Paper
no.1189
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13.
12. 2004
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AL QAEDA WATCHERS
by B.Raman
Remember the Kremlin Watchers of yore during the height of the
cold war and their best-sellers on the Evil Empire? And the scary
stories on communism they used to disseminate? And how the
newspaper columns of those days were filled with their analyses?
And the so-called classified documents of the Soviet State and
Communist Party to which they managed to have access and which
they used liberally in their writings and books?
2. And remember a statement made by John Major, the then British
Prime Minister, in the House of Commons in response to a question
in the early 1990s shortly after the USSR had collapsed and
the cold war had ended? He admitted that many of these
best-sellers of the so-called Kremlin Watchers had been supported
by the British Foreign Office.
3. As I had pointed out in one of my articles, what Major did not
admit was that many of these Kremlin Watchers and their articles
and best-sellers had been sponsored and encouraged not by the
British Foreign Office , but by the disinformation divisions of
the British Secret Intelligence Service (SIS--MI-6) and the USA's
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). These Kremlin Watchers, who
were the equivalent of today's embedded terrorism analysts, lapped
up whatever was fed to them by the disinformation divisions and
made it the focus of their analyses.
4. Since 9/11, we have been witnessing the similar emergence of a
core of Al Qaeda watchers, whose writings and scar-stories remind
you disturbingly of the Kremlin Watchers of yore. If you carefully
examine their writings and books, you notice that there is a
sameness in their analyses marked by:" I scare you; you scare
me; and let us scare the world together." The more scary the
writings, the greater the number of readers and the greater the
sales of their books. They are making hay, while Al Qaeda shines.
There is no business like the Al Qaeda watching business today.
5.They quote and cite each other and it is evident that many
of them use without the least qualms of conscience details of interrogation
reports of terrorists in the custody of the USA in Guantanamo Bay,
Diego Garcia and Afghanistan. They are not disturbed by the
thought that if the intelligence agencies of the USA and the
UK were capable of misleading the world with carefully
disseminated disinformation regarding Iraq's weapons of mass
destruction (WMD) and Saddam Hussein's alleged links with Al Qaeda
in order to achieve their strategic objective, they should
be equally capable of misleading the world through scary stories
on terrorism in order to achieve their strategic objectives
in different areas, which are often unrelated to the so-called war
on terrorism.
6. As I read their analyses replete with references to information
obviously obtained from interrogation reports, I am reminded of an
experience in 1992. On the orders of the then Government in New
Delhi, analysts of the intelligence community had prepared a
detailed collation of intelligence relating to Pakistan's
sponsorship of terrorism against India.
7. When we presented our dossier to senior officials of the USA
and the UK, they rejected it without even properly examining
it on the ground that much of the information included in our
analyses was based on reports of interrogation of suspected
terrorists in Indian police custody. They told us self-righteously:" Interrogation
reports are no empirical evidence. The terrorists could have been
tortured in Police custody." When we produced
intelligence gathered from electronic intercepts, which
corroborated the interrogation reports, they asked: " How do
we know the intercepts are genuine? "
8. Take the writings and best-sellers on Al Qaeda coming from
these Al Qaeda watchers and delete all information, which appear
to be based on interrogation reports as shared by the US with the
writers or as carried by Western media. What remains which one can
call empirical evidence or the insights, results from independent
enquiries and personal experience of these watchers? Almost zilch.
9. Their writings are significant not for the questions they pose,
but for those they don't pose?
- How come so many so-called Al Qaeda documents, tapes,
video recordings etc were discovered from different places in
Afghanistan at the height of the US air strikes in 2001-02
by so-called intrepid Western journalists and not by the
security forces? When the security forces reached the spots
after the bombing, they did not discover any documents etc,
but when the journalists went there they found a treasure
trove of documents, video-recordings etc. Were these really of
Al Qaeda or were these planted by the disinformation division
of the CIA and got discovered through compliant journalists in
the hope that they would enjoy greater credibility if
"discovered" and disseminated by journalists than if
they were by the intelligence agencies?
- The world knows the kind of brutal torture
used by the Americans on suspected terrorists in their
custody. Even the International Committee of the Red Cross has
reportedly referred to the use of torture in Guantanamo Bay.
We have seen with our own eyes on our TV screens the kind of
brutal methods used in Iraq. How can we uncritically accept
information obtained by the Americans through such methods?
- In respect of all the captures of terrorists
after 9/11---whether of senior Al Qaeda operatives in Pakistan
or of Hambali of the Jemaah Islamiya in Thailand or of
others in the rest of the world-- the Americans or other
Western intelligence agencies arrogated to themselves
the right of first interrogation, though they were
wanted for investigation and prosecution in other countries.
In many of these instances, what the world has is the American
or British version of the interrogation. How can we accept it
without questioning and independent verification?
- Is it not the duty of these Al Qaeda
watchers to caution their readers on the need to treat the
information with reserve in view of their origin?
10. Look at the way many of these Al Qaeda watchers
have been shifting stance since 9/11. Al Qaeda was initially
projected as a monolithic organisation with a massive strength of
42,000 spread in many countries of the world. Then, they started
gradually downplaying its strength till they came down to 500.
Now, we are told that it has franchised or outsourced its tasks to
indigenous organisations in a number of Islamic countries,
providing them only with ideological support. We were told that Al
Qaeda was the name of the organisation. Then, we were told it is
actually the name of the pan-Islamic ideology propagated by bin
Laden and accepted by the indigenous organisations.
11. When acts of jihadi terrorism continued despite US claims of
success in neutralising many of the so-called senior operatives of
Al Qaeda, we were told by these Al Qaeda watchers that a new
generation of terrorist leaders, more dangerous than the past
leadership, has emerged. Nightmarish scenarios of maritime
terrorism by Al Qaeda were projected before the international
community. Such projections, consciously or unwittingly, served
the American strategic objective of bulldozing the reluctant
countries of the world to accept the intrusive Proliferation
Security Initiative and the Container Security Initiative.
12. When it was pointed out that till now there had been only two
instances of maritime terrorism attributable to Al Qaeda---the
2000 attack on the US naval ship USS Cole and the 2002 attack on
Limburg, the French oil tanker, both off Aden--- we were told by
the watchers that just because Al Qaeda has not so far indulged in
a strategic act of maritime terrorism to disrupt world trade and
oil supplies, it does not mean it would not do so in future. Does
it require a great intellectual or analyst to say this? Even a
schoolboy in one of the lower forms would have known this. We are
now told that Al Qaeda plans its strikes months, if not years, in
advance and should, therefore, be presumed to be planning a 9/11
on the high seas.
13. I listened with utter amazement and disbelief in 2002,
when, at an international seminar, a famous American watcher
projected bin Laden in terms which would have made him blush. Many
of the things, which are being written about bin Laden and Al
Qaeda by these watchers, must be news to them. We were told that
Al Qaeda was run by Osama bin Laden on the basis of the principles
of corporate house management and that he himself acted like a
modern Chief Executive Officer of a private company. My foot!
14. In a series of articles on punishment terrorism written by me
in March-April 2002, which are available at www.saag.org, I had
expressed my doubts whether bin Laden himself called his
organisation Al Qaeda.
The only name which he had once used in February,1998, is
the International Islamic Front (IIF). He has since stopped using
that name too. He refers to his followers in different countries
simply as the Mujahideen. Recently, however, the terrorists in
Saudi Arabia and Iraq have been identifying themselves as members
of Al Qaeda.
15. Once I asked a well-informed Pakistani whether bin Laden
called his organisation Al Qaeda. He replied: " No. The
Americans first called it Al Qaeda. It sounded sexy and made an
impact on the minds of the Muslim masses. So, they too started
calling themselves Al Qaeda."
16. To my knowledge (I would be happy to stand corrected, if
wrong) most of the jihadi terrorist organisations, which
have been active for many years now, had come into existence long
before bin Laden made his appearance in Afghanistan in 1996. They
did not owe their existence or their following and
capability in their respective areas of operation to him. His contribution
was to bring them together in the IIF and make them accept his
pan-Islamic ideology and focus their campaign against the
Americans and the Jewish people, whatever be their national
objective.
17. Al Qaeda, by whatever name it is called, exists. Bin Laden and
his followers and the jihadi terrorist organisations supporting
him continue to pose a serious threat to peace and security
and to the lives of millions of innocent civilians all over the
world. They are ruthless and prepared to use any means to kill and
disrupt normal life.
18. While continuing to be on guard against them and counter their
activities, we should avoid over-projecting them, which would only
play into their hands. We should maintain the independence of our
judgement and should not allow it to be distorted by the analyses
and projections of analysts playing the American game.
19. Beware of Al Qaeda, but equally beware of Al Qaeda
watchers.
(The writer is Additional Secretary (retd),
Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of India, New Delhi, and, presently,
Director, Institute For Topical Studies, Chennai, and
Distinguished Fellow and Convenor, Observer Research Foundation (ORF),
Chennai Chapter. E-Mail: corde@vsnl.com
)
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