Why al-Qaida is now more dangerous than IS

Policymakers and terrorism scholars are debating whether al-Qaida or Islamic State is the more dangerous threat to the United States and the West. After the various bombings and attacks across the West, many experts insist Islamic State is the more serious problem. That is a mistake. Al-Qaida presents the gravest long-term problem to the West.

Al-Qaida’s ruthlessly pragmatic approach has placed it in a far better position to achieve its strategic objectives. It has proved more effective in taking advantage of U.S. policy in the Middle East, primarily in Syria, to legitimize itself as an armed force and, increasingly, as a viable political player.

The al-Qaida-linked Jabhat al-Nusra, since rebranded Jabhat Fateh al-Sham, or JFS, is quietly morphing into a mainstream option in the broader panoply of rebel groups operating in Syria, even as Islamic State’s caliphate continues to shrink and the United States and Russia spar over mistaken targets.

If Jabhat Fateh al-Sham successfully embeds within the Syrian opposition, it could prolong the conflict in Syria. Even more worrisome, with a concerted political and military strategy, it could attain the long-term success that Hezbollah has achieved in neighboring Lebanon. With a highly capable, well-trained and well-armed franchise group on the periphery of Europe, al-Qaida would be even more dangerous than IS.

Al-Qaida’s current strategy reveals a group determined to learn from its past mistakes. The group offers a strong political component, and no longer focuses solely on violence.

Since being forced out of Afghanistan, al-Qaida has evolved to include not only a core group based in South Asia but also franchises and affiliates throughout North Africa and the Arabian Peninsula. These branches were formed as a response to al-Qaida’s post-9/11 struggle to assure its survival.

Over time, however, they have become crucial. A vanguard group of exiles with weak roots in Middle Eastern social networks and an unrealistic U.S.-centric plan has transformed itself into a broad movement whose central leadership provides strategic guidelines while its branches embed in regional social movements.

This reorientation helped al-Qaida establish close ties with locals in areas where its affiliates operate. In Yemen, for example, al-Qaida moved to share power with local jihadists after successfully seizing the city of Mukalla in the southern part of the country. (It has since lost the town.) Al-Qaida’s North African branch allied with local actors to govern areas in northern Mali before the 2013 French intervention. Al-Qaida has also been moving fighters and resources into Syria and slowly accruing popular support among locals there through its affiliate, Jabhat Fateh al-Sham.

Al-Qaida’s new focus on building political support has been demonstrated by its efforts to match violence to the local population’s specific regional political objectives. Though al-Qaida affiliates may still rely on militant tactics, including ambushes and improvised explosive devices, they function largely as insurgent forces that hold key terrain, maintain shadow governments and defend Sunni communities from hostile forces. These efforts are bolstered by comprehensive da’wa campaigns, which spread strict Wahhabist beliefs to recruit new members.

Al-Qaida has always contained diverse voices. Indeed, several high-ranking militants in its senior leadership, including Abu Musab al-Suri and Sayf al-Adl, viewed the Sept. 11 attacks as counterproductive. Both predicted that Washington’s response would inevitably lead to a loss of the group’s Afghan sanctuary. Al-Qaida founder Osama bin Laden, however, was deaf to their arguments. The group’s struggles in the ensuing years made it more receptive to different ideas. The current al-Qaida leader, Ayman al-Zawahiri, has long sought to pursue al-Qaida’s objectives without alienating locals. He has warned against the wanton slaughter of Shiites in Iraq, as revealed in his intercepted communications to Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, then leader of al-Qaida in Iraq.

Eight years later, Zawahiri issued an official manifesto, General Guidelines for Jihad, that lays out clear ground rules for how al-Qaida franchises should deal with local communities.

By making the guidelines public, al-Qaida signaled to affiliates and allies that it would no longer let rogue actions tarnish its name and derail its political objectives, as Zarqawi ultimately did.

Al-Qaida’s softer, less violent approach seeks to help local Sunni tribes assuage their parochial grievances. As in Syria, this quid pro quo helps al-Qaida build local bases of influence and embed fighters into established zones of territorial control.

Over time, al-Qaida likely hopes to incorporate local groups into its radical brand of Islam. In stark juxtaposition to Islamic State’s focus on occupying territory, and in keeping with its philosophy of relative pragmatism, al-Qaida has maintained a far longer timeline for establishing a caliphate. Al-Qaida also declared IS illegitimate because its actions denied Muslims the right to choose their caliph. They would divide the Islamic world “umma,” or community, rather than unify it.

By embedding itself into larger movements, al-Qaida has gained greater protection from external attacks. When attacks do occur, it can present them as evidence of the attackers’ hostility to all Sunnis. In this way, the group may hope local partners will accede to its global agenda and use newly established sanctuaries to launch attacks against the West.

For the West in general, and the U.S. in particular, the worst possible outcome of al-Qaida’s pragmatism is the risk that Sunnis around the globe will find al-Qaida and its positions legitimate enough to warrant respectful consideration. This would undermine hopes of stability in the Mideast and would further weaken Washington’s limited ability to shape the region’s politics.

The real tragedy could be that al-Qaida, particularly because of its franchises, might appear to be a more genuine protector of Sunni interests than legitimate Arab regimes or the U.S.-led West.

In keeping with this scenario, Washington’s failed strategy to stop the civil war in Syria has been a boon to al-Qaida. As has Washington’s continued inaction in the face of the President Bashar Assad’s brutal regime, which is aided and abetted by his allies in Moscow and Tehran.

The horrific photographs of maimed civilians in Aleppo, Syria, seriously threaten to undermine U.S. accomplishments in the fight against the jihadist movement. Sadly, they are likely to increase hostility toward the U.S. and bolster support for al-Qaida.

Long after IS has been degraded as a military threat, there is a real probability that al-Qaida could complete its transformation from a vanguard group into a grass-roots social movement with significant appeal among Sunni Muslims worldwide. That outcome should be the main concern of Western policymakers and government officials focused on counterterrorism.

Colin P. Clarke is a political scientist at the nonprofit, nonpartisan RAND Corporation. Barak Mendelsohn is an associate professor at Haverford College and author of The al-Qaeda Franchise: The Expansion of Al-Qaeda and Its Consequences.

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