Bin Laden with one of his sons, an AK-47, and a map of the Horn of Africa and the Indian Ocean, marking the place of a U.S. Navy ship. The photo is undated. (Getty Images).
From The Economist:
Military setbacks and ideological disputes have put al-Qaeda on the defensive.
OSAMA BIN LADEN’S messages from the wilderness get little attention nowadays. Al-Qaeda has been unable to land a blow on Western soil since the 2005 London bombings. Its leaders lurk in Pakistan’s tribal belt, hiding from regular lethal attacks by America’s unmanned Predator aircraft. Their Pushtun hosts are tiring of their troublesome guests. Perhaps most damaging, former supporters publicly denounce its ideology.
The resultant bickering and low morale do not mean that al-Qaeda and its followers cannot still mount spectacular attacks. Western intelligence services are convinced the group tried to blow up several transatlantic airliners in 2006. It can still pose a menace in, say, parts of Asia. But for now, Mr bin Laden has to try to exploit the news, rather than to make it.
Read more ....
My Comment: Al Qaeda is still relevant. Their terror actions may be absent on the international scene, but their ideology and method of operandus is still there .... and it is very lethal and dangerous. When their ideology and extreme view of Islam is discredited, that is when we can say that Al qaeda has become irrelevant.
No comments:
Post a Comment