US report: al-Qaida gaining strength in Afghanistan
WASHINGTON (AP) - April 30, 2008 Attacks in Pakistan doubled between 2006 and 2007 and the number
of fatalities quadrupled, the State Department said in its annual
terrorism report. In Afghanistan, the number of attacks rose 16
percent, to 1,127 incidents last year.
The report says attacks in Iraq dipped slightly between 2006 and
2007, but they still accounted for 60 percent of worldwide
terrorism fatalities, including 17 of the 19 Americans who were
killed in attacks last year. The other two were killed in
Afghanistan.
More than 22,000 people were killed by terrorists around the
world in 2007, 8 percent more than in 2006, although the overall
number of attacks fell, the report says.
The report once again identifies Iran as the world's "most
active" state sponsor of terrorism for supporting Palestinian
extremists and insurgents in Afghanistan and Iraq, where it says
elements of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps continued to
provide militants with weapons, training and funding.
"In this way, Iranian government forces have been responsible
for attacks on coalition forces," State Department counter
terrorism coordinator Dell Dailey told reporters. Iranian forces
are also giving weapons and financial aid to the Taliban in
Afghanistan, he said.
About 13,600 noncombatants were killed in 2007 in Iraq, the
report says, adding the high number could be attributed to a 50
percent increase in the number of suicide bombings. Suicide car
bombings were up 40 percent and suicide bombings outside of
vehicles climbed 90 percent over 2006, it says.
"The ability of these attackers to penetrate large
concentrations of people and then detonate their explosives may
account for the increase in lethality of bombings in 2007," the
report says.
In Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere, al-Qaida and its affiliates
remain "the greatest terrorist threat to the United States and its
partners" despite ongoing efforts to combat followers of Osama bin
Laden and his top deputy, Ayman al-Zawahiri, according to the
report. It says Zawahiri has emerged as the group's "strategic and
operational planner."
"It has reconstituted some of its pre-9/11 operational
capabilities through the exploitation of Pakistan's Federally
Administered Tribal Areas, replacement of captured or killed
operational lieutenants, and the restoration of some central
control by its top leadership, in particular Ayman al-Zawahiri,"
it says.
Dailey, however, stressed that al-Qaida is still weaker overall
than it was before Sept. 11, 2001.
A primary reason for its resurgence was a cease-fire the
Pakistani government reached with tribal leaders last year, the
report says. That truce has since ended but Pakistan's new
government is now renegotiating a similar agreement that some fear
could have similar results and further undermine efforts to battle
al-Qaida.
The earlier cease-fire and instability in the region appear "to
have provided al-Qaida leadership greater mobility and ability to
conduct training and operational planning, particularly that
targeting Western Europe and the United States," the report says.
"Numerous senior al-Qaida operatives have been captured or
killed, but al-Qaida leaders continued to plot attacks and to
cultivate stronger operational connections that radiated outward
from Pakistan to affiliates throughout the Middle East, North
Africa, and Europe," it says.
Of particular concern are al-Qaida sympathizers who attacked a
U.N. building in Algeria, killing more than 40 people and wounding
more than 150 last year, the report says.
In Pakistan, the State Department recorded more than 45 suicide
bombings in 2007, up from a total of just 22 such incidents between
2002 and 2006. Among those logged last year were the December
attack that killed former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto and an
October attack on her homecoming parade that killed more than 130
people, the worst suicide attack in Pakistani history.