Welcome to the Islamic State of Syria Al Qaeda makes it official: The terror group is trying to extend its medieval rule from Baghdad to Damascus.
BY BRIAN FISHMAN
Foreign Policy | APRIL 10, 2013
As soon as
peaceful protests against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad turned violent in
summer 2011, it was clear that al Qaeda's affiliate in Iraq -- known as the
Islamic State of Iraq (ISI) -- would play a terrible role shaping Syria's future.
That reality was reemphasized on April 9, when ISI leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi publicly
acknowledged that his organization had founded the preeminent Syrian jihadi
group, Jabhat al-Nusra. Baghdadi then renamed their collective enterprise the
Islamic State of Iraq and Greater Syria (ISIGS).
Kudos to
Baghdadi for confirming what has long been known. The United States had already listed Jabhat
al-Nusra as an alias for al Qaeda in Iraq in December 2012, and the basic
relationship between the Iraqi and Syrian branches of al Qaeda was easy to surmise
when Jabhat al-Nusra officially
declared its
existence in January 2012. It's no surprise ISI was quickly able to establish a
foothold in Syria: The group had
built extensive networks in the country since
early
in the Iraq war, and was reasserting
itself in eastern Iraq, which shares a 376 mile-long border with Syria, in the
years before the uprising against Assad began.
The relevant issue,
then, is not whether Baghdadi's statement is true. Rather, the important
questions to ask are who made the branding decision, why the ISI acknowledged
this relationship now, and whether the announcement will lead to changes in
behavior by the jihadist group. In Syria, the looming question is how Jabhat
al-Nusra's open affiliation with al Qaeda will affect its relationships with
other rebel groups fighting against Assad.
Perhaps the most
interesting conclusion to be drawn from the creation of the ISIGS is that Ayman
al-Zawahiri, al Qaeda's titular head, still seems to be engaged in the
operations of the terror group's regional affiliates. The co-branding of the
ISI and Jabhat al-Nusra was preceded on April 7 by an audio statement from
Zawahiri urging
Jabhat al-Nusra to establish an Islamic state and emphasizing the
importance of the Iraqi branch of al Qaeda to that effort. Abu Bakr
al-Baghdadi's subsequent declaration of unity -- only a day or so later -- suggests
either a high-degree of coordination with Zawahiri's PR team, or that he jumps
quickly when the head man gives an order.
Zawahiri's apparent
ability to affect al Qaeda's strategy in the Levant is somewhat surprising. In
the wake of Osama bin Laden's death, he is the world's most wanted man, and a
series of U.S. strikes on al Qaeda's communication network after the bin Laden
raid must have forced him deeper underground. Nonetheless, it is very hard to
believe that the timing of the Zawahiri and Baghdadi statements are a
coincidence. It seems that Zawahiri -- like bin Laden before him -- remains
relevant to the operations of the network he heads.
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