Nine days after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, President George W. Bush stood before Congress to outline a two-pronged response to history’s deadliest terrorist act: dramatic improvements in security at home and an all-out assault against what he called a “fringe form of Islamic extremism” at war with the West.
Fifteen years later, the first goal arguably has been met, as Americans by almost every measure are safer today from another 9/11-scale attack than in 2001.
Yet the struggle to defeat the global network of violent, rabidly anti-Western jihadist groups has recorded fewer successes. Indeed, the problem appears to have grown bigger.
The al-Qaeda organization once led by Osama bin Laden has been decimated and is no longer capable of orchestrating a sophisticated, trans-national plot on its own, terrorism experts say they believe. Al-Qaeda’s branches in North Africa and Yemen also have been weakened by Western military strikes and ongoing fighting with rival factions.
But al-Qaeda’s powerful and locally popular Syrian branch, Jabhat Fatah al-Sham, commands an army of thousands of trained fighters and now serves as a base for senior al-Qaeda operatives experienced in making explosives and carrying out terrorist attacks, U.S. officials and terrorism experts say. The Syrian group recently announced it had split with al-Qaeda, but U.S. officials say the claim is not credible.
Meanwhile, the Islamic State, despite military setbacks in Iraq and Syria, has demonstrated a growing capability to direct — or inspire — simple-but-lethal terrorist attacks around the world.
“The threat is actually worse:It has metastasized and spread geographically,” said Richard Clarke, a top terrorism adviser to three presidents and the man who famously warned the Bush administration about the growing risk from al-Qaeda in the weeks before 9/11. “Today there are probably 100,000 people in the various terrorist groups around the world, and that’s much larger than anything we had 15 years ago.”
Both the Bush and Obama administrations thwarted multiple terrorist plots and achieved significant military successes against specific terrorist factions and key leaders, including al-Qaeda in Iraq founder Abu Musab al-Zarqawi in 2006, bin Laden in 2011 and the Islamic State’s No. 2 commander, Abu Muhammad al-Adnani, who reportedly was killed in a U.S. airstrike last month. Yet both administrations struggled to find a formula for blunting the appeal of violent jihadist groups or preventing thousands of young Muslims from enlisting in a global movement fueled by hatred and bent on destruction.
There is little to show for more than a decade’s worth of U.S.-sponsored programs aimed at countering extremist messages, terrorism experts say, and U.S. officials have struggled to block the jihadists’ use of social media or disrupt international funding and support for extreme interpretations of Islam. Meanwhile, U.S. policies, from the Iraq invasion in 2003 to the ongoing use of armed drones against suspected terrorists, have helped drive new recruits to al-Qaeda and the Islamic State, former U.S. officials and analysts say.
“We generate more enemies than we are able to take out,” said former congresswoman Jane Harman (D-Calif.), a chairwoman of the House Intelligence Committee in the years after 9/11, who now is president of the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars. “Our military power remains extraordinary. But winning this fight requires projecting a narrative about American values and interests. And we have failed to do that.”
‘The cavalry did arrive’
Beginning in the fall of 2001, intelligence and law enforcement officials began bracing for follow-up attacks of equal or even greater magnitude, from the downing of passenger planes to biological or even nuclear terrorism.
Instead, despite its stated ambition to kill large numbers of Americans and disrupt the U.S. economy, al-Qaeda has been unable since 2001 to carry out another major strike on the U.S. homeland. The only significant acts of terrorism in the past 15 years involved lone actors or — apparently, in the case of the 2001 anthrax attack — a domestic terrorist.
Al-Qaeda’s failure, analysts say, was in large measure the result of an extensive effort to harden U.S. defenses, from improved intelligence collection and tighter restrictions on air travel to a network of sensors to detect possible nuclear and biological threats. Rolf Mowatt-Larssen, a former CIA officer and Energy Department official who advised the White House on counterterrorism, remembered a “call-in-the-cavalry moment” after 9/11 when U.S. intelligence agencies picked up hints of an al-Qaeda plot to obtain a nuclear device.
“The cavalry did arrive, and we have good people still working on it,” said Mowatt-Larssen, now a senior fellow at Harvard University’s Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs. One of the unheralded successes of the post-Sept. 11 era is “the fact that we haven’t had a WMD attack in these 15 years,” he said.
At the same time, jihadist groups, from al-Qaeda’s remnants to the Islamic State, continue to harbor ambitions to carry out catastrophic terrorist attacks against the West, and their numbers and resources have grown dramatically since 2001, Mowatt-Larssen said. The Islamic State has attempted to manufacture crude chemical weapons, and it has sought to recruit scientists and technicians from around the world.
“They’re still trying,” he said. “And it only has to happen once to change everything that you thought.”
Failing at counter-radicalization
Yet, despite gains in safeguarding the U.S. homeland, efforts to counter the root causes of violent jihad largely have fallen flat. The National Counterterrorism Center (NCTC), which was created by the post-9/11 wave of intelligence reforms, mounted a series of efforts to map the radicalization paths of Islamist militants. But there are divided opinions on what came of that work.
Michael Leiter, who led the NCTC from 2007 to 2011, said the research produced important insights that have helped guide U.S. counter terrorism policy, but never led to the discovery of sequences or patterns that would reliably signal an individual’s intent to carry out an attack.
“We understand the general dynamics that cause radicalization to occur,” Leiter said in an interview. “Knowing how to identify the people who are radicalizing is hard enough, but then to actually filter through the ones who are radicalizing and identify those who are mobilizing toward violence? It’s terribly difficult to do, and we aren’t particularly good at doing it.”
Soon after President Obama took office in 2009, the new administration’s security team began looking for novel approaches to countering radicalization, but administration officials said the efforts languished amid internal turf battles.
A week after his inauguration, former officials said, Obama directed his national security advisers to draft a report summarizing the government’s efforts on countering violent extremism, identifying promising approaches. “The president wanted a new strategy,” said a former senior administration official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity in discussing the administration’s internal deliberations. The effort went nowhere, the former official said, in part because key advisers including John Brennan, Denis McDonough and Ben Rhodes could never agree on who should be in charge.
There were “endless discussions between Brennan, Denis and Rhodes about who owns this,” the former official said. The administration’s focus became the escalating CIA drone campaign in Pakistan, and the halfhearted push on countering violent extremism “got dropped,” the former official said.
In 2010, the NCTC proposed issuing monthly grades — green, yellow and red — to the CIA, FBI and other agencies on their countering violent extremism programs as a way of prodding them to devote more attention and resources to the problem. The proposal predictably rankled the targeted agencies and was blocked.
Five years later, in 2015, the White House convened an international summit on the issue, a belated push that coincided with the rise of the Islamic State.
“We simply did not put enough resources and focus on that as we should have,” acknowledged Michael Morell, the CIA’s former deputy director who twice served as acting director during Obama’s presidency.
A hard-learned lesson of the last 15 years, current and former officials say, is that the most effective counter-radicalization messages can only come from Muslims themselves — religious leaders and institutions as well as governments, which must address the political and social disparities that fuel extremism. But U.S. officials have been largely frustrated in their efforts to persuade Muslim allies to take more aggressive measures in their home countries.
The Islamic State, widely regarded as the preeminent global jihad threat, has mastered the process of recruiting and radicalizing adherents to a far greater degree than al-Qaeda did, U.S. officials and terrorism experts say. And the Islamic State has shown itself to be far more willing than al-Qaeda to attack soft targets of limited strategic value, using recruits with little or no training and weapons that are simple but enormously effective in sowing fear and panic.
Such attacks have come to define jihadist terrorism in the second decade of the 21st century. Longtime veterans of the terrorist fight say they are surprised, in retrospect, that such tactics weren’t adopted sooner and that al-Qaeda remained fixated on replicating the scale of 9/11.
“We were always surprised that they [al-Qaeda] didn’t get that — surprised that they did not seem to understand the fear and chaos that such attacks can create,” Morell said. “It turns out that they had this fundamental belief that what they really wanted to have happen was a history-changing attack — a single attack that would have led us to withdraw from the Middle East, to pull back the way the Soviets pulled back from Afghanistan. They thought they needed a Sept. 11-style catastrophic attack in order to do that.”
Courtesy: The Washington Post