Feb 21, 2014 02:00 am | Charles E. Berger
This month, Al Qaeda officially disenfranchised
one of its affiliates, the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS). In
fact, ISIS is now in open warfare with al Nusra Front, another Al Qaeda
affiliate in Syria. These events reveal an Al Qaeda more Balkanized than
unified. They also undermine the generally accepted view of a global Al
Qaeda network expanding its reach. As opposed to a single organization
bound by a common ideology, we should view the Al Qaeda network for what
it is: a loose coalition of separate terrorist groups with their own
individual causes. Our current strategy to defeat the Al Qaeda network
by countering its ideology will likely fail. These other groups will
continue on, perhaps under different names, long after Al Qaeda is
militarily defeated.read morehttp://nationalinterest.org/commentary/the-balkanization-al-qaeda-9912
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