Al-Qaeda on the rise again in shadow of Daesh in Syria: Experts

Syrian children ride in carriages decorated in balloons along a damaged street in the northwestern Syrian city of Idlib on September 1, 2017. (AFP)

WASHINGTON: Al-Qaeda is on the rise again in the shadow of Daesh in Syria, 16 years after the terrorists shocked the US in the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks, experts said.
They said that Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham (HTS), the group that last month seized control of the northern Syrian city of Idlib, is simply a “rebranding” of Al-Qaeda that is positioning itself as more moderate than Daesh in hopes of a resurgence.
“ISIS (Daesh) may be today’s preeminent terrorist threat, but Al-Qaeda in Syria is worrisome. It is Al-Qaeda’s largest global affiliate at this point,” said former White House counterterrorism director Joshua Geltzer.
Speaking on the current terror threat against the US at the New America think tank, Geltzer and other experts said they expect HTS to take center stage among jihadists as the Daesh group loses ground on the battlefield in Syria and Iraq.
HTS is simply a cosmetic name-change for Al-Qaeda, they said. In consolidating control of much of Idlib province, it has eliminated or absorbed rival groups, and is modernizing its propaganda on the web-savvy model of Daesh.
“The organization itself seems to have more lives than a cat,” said Daveed Gartenstein-Ross, co-author with Geltzer of a New America report on the current terrorist threat.
He called Al-Qaeda a “much stronger” organization than in 2010, when its weakness gave way to the rise of Daesh.
“It has skillfully played itself off of ISIS to portray its organization as being the ‘moderate jihadists’, people who you might not like but you can do business with.”
As such it has more popular support, and some official support in the Gulf States.
“Being more restrained than ISIS has been very helpful,” Gartenstein-Ross said.
The New America report stresses the need to focus on Islamic State as the most dangerous external threat at the moment, while noting that since 9/11 all lethal jihadist attacks in the US have been by US citizens or permanent residents.
But it says Al-Qaeda could resume the role of the foremost threat in the future, gathering followers turned off by Daesh’s most extreme tactics.
While current leader Ayman Al-Zawahiri is turgid and uninspiring, the younger leaders in Idlib are learning from the way that Daesh mastered the use of social media to attract followers.
“Al-Qaeda in Syria has undergone cosmetic changes to its naming and organizational design, but without truly renouncing its affiliation with its mother organization,” the study said.