Ineresting if Sudan and Iraq were responsible for the embassy bombings since they were mentioned in an E-mail from Stratfor I got earlier this AM......
Global Intelligence Update Red Alert August 10, 1998
The Kenyan and Tanzanian Bombings and Iraq's Role
The bombing of U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania was the major international event last week. There was ample reason for concern. First, these acts seemed to indicate that international terrorism was returning to the world scene. Second, because the origin of the bombings was immediately assumed to be somewhere in the Middle East, they seemed to signal greater instability in that critical region. Therefore, we need to turn our attention to sorting through what we know and don't know about the bombings. Three questions need to be addressed: who did it, why did they do it, and why did they do it now?
* The Bombers Were Not Amateurs
First, we do not know from direct evidence who was responsible. We assume that U.S. intelligence agencies also don't know who carried out the bombings, because had they known, we assume they would have prevented it. Second, if they uncovered the perpetrators in the few days since the bombings occurred, this would indicate that they had a great deal of information on hand already, and had failed to draw proper conclusions prior to the attack. Therefore, we assume that U.S. intelligence is also scrambling to figure out who was responsible.
To put it another way, barring the unthinkable, which was that U.S. intelligence knew of the bombings but failed to stop them, it follows that the bombers were either clever enough to evade detection by the world's most sophisticated intelligence agencies, or that they represent a completely new element not on any watch list. Because it is a given that all significant terrorist threats are under constant scrutiny by U.S. intelligence, the bombers were either very new, very good, or both.
Very new groups are hard to imagine in this case. The sophistication needed to carry out this operation came from experience. It also required a sophisticated support structure. An unknown, novice group did not carry out a multi-national, coordinated strike as its first mission. While the group may portray itself as new, there is little doubt that the organizers and most of the operatives have been at this game for a while. Therefore, the failure of U.S. intelligence to detect them has, we think, less to do with their being new than it has to do with their being good at what they do.
Contrary to popular myth, terrorist attacks are not easy to carry out. The mere act of acquiring or moving weapons and explosives, identifying and monitoring targets, acquiring and using bases of operations and transportation, involves both trusting increasing numbers of operatives with at least part of the plan, and using the services of outsiders. The more complex the plan, the more conspirators are necessary, the more outside resources need to be acquired, and the greater the likelihood of detection and betrayal.
The lone bomber striking without warning is possible, but is usually not the likeliest explanation. Usually, the lone amateur is detected in the course of preparing for his mission. He is most likely to succeed in his native country, where he is able to blend in and where he knows how to acquire resources without being noticed. A lone bomber operating in a foreign country is much harder to imagine. Carrying out simultaneous attacks in two foreign countries is extremely difficult to execute. The chances of detection are enormous.
The plan undoubtedly involved some key figures who are well known to intelligence organizations as part of terrorist networks, whose mere presence in Kenya or Tanzania would have set off alarms, or whose mere conversations concerning either country would have been detected, triggering alarms. So we are either dealing here with a massive intelligence failure on the part of the United States or with an extremely sophisticated group. We suspect the latter.
An unsophisticated group would not have chosen Kenya and Tanzania as a target nor have had the resources to carry out a mission there. It seems to us that the targets were selected because they were not likely to be on the same level of alert as a U.S. facility in the Middle East or Europe. Local security officials were less likely to detect the activities. In other words, the terrorists deliberately hit two soft targets, decreasing the chance of detection while actually increasing the shock value, making it appear that no U.S. facility was safe anywhere.
* A National Intelligence Service Involved
This represents extremely sophisticated thinking, excellent planning, first-rate security measures, and a good knowledge of how to evade detection by U.S. technical capabilities. This forces us to conclude by pure inference that a national intelligence service with access to diplomatic facilities was involved, given the logistical and communications requirements of the mission. The problem with this theory is, of course, that the use of diplomatic personnel and facilities increases the probability of detection by U.S. intelligence, since most suspect countries' diplomatic communications and travel are carefully monitored. Somehow, a group with access to a national intelligence service's facilities, and extremely sophisticated in its own right, managed to evade detection by the CIA and NSA.
>From our point of view, therefore, this is not a question of a handful of terrorists, but of a decision by a nation, or by a significant faction within a nation, to strike at U.S. embassies. The question is, what group and what nation would stand to gain by bombing U.S. facilities in Africa at this point in time? Remember that a terrorist act is a scarce resource. It takes time, courts danger, and terrorists tend to get used up quickly. Who would spend scarce resources on this mission?
* Osama Bin Laden is the Logical Candidate for Perpetrator
Press speculation has focused on Osama Bin Laden, a wealthy Saudi expatriate who had spent time in Sudan and is now in Afghanistan. Bin Laden is a good focus for several reasons. First, he has recently been making threats against U.S. facilities. Of course, Bin Laden makes such threats regularly. Second, as we noted earlier this week, the Russians recently issued a warning about active and spreading Wahabi extremism. Wahabi is a Saudi variety of Islam. Russian intelligence is extremely sensitive to the spread of Islamic movements into Central Asia and the Caucasus. They are in a crisis mode along the Afghan border, where Bin Laden's hosts, the Taleban, are waging an offensive to capture the remainder of Afghanistan. The Russians have noted Wahabi activism in the Caucasus. It would be interesting to know if they were aware of such activity elsewhere.
There is a final reason why Bin Laden is the prime suspect. There just aren't a whole lot of other candidates. The old, international terrorist movement is in a state of collapse. Most of the old masterminds are dead or too old for the sport. Moreover, ever since the Czech, Hungarian, and East German intelligence archives fell into Western hands, their infrastructure was exposed and rolled-up. Hamas is obsessed with its struggle with the PLO and Israel, and has neither the resources nor the security system to carry out such an attack.
Hezbollah and the Iranians are always a possibility, but there are several good arguments against this being their work. First, Iran is profiting greatly from its flirtation with the United States. It has broken the back of the U.S. dual containment policy, created an entente with Saudi Arabia without forcing the Saudis to break with the United States, and actually sees a chance of ending the U.S. economic embargo. This policy is one on which most Iranian factions agree. Moreover, if it were Hezbollah, we would expect the attacks to have come in Latin America, where they reportedly have developed operating units and work with some of the major drug dealers. Iran doesn't have any reason to carry out this action right now, and the action does not have Hezbollah's signature on it.
That leaves Bin Laden, both by reason and default, as the most likely choice. Geography points to Bin Laden. Having lived and worked in Sudan for years, Bin Laden has excellent relations with elements in Sudan's Islamic government. This government, although not on the best of terms with Kenya, does provide access to both target countries. Bin Laden is relatively familiar with the region, and probably has assets available to him there. Moreover, Sudan has been increasingly confident in the last few months, as its opponents in the civil war have fragmented.
* Possible Motivations for Bin Laden
Moreover, Bin Laden is sitting in Afghanistan, where the Taleban are moving closer to victory in the civil war. Bin Laden is closely allied with the Taleban, which are strongly opposed by both Iran and Russia. The Taleban's only support comes from Pakistan. Were Pakistan to break with the Taleban, as Russia and Iran desire, defeat could be snatched from the jaws of victory. The bombings, therefore, could be used as a signal to Pakistan of the price for opposing Taleban
In this reading, Bin Laden is striking against the United States in a warning to Pakistan and a declaration of war against Iranians willing to work with the U.S. Put another way, Bin Laden is signaling the Shiites that the true mantle of Islamic anti-Americanism has fallen from their shoulders to his. So, the bombings make sense simply within the immediate Afghani context, and warn the Iranians that their claim on Islamic radicalism is slipping.
The bombings could have had another audience as well: the Saudi royal family. King Fahd was reportedly ill and in the hospital again last week. His heir apparent, Prince Abdullah, has been the leading figure in the flirtation with Iran. His main rival, Prince Sultan, is aligned with the United States. Bin Laden, suspected in the Khobar Tower bombing, has declared war on the "crusader" occupation of Mecca and Medina, meaning the United States. Bin Laden is making it clear to both Abdullah and Sultan that there will be a third force in the succession struggle that is independent of both the United States and Iran.
In this context, the bombings are a warning to the Saudi Royal family that choosing between the U.S. and Iran, or even brokering reconciliation between them, will not secure the royal family's interests in the face of collapsing oil prices. He has the ability to strike deep and hard, both inside of Saudi Arabia and against targets far away. The bombings would be a strong signal to an uneasy monarchy that it needs to deal with its own radicals.
Thus, Bin Laden is the logical suspect, with the Sudanese the logical vehicle. There are several good reasons why the bombing should have taken place now. But there is also a mystery. Bin Laden is extremely well known to U.S. intelligence. His every move is undoubtedly monitored. The Sudanese are not sophisticated enough to provide the cover needed to operate without detection. How could Bin Laden have carried out a simultaneous multi-national strike without being detected, particularly as he is the prime suspect in the Khobar Tower bombing? There has to be another element.
* The Iraqi Connection
We believe that other element to be Iraq. Bin Laden and Iraq share a double hatred of Iran and the United States. Both are deeply concerned by the growing accommodation between Saudi Arabia and Iran. Both want to send a message to the Saudis that accommodation with Iran will not protect the Saudi regime from terrorism, while simultaneously signaling all Persian Gulf nations that the United States cannot protect them either. Tensions in the region mounted last week as Iraq faced off with United Nations inspectors once again, and as the Iranians assured the Saudis and the rest of the Persian Gulf that they were prepared to use their military force to protect them from the Iraqis. The Iraqis have clearly decided to increase tensions in the region. They are trying to convince the Saudis that working with Iran is no safer than working with the United States.
It would also explain the lack of detection. Although undoubtedly deeply penetrated by both human and technical U.S. intelligence, the Iraqis have displayed a regular ability to occasionally confound U.S. intelligence monitoring through clever and sophisticated means. That is why they have periodically startled the U.S. with their moves. It would also explain how Bin Laden slipped past U.S. intelligence: Iraq, using Sudanese assets, operating in an unanticipated area of the world, allowed Bin Laden's people to slip into Kenya and Tanzania, maintain necessary communications for coordination, and strike before U.S. intelligence could detect the threat.
* Iraq's Motivation
The real issue is why? Why would the Iraqis strike now? Indeed, why in general is Iraq increasing tensions in the Persian Gulf? The key is Iran. Iraq, having nearly broken free from its encirclement, is seeing that progress reverse and now is finding itself increasingly isolated. Iran's love affair with Saudi Arabia and its flirtation with the United States have given the Iraqis the feeling that time is not on their side. The Syrians, long friendly with Iran, have cooled toward the Iraqis. The Turks remain a glowering presence to the north.
Iraq is feeling insecure. The key is to drive a wedge between Iran and Saudi Arabia. Since seduction hasn't worked, the Iraqis are now turning to the bludgeon. They are not striking directly at the Saudis, as that might drive them deeper into the Iranians' arms. Rather, they are letting the Saudis know that they could strike if they wanted. Iran might have its missiles, but Iraq has Bin Laden. By supporting Bin Laden's operation in Africa, Iraq shows its muscle without striking directly against those it wants to entice, namely, the Persian Gulf Arabs. Moreover, Saddam is warning Clinton, whom Saddam reads as having no stomach for a confrontation, that he will strike hard where the U.S. least expects to be hit.
At the same time, we must remember that, tragic though it was, if this action was Iraq's and Bin Laden's best shot, it really wasn't much. It will not determine the outcome of the Saudi succession, shift Iranian policy, nor solve Iraqi isolation. What it might do is to create further instability in an already rudderless U.S. Mideast policy while setting off another witch hunt in the U.S. intelligence community over who fouled up this time. What is important here is the fact that Saddam is getting desperate again. With Saddam, desperation and unpredictability tend to go hand in hand. If we are right in our inference of Iraqi involvement, the very fact that the strike will not redefine the region's current alignment means that we can expect more definitive action on the part of Iraq.
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