Editor's Note:
In a stunning series of raids Saudi
Arabian security forces arrested over 170 suspected
members of Al Qaeda cells in the kingdom late last week.
The seven simultaneous security operations netted
weapons, over $5 million in cash, communications gear
and documents, and revealed plans to attack the
kingdom's oil infrastructure, military bases and
officials as well as targets abroad. As Dan Murphy
reported in the Christian Science Monitor today,
the raids demonstrate not only the success of security
forces in targeting Al Qaeda in Saudi Arabia, but also
highlight how Saudi citizens view terrorism as a threat
to society. SUSRIS is pleased to provide Mr. Murphy's
report for your consideration today and thanks the
Christian Science Monitor for permission to share it
with you.
New Saudi tack on Al Qaeda
The arrest of 172 suspected militants reveals a Saudi
public that is helping in the fight against the
terrorist group.
By Dan Murphy | Staff writer of The Christian Science
Monitor
Cairo
Some had trained abroad to become pilots and were
planning to hijack airplanes to destroy oil refineries,
Saudi Arabian officials said over the weekend, revealing
alleged details of a foiled Al Qaeda plot on the
kingdom.
Government officials announced on Friday the arrests of
172 suspected militants, one of the largest such
roundups inside the country and the result of months of
work involving informants and intelligence gleaned from
captured militants.
While the arrests may have thwarted a 9/11-like plot,
stopping the attacks in the planning highlights how
successful the country's security services have been in
restricting the group's ability to operate since 2004.
By then, dozens of Saudi nationals and foreign-born
residents had been killed by Al Qaeda's adherents as the
group appeared to be growing in strength and support.
What happened, analysts say, is that the Saudis came to
view Al Qaeda as a legitimate threat as average Saudis �
who had been somewhat supportive of Al Qaeda when its
attacks seemed targeted at driving the US out of
Afghanistan or Iraq or focused on foreigners in the
kingdom � grew disgusted with bloodshed on their own
soil.
"In May 2003, when the first attack happened, the Saudi
security was not prepared. They never thought there
would be an attack" inside the country, says Mustafa
Alani, referring to the Al Qaeda attacks on three
compounds where many American residents lived in Riyadh,
the Saudi capital, that killed 35 people.
Now, "security services have improved," says Mr. Alani,
the director of security and terrorism studies at the
Gulf Research Center in Dubai, a think tank funded by a
Saudi businessman.
"More importantly, there has been a change in Saudi
society," says Alani. "Al Qaeda made a strategic mistake
by attacking Saudis, Arabs, and Muslims. For the sake of
killing one foreigner, they are killing five or 10
Saudis. The average man no longer believes it is jihad.
Any attacks in Saudi Arabia they see as unjustifiable,
illegitimate, and terrorism, not jihad."
That shift in local attitudes, he says, has made
policing the country easier.
"Society became the main source of intelligence..
..there are many cases when the information is coming
from the family. Someone calls and says my son or
brother has disappeared and I believe he has been
recruited," Alani says.
There's no question that Al Qaeda's ability to
successfully carry out attacks inside Saudi Arabia has
been severely degraded in recent years.
According to data compiled by Alani, 50 civilians and
members of the security services were killed by Islamist
militants inside the kingdom in 2003, 68 in 2004, and
seven in 2006. Alani didn't provide data for 2005, but a
review of press reports from that year shows at least
five deaths.
Saudi Arabia has also moved away from what appeared to
have been a state of denial regarding Al Qaeda. In 2002,
there were a series of assassinations of local officials
and foreigners in the country, but at the time the Saudi
government described many of the killings of the
foreigners as tied to gangs involved in alcohol
smuggling (alcohol is illegal in the Kingdom).
"It's been night and day, says a European businessman in
Riyadh who has worked inside the kingdom for 10 years
and was friends with one of the first foreigners killed,
British banker Simon Veness, murdered by a bomb placed
in his car.
"They were going on and on about this being gang
violence � everyone knew it was Al Qaeda, but the
government didn't want to admit it had a problem..
..Now, they seem to be grappling with the reality."
The Saudi government still typically refers to Al Qaeda
� whose leader, Osama bin Laden, is a Saudi � not by
name, but as a "deviant group."
This time, at least one official was more blunt. Those
arrested, "are carriers of Al Qaeda ideology, working on
achieving Al Qaeda goals," Interior Ministry spokesman
Mansour al-Turki told the Associated Press.
While the security services have shown some improvement
in confronting the terrorist threat, Faris bin Hizam
says the government still has a long way to go in the
battle against Al Qaeda.
"It's like we have done nothing against Al Qaeda in the
past four years. It's only the security forces that are
working against the militants. The other branches of the
government are not doing anything. Where are the
ministries of education and Islamic affairs?" says Mr.
Hizam, a Saudi expert on Al Qaeda who is based in Dubai.
Hizam says that most of the those arrested over the past
few months are young Saudis in their early 20s and that
Al Qaeda has found a fertile recruiting ground on the
Internet. "They recruit them mostly now through the
Internet, and they communicate through [text
messaging]," he says. "Most of the new recruits are
students in high school and college, and not all of them
are from religious families. I just visited a liberal
Saudi family in Dammam whose son has joined the ranks of
Al Qaeda," says Hizam.
Hizam said that many Saudis were puzzled at the lack of
a coordinated government plan to fight militants in the
kingdom and said that he thought arrests of more
militants would continue for many years to come.
"No one can understand what the ministries of Education
and Islamic affairs are doing to fight these
terrorists," he says. "I don't believe that the
government is going to do anything new in the future to
fight terrorism."
Over the weekend, the Saudi government did take the
occasion of the arrests to reiterate to the Saudi public
that Al Qaeda is working against the kingdom's
interests.
State TV showed security forces digging up weapons and
explosives, and a government statement said the men had
received training in an unspecified, nearby "troubled"
country, and that they intended to target both Saudi
nationals and foreigners.
General Turki told the AP that the men might have been
trained in Iraq, Somalia, or Pakistan. Counter-terrorism
officials inside and outside of Iraq say that a growing
number of young Saudi men have been crossing the border
to fight in Iraq, and that the conflict there is
inspiring a new generation of radicals.
� Rasheed Abou-Alsamh in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, and Jill
Carroll in Cairo contributed reporting.
By Dan Murphy. Reused with permission from
The Christian Science Monitor (www.csmonitor.com), April
30, 2007. � 2007 The Christian Science Monitor. All
rights reserved. For permissions, contact
[email protected] .
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