Al Qaeda leaders seem put off by the brutality of its Syrian arm, says CNN analyst Peter Bergen.
A terror group too brutal for al Qaeda?
By Peter Bergen, CNN National Security Analyst
February 4, 2014 -- Updated 2312 GMT (0712 HKT)
Medical personnel look for
survivors after a reported airstrike in Aleppo, Syria, on Saturday,
February 1. The United Nations estimates more than 100,000 people have
been killed since the Syrian conflict began in March 2011. Click through
to see the most compelling images taken during the conflict, which is
now a civil war:
HIDE CAPTION
Editor's note: Peter Bergen is CNN's national security analyst, a director at the New America Foundation and the author of "Manhunt: The Ten-Year Search for bin Laden -- From 9/11 to Abbottabad."
(CNN) -- When even al Qaeda publicly rejects you because you are too brutal, it's likely a reasonable indicator that you are.
A long simmering dispute
between "al Qaeda Central," headed by Ayman al-Zawahiri, and the most
brutal al Qaeda affiliate in Syria, generally known as the Islamic State
of Iraq and Syria, surfaced publicly on Monday.
On jihadist websites, al Qaeda's central leadership posted a notice saying ISIS "is not a branch of the al Qaeda group."
It is the first time in its quarter century history that al Qaeda has officially rejected one of its affiliates.
Why did this happen? ISIS
and another al Qaeda affiliate known as the Nusra Front have been
fighting each other in Syria for several weeks now.
Peter Bergen
This open warfare caps a
dispute between ISIS and Nusra about who is boss in Syria that has been
brewing since ISIS released a statement in April announcing its official
merger with Nusra.
A leader of Nusra rejected the merger, and in June, al-Zawahiri annulled the merger. ISIS, in turn, rejected al-Zawahiri's annulment of the merger.
Al-Zawahiri is clearly
fed up with ISIS's open rejection of his overall leadership of the al
Qaeda network. Moreover, he is likely quite concerned about how ISIS is
alienating ordinary Syrians by a brutal campaign that has involved the public beheading of opponents and the imposition of Taliban-style rule on the population, including the banning of smoking, music and unveiled women in public.
Al Qaeda's leader has
seen this movie before -- in western Iraq in 2006, when al Qaeda in Iraq
(the parent organization of ISIS) imposed a brutal Taliban-like rule on
the population that caused the Sunni tribes in western Iraq to rebel
against al Qaeda in an uprising known as "the Sunni Awakening."
The Sunni Awakening, with a heavy assist from the U.S. military, led to al Qaeda losing control of much of western Iraq by 2008.
Nusra seems to have
learned from the mistakes of al Qaeda in Iraq and is not imposing
Taliban-style rule in the areas of Syria that it controls and is instead
operating in a Hezbollah-like manner, providing social services. The
group, for instance, provides bread and electricity in the eastern
Syrian city of Ash Shaddadi, where it also controls the city's wheat
silos and oil wells.
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Nursa also is engaging
in the kind of alliance-building that al Qaeda affiliates generally have
not been able to pull off because they regard compromise as a deviation
from their God-given beliefs. Nusra has, for instance, allied with more
moderate elements of the Syrian opposition to fight against ISIS during
the past several weeks.
Nusra, in fact,
represents what al Qaeda's core leadership wants in one of its
affiliates: A group that doesn't tarnish the al Qaeda brand by using
brutal tactics against fellow Muslims.
This has been a core
concern for al Qaeda for the past decade. Al-Zawahiri sent a letter to
al Qaeda in Iraq in the summer of 2005 admonishing the group against its campaign of killing Shia civilians.
Similarly, Osama bin Laden wrote a private letter
to the al Qaeda-aligned Somali terrorist group, Al-Shabaab, in 2010
telling the organization to stop attacking in the central market of the
Somalia capital, Mogadishu, because such attacks were killing Muslim
civilians.
Also in 2010, al Qaeda
leaders wrote a private letter to the leader of the Pakistan Taliban
telling him forcefully to suspend his group's campaign of attacks
against mosques and markets, which was killing hundreds of Pakistani
civilians.
The difference now is that al Qaeda has gone public with its displeasure with ISIS and is also officially cutting the group off.
Despite the bitter
differences between the two al Qaeda-aligned groups in Syria, senior
U.S. counterterrorism officials tell me they are "All Syria. All the
time."
That is because al Qaeda affiliated groups in Syria and neighboring Iraq now control more territory in the Arab world
than at any time in their history; a swath of land that runs from
northwestern Syria some 400 miles to the east into western Iraq.
On Tuesday, CIA Director
John Brennan testified before the House Intelligence Committee: "There
are camps inside of both Iraq and Syria that are used by al Qaeda to
develop capabilities that are applicable, both in the theater, as well
as beyond." Brennan asserted that these camps represent a real threat to
the United States.
Adding to their
concerns, U.S. counterterrorism officials tell me that more Americans
have traveled to fight in Syria than was previously understood. They
believe some 70 Americans have fought there over the past three years.
Previous estimates suggested only a handful of Americans had done so.
U.S. counterterrorism
officials are rightly concerned that Americans who have fought in Syria
will return to the States radicalized and perhaps even to plan to carry
out terrorist attacks.
That said, it isn't
clear how many of the 70 Americans who are estimated to have fought in
Syria have done so alongside the al Qaeda-aligned groups or with other
more moderate rebel groups who are fighting the Bashar al-Assad regime
with some degree of American support.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- A Syrian rebel group has been disowned by al Qaeda
- Peter Bergen says al Qaeda's central leadership seems put off by the group's brutality
- The split could weaken al Qaeda's grip in Syria, after it made advances there, he says
- Bergen: U.S. officials believe more Americans have gone to fight vs. the Syrian regime
- COPY http://edition.cnn.com/
Syrian civil war in photos
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