Caustic Light on White House’s Reaction to a Terrorist Threat
From The New York Times:
The gloating among jihadists and their sympathizers began last week, right after the United States shut down almost two dozen diplomatic posts across the Middle East in response to a terrorist threat.
The gloating among jihadists and their sympathizers began last week, right after the United States shut down almost two dozen diplomatic posts across the Middle East in response to a terrorist threat.
“God is great! America is in a condition of terror and
fear from Al Qaeda,” wrote one jihadist in an online forum. Another one
rejoiced: “The mobilization and security precautions are costing them billions
of dollars. We hope to hear more of such psychological warfare, even if there
are no actual jihadi operations on the ground.”
The jihadists are not the only ones who see the new
terrorist alert in a caustic light.
The Obama administration’s decision to evacuate so
many diplomats on such short notice — however justified by the seriousness of
the threat — has upset some of its foreign partners, who say the gesture
contributes to a sense of panic and perceived weakness that plays into the hands
of the United States’ enemies, and impedes their efforts to engage with people
in their countries.
Some American officials have also said they believe
the administration overreacted, in large part because of the political fallout
from the attack last year on the diplomatic mission in Benghazi, Libya, that
killed the American ambassador, J. Christopher Stevens. Since that attack,
security procedures have been tightened at American diplomatic outposts across
the Middle East. Those embassies are already so heavily fortified against
attacks that many diplomats lament it is more and more difficult for them to do
their jobs.
“I think since Benghazi the administration has been in
a defensive crouch, and they are playing it as safe as they can,” said Will
McCants, a former State Department counterterrorism official who is now an
analyst at the Center for Naval Analyses in Alexandria, Va.
The government of Yemen issued a rare public rebuke to
the Obama administration on Tuesday, declaring in a statement that the
evacuation “serves the interests of the extremists” and undermines cooperation
with the United States. As if to answer the gesture, Yemen announced Wednesday
that it had foiled a spectacular plot to bomb oil pipelines and take over major
ports — an assertion that was greeted by analysts both here and abroad as little
more than cynical political theater aimed at proving that Yemen was capable of
defeating Al Qaeda on its own.
The diplomatic shutdown may have been especially
jarring, analysts say, because the administration has portrayed Al Qaeda as a
waning force in the past year.
“The impression the administration left was that Al
Qaeda was dead or close to dead,” said Bruce Riedel, a former Central
Intelligence Agency case officer and a Brookings Institution scholar. “In which
case, why are we so worried about a conversation between two Al Qaeda leaders?”
The intercepted conversation in question was between
Ayman al-Zawahri, who succeeded Osama bin Laden as the leader of Al Qaeda, and
Nasser al-Wuhayshi, the leader of Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, based in
Yemen. American officials and lawmakers have said the conversation revealed one
of the most serious terrorist plots against Western interests since the attacks
of Sept. 11, 2001.
But the vagueness of the threat has made it easier to
question the Obama administration’s response. The two men did not specify the
nature or location of the attack, American officials say. The timing was also
unclear, though the attack was apparently originally scheduled to take place
last Sunday.
In an appearance Tuesday on NBC’s “The Tonight Show
With Jay Leno,” President
Obama defended the government’s initial decision to shutter 22 embassies and
consulates. The State Department said Monday that 19 diplomatic missions would
remain closed through the end of this week.
“Whenever we see a threat stream that we think is
specific enough that we can take some specific precautions within a certain time
frame, then we do so,” Mr. Obama said.
On Wednesday, several American intelligence, defense
and Congressional officials described a growing body of intercepted
communications among jihadists over the past few months that culminated in
especially worrisome conversations between Mr. Zawahri and Mr. Wuhayshi.
“It’s a very high threat environment with Al Qaeda right now because of the
quality, quantity and seriousness of the intelligence we’re getting,” said one
Congressional official who receives regular updates from the C.I.A. and Defense
Intelligence Agency.
By closing the embassies and consulates, the United
States and its allies deprive terrorists of potential targets and also buy time
to find more clues and pressure extremist networks, hoping to trip up any
would-be attackers.
Still, some security analysts, as well as current and
former government officials, said the administration, still stinging from the
criticism of its handling of the attack in Benghazi last September, was taking
extraordinary precautions in this instance.
To some critics, the diplomatic shutdown was
reminiscent of the Bush administration’s color-coded terrorism alerts, which
were seen by some as efforts to sow fear and broaden political support for
stronger antiterrorism policies.
In the Middle East, some government officials saw the
alert as an unnecessary blow that was bound to further damage their efforts to
lure tourists and foreign investment.
That was especially true in Yemen, whose president,
Abdu Rabbu Mansour Hadi, was in Washington last week meeting with Mr. Obama.
Yemen’s government has worked closely with the United
States on counterterrorism measures, and American officials, who had a troubled
relationship with Yemen’s former longtime president, Ali Abdullah Saleh, have
voiced confidence in Mr. Hadi and increased aid to the country.
“When you do evacuations, you signal that all the
effort to build up trust in the Yemeni security establishment amounts to
nothing,” said one Yemeni official, who spoke on condition of anonymity. “And
all the development projects by U.S.A.I.D. and its counterparts in Britain,
Germany and elsewhere — everything stops.”
In the Yemeni capital, Sana, the American withdrawal
prompted a muscular display of military defiance that left residents puzzled.
Jet fighters soared across the sky throughout the day on Tuesday and Wednesday,
and soldiers in armored vehicles blocked sections of the city.
Yemeni officials said Wednesday that they had thwarted
a bold plot by Al Qaeda to take over ports and destroy oil pipelines. But they
provided no evidence of the plot, which was not related to the threats that
prompted the embassy closings.
The Yemeni announcement, which echoed other recent
statements about foiled terrorist schemes, elicited skepticism and even some
amusement among analysts.
“The timing of the plot is deeply suspicious,” said
Gregory Johnsen, the author of “The Last Refuge,” a book on Yemen and Al Qaeda.
“It doesn’t fit into what we know about Al Qaeda, but it does fit into what we
know about the way the Yemeni government plays these things.”
Yemeni security officials have often announced major
operations to disrupt Al Qaeda just as American officials were arriving on
official visits — operations that mysteriously faded away after the officials
left the country.
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