While we are busy freeing Iraq....

TossingSalads

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Alqaeda has been getting stronger. It makes me sick.


LONDON - Far from being crippled by the U.S.-led war on terror, al-Qaida has more than 18,000 potential terrorists scattered around the world and the war in Iraq (news - web sites) is swelling its ranks, a report said Tuesday.


AFP/File Photo



Al-Qaida is probably working on plans for major attacks on the United States and Europe, and it may be seeking weapons of mass destruction in its desire to inflict as many casualties as possible, the International Institute of Strategic Studies said in its annual survey of world affairs.


Osama bin Laden (news - web sites)'s network appears to be operating in more than 60 nations, often in concert with local allies, the study by the independent think tank said.


Although about half of al-Qaida's top 30 leaders have been killed or captured, it has an effective leadership, with bin Laden apparently still playing a key role, it said.


"Al-Qaida must be expected to keep trying to develop more promising plans for terrorist operations in North America and Europe, potentially involving weapons of mass destruction," IISS director Dr. John Chipman told a press conference releasing "Strategic Survey 2003/4."


At the same time it will likely continue attacking "soft targets encompassing Americans, Europeans and Israelis, and aiding the insurgency in Iraq," he added.


The report suggested that the two military centerpieces of the U.S.-led war on terror ? the wars in Afghanistan (news - web sites) and Iraq ? may have boosted al-Qaida.


Driving the terror network out of Afghanistan in late 2001 appears to have benefited the group, which dispersed to many countries, making it almost invisible and hard to combat, the story said.


And the Iraq conflict "has arguably focused the energies and resources of al-Qaida and its followers while diluting those of the global counterterrorism coalition that appeared so formidable" after the Afghan intervention, the survey said.


The U.S. occupation of Iraq brought al-Qaida recruits from across Islamic nations, the study said. Up to 1,000 foreign Islamic fighters have infiltrated Iraqi territory, where they are cooperating with Iraqi insurgents, the survey said.


Efforts to defeat al-Qaida will take time and might accelerate only if there are political developments that now seem elusive, such as the democratization of Iraq and the resolution of conflict in Israel, it said.


It could take up to 500,000 U.S. and allied troops to effectively police Iraq and restore political stability, IISS researcher Christopher Langton told the news conference.


Such a figure appeared impossible to meet, given political disquiet in the United States and Britain and the unwillingness of other nations to send troops, he said.


The United States is al-Qaida's prime target in a war it sees as a death struggle between civilizations, the report said. An al-Qaida leader has said 4 million Americans will have to be killed "as a prerequisite to any Islamic victory," the survey said.


"Al-Qaida's complaints have been transformed into religious absolutes and cannot be satisfied through political compromise," the study said.


The London-based institute is considered the most important security think tank outside the United States. Its findings on al-Qaida's expanding structure and growing support by allied terrorist networks around the world track with similar assessments from governments and other experts.


The IISS said its estimate of 18,000 al-Qaida fighters was based on intelligence estimates that the group trained at least 20,000 fighters in its camps in Afghanistan before the United States and its allies ousted the Taliban regime. In the ensuing war on terror, some 2,000 al-Qaida fighters have been killed or captured, the survey said.





Al-Qaida appears to have successfully reconstituted its operations by dispersing its forces into small groups and through working with local allies, such as the Great Eastern Islamic Raiders' Front in Turkey, the report said.

"Al-Qaida is the common ideological and logistical hub for disparate local affiliates, and bin Laden's charisma, presumed survival and elusiveness enhance the organization's iconic drawing power," it said.
 

djv

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Yes to bad we had to rush to Iraq to save our selfs. We had just about finished off these ass holes in Afgan.
 

TossingSalads

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Meet the Men who chose to let you be attacked in America again.
wolfowitz.jpg


Paul Wolfowitz
 

Iminforabuck

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djv said:
Yes to bad we had to rush to Iraq to save our selfs. We had just about finished off these ass holes in Afgan.



That is quite possibly one of the most idiotic statements I've seen in some time on here. And that says a lot djv....cause I read most of your posts.

Do you honestly think we ever "just about" had Al Queda finished off? You can cut the head off of this network.....maybe slow it down.....but due to anti-american sentiment....this group isnt going to be "just about" finished off any time soon.

I'm sure everything going on in Iraq has done wonders for their recruitment program.....but make no mistake about it....they've never been "just about" finished.



:rolleyes:
 

djv

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I dont if it's that far off. when you pull 20000 troops out of there ship them to Iraq. You might say you took some of the heat off. And yes I mean from Afagn. I know there still running around in other countries. But chace them into the mountains and stop for afew months. Well im sure your right chit loads got away. That would be the point I was makeing.
 

TossingSalads

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Bottomline after 9/11 we had the whole world on our side. We could have had Bin Laden if we "stayed the course". We could have handled Iraq the right way, but this administration had singular vision of what their war should be and that vision was so short sighted it is sick. They alienated the entire world, and made moderate arabs our enemy
 
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