Accession Number:

ADA473866

Title:

Cracks in the Foundation: Leadership Schisms in Al-Qa'ida from 1989-2006

Descriptive Note:

Monograph

Corporate Author:

MILITARY ACADEMY WEST POINT NY COMBATING TERRORISM CENTER

Personal Author(s):

Report Date:

2007-09-01

Pagination or Media Count:

77.0

Abstract:

Key insights emerge from this analysis of documents declassified from the Harmony Database and made available to the Combating Terrorism Center by the DoD. The analysis charts the evolution of Al-Qaida and of the internal divisions between guerrilla strategists and brand managers that accompanied it. The Harmony documents shed light on cohesion problems that have been bedeviling Salafi jihadi organizations going back more than 30 years. This has been a constant challenge for al-Qaida as well. While the branding-versus-bureaucracy crux has consistently been the driving force, at different points in the development of al-Qaida the scope and consequences of this leadership struggle have changed. During the first phase, from the founding of the organization at the close of the anti-Soviet jihad in Afghanistan to the return of the leadership to South Asia after its misadventures in Africa, al-Qaida had failed in both areas, creating neither an effective guerrilla organization nor a consistent jihadi message. In the second phase, from al-Qaidas re-establishment in Afghanistan to its dispersal from that refuge by American-led attacks, al-Qaida was able to exploit the relative security provided by its uneasy alliance with the Taliban to develop and begin to market its anti-American message. Though it was during this period that it was able to carry out the large-scale acts of terror for which it is famous -- the 1998 embassy bombings in Africa and the attacks of 911 -- internal divisions over the decision to target the United States severely degraded al-Qaidas organizational capacity. During the third and current phase, which began with the United States response to 911, al-Qaida as a centrally-controlled bureaucracy all but disappeared, with most of its key military and strategic leaders dispersed, captured, or killed. In this period, al-Qaida Central has been largely reduced to a media organization. A 44-page Harmony document bibliography is included.

Subject Categories:

  • Administration and Management
  • Psychology
  • Unconventional Warfare

Distribution Statement:

APPROVED FOR PUBLIC RELEASE