Twenty-two years ago, al-Qaeda terrorists killed nearly 3,000 civilians and
injured thousands more in the deadliest terror attacks in history, prompting
the U.S. to shift its military and intelligence focus to disrupting and
destroying the organization’s infrastructure in Afghanistan and Pakistan.
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Twenty-two Years After 9/11 Terror Attacks, Al-Qaeda Threat Remains
(New York, N.Y.) — Twenty-two years ago, al-Qaeda
<[link removed]> terrorists killed nearly
3,000 civilians and injured thousands more in the deadliest terror attacks in
history, prompting the U.S. to shift its military and intelligence focus to
disrupting and destroying the organization’s infrastructure in Afghanistan and
Pakistan. In the years since, however, the terrorist group has established five
major regional affiliates in the Arabian Peninsula, North Africa, East Africa,
Syria, and the Indian subcontinent. The terrorist group has launched multiple
attacks this year and once again has a growing base in Afghanistan.
To read CEP’s resource Al-Qaeda, please click here
<[link removed]>.
Since its founding in 1988, al-Qaeda has played a role in innumerable
terrorist attacks, including the 1998 bombings of the U.S. embassies in Kenya
and Tanzania, the 2002 Bali bombing, the 2003 Saudi Arabia bombings, the 2004
Madrid bombing, and the 2005 London bombing. It is also responsible for several
failed operations, including the 2009 Christmas Day plane bombing attempt and
the Times Square and cargo plane bombing attempts in 2010.
Following the May 2011 death of Osama bin Laden, al-Qaeda’s affiliates have
taken on more central roles as al-Qaeda’s core became more decentralized.
Al-Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri brokered mergers with several Islamist
groups, including al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (previously the Salafist
Group for Preaching and Combat or GSPC) and al-Shabaab before he died in 2021.
In February 2023, the U.S. Department of State confirmed thatSaif al-Adel
<[link removed]> is Zawahiri’s de
facto successor and is currently being harbored by Iran.
Al-Qaeda and its affiliates continue to conduct attacks worldwide. On June 9,
2023, al-Shabaab was suspected of carrying out two attacks, one in Mogadishu,
where theydetonated
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an explosive, killing nine and injuring 20 others, and another in Qoryoley in
southern Somalia, where a child accidentallystruck
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an explosive device reportedly placed by al-Shabaab. In August 2023, the FBI
arrested
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a 17-year-old in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on suspicion of gathering
bomb-making material and communicating with al-Qaeda-linked Katibat al Tawhid
wal Jihad in Syria. Later that month, al-Qaeda militants in northwest Syria
detonated
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explosives in tunnels underneath army positions, killing at least 11 and
wounding 20 others. A June 2023 U.N. report also warned that terror groups are
taking advantage of having “great freedom” to “maneuver” under Taliban rule in
Afghanistan. The report gathered evidence that al-Qaeda and ISIS’s Afghan
affiliates have grown substantially in Afghanistan since the 2021 withdrawal of
U.S. troops.
Counter Extremism Project (CEP) CEO Ambassador Mark D. Wallace said
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, “Terrorism did not begin nor end with the tragedy of September 11. However,
the attacks showed that groups like al-Qaeda are highly motivated to attack the
United States on its territory. Recent events in Afghanistan have ignited
concerns that the country will once again become a sanctuary to jihadist
groups, which could plot and direct attacks against the U.S. and its allies.
There is still much work to do to combat terrorists and the regimes that enable
or harbor them.”
To read CEP’s resource Al-Qaeda, please click here
<[link removed]>.
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