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Iraq
Zarqawi recruited hundreds for attacks abroad
2006-06-11
Before his death, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi had recruited hundreds of people who received terrorist training in Iraq and then returned to their home countries to await orders, The New York Times reported in Sunday editions. Citing high-ranking security officials in Jordan, the Times said that in addition to recruiting volunteers and suicide bombers to fight in Iraq, Zarqawi had recruited some 300 people who received terrorist training in Iraq before returning home to await orders to carry out strikes.

The Jordanians' assessment of Zarqawi's reach was the first to offer firm numbers and details about such training, the Times said. While U.S. counterterrorism officials said they too had seen movement of terrorists from other countries including Saudi Arabia and Egypt into Iraq for training under Zarqawi and his associates, they said they believed the number of those trained and sent home to await orders was probably significantly lower than 300, the Times said. "My sense is that the next step might have been mobilizing his recruitment networks to attack Europeans," the Times quoted Steven Simon, a former National Security Council staff member now at the Council on Foreign Relations, as saying. "That's one reason I think his death makes a difference."

The Times said that Jordanian intelligence officials had been particularly focused on Zarqawi, who was born there. Their scrutiny increased after he took credit for sending suicide bombers into three Jordan hotels last December, killing dozens, it said. The officials said Zarqawi had managed to set up logistical operations in Syria, Iran and Libya that funneled volunteers into Iraq, and that as the insurgency became increasingly driven by Iraqis, he wanted to spread it global reach and mount a challenge to Osama bin Laden and al-Qaeda second-in-command Ayman al-Zawahri as the leader of a global terrorist war.
Posted by:Fred

#4  There has been speculation -- we've seen some of the articles posted here -- that Zarqawi's fanaticism had become a threat to Al Qaeda's ability to recruit beyond Iraq's borders, and therefore he was set up by upper management. But with Zawahiri apparently limited to the Pakistani borderlands, I don't see how he could effectively manage the very active organization in Iraq. But then, I'm really not cut out for management -- I can handle the theory well enough, but actual practice is beyond me. ;-)
Posted by: trailing wife   2006-06-11 23:02  

#3  "Mount a challenge to Osama ... ... Ayman" > is this article implying that Osama andor Ayman had a role = stake in offing Zark by US air attack, as opposed to ordering him, or any other real-potential challenger or follower, to die vv a PC/PDeniable suicide mission??? Wid Osama > dead? = medically indisposed? and in hiding, can AYMAN ably pick up the mantle from Zark!?
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2006-06-11 22:57  

#2  This is of course consistant with the reports in Iraq of family members being kidnapped and people being forces to drive/deliver devices upon threat of death of their loved ones. Yep, that's called 'recruiting'. When the Big Guy is dead as compost and the authorities are raiding one cell after another in quick follow up. I don't see a whole lot of these types of volunteers in the near future.
Posted by: Omins Ebbereth3699   2006-06-11 08:55  

#1  Is it me or there a palpable sense of admiration from Rooters and the NYT?

BTW, the Steven Simon quoted, was a Clinton NSC member who co-authored stories with Dickie Clarke and the book "Are We Safer?" with Daniel Benjamin, so I'm thinking he's another ex-fuckup who's gig nowadays is blathering about how things would be so much better if only...

There's no magic in this story. People recruited are what they are, are where they are, and Zaqi's death just as likely means they are without funds and leadership as it does some dire mobilization is imminent.
Posted by: flyover   2006-06-11 00:35  

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