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Action Log

10 Feb 2012 11:38 a.m. PST
by Editor in Chief Bill

  • Changed title from "Legion of Doom,,," to "Legion of Doom..."
  • Changed total # of posts from 3 to 2
  • Changed time from
    10 Feb 2012 10:38 a.m. PST
    to
    10 Feb 2012 10:35 a.m. PST

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Tango01 Supporting Member of TMP10 Feb 2012 11:14 a.m. PST

…Somali Militants Join al-Qaida.

"Al-Qaida was supposed to be a spent force after Navy SEALs killed Osama bin Laden. But it may just have replenished its forces and strengthened its brand.

In one bold move, al-Qaida incorporated al-Shabab, one of the world's most assertive extremist groups, thereby expanding its reach out of tribal Pakistan and bolstering its dwindling ranks. Expect the growing U.S. shadow war in Somalia to heat up in response — and U.S. citizens who've joined Shabab are likely to be first in the crosshairs.

An audiotape circulating across the Internet on Thursday from Shabab leader Mukhtar Abu al-Zubayr and Ayman Zawahiri announce that "jihadi unity" has motivated the merger — the first major move for Zawahiri since inheriting al-Qaida.

It's good news for the "jihadi agglomeration," Zawahiri tells supporters, "in the face of the crusader Zionist campaign and its agents of rulers and traitors who allowed invading crusader forces access into their countries, entering mounted on tanks into government palaces in Kabul, Baghdad, Mogadishu and Grozny."


Perhaps, but those "crusaders" have also been building their counterterrorism forces in east Africa for years. The U.S. is establishing three new drone bases in the region. Special Operations Forces have detained Shebab "supporters" in the waters off of Somalia and launched raids into the interior of the country to free captive humanitarian aid workers.

When elite U.S. troops have hunted al-Qaida suspects in Somalia — missions that typically go unreported for years — they've been able to call on serious military hardware, from Navy Destroyers to AC-130 gunships. Oh, and the CIA's set up shop in Somalia, too.

Zawahiri and al-Zubayr surely didn't mean it this way, but the merger will have serious and potentially lethal consequences for al-Shabab's cohort of U.S. members, affiliates and supporters. One of its members, Omar Hammami — who doubles as the group's lead emcee — was born in Arkansas Alabama. If a drone strike could kill the U.S. citizen and al-Qaida propagandist Anwar al-Awlaki in Yemen, then a formal Shabab/Qaida merger probably puts Hammami squarely on the U.S.' kill/capture list, if he wasn't already.

Other Americans have gotten involved with Shabab, including one who became a suicide bomber in Mogadishu last October. The Justice Department has charged a number of Americans and U.S. residents with supporting Shabab, and the federal attention is sure to increase with the al-Qaida merger.

Still, the union might be more an act of desperation than strength. Shabab's been trying for years to show al-Qaida how much it hearts the OG jihadis, with little reciprocal love. The group's even been driven out of Mogadishu by U.S. proxies. Australian terror analyst Leah Farrall wrote shortly after the bin Laden raid that the "the benefits of a merger at a time when al-Qaida needs to project power and influence [might] outweigh any lingering concerns about al-Shabab's suitability."

Which provides some context to Zawahiri's first major decision as al-Qaida's leader. "Shabab has been allegedly losing ground, [so the merger provides] a boost to the movement and ‘legitimacy," says Aaron Zelin, a terrorism researcher at Brandeis University who translated the video for Danger Room, "and it gives some press to al-Qaida, a failing brand, by associating it with Shabab, which has a nice safe haven." Except the merger might soon make that haven less safe."

What about a "wargame" of a new landing in Somalia?.

From
link

Amicalement
Armand

MajorB10 Feb 2012 11:35 a.m. PST

What about a "wargame" of a new landing in Somalia?.

Well, what about it? Do have the figs? Terrain should be easy…

CraigH10 Feb 2012 11:38 a.m. PST

I wonder if a group email went out explaining how this merger is about growth and strengthening the brand and how they plan to take advantages of each organization's best practices and no layoffs are anticipated.

Uesugi Kenshin Supporting Member of TMP10 Feb 2012 12:28 p.m. PST

Not a big deal really. They have been defacto allies for several years. Its more a desperate public relations act on Al-Qaidas part. The US has already been increasing its footprint in central and eastern Africa of late already. I dont see this causing any doctrinal change.

Cherno10 Feb 2012 1:07 p.m. PST

How disappointing, I came here expecting to see this:

ancientsgamer10 Feb 2012 2:16 p.m. PST

"hearts" is an emoticon, not a sentiment…

I came here thinking the antagonists of the Justice League were in miniature! lol

Redroom10 Feb 2012 3:46 p.m. PST

same thoughts as ancientsgamer

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