorism in Iraq and Afghanistan is excluded, fatal
attacks in the rest of the world have increased by
more than one-third.
We are not making the argument that without the Iraq
War, jihadist terrorism would not exist, but our
study shows that the Iraq conflict has greatly
increased the spread of the Al Qaeda ideological
virus, as shown by a rising number of terrorist
attacks in the past three years from London to
Kabul, and from Madrid to the Red Sea.
In our study we focused on the following
questions:
-
Has jihadist
terrorism gone up or down around the world since the
invasion of Iraq?
-
What has been the
trend if terrorist incidents in Iraq and Afghanistan
(the military fronts of the "war on terrorism") are
excluded?
-
Has terrorism
explicitly directed at the United States and its
allies also increased?
In order to zero in on The
Iraq Effect, we focused on the rate of terrorist attacks
in two time periods: September 12, 2001, to March 20,
2003 (the day of the Iraq invasion), and March 21, 2003,
to September 30, 2006. Extending the data set before
9/11 would risk distorting the results, because the rate
of attacks by jihadist groups jumped considerably after
9/11 as jihadist terrorists took inspiration from the
events of that terrible day.
We first determined which terrorist organizations should
be classified as jihadist. We included in this group
Sunni extremist groups affiliated with or sympathetic to
the ideology of Al Qaeda. We decided to exclude
terrorist attacks by Palestinian groups, as they depend
largely on factors particular to the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict.
Our study draws its data from the MIPT-RAND Terrorism
database (available at
terrorismknowledgebase.org), which is widely
considered to be the best publicly available database on
terrorism incidents. RAND defines a terrorist attack as
an attack on a civilian entity designed to promote fear
or alarm and further a particular political agenda. In
our study we only included attacks that caused at least
one fatality and were attributed by RAND to a known
jihadist group. In some terrorist attacks, and this is
especially the case in Iraq, RAND has not been able to
attribute a particular attack to a known jihadist group.
Therefore our study likely understates the extent of
jihadist terrorism in Iraq and around the world.
Our study yields one resounding finding: The rate of
terrorist attacks around the world by jihadist groups
and the rate of fatalities in those attacks increased
dramatically after the invasion of Iraq. Globally there
was a 607 percent rise in the average yearly incidence
of attacks (28.3 attacks per year before and 199.8
after) and a 237 percent rise in the average fatality
rate (from 501 to 1,689 deaths per year). A large part
of this rise occurred in Iraq, which accounts for fully
half of the global total of jihadist terrorist attacks
in the post-Iraq War period. But even excluding Iraq,
the average yearly number of jihadist terrorist attacks
and resulting fatalities still rose sharply around the
world by 265 percent and 58 percent respectively.
And even when attacks in both Afghanistan and Iraq (the
two countries that together account for 80 percent of
attacks and 67 percent of deaths since the invasion of
Iraq) are excluded, there has still been a significant
rise in jihadist terrorism elsewhere--a 35 percent
increase in the number of jihadist terrorist attacks
outside of Afghanistan and Iraq, from 27.6 to 37 a year,
with a 12 percent rise in fatalities from 496 to 554 per
year.
Of course, just because jihadist terrorism has risen in
the period after the invasion of Iraq, it does not
follow that events in Iraq itself caused the change. For
example, a rise in attacks in the Kashmir conflict and
the Chechen separatist war against Russian forces may
have nothing to do with the war in Iraq. But the most
direct test of The Iraq Effect--whether the United
States and its allies have suffered more jihadist
terrorism after the invasion than before--shows that the
rate of jihadist attacks on Western interests and
citizens around the world (outside of Afghanistan and
Iraq) has risen by a quarter, from 7.2 to 9 a year,
while the yearly fatality rate in these attacks has
increased by 4 percent from 191 to 198.
One of the few positive findings of our study is that
only 18 American civilians (not counting civilian
contractors in Iraq and Afghanistan) have been killed by
jihadist groups since the war in Iraq began. But that
number is still significantly higher than the four
American civilians who were killed in attacks attributed
to jihadist groups in the period between 9/11 and the
Iraq War. It was the capture and killing of much of Al
Qaeda’s leadership after 9/11 and the breakup of its
training camp facilities in Afghanistan--not the war in
Iraq--that prevented Al Qaeda from successfully
launching attacks on American targets on the scale it
did in the years before 9/11.
Also undermining the argument that Al Qaeda and
like-minded groups are being distracted from plotting
against Western targets are the dangerous, anti-American
plots that have arisen since the start of the Iraq War.
Jihadist terrorists have attacked key American allies
since the Iraq conflict began, mounting multiple
bombings in London that killed 52 in July 2005, and
attacks in Madrid in 2004 that killed 191. Shehzad
Tanweer, one of the London bombers, stated in his
videotaped suicide "will," "What have you witnessed now
is only the beginning of a string of attacks that will
continue and become stronger until you pull your forces
out of Afghanistan and Iraq." There have been six
jihadist attacks on the home soil of the United States’
NATO allies (including Turkey) in the period after the
invasion of Iraq, whereas there were none in the 18
months following 9/11; and, of course, the plan
uncovered in London in August 2006 to smuggle liquid
explosives onto U.S. airliners, had it succeeded, would
have killed thousands.
Al Qaeda has not let the Iraq War distract it from
targeting the United States and her allies. In a January
19, 2006 audiotape, Osama bin Laden himself refuted
President Bush’s argument that Iraq had distracted and
diverted Al Qaeda: "The reality shows that that the war
against America and its allies has not remained limited
to Iraq, as he claims, but rather, that Iraq has become
a source and attraction and recruitment of qualified
people.... As for the delay in similar [terrorist]
operations in America, [the] operations are being
prepared, and you will witness them, in your own land,
as soon as preparations are complete."
Ayman al Zawahiri echoed bin Laden’s words in a March 4,
2006, videotape broadcast by Al Jazeera calling for
jihadists to launch attacks on the home soil of Western
countries: "[Muslims have to] inflict losses on the
crusader West, especially to its economic infrastructure
with strikes that would make it bleed for years. The
strikes on New York, Washington, Madrid, and London are
the best examples."
One measure of the impact of the Iraq War is the
precipitous drop in public support for the United States
in Muslim countries. Jordan, a key U.S. ally, saw
popular approval for the United States drop from 25
percent in 2002 to 1 percent in 2003. In Lebanon during
the same period, favorable views of the United States
dropped from 30 percent to 15 percent, and in the
world’s largest Muslim country, Indonesia, favorable
views plummeted from 61 percent to 15 percent. Disliking
the United States does not make you a terrorist, but
clearly the pool of Muslims who dislike the United
States has grown by hundreds of millions since the Iraq
War began. The United States’ plummeting popularity does
not suggest active popular support for jihadist
terrorists but it does imply some sympathy with their
anti-American posture, which means a significant swath
of the Muslim population cannot be relied on as an
effective party in counter-terrorism/insurgency
measures. And so, popular contempt for U.S. policy has
become a force multiplier for Islamist militants.
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The Iraq War has also encouraged Muslim youth around the
world to join jihadist groups, not necessarily directly
tied to Al Qaeda but often motivated by a similar
ideology. The Iraq War allowed Al Qaeda, which was on
the ropes in 2002 after the United States had captured
or killed two-thirds of its leadership, to reinvent
itself as a broader movement because Al Qaeda’s central
message--that the United States is at war with
Islam--was judged by significant numbers of Muslims to
have been corroborated by the war in Iraq. And
compounding this, the wide dissemination of the exploits
of jihadist groups in Iraq following the invasion
energized potential and actual jihadists across the
world.
How exactly has The Iraq Effect played out in different
parts of the world? The effect has not been uniform.
Europe, the Arab world, and Afghanistan all saw major
rises in jihadist terrorism in the period after the
invasion of Iraq, while Pakistan and India and the
Chechnya/Russia front saw only smaller increases in
jihadist terrorism. And in Southeast Asia, attacks and
killings by jihadist groups fell by over 60 percent in
the period after the Iraq War. The strength or weakness
of The Iraq Effect on jihadist terrorism in a particular
country seems to be influenced by four factors: (1) if
the country itself has troops in Iraq; (2) geographical
proximity to Iraq; (3) the degree of identification with
Iraq’s Arabs felt in the country; and (4) the level of
exchanges of ideas or personnel with Iraqi jihadist
groups. This may explain why jihadist groups in Europe,
Arab countries, and Afghanistan were more affected by
the Iraq War than groups in other regions. Europe,
unlike Kashmir, Chechnya, and Southeast Asia for
example, contains several countries that are part of the
coalition in Iraq. It is relatively geographically close
to the Arab world and has a large Arab-Muslim diaspora
from which jihadists have recruited.
European intelligence services are deeply concerned
about the effect of the Iraq War. For example, Dame
Eliza Mannigham-Buller, the head of Britain’s MI5,
stated on November 10, 2006, "In Iraq, attacks are
regularly videoed and the footage is downloaded onto the
Internet [and] chillingly we see the results here. Young
teenagers are being groomed to be suicide bombers. We
are aware of numerous plots to kill people and damage
our economy...30 that we know of. [The] threat is
serious, is growing, and, I believe, will be with us for
a generation." Startlingly, a recent poll found that a
quarter of British Muslims believe that the July 7,
2005, London bombings were justifiable because of
British foreign policy, bearing out Dame Eliza’s concern
about a new generation of radicals in the United
Kingdom.
While Islamist militants in Europe are mobilized by a
series of grievances such as Palestine, Afghanistan, the
Kashmir conflict, and Chechnya, no issue has resonated
more in radical circles and on Islamist websites than
the war in Iraq. This can be seen in the skyrocketing
rate of jihadist terrorist attacks around the Arab world
outside of Iraq. There have been 37 attacks in Arab
countries outside of Iraq since the invasion, while
there were only three in the period between 9/11 and
March 2003. The rate of attacks in Arab countries jumped
by 445 percent since the Iraq invasion, while the rate
of killings rose by 783 percent. The November 9, 2005
bombings of three American hotels in Amman, Jordan, that
killed 60, an operation directed by Abu Musab al
Zarqawi’s Al Qaeda in Iraq network, was the most direct
manifestation of The Iraq Effect in the Arab world.
Saudi Arabia, in particular, has seen an upsurge in
jihadist terrorism since the U.S. invasion of Iraq.
There were no jihadist terrorist attacks between 9/11
and the Iraq War but 12 in the period since. The reason
for the surge in terrorism was a decision taken by Al
Qaeda’s Saudi branch in the spring of 2003 to launch a
wave of attacks (primarily at Western targets) to
undermine the Saudi royal family. These attacks were
initiated on May 12, 2003 with the bombing of Western
compounds in Riyadh, killing 34, including 10 Americans.
While Saudi authorities believe that planning and
training for the operation predated the war in Iraq, the
timing of the attack, just weeks after the U.S invasion
is striking.
The fact that the Iraq War radicalized some young Saudis
is underlined by studies showing that more Saudis have
conducted suicide operations in Iraq than any other
nationality. For instance, Mohammed Hafez, a visiting
professor at the University of Missouri in Kansas City,
in a study of the 101 identified suicide attackers in
Iraq from March 2003 to February 2006, found that more
than 40 percent were Saudi. This jihadist energy was not
just transferred over the Saudi border into Iraq. It
also contributed to attacks in the Kingdom. The group
that beheaded the American contractor Paul Johnson in
Riyadh in June 2004 called itself the "Al Fallujah
brigade of Al Qaeda" and claimed that it had carried out
the killing in part to avenge the actions of
"disbelievers" in Iraq. In January 2004 Al Qaeda’s Saudi
affiliate launched Al Battar, an online training
magazine specifically directed at young Saudis
interested in fighting their regime. The achievements of
jihadists in Iraq figured prominently in its pages.
Indeed, a contributor to the first issue of Al Battar
argued that the Iraq War had made jihad "a commandment"
for Saudi Arabians "[because] the Islamic nation is
today in acute conflict with the Crusaders."
The Iraq War had a strong impact in other Arab countries
too. Daily images aired by Al Jazeera and other channels
of suffering Iraqis enraged the Arab street and
strengthened the hands of radicals everywhere. In Egypt,
the Iraq War has contributed to a recent wave of attacks
by small, self-generated groups. A Sinai-based jihadist
group carried out coordinated bombing attacks on Red Sea
resorts popular with Western tourists at Taba in October
2004, at Sharm el-Sheikh in July 2005, and at Dahab in
April 2006, killing a total of more than 120.
One of the cell’s members, Younis Elian Abu Jarir, a
taxi driver whose job was to ferry the group around,
stated in a confession offered as evidence in court that
"they convinced me of the need for holy war against the
Jews, Americans, Italians, and other nationalities that
participated in the occupation of Iraq." Osama Rushdi, a
former spokesman of the Egyptian terrorist group Gamma
Islamiyya now living in London, told us that while
attacks in the Sinai were partly directed at the
Egyptian regime, they appeared to be primarily
anti-Western in motivation: "The Iraq War contributed to
the negative feelings of the Sinai group. Before the
Iraq War, most Egyptians did not have a negative feeling
towards American policy. Now almost all are opposed to
American policy."
Since the invasion of Iraq, Afghanistan has suffered 219
jihadist terrorist attacks that can be attributed to a
particular group, resulting in the deaths of 802
civilians. The fact that the Taliban only conducted its
first terrorist attacks in September 2003, a few months
after the invasion of Iraq, is significant.
International forces had already been stationed in the
country for two years before the Taliban began to
specifically target the U.S.-backed Karzai government
and civilians sympathetic to it. This points to a link
between events in Iraq and the initiation of the
Taliban’s terrorist campaign in Afghanistan.
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True, local dynamics form part of the explanation for
the resurgence of the Taliban in Afghanistan. But the
use of terrorism, particularly suicide attacks, by the
Taliban is an innovation drawn from the Iraqi theater.
Hekmat Karzai, an Afghan terrorism researcher, points
out that suicide bombings were virtually unknown in
Afghanistan until 2005. In 2006, Karzai says, there were
118 such attacks, more than there had been in the entire
history of the country. Internet sites have helped
spread the tactics of Iraqi jihadists. In 2005 the
"Media Committee of the Al Qaeda Mujahideen in
Afghanistan" launched an online magazine called
Vanguards of Kharasan, which includes articles on what
Afghan fighters can learn from Coalition and jihadist
strategies in Iraq. Abdul Majid Abdul Majed, a
contributor to the April 2006 issue of the magazine,
argued for an expansion in suicide operations, citing
the effectiveness of jihadist operations in Iraq.
Mullah Dadullah, a key Taliban commander, gave an
interview to Al Jazeera in 2006 in which he explained
how the Iraq War has influenced the Taliban. Dadullah
noted that "we have ‘give and take’ with the mujahideen
in Iraq." Hamid Mir, a Pakistani journalist who is
writing bin Laden’s biography, told us that young men
traveled from the Afghan province of Khost to
"on-the-job training" in Iraq in 2004. "They came back
with lots of CDs which were full of military actions
against U.S. troops in the Mosul, Fallujah, and Baghdad
areas. I think suicide bombing was introduced in
Afghanistan and Pakistan after local boys came back
after spending some time in Iraq. I met a Taliban
commander, Mullah Mannan, last year in Zabul who told me
that he was trained in Iraq by Zarqawi along with many
Pakistani tribals."
Propaganda circulating in Afghanistan and Pakistan about
American "atrocities" and jihadist "heroics" has also
energized the Taliban, encouraging a previously somewhat
isolated movement to see itself as part of a wider
struggle. Our study found a striking correlation in how
terrorist campaigns intensified in Iraq and Afghanistan.
The rate of terrorist attacks in Afghanistan gathered
pace in the summer of 2005, a half year after a similar
increase in Iraq, and in 2006 the rate of attacks in
both countries rose in tandem to new, unprecedented
levels.
While the Iraq War has had a strong effect on the rise
in terrorism in Afghanistan, it appears to have played
less of a role on jihadists operating in Pakistan and
India, though terrorism did rise in those countries
following the invasion of Iraq. (Of course, neither
Pakistan nor India has foreign troops on its soil, which
accounts, in part, for the high terrorism figures in
Afghanistan.) The rate of jihadist attacks rose by 21
percent while the fatality rate rose by 19 percent.
There were 52 attacks after the Iraq invasion, killing
489 civilians, while there were 19 in the period before,
killing 182. The local dynamics of the Kashmir conflict,
tensions between India and Pakistan, and the resurfacing
of the Taliban in eastern Pakistan likely played a large
role here. That said, there is evidence that the Iraq
War did energize jihadists in Pakistan. Hamid Mir says,
"Iraq not only radicalized the Pakistani tribals [near
the Afghan border] but it offered them the opportunity
for them to go to Iraq via Iran to get on-the-job
training."
There is also evidence that the Iraq War had some impact
in other areas of Pakistan. In the summer of 2004, Hafiz
Mohammad Saeed, the head of the Kashmiri militant group
Lashkar-e-Toiba, told followers in Lahore, "Islam is in
grave danger, and the mujahideen are fighting to keep
its glory. They are fighting the forces of evil in Iraq
in extremely difficult circumstances. We should send
mujahideen from Pakistan to help them." And Pakistan,
inasmuch as it has become Al Qaeda’s new base for
training and planning attacks, has become the location
where significant numbers of would-be jihadists--including
some young British Pakistanis such as the London suicide
bombers, radicalized in part by the Iraq War--have
traveled to learn bomb-making skills.
In Russia and Chechnya, the Iraq War appears to have had
less of an impact than on other jihadist fronts. This is
unsurprising given the fact that jihadist groups in the
region are preoccupied by a separatist war against the
Russian military. Whilst following the invasion of Iraq
there was a rise in the number of attacks by Chechen
groups that share a similar ideology with Al Qaeda, the
total rate of fatalities did not go up. The Iraq War
does seem to have diverted some jihadists from the
Russian/Chechen front: Arab fighters who might have
previously gone to Chechnya now have a cause at their
own doorstep, while funds from Arab donors increasingly
have gone to the Iraqi jihad.
Southeast Asia has been the one region in the world in
which jihadist terrorism has declined significantly in
the period since the invasion of Iraq. There was a 67
percent drop in the rate of attacks (from 10.5 to 3.5
attacks per year) in the post-invasion period and a 69
percent drop in the rate of fatalities (from 201 to 62
fatalities per year). And there has been no bombing on
the scale of the October 2002 Bali nightclub attack that
killed more than 200. However, jihadist terrorism in
Southeast Asia has declined in spite, not because of,
the Iraq War. The U.S. invasion of Iraq was deeply
unpopular in the region, as demonstrated by the poll
finding that only 15 percent of Indonesians had a
favorable view of the United States in 2003. But the
negative impact of the Iraq War on public opinion was
mitigated by U.S. efforts to aid the region in the wake
of the devastating tsunami of December 2004--Pew opinion
surveys have shown that the number of those with
favorable views towards the United States in Indonesia
crept above 30 percent in 2005 and 2006.
However, the main reason for the decline of jihadist
terrorism in Southeast Asia has been the successful
crackdown by local authorities on jihadist groups and
their growing unpopularity with the general population.
The August 2003 capture of Hambali, Jemaa Islamiya’s
operational commander, was key to degrading the group’s
capacity to launch attacks as was the arrest of hundreds
of Jemaa Islamiya and Abu Sayyaf operatives in
Indonesia, the Philippines, Thailand and Singapore in
the years after the October 2002 Bali bombings. Those
arrested included most of those who planned the Bali
attacks, as well as former instructors at Jemaa Islamiya
camps and individuals involved in financing attacks. And
in November 2005 Indonesian security services killed
Jemaa Islamiya master bomber Azhari bin Husin in a
shoot-out. The second wave of Bali attacks in 2005
killed mostly Indonesians and created a popular backlash
against jihadist groups in Indonesia, degrading their
ability to recruit operatives. And Muslim leaders such
as Masdar Farid Masudi, the deputy leader of the
country’s largest Islamic group, condemned the bombings:
"If the perpetrators are Muslims, their sentences must
be multiplied because they have tarnished the sacredness
of their religion and smeared its followers worldwide."
Our survey shows that the Iraq conflict has motivated
jihadists around the world to see their particular
struggle as part of a wider global jihad fought on
behalf of the Islamic ummah, the global community of
Muslim believers. The Iraq War had a strong impact in
jihadist circles in the Arab world and Europe, but also
on the Taliban, which previously had been quite
insulated from events elsewhere in the Muslim world. By
energizing the jihadist groups, the Iraq conflict acted
as a catalyst for the increasing globalization of the
jihadist cause, a trend that should be deeply troubling
for American policymakers. In the late 1990s, bin Laden
pushed a message of a global jihad and attracted
recruits from around the Muslim world to train and fight
in Afghanistan. The Iraq War has made bin Laden’s
message of global struggle even more persuasive to
militants. Over the past three years, Iraq has attracted
thousands of foreign fighters who have been responsible
for the majority of suicide attacks in the country.
Those attacks have had an enormous strategic impact; for
instance, getting the United Nations to pull out of Iraq
and sparking the Iraqi civil war.
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Emblematic of the problem is Muriel Degauque, a
38-year-old Belgian woman who on November 9, 2005, near
the town of Baquba in central Iraq, detonated a bomb as
she drove past an American patrol. In the bomb crater,
investigators found travel documents that showed that
she had arrived in Iraq from Belgium just a few weeks
earlier with her Moroccan-Belgian husband Hissam Goris.
The couple had been recruited by "Al Qaeda in Iraq."
Goris would die the following day, shot by American
forces as he prepared to launch a suicide attack near
Fallujah.
The story of Muriel Degauque and her husband is part of
a trend that Harvard terrorism researcher Assaf Moghadam
terms the "globalization of martyrdom." The London
suicide bombings in July 2005 revealed the surprising
willingness of four British citizens to die to protest
the United Kingdom’s role in the Coalition in Iraq;
Muriel Degauque, for her part, was willing to die for
the jihadist cause in a country in which she was a
stranger.
This challenges some existing conceptions of the
motivations behind suicide attacks. In 2005 University
of Chicago political scientist Robert Pape published a
much-commented-upon study of suicide bombing, "Dying to
Win," in which he used a mass of data about previous
suicide bombing campaigns to argue that they principally
occurred "to compel modern democracies to withdraw
military forces from territory that the terrorists
consider to be their homeland." (Of course, terrorism
directed against totalitarian regimes rarely occurs
because such regimes are police states and are
unresponsive to public opinion.) Pape also argued that
while religion might aggravate campaigns of suicide
terrorism, such campaigns had also been undertaken by
secular groups, most notably the Sri Lankan Tamil
Tigers, whose most spectacular success was the
assassination of Indian Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi by a
female suicide attacker in 1991.
Pape’s findings may explain the actions and motivations
of terrorist groups in countries such as Sri Lanka, but
his principal claim that campaigns of suicide terrorism
are generally nationalist struggles to liberate occupied
lands that have little to do with religious belief does
not survive contact with the reality of what is going on
today in Iraq. The most extensive suicide campaign in
history is being conducted in Iraq largely by foreigners
animated by the deeply-held religious belief that they
must liberate a Muslim land from the "infidel"
occupiers.
While Iraqis make up the great bulk of the insurgents,
several studies have shown that the suicide attackers in
Iraq are generally foreigners, while only a small
proportion are Iraqi. (Indeed, the most feared terrorist
leader in Iraq until his death earlier this year, Abu
Musab al Zarqawi, was a Jordanian.) The Israeli
researcher Reuven Paz, using information posted on Al
Qaeda-linked websites between October 2004 and March
2005, found that of the 33 suicide attacks listed, 23
were conducted by Saudis, and only 1 by an Iraqi.
Similarly, in June 2005 the Search for International
Terrorist Entities (SITE) Institute of Washington, D.C.
found by tracking both jihadist websites and media
reports that of the 199 Sunni extremists who had died in
Iraq either in suicide attacks or in action against
Coalition or Iraqi forces, 104 were from Saudi Arabia
and only 21 from Iraq. The rest were predominantly from
countries around the Middle East. And Mohammed Hafez in
his previously cited study of the 101 "known" suicide
bombers in Iraq found that while 44 were Saudi and 8
were from Italy (!), only 7 were from Iraq.
In congressional testimony this past November, CIA
Director General Michael Hayden said that "an
overwhelming percentage of the suicide bombers are
foreign." A senior U.S. military intelligence official
told us that a worrisome recent trend is the rising
number of North Africans who have joined the ranks of
foreign fighters in Iraq, whose number General Hayden
pegged at 1,300 during his November congressional
testimony. A Saudi official also confirmed to us the
rising number of North Africans who are being drawn into
the Iraq War.
The globalization of jihad and martyrdom, accelerated to
a significant degree by the Iraq War, has some
disquieting implications for American security in the
future. First, it has energized jihadist groups
generally; second, not all foreign fighters attracted to
Iraq will die there. In fact there is evidence that some
jihadists are already leaving Iraq to operate elsewhere.
Saudi Arabia has made a number of arrests of fighters
coming back from Iraq, and Jordanian intelligence
sources say that 300 fighters have returned to Jordan
from Iraq. As far away as Belgium, authorities have
indicated that Younis Lekili, an alleged member of the
cell that recruited Muriel Degauque, had previously
traveled to fight in Iraq, where he lost his leg. (Lekili
is awaiting trial in Belgium.)
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German, French, and Dutch intelligence officials have
estimated that there are dozens of their citizens
returning from the Iraq theater, and some appear to have
been determined to carry out attacks on their return to
Europe. For example, French police arrested Hamid Bach,
a French citizen of Moroccan descent, in June 2005 in
Montpellier, several months after he returned from a
staging camp for Iraq War recruits in Syria. According
to French authorities, Bach’s handlers there instructed
him to assist with plotting terrorist attacks in Italy.
Back in France, Bach is alleged to have bought
significant quantities of hydrogen peroxide and to have
looked up details on explosives and detonators online.
(Bach is awaiting trial in France.)
This "blowback" trend will greatly increase when the war
eventually winds down in Iraq. In the short term the
countries most at risk are those whose citizens have
traveled to fight in Iraq, in particular Arab countries
bordering Iraq. Jamal Khashoggi, a leading Saudi expert
on jihadist groups, told us that "while Iraq brought new
blood into the Al Qaeda organization in Saudi Arabia,
this was at a time when the network was being
dismantled. Al Qaeda in Saudi Arabia could not
accommodate these recruits so they sent them to Iraq to
train them, motivate them, and prepare them for a future
wave of attacks in the Kingdom. It is a deep worry to
Saudi authorities that Saudis who have gone to Iraq will
come back." That’s a scenario for which Khashoggi says
Saudi security forces are painstakingly preparing.
Several U.S. citizens have tried to involve themselves
in the Iraq jihad. In December an American was arrested
in Cairo, Egypt, accused of being part of a cell
plotting terrorist attacks in Iraq. And in February 2006
three Americans from Toledo, Ohio, were arrested for
allegedly plotting to kill U.S. military personnel in
Iraq. According to the FBI, one of these individuals,
Mohammad Zaki Amawi, was in contact with an Arab
jihadist group sending fighters to Iraq and tried
unsuccessfully to cross the border into Iraq. However,
to date there is no evidence of Americans actually
fighting in Iraq so the number of returnees to the
United States is likely to be small. The larger risk is
that jihadists will migrate from Iraq to Western
countries, a trend that will be accelerated if, as
happened following the Afghan jihad against the Soviets,
those fighters are not allowed to return to their home
countries.
Already terrorist groups in Iraq may be in a position to
start sending funds to other jihadist fronts. According
to a U.S. government report leaked to the New York Times
in November 2006, the fact that insurgent and terrorist
groups are raising up to $200 million a year from
various illegal activities such as kidnapping and oil
theft in Iraq means that they "may have surplus funds
with which to support other terrorist organizations
outside Iraq." Indeed, a letter from Al Qaeda’s No. 2,
Ayman al Zawahiri, to Al Qaeda in Iraq leader Abu Musab
al Zarqawi in July 2005 contained this revealing
request: "Many of the [funding] lines have been cut off.
Because of this we need a payment while new lines are
being opened. So if you’re capable of sending a payment
of approximately one hundred thousand we’ll be very
grateful to you."
The "globalization of martyrdom" prompted by the Iraq
War has not only attracted foreign fighters to die in
Iraq (we record 148 suicide-terrorist attacks in Iraq
credited to an identified jihadist group) but has also
encouraged jihadists to conduct many more suicide
operations elsewhere. Since the U.S. invasion of Iraq,
there has been a 246 percent rise in the rate of suicide
attacks (6 before and 47 after) by jihadist groups
outside of Iraq and a 24 percent increase in the
corresponding fatality rate. Even excluding Afghanistan,
there has been a 150 percent rise in the rate of suicide
attacks and a 14 percent increase in the rate of
fatalities attributable to jihadists worldwide. The
reasons for the spread of suicide bombing attacks in
other jihadist theaters are complex but the success of
these tactics in Iraq, the lionization that Iraqi
martyrs receive on jihadist websites, and the increase
in feelings of anger and frustration caused by images of
the Iraq War have all likely contributed significantly.
The spread of suicide bombings should be of great
concern to the United States in defending its interests
and citizens around the world, because they are
virtually impossible to defend against.
The Iraq War has also encouraged the spread of more
hardline forms of jihad (the corollary to an increase in
suicide bombing). Anger and frustration over Iraq has
increased the popularity, especially among young
militants, of a hardcore takfiri ideology that is deeply
intolerant of divergent interpretations of Islam and
highly tolerant of extreme forms of violence. The
visceral anti-Americanism, anti-Semitism, and anti-Shiism
widely circulated among the Internet circles around
ideologues such as Abu Muhammad al-Maqdisi and Abu
Qatada (both Jordanian-Palestinian mentors to Abu Musab
al Zarqawi) and Al Qaeda’s Syrian hawk, Mustafa
Setmariam Nasar, are even more extreme, unlikely as it
may sound, than the statements of bin Laden himself.
Our study shows just how counterproductive the Iraq War
has been to the war on terrorism. The most recent State
Department report on global terrorism states that the
goal of the United States is to identify, target, and
prevent the spread of "jihadist groups focused on
attacking the United States or its allies [and those
groups that] view governments and leaders in the Muslim
world as their primary targets." Yet, since the invasion
of Iraq, attacks by such groups have risen more than
sevenfold around the world. And though few Americans
have been killed by jihadist terrorists in the past
three years it is wishful thinking to believe that this
will continue to be the case, given the continued
determination of militant jihadists to target the
country they see as their main enemy. We will be living
with the consequences of the Iraq debacle for more than
a decade.
Special thanks to Mike Torres and Zach Stern at NYU
and Kim Cragin and Drew Curiel at RAND.
Peter Bergen and Paul Cruickshank Research fellows at
the Center on Law and Security at the NYU School of Law.
Bergen is also a senior fellow at the New America
Foundation in Washington, D.C.
© 2007 The Foundation for National Progress