21.12.2016
AlSuri's Doctrines for Decentralized Jihadi Training Part 2 Jamestown
(https://jamestown.org/)
Al-Suri’s Doctrines for Decentralized
Jihadi Training – Part 2
Publication: Terrorism Monitor Volume: 5 Issue: 2
By: Brynjar Lia (https://jamestown.org/analyst/brynjar-lia/)
February 21, 2007 08:56 PM Age: 10 years
Training jihadi recruits in the post-9/11 world is increasingly about
finding a safe place where training is possible rather than discussing
curricula, facilities, selection of recruits, instructors and related tasks [1].
In his voluminous treatise The Call to Global Islamic Resistance,
published on the internet in January 2005, the Syrian-born al-Qaeda
veteran Mustafa bin Abd al-Qadir Setmariam Nasar, better known as
Abu Mus’ab al-Suri and Umar Abd al-Hakim, examines five different
methods for jihadi training based on past jihadi practices [2]:
1. Secret training in safe houses.
2. Training in small secret camps in the area of operations.
3. Overt training under the auspices of states providing safe havens.
4. Overt training in the camps of the Open Fronts [3].
5. Semi-overt training in areas of chaos and no [governmental] control.
Secret training in safe houses has been extremely important in terrorist
training in all jihadi experiences, according to al-Suri. He considers this
method “the very foundation” in preparing jihadi cadres, even though
21.12.2016
AlSuri's Doctrines for Decentralized Jihadi Training Part 2 Jamestown
it only allows for live training in the use of light weapons and some
lessons in the use of explosives [4]. Al-Suri himself had hands-on
experience with this type of training in Jordan from the early 1980s,
and he emphasized, in particular, successes in educating cadres “in
doctrinal and ideological courses” using this method [5].
Training in small, secret mobile camps has also been frequently used
by jihadi groups during the past decades. This type of training may
take place in remote regions such as in mountains, forests and distant
rural areas, and the number of persons involved should be in the range
of 5-12. Slightly more advanced training, such as setting up ambushes
and organizing assassinations, is possible in such camps. Al-Suri
suggests that live training in the use of explosives can be practiced
inside caves or near places where the sound of explosions would not
attract attention, such as in the proximity of stone quarries, fishing
areas and related locations.
Although al-Suri acknowledges that jihadi organizations in the past
have derived great short-term benefits from establishing overt training
camps in states providing safe havens, he finds that the results have
ultimately been mostly disastrous: “Experience has proven that this is
strategically a mortal trap” [6]. Safe haven states tend to constrain,
exploit and may eventually sacrifice the jihadi organizations to further
their own interests [7]. Moreover, after 9/11 “it is no longer possible for
countries to open safe havens or camps for the Islamists and the
jihadis” [8].
Al-Suri is more positive about overt training in the camps of the “Open
Fronts,” based mainly on the Afghan and Bosnian experiences. The
comprehensiveness of the training opportunities on these fronts, and
the absence of “political and ideological constraints,” makes this a
better option [9]. He nevertheless cautions that training on the “Open
Fronts” is not always effective, partly because of the presence of many
competing jihadi and Islamist groups. The conditions do not allow for
the kind of tight ideological indoctrination that is possible in safe
houses. Furthermore, the economic costs involved in dispatching
volunteers to camps in distant countries are very high. More
importantly, crossing several national borders to reach the areas of the
“Open Fronts” involves too many security risks [10].
As for semi-overt training in areas of chaos and where there is no
governmental control, al-Suri points out its benefits in the past: in
locations such as the tribal areas in Yemen, Somalia, the Horn of Africa,
the tribal areas in the border regions of Pakistan and the great Saharan
countries in Africa, both local and non-local jihadi groups have been
able to set up semi-overt camps. The low cost of weapons, ammunition
21.12.2016
AlSuri's Doctrines for Decentralized Jihadi Training Part 2 Jamestown
and space in these regions is an advantage [11]. He finds, however, that
the prospect for exploiting these black holes is rapidly declining as a
result of the U.S.-led war on terrorism and the new geopolitical
situation:
“The areas of chaos are on the verge of coming under American control
and being closed…the only [training] methods which remain possible
for us now, in the world of American aggression and international
coordination to combat terrorism, are the methods of secret training in
houses and mobile training camps” [12].
In other words, only the first two models are viable options in the post9/11 era. Al-Suri clearly believes that the formation of large-scale overt
camps similar to the al-Qaeda camps in Afghanistan must be
postponed until some point in the distant future [13].
Devising Jihadi Training in a Harsh Security Environment
Al-Suri’s training doctrine is heavily informed by his acute awareness of
the military weakness of the jihadi movement. The current situation in
which the enemy “is dominating air, ground and sea” imposes very
strict security precautions on jihadi training opportunities [14]. From
this point of departure, al-Suri offers five building blocks for jihadi
training: 1. mental and ideological preparation and developing the
desire to fight and moral strength; 2. jihadi guerrilla warfare theory; 3.
spreading the ideological, theoretical and military training programs
across the Islamic Nation by various means; 4. secret training in houses
and in limited, mobile training camps; 5. developing fighting
competence through jihadi action and through participation in battle
[15].
Not surprisingly, ideological indoctrination comes first, but no less
important is the emphasis on studying guerrilla warfare theory
adapted to the jihadi struggle. This has been a topic of intense study by
al-Suri. In fact, three of al-Suri’s most well-known audiotaped lecture
series deal specifically with this topic. One of them was held in Khost in
1998 and consists of 32 audiotapes in which he reads and comments
on War of the Oppressed, an American book on guerrilla warfare that
has been translated into Arabic. Al-Suri strived to modify and adapt
leftist guerrilla warfare literature to the Islamic context and planned to
turn these lectures into a book entitled The Basis for Jihadi Guerrilla
Warfare in Light of the Contemporary American Campaigns [16].
Finding very few works in the Arab library on jihadi guerrilla warfare, alSuri called upon his followers to transcribe his lectures in order to make
21.12.2016
AlSuri's Doctrines for Decentralized Jihadi Training Part 2 Jamestown
them available to the broadest possible audience; in September 2006,
his request was apparently heeded, as several of these lectures
appeared on jihadi websites in Arabic PDF-formatted transcripts [17].
The widest possible distribution of jihadi training materials is clearly a
cornerstone of al-Suri’s training doctrine. One needs the “spread of
culture of preparation and training…by all methods, especially the
internet” [18]. This recommendation has been followed up by jihadis in
recent years. Not only have numerous, comprehensive training
manuals and encyclopedias, such as the 700 MB size Encyclopedia of
Preparation for Jihad (mawsu’at al-i’dad), been made available online
in text and picture formats, but also sleek, professional, videoformatted, instructional materials detailing various explosive
manufacturing recipes have begun to circulate widely during the past
two years, and at least 22 separate audio-visual jihadi manuals are now
in circulation on the web. Furthermore, 29 WMV-formatted files of alSuri’s videotaped lectures, recorded in August 2000 at his own training
camp, called mu’askar al-ghuraba (The Strangers’ Camp), in Karghah
near Kabul, have been available to download from multiple sites since
January 2005.
The last building block in al-Suri’s training doctrine, namely training
through action and fighting, is derived directly from his experience in
the Syrian Islamist uprising in 1980-82. Al-Suri did not intend to allow
untrained recruits to undertake complicated operations, which would
contradict his principle of sequence: “will…preparation…launch.”
Rather, he described how a gradual introduction of untrained recruits
into an operative role can take place to allow “expertise [to] develop
through battle” [19]. Recruits should first participate in action only as
bystanders or witnesses. Later, they will serve in a minor auxiliary
function without directly intervening. Finally, when deemed qualified,
they will operate directly in main operations under the command of
senior members [20].
Although al-Suri does not go deeply into the details of jihadi training,
he presents what he terms “a light program which can be implemented
by the simplest cells…operating under the most difficult
circumstances of security and secrecy” [21]. The program is
characterized by training activities that do not involve serious security
risks, but are still relevant to a jihadi. The elements of the program
range from physical exercise and studies of explosive manuals to
practicing explosive manufacturing using dummies, shooting practice
with compressed air guns, practicing procedures for secure
communication and studies of all kinds of relevant military- and
21.12.2016
AlSuri's Doctrines for Decentralized Jihadi Training Part 2 Jamestown
weapons-related handbooks. Only when the time is right should the
group proceed to find a proper secret location to undertake live
practice shooting and use of explosives.
Conclusion
The danger of al-Suri’s training doctrine lies in its very realistic
assumptions about the jihadis’ military weakness. His doctrine seems
to be cleanly and pragmatically tailored to the security situation in the
Western world of the post-9/11 era. It emphasizes training and fighting
at home or in the country of residence (which for many al-Qaeda
sympathizers means the Western world), not overseas, using whatever
means are available and always maintaining security precautions as the
number one priority. This hard-hitting realism differs greatly from the
main body of jihadi literature. Although al-Suri stands out as one of the
sharpest theoreticians in the jihadi movement, he is rarely quoted in
the wider and more religiously oriented Salafi-Jihadi literature [22].
Lacking the stature of a religious scholar, his writings probably have a
limited, but important audience among the more intellectually
oriented jihadis. Al-Suri is emblematic of the rise of a new generation of
jihadi strategic study writers, who are still a tiny minority, but whose
writings are informed by pragmatism, presented in a rational-secular
style and emphasize a willingness to put political effectiveness before
religious dogmas [23].
Notes
1. The author would like to thank Petter Nesser, Anne Stenersen and
Thomas Hegghammer at the Norwegian Defense Research
Establishment (FFI) for valuable comments and feedback on this article.
2. When al-Suri discusses the training options, especially the last three
models, he appears slightly ambiguous and self-contradictory,
although his conclusion is clear. This probably reflects the fact that The
Call to Global Islamic Resistance was written over a long period of time.
After the U.S. announced the $5 million bounty on his head, the book
was hastily released before he had time to double-check and finalize
the manuscript. See introduction in The Call to Global Islamic
Resistance.
3. For an explanation of the term “Open Fronts,” see Part One of this
study.
4. The Call to Global Islamic Resistance, p. 1414 (pdf-version).
5. Ibid., p. 1417 (pdf-version).
21.12.2016
AlSuri's Doctrines for Decentralized Jihadi Training Part 2 Jamestown
6. Ibid., p. 1417 (pdf-version).
7. Ibid., p. 1416 (pdf-version).
8. Ibid., p. 1419 (pdf-version).
9. Ibid., p. 1416 (pdf-version).
10. Ibid., p. 1418 (pdf-version).
11. Ibid., p. 1416 (pdf-version).
12. Ibid., p. 1419 (pdf-version).
13. Ibid., p. 1424 (pdf-version).
14. Ibid., p. 1423 (pdf-version).
15. Cited in Ibid., p. 1423 (pdf-version).
16. Ibid., p. 1424 (pdf-version).
17. These lectures were “The Management and Organisation of
Guerrilla Warfare,” Khost, 1998; “Explanation of the Book ‘War of the
Oppressed,'” Khost, 1998; and “Lessons in Guerrilla Warfare Theories,”
Jalalabad, 1999. See posting on muntadayat al-firdaws al-jihadiyyah,
September 21, 2006, at http://www.alfirdaws.org, accessed October
2006.
18. The Call to Global Islamic Resistance, p. 1424 (pdf-version).
19. Ibid., p. 1426 (pdf-version).
20. Ibid., p. 1424 (pdf-version).
21. Ibid., p. 1427 (pdf-version).
22. See William McCants (ed.), The Militant Ideology Atlas (Combating
Terrorism Center, West Point, 2006), http://www.ctc.usma.edu.
23. For one such strategic study, see Brynjar Lia and Thomas
Hegghammer, “Jihadi Strategic Studies: The Alleged Al Qaida Policy
Study Preceding the Madrid Bombings,” Studies in Conflict and
Terrorism 27 (5) (September-October 2004), pp.355-375.
21.12.2016
AlSuri's Doctrines for Decentralized Jihadi Training Part 2 Jamestown
1310 L St. NW, Suite 810
Washington DC, 20005
PHONE: 202.483.8888 (tel:202.483.8888)
FAX: 202.483.8337
E-MAIL:
[email protected] (mailto:
[email protected])
© 2016 The Jamestown Foundation All rights reserved.