AP’s Discovery Suggests
al-Qaeda Has Feared Weapon
Jun.
11, 2013 5:45pm
Editor’s note: This is the fourth story in an
occasional series based on thousands of pages of internal al-Qaida documents
recovered by The Associated Press earlier this year in Timbuktu, Mali.
–
–
TIMBUKTU,
Mali (AP) — The photocopies of the manual lay in heaps on the floor, in stacks
that scaled one wall, like Xeroxed, stapled handouts for a class.
Except
that the students in this case were al-Qaida fighters in Mali. And the manual
was a detailed guide, with diagrams and photographs, on how to use a weapon that
particularly concerns the United States: A surface-to-air missile capable of
taking down a commercial airplane.
The
26-page document in Arabic, recovered by The Associated Press in a building
that had been occupied by al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb in Timbuktu, strongly
suggests the group now possesses the SA-7 surface-to-air missile, known to the
Pentagon as the Grail, according to terrorism specialists. And it confirms that
the al-Qaida cell is actively training its fighters to use these weapons, also
called man-portable air-defense systems, or MANPADS, which likely came from the
arms depots of ex-Libyan strongman Col. Moammar Gadhafi.
In this
March 29, 2013 photo provided by the French Army’s images division, ECPAD, a
French soldier holds the launch tube of an SA-7 surface-to-air missile before
its destruction in Timbuktu, northern Mali. The knowledge that the terrorists
have the weapon has already changed the way the French are carrying out their
five-month-old offensive in Mali. They are using more fighter jets rather than
helicopters to fly above its range of 1.4 miles (2.3 kilometers) from the
ground, even though that makes it harder to attack the jihadists. They are also
making cargo planes land and take off more steeply to limit how long they are
exposed, in line with similar practices in Iraq after an SA-14 hit the wing of
a DHL cargo plane in 2003. (AP Photo/ECPAD, Olivier Debes)
“The
existence of what apparently constitutes a ‘Dummies Guide to MANPADS’ is strong
circumstantial evidence of al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb having the
missiles,” said Atlantic Council analyst Peter Pham, a former adviser to the
United States’ military command in Africa and an instructor to U.S. Special
Forces. “Why else bother to write the guide if you don’t have the weapons? … If
AQIM not only has the MANPADS, but also fighters who know how to use them
effectively,” he added, “then the impact is significant, not only on the
current conflict, but on security throughout North and West Africa, and possibly
beyond.”
The
United States was so worried about this particular weapon ending up in the
hands of terrorists that the State Department set up a task force to track and
destroy it as far back as 2006. In the spring of 2011, before the fighting in
Tripoli had even stopped, a U.S. team flew to Libya to secure Gadhafi’s
stockpile of thousands of heat-seeking, shoulder-fired missiles.
By
the time they got there, many had already been looted.
“The
MANPADS were specifically being sought out,” said Peter Bouckaert, emergencies
director for Human Rights Watch, who catalogued missing weapons at dozens of
munitions depots and often found nothing in the boxes labeled with the code for
surface-to-air missiles.
The
manual is believed to be an excerpt from a terrorist encyclopedia edited by
Osama bin Laden. It adds to evidence for the weapon found by French forces
during their land assault in Mali earlier this year, including the discovery of
the SA-7′s battery pack and launch tube, according to military statements and
an aviation official who spoke on condition of anonymity because he wasn’t
authorized to comment.
The
knowledge that the terrorists have the weapon has already changed the way the
French are carrying out their five-month-old offensive in Mali. They are using
more fighter jets rather than helicopters to fly above its range of 1.4 miles
(2.3 kilometers) from the ground, even though that makes it harder to attack
the jihadists. They are also making cargo planes land and take off more steeply
to limit how long they are exposed, in line with similar practices in Iraq
after an SA-14 hit the wing of a DHL cargo plane in 2003.
And
they have added their own surveillance at Mali’s international airport in
Bamako, according to two French aviation officials and an officer in the
Operation Serval force. All three spoke on condition of anonymity because they
were not authorized to comment.
“There
are patrols every day,” said the French officer. “It’s one of the things we
have not entrusted to the Malians, because the stakes are too high.”
First
introduced in the 1960s in the Soviet Union, the SA-7 was designed to be
portable. Not much larger than a poster tube, it can be packed into a duffel
bag and easily carried. It’s also affordable, with some SA-7s selling for as
little as $5,000.
Since
1975, at least 40 civilian aircraft have been hit by different types of
MANPADS, causing about 28 crashes and more than 800 deaths around the world,
according to the U.S. Department of State.
The
SA-7 is an old generation model, which means most military planes now come
equipped with a built-in protection mechanism against it. But that’s not the
case for commercial planes, and the threat is greatest to civilian aviation.
In
Kenya in 2002, suspected Islamic extremists fired two SA-7s at a Boeing 757
carrying 271 vacationers back to Israel, but missed. Insurgents in Iraq used
the weapons, and YouTube videos abound purporting to show Syrian rebels using
the SA-7 to shoot down regime planes.
An
SA-7 tracks a plane by directing itself toward the source of the heat, the
engine. It takes time and practice, however, to fire it within range. The
failure of the jihadists in Mali so far to hit a plane could mean that they
cannot position themselves near airports with commercial flights, or that they
are not yet fully trained to use the missile.
“This
is not a ‘Fire and forget’ weapon,” said Bruce Hoffman, director of the Center
for Security Studies at Georgetown University. “There’s a paradox here. One the
one hand it’s not easy to use, but against any commercial aircraft there would
be no defenses against them. It’s impossible to protect against it. … If
terrorists start training and learn how to use them, we’ll be in a lot of
trouble.”
In
Timbuktu, SA-7 training was likely part of the curriculum at the ‘Jihad
Academy’ housed in a former police station, said Jean-Paul Rouiller, director
of the Geneva Center for Training and Analysis of Terrorism, one of three
experts who reviewed the manual for AP. It’s located less than 3 miles (5
kilometers) from the Ministry of Finance’s Budget Division building where the
manual was found.
Neighbors
say they saw foreign fighters running laps each day, carrying out target
practice and inhaling and holding their breath with a pipe-like object on their
shoulder. The drill is standard practice for shoulder-held missiles, including
the SA-7.
As
the jihadists fled ahead of the arrival of French troops who liberated Timbuktu
on Jan. 28, they left the manual behind, along with other instructional
material, including a spiral-bound pamphlet showing how to use the KPV-14.5
anti-aircraft machine gun and another on how to make a bomb out of ammonium
nitrate, among other documents retrieved by the AP. Residents said the
jihadists grabbed reams of paper from inside the building, doused them in fuel
and set them alight. The black, feathery ash lay on top of the sand in a ditch
just outside the building’s gate.
However,
numerous buildings were still full of scattered papers.
“They
just couldn’t destroy everything,” said neighbor Mohamed Alassane. “They
appeared to be in a panic when the French came. They left in a state of
disorder.”
The
manual is illustrated with grainy images of Soviet-looking soldiers firing the
weapon. Point-by-point instructions explain how to insert the battery, focus on
the target and fire.
The
manual also explains that the missile will malfunction above 45 degrees
Celsius, the temperature in the deserts north of Timbuktu. And it advises the
shooter to change immediately into a second set of clothes after firing to
avoid detection.
Its
pages are numbered 313 through 338, suggesting they came from elsewhere.
Mathieu Guidere, an expert on Islamic extremists at the University of Toulouse,
believes the excerpts are lifted from the Encyclopedia of Jihad, an 11-volume
survey on the craft of war first compiled by the Taliban in the 1990s and later
codified by Osama bin Laden. Bin Laden, who led a contingent of Arab fighters
in Afghanistan at the time, paid to have the encyclopedia translated into
Arabic, according to Guidere, author of a book on al-Qaida’s North African
branch.
However,
the cover page of the manual boasts the name of al-Qaida in the Islamic
Maghreb.
“It’s
a way to make it their own,” said Guidere. “It’s like putting a logo on
something. … It shows the historic as well as the present link between al-Qaida
core and AQIM.”
Bin
Laden later assembled a team of editors to update the manual, put it on CD-ROMs
and eventually place it on the Internet, in a move that lay the groundwork for
the globalization of jihad, according to terrorism expert Jarret Brachman, who
was the director of research at the Combating Terrorism Center when the
al-Qaida encyclopedia was first found.
N.R.
Jenzen-Jones, an arms expert in Australia, confirmed that the information in
the manual in Timbuktu on the missile’s engagement range, altitude and weight
appeared largely correct. He cautions though that the history of the SA-7 is
one of near-misses, specifically because it takes training to use.
“Even
if you get your hands on an SA-7, it’s no guarantee of success,” he said.
“However, if someone manages to take down a civilian aircraft, it’s hundreds of
dead instantly. It’s a high impact, low-frequency event, and it sows a lot of fear.”
___
Associated
Press writer Lori Hinnant contributed to this report from Paris, and AP
journalist Amir Bibawy translated the document. Callimachi reported this
article in Timbuktu, Mali and in Dakar, Senegal.
___
The
document from al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb in Arabic and English can be seen
at http://hosted.ap.org/specials/interactives/_international/_pdfs/al-qaida-papers-dangerous-weapon.pdf
2 comments:
FEAR mongering shits. Al CIA DUH. Quick! Lets put Glenn Beck on this story, take his fake tears, and rub it on the douche you use for you ass.
Say, here's a solution - stop making the fukcing things. Totally NEW concept...
Post a Comment