Iraq has replaced Afghanistan as the training ground for
the next generation of "professionalized" terrorists,
according to a report released yesterday by the National
Intelligence Council, the CIA director's think tank.
Iraq provides terrorists with "a training ground, a
recruitment ground, the opportunity for enhancing technical
skills," said David B. Low, the national intelligence
officer for transnational threats. "There is even, under the
best scenario, over time, the likelihood that some of the
jihadists who are not killed there will, in a sense, go
home, wherever home is, and will therefore disperse to
various other countries."
Low's comments came during a rare briefing by the council
on its new report on long-term global trends. It took a year
to produce and includes the analysis of 1,000 U.S. and
foreign experts. Within the 119-page report is an evaluation
of Iraq's new role as a breeding ground for Islamic
terrorists.
President Bush has frequently described the Iraq war as
an integral part of U.S. efforts to combat terrorism. But
the council's report suggests the conflict has also helped
terrorists by creating a haven for them in the chaos of war.
"At the moment," NIC Chairman Robert L. Hutchings said,
Iraq "is a magnet for international terrorist activity."
Before the U.S. invasion, the CIA said Saddam Hussein had
only circumstantial ties with several al Qaeda members.
Osama bin Laden rejected the idea of forming an alliance
with Hussein and viewed him as an enemy of the jihadist
movement because the Iraqi leader rejected radical Islamic
ideals and ran a secular government.
Bush described the war in Iraq as a means to promote
democracy in the Middle East. "A free Iraq can be a source
of hope for all the Middle East," he said one month before
the invasion. "Instead of threatening its neighbors and
harboring terrorists, Iraq can be an example of progress and
prosperity in a region that needs both."
But as instability in Iraq grew after the toppling of
Hussein, and resentment toward the United States intensified
in the Muslim world, hundreds of foreign terrorists flooded
into Iraq across its unguarded borders. They found tons of
unprotected weapons caches that, military officials say,
they are now using against U.S. troops. Foreign terrorists
are believed to make up a large portion of today's suicide
bombers, and U.S. intelligence officials say these
foreigners are forming tactical, ever-changing alliances
with former Baathist fighters and other insurgents.
"The al-Qa'ida membership that was distinguished by
having trained in Afghanistan will gradually dissipate, to
be replaced in part by the dispersion of the experienced
survivors of the conflict in Iraq," the report says.
According to the NIC report, Iraq has joined the list of
conflicts -- including the Israeli-Palestinian stalemate,
and independence movements in Chechnya, Kashmir, Mindanao in
the Philippines, and southern Thailand -- that have deepened
solidarity among Muslims and helped spread radical Islamic
ideology.
At the same time, the report says that by 2020, al Qaeda
"will be superseded" by other Islamic extremist groups that
will merge with local separatist movements. Most terrorism
experts say this is already well underway. The NIC says this
kind of ever-morphing decentralized movement is much more
difficult to uncover and defeat.
Terrorists are able to easily communicate, train and
recruit through the Internet, and their threat will become
"an eclectic array of groups, cells and individuals that do
not need a stationary headquarters," the council's report
says. "Training materials, targeting guidance, weapons
know-how, and fund-raising will become virtual (i.e.
online)."
The report, titled "Mapping the Global Future,"
highlights the effects of globalization and other economic
and social trends. But NIC officials said their greatest
concern remains the possibility that terrorists may acquire
biological weapons and, although less likely, a nuclear
device.
The council is tasked with midterm and strategic
analysis, and advises the CIA director. "The NIC's goal,"
one NIC publication states, "is to provide policymakers with
the best, unvarnished, and unbiased information --
regardless of whether analytic judgments conform to U.S.
policy."
Other than reports and studies, the council produces
classified National Intelligence Estimates, which represent
the consensus among U.S. intelligence agencies on specific
issues.
Yesterday, Hutchings, former assistant dean of the
Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at
Princeton University, said the NIC report tried to avoid
analyzing the effect of U.S. policy on global trends to
avoid being drawn into partisan politics.
Among the report's major findings is that the likelihood
of "great power conflict escalating into total war . . . is
lower than at any time in the past century." However, "at no
time since the formation of the Western alliance system in
1949 have the shape and nature of international alignments
been in such a state of flux as they have in the past
decade."
The report also says the emergence of China and India as
new global economic powerhouses "will be the most
challenging of all" Washington's regional relationships. It
also says that in the competition with Asia over
technological advances, the United States "may lose its
edge" in some sectors.
Staff writer Bradley Graham and researcher Julie Tate
contributed to this report.