Newsweek - Dec. 25, 2006 - Jan. 1, 2007 issue - For the
past year, a secret has been slowly spreading among
Taliban commanders in Afghanistan: a 12-man team of
Westerners was being trained by Al Qaeda in Pakistan for
a special mission. Most of the Afghan fighters could
rely only on hearsay, but some told of seeing the
"English brothers" (as the foreign recruits were
nicknamed for their shared language) in person. One
eyewitness, a former Guantánamo detainee with close
Taliban and Qaeda ties, spoke to NEWSWEEK recently in
southern Afghanistan, demanding anonymity because he
doesn't want the Americans looking for him. He says he
met the 12 recruits in November 2005, at a mud-brick
compound near the North Waziristan town of Mir Ali. That
was as much as the tight-lipped former detainee would
divulge, except to mention that Adam Yahiye Gadahn, the
notorious fugitive "American Al Qaeda," was with the
brothers, presumably as an interpreter.
Another
Afghan had more to say on the subject. Omar Farooqi is
the nom de guerre of a former provincial intelligence
chief for the Taliban; he now serves as the Taliban's
chief Qaeda liaison for Ghazni province, in eastern
Afghanistan. He says he spent roughly five weeks this
past year helping to indoctrinate and train a class of
foreign recruits near the Afghan border in tribal
Waziristan, and among his students were the English
brothers. The 12 included two Norwegian Muslims and an
Australian, along with nine British subjects, says
Farooqi. Their mission, Farooqi told NEWSWEEK, will be
to act as underground organizers and operatives for Al
Qaeda in their home countries—and their yearlong
training course is just about finished.
U.S. and
British security agencies have known this threat would
come sooner or later. While saying he could not confirm
the English brothers' case specifically, a spokesman for
Britain's Foreign Office (unnamed as a matter of
standard policy) calls it "common knowledge" that
jihadist recruits have been traveling from Britain to
Pakistan for indoctrination and training. The existence
of a Qaeda pipeline between those two countries has
grown harder to deny with every new terrorism story that
has broken since the suicide bombings in London that
killed 52 subway and bus passengers on July 7, 2005.
Each new case that emerges features at least one or two
suspects with ties to Pakistan—such as an alleged plot
that began before 9/11 to bomb financial buildings in
New York, Newark, N.J., and Washington, and this past
summer's alleged plot to blow up airline flights from
Britain to the United States.
A few
weeks ago Dame Eliza Manningham-Buller, director-general
of the British security service M.I.5, publicly
disclosed that British authorities are monitoring 200
networks and 1,600 individuals "actively engaged in
plotting or facilitating terrorist acts here and
overseas." A "substantial" fraction of those 1,600
people have connections to Pakistan, says a British
official, declining to be named because the subject is
sensitive. The M.I.5 chief added that her investigators
had identified nearly 30 separate plots "that often have
links back to Al Qaeda in Pakistan, and through those
links Al Qaeda gives guidance and training to its
largely British foot soldiers here."
Indeed,
while often thought to have become mostly an inspiration
to jihadists around the world, Al Qaeda appears to be
gaining strength along the unruly Afghan-Pakistani
border. Within the past year, M.I.5 has produced
detailed reports about a group of British men, ethnic
Pakistanis, who traveled to jihadist training camps in
Pakistan by way of Saudi Arabia, Syria and Afghanistan,
according to a counterterrorism official in London who
requested anonymity because of the sensitive subject.
And the scariest part is not what M.I.5 knows but what
it doesn't know: there's no way the authorities can
watch more than a tiny percentage of the 400,000 British
residents who visit Pakistan every year.
U.S.
security agencies are no less worried. American
intelligence officials tell NEWSWEEK that their people
are definitely concerned about terror suspects and
operatives shuttling back and forth between Britain and
Pakistan. One particular worry is that under current
practice, British visitors to the States are not
required to apply in advance for temporary visas, which
are routinely granted to any British passport holder who
is not on a watch list. In other words, the door is wide
open for Britain's growing ranks of young jihadists,
even those who have attended Qaeda training camps, if
they are unknown to intelligence agencies. U.S.
officials are discussing how the visa system could be
tightened. "For the most effective background checks on
passengers, the United States needs information and
assistance from the country where the traveler resides,"
says Homeland Security Department spokesman Russ Knocke,
adding that such help should be "routine."
While
the Americans talk, Al Qaeda is pressing on with its
training plans, Farooqi says. He confidently described
those plans to a NEWSWEEK correspondent at a mud-brick
house in Paktia province, not far from the Pakistan
border, mentioning the English brothers almost in
passing as an example of the jihad's recent successes.
The specifics of his story could not be independently
corroborated. But one gunman among the dozen or so
guarding the house, with most of his face hidden by a
black-and-white kaffiyeh, appeared to be a European with
light-colored eyes; Farooqi later confirmed that the
guard was one of the brothers. An open notebook lay on
the carpet where Farooqi sat, and the NEWSWEEK
correspondent caught a fleeting glimpse of scrawled
names and phone numbers, including several that were
preceded by the United Kingdom's country code: 44.
Farooqi
says he first met the brothers, all of them in their
20s, soon after they reached Waziristan in October 2005.
He recalls one of them, known as Musa, telling him that
the 7/7 bombings in London "were just a rehearsal of
bigger acts to come." A few, he couldn't say how many,
had arrived in Pakistan by air, but most had taken a
clandestine overland route across Turkey, Iran and
Afghanistan, escorted by a network of professional
smugglers. As NEWSWEEK has reported previously, Al Qaeda
uses the same underground railroad to transport Iraqi
bombmakers and insurgent trainers to share their skills
with Taliban fighters in Afghanistan and Pakistan.
According to Farooqi, the brothers' travel arrangements
were made by Abdul Hadi al-Iraqi, one of Al Qaeda's top
operations men and a liaison with insurgents in Iraq.
(His name has also cropped up in an ongoing British
criminal trial in which seven London-area defendants of
Pakistani descent are accused of conspiring to bomb
British targets with homemade explosives. Prosecutors
have alleged that Abdul Hadi's deputy even visited
Britain and prayed at a mosque near London with one of
the suspects.) The transcontinental journey took a month
to complete, but Farooqi claims the brothers left no
official traces of their passage, slipping past every
border-control post without showing any travel
documents. Once they get home, there may be no record
that they ever visited Pakistan.
That's
something a British Qaeda operative would certainly want
to keep secret. A newly issued International Crisis
Group report on the tribal areas says the militants have
been able to "establish a virtual mini-Taliban-style
state there" where they can "provide safe haven to the
Taliban and its foreign allies." In the words of a
senior Western diplomat in Islamabad, who asks to remain
nameless to avoid offending his hosts: "The Pakistanis
simply don't control the territory in any meaningful
way, and that means a common enemy has a place [to
operate]. You have to assume Al Qaeda will make the most
of it." Before September 11, Al Qaeda had no network
inside Pakistan and only limited contact with Pakistani
militants. Now the group has close support on both sides
of the border.
Inside
Afghanistan, Taliban field commanders depend on regular
visits from their Qaeda paymasters. Guerrillas in
eastern Ghazni province say the Arab money teams ride in
from the direction of the Pakistan border astride
motorcycles driven by Taliban fighters. The Qaeda men
ask each local commander what weapons, money and
technical assistance he needs—and then deliver the aid
that is required. According to Zabibullah, a senior
Taliban official who has been a reliable source in the
past, Al Qaeda has more than 100 specialists, mostly
Arabs, helping support Taliban forces in Afghanistan.
Still,
Al Qaeda took no chances with the English brothers'
safety. They received much of their training behind
mud-brick walls in the sprawling compounds that are
typical of Pakistan's tribal areas. The idea was to keep
the men hidden from U.S. and Pakistani reconnaissance
planes. Farooqi says the recruits were taught a wide
variety of subjects, from religious and ideological
doctrine to the art of molding, assembling and
detonating state-of-the-art Iraqi-style shaped-charge
IEDs. They learned how to make and use suicide-bomb
vests, how to rig car bombs, how to motivate other men
to sacrifice their lives for the jihad and how to
maintain communications with Al Qaeda on the
Afghan-Pakistani frontier. They're not meant to be
suicide bombers themselves, Farooqi says; they are far
too valuable to waste. The recruits that M.I.5 was
tracking also seemed bound for bigger things than cannon
fodder.
Some
counterterrorism experts argue that Al Qaeda has become
only a figurehead, with no real control over the local
terrorist cells it has spawned around the world. The
English brothers—and the Pakistan pipeline—are signs
that the organization is still in action. Farooqi says
he believes, based on overhead conversations, that Al
Qaeda is planning for the very long term, a decade into
the future. He says the terrorist group is talking about
gradually fielding more than 1,000 operatives in Europe
over the next 10 years. From what he has heard, only 10
percent of those jihadists are in place so far. Based on
information from M.I.5, the British Home secretary, John
Reid, recently warned that a terrorist attack in the
United Kingdom could be highly likely during the
holidays.
The
English brothers completed their Waziristan stay in
October, Farooqi says, but before going home, they had
one final assignment. Their Arab handlers separated them
into several smaller groups and sent them into
Afghanistan to see the jihad firsthand, embedded with
Taliban units in Khowst and Paktia provinces. The unit
commanders were warned to avoid putting them in any
danger. After that, the brothers were supposed to return
to Britain the same way they got to Pakistan. That means
most of them could be getting home any day now—if they
aren't there already.