A stunning new study authored by a former US government intelligence analyst and staff member for official investigations into the 9/11 attacks, concludes that the Islamic State (ISIS) received significant state-sponsorship up to 2016.
The study is corroborated by revelations from two former senior British intelligence officials in exclusive interviews with INSURGE.
The new evidence raises urgent questions about the material context of ISIS’ extraordinarily rapid growth, and its ability to inspire incidents such as the truck attack in New York.
Contrary to conventional wisdom, the peer-reviewed paper published in the Routledge journal Studies in Conflict and Terrorism
in July, confirms not only that several regional states deliberately
empowered al-Qaeda and ISIS foreign fighters for their geopolitical
ends, but that many of these states are ostensibly US allies in the ‘war
on terror’: including Turkey, Pakistan and Saudi Arabia.
Study
author Professor Daniel Byman of Georgetown University’s Security
Studies Programme was previously a Middle East analyst for the US
intelligence community, and headed up the Center for Middle East Studies
at the RAND Corporation — a major US government defence contractor.
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He
later went on to become a senior staffer at the 9/11 Commission and the
Joint 9/11 Inquiry Staff of the House and Senate Intelligence
Committees.
‘Non-state’ terror is often state-sponsored
Flying
in the face of much conventional wisdom on the ‘non-state’ nature of
international Islamist terrorism, the study finds that:
“Some of the
most important foreign fighter movements in the world today receive
massive and explicit state support, while still others rely on states to
tolerate their fund-raising, transit, recruitment, and other core
activities.”
The study pinpoints the Syrian regime of Bashar
al-Assad for facilitating the “transit of foreign fighters from its
territory to Iraq” and nurturing “various anti-US Sunni groups,
including al-Qaeda in Iraq, the Islamic State’s predecessor
organization.”
It also lays out the expansion of Iranian
power through proxy forces such as the Lebanese Hizballah, as well as
Shi’a militias in Iraq.
Of course, the role of the Syrian and Iranian states in facilitating foreign fighters is well-known and widely reported.
Yet
Byman’s most explosive allegations are against key US allies, Saudi
Arabia and Turkey, which he accuses of “complicity” in supporting ISIS:
“A
number of US allies allowed their citizens to send money or volunteer
with little interference, at times bordering on regime complicity. When
the organization [IS] established itself in Syria a decade later, key US
regional partners like Turkey facilitated the flow of fighters and
logistical support in the hopes of expediting the overthrow of the Assad
regime. Without the relatively permissive environments in these states,
the Islamic State would have been far weaker and fighting it
much easier.”
Byman’s analysis corroborates my previous reporting
on evidence that Turkey, Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states have at
various times supported Islamist militant groups in Syria, including
al-Qaeda in Iraq, which went on to metamorphose into ISIS.
Two
years ago, a declassified Pentagon intelligence report from 2012
revealed not only that the US government had been aware of the policy of
its allies at the time, but seemed to approve of the strategy despite
anticipating that it might culminate in the appearance of an IS-type
entity.
Turkey
In the
Byman paper, however, Turkey comes in for the most detailed criticism.
Noting that Turkey aggressively targeted al-Qaeda through 2012, the
paper observes that “this policy changed as the Syrian civil war heated
up and Ankara sought to both overthrow the government in Damascus and
prevent the emergence of a strong Kurdish group.”
Byman
asserts that Turkey under President Erdogan quite deliberately sponsored
Islamist militant groups, including al-Qaeda, in its bid to oust Assad.
In the early years of the war, Ankara “sought to bolster forces,
including jihadists, seeking [Assad’s] overthrow. Turkey also encouraged
jihadists to attack Kurdish forces in Syria.”
Of
course, Turkey and other US allies supported a range of opposition
fighters, including secular and Islamist groups which ideologically
opposed disavowed al-Qaeda and IS. Unfortunately, the pressures of the war meant that these groups frequently ended up coordinating their anti-Assad offensives and sharing weapons.
INSIGHT:
Yet amidst this confusing situation, US allies also intentionally
directed support to specific jihadist groups, including ISIS.
By
2015, Byman reports, “Turkey allowed foreign fighters to use the
country as a logistics base for the war in Syria,” and that also meant
“providing sanctuary, arms, and medical care” to jihadist groups. He
cites former US Ambassador to Turkey, Francis Ricciardone, who said:
“The Turks frankly worked with groups for a period, including al-Nusra [al-Qaeda’s former affiliate in Syria].”
Another approach was to turn a blind eye to foreign fighters coming into Syria through Turkey:
“Turkish
security services ignored jihadists traveling to Syria from Chechnya
and nearby areas via Turkey. Meanwhile, volunteers from all over the
world would arrive in Turkey, where facilitators would help them get to
the war zone.”
Most disturbingly, that policy of ignoring
“the growing influx” of foreign fighters, many streaming to join ISIS,
continued even after ISIS expanded into Syria in 2013 according to
Byman. The Turkish military “even cooperated with the Islamic State,
including allowing convoys to travel through Turkey, against one of
their mutual enemies: the Kurds.”
It was only from
around 2015 to 2016, Byman explains, that Turkey’s toleration for the
flow of foreign fighters of all denominations into Syria “diminished
considerably”, based on the changing “political calculus” — which
included the escalating threat from IS and other jihadist groups to
Turkish national security, among other factors.
INSIGHT: Byman’s analysis adds credibility to the detailed allegations of the highest-ranking whistleblower to have ever come on the record with claims of Turkish state-sponsorship of terrorism.
In September 2016, INSURGE ran an exclusive interview
with Ahmet Sait Yayla, Chief of the Counter-Terrorism and Operations
Division of Turkish National Police between 2010 and 2012, before
becoming Chief of the Public Order and Crime Prevention Division until
2014.
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“I am the police chief who was asked to guard ISIS terrorists”medium.com
Yayla
provided a shocking insider account of how he had personally witnessed
evidence of high-level Turkish state sponsorship of ISIS during his
police career, which eventually led him to resign.
Pakistan
Another
government highlighted by the Byman study is Pakistan, described as a
key example of how some states — caught between the pull of domestic
constituencies and foreign pressures — end up swaying between “limited
crackdowns and limited support.”
Despite working
regularly with the United States to stop foreign fighters linked to
al-Qaeda, Byman observes that Pakistan simultaneously allows “weapons,
money, recruits, and other support to go to an array of jihadist groups
with foreign ties.”
INSIGHT: Although the Pakistani
government cooperates with important arrests of al-Qaeda figures, it
also permits powerful domestic groups like Jamaat-e Islami and Jamiat
Ulema-e-Islam “to work with various militant groups, often in
cooperation with Pakistani intelligence.”
According to Byman, such complicity is endemic at the highest levels:
“Pakistani
intelligence works with Islamist groups in Pakistan that run religious
schools and, together, raise thousands of recruits, including suicide
bombers, to help both the Afghan Taliban in its fight against the
US-backed government in Kabul and Lashkar-e-Taiba in its operations
against India. The Pakistani government has deliberately afforded its
intelligence service a high degree of autonomy, and the service itself
gives its operatives considerable flexibility.”Saudi Arabia
The
third state most prominently featured in the Byman paper is the Kingdom
of Saudi Arabia, which stands out as an example of how some “US allies
also may have close ties to and depend on institutions that support
foreign fighters.”
INSIGHT: In Saudi Arabia’s case, the
Kingdom “has long had an agreement with its own religious establishment
to bolster its legitimacy,” which has included the practice of “allowing
religious figures to raise money to defend Islam” — often by financing
foreign fighters — and thus “honoring the contract of support in
exchange for legitimacy.”
US intelligence has for some decades been aware
that various senior members of the Saudi royal family have channelled
hundreds of millions of dollars to extremist groups, many of whom aspire
to overthrow the Kingdom itself, as a form of ‘protection money’.
To
some extent — notwithstanding the reality of terror incidents inside
Saudi Arabia (such as in 2003) — Byman argues that this strategy has
succeeded, given that “the vast majority of Saudi foreign fighters
embraced jihadist causes overseas but remained loyal, or at least not
violently opposed, to the Saudi regime.”
Another
dimension of this strategy is to tolerate or sponsor individuals who
promote violent ideologies, but stop short of directly advocating
violence themselves.
“Saudi Arabia still sponsors
religious leaders, mosques, media, and schools that embrace a
theological disposition that matches many jihadist teachings,” writes
Byman. In Kosovo, for instance, Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states
“poured money into religious institutions in the country” which promoted
violence in the name of protecting Islam, but “did not directly fund
travel to Syria”.
While Saudi Arabia has now established
more robust counter-terrorism measures to target domestic financing
mechanisms, “donors sending money to fighters in Syria often channelled
their funds via Kuwait to avoid Saudi countermeasures.”
Yet
little has been done to resolve the wider porous nature of Gulf
financial institutions, which provides a carte blanche for such covert
funding to continue with impunity: “States that adopt this relatively
permissive approach often simply deny any form of support is occurring
or dismiss it as an aberration.”
Blowback
While
Byman’s paper focuses on the role of regional states in fuelling
Islamist militant networks for their own ends, it also raises questions
about the strategic rationale behind the US alliance with such states.
INSIGHT:
Not a single US ally has received any meaningful coercive pressure to
change these activities that support terrorism. For Byman, this is
because such pressures might end up damaging alliances with these states
in such a way that would “come with significant costs for US national
interests.”
In the case of Saudi Arabia, he notes,
if the US held the Kingdom “drastically more accountable for its
continued toleration of some rhetorical and material support, it would
likely either undermine the relationship and risk losing a critical US
ally or compromise the stability of the country by forcing the Saudis to
challenge pillars of their legitimacy.”
The US has
faced similar dilemmas in relation to Turkey and Pakistan. The core
dynamic is that as these states can threaten to reduce intelligence
sharing and other cooperation, US pressure could lead them to accelerate
support for terrorists, “making the problem worse.”
The
end result is that some terrorism — namely, the terrorism of its own
allies — is effectively deemed as acceptable, based on a dubious
cost-benefit calculation:
“Thus, ultimately even the United
States is willing to tolerate some other states’ toleration or support
for jihadist foreign fighters because there are other more valuable
benefits reaped by maintaining close relations.”
Byman’s
explanation gives some context to what appears to be official awareness
of Gulf state complicity, as evident from a secret memo written by then secretary of state Hillary Clinton in August 2014 to John Podesta, her campaign chairman.
In the memo, Podesta noted — citing Western intelligence sources — that the Saudi and Qatari governments:
“…
are providing clandestine financial and logistic support to ISIL
[Islamic State] and other radical Sunni groups in the region”.
What
Byman does not say, is that by actively maintaining alliances with the
very regimes that have sponsored ISIS, US foreign policy itself is
undermining the ‘war on terror’, while indirectly aiding and abetting
the official enemy.
From the question of moral culpability, does this not also amount to a form of complicity?
But
there are other deeper, systemic issues plaguing the post war
international system which explain why the Gulf states must be protected
at almost any cost:
- their role as ‘guardians’ of a Western-dominated regional petroleum architecture;
- the massive contributions of these oil-rich regimes to the Western arms trade and financial system; and
- the extent to which Western intelligence services have become institutionally, financially and even ideologically dependent on these governments for covert operations.
Controlling the oil order
As British historian Mark Curtis has documented in his book Web of Deceit, citing declassified Foreign Office and State Department files, it’s often all about oil.
AXIOM:
Control of regional oil reserves has always been most fundamental
interest behind US and British relations with the Gulf states.
Intelligence issues alone have never been the driving force of these
alliances.
In 1947, Curtis points out, British
planners described oil as “a vital prize for any power interested in
world influence or domination”. US planners similarly acknowledged their
“mutual recognition” with Britain that the two countries’ oil policy
was based upon “control, at least for the moment, of the great bulk of
the free petroleum resources of the world”.
AXIOM: A second
component of this, writes Curtis, is that the US and Britain expect oil
profits to be invested in Western economies, either through the
domination of Western companies, or by way of lubricating the wider
world economy. Thirdly, and relatedly, Gulf elites are expected to
invest substantively in Western arms.
“Repressive
Middle Eastern elites understand these priorities, and also that it is
their role in this system that helps keep them in power locally,” Curtis
observes. “The West could withdraw its support for them if they got any
wayward ideas” — which is, arguably, what happened with countries like
Iran, once a staunch ally of the US under the brutal reign of the Shah.
This
suggests that part of the problem is the fact that the US is convinced
of the absolute and unquestionable necessity of maintaining alliances
with these regimes, regardless of their sponsorship of
terrorism — which appears merely as a sort of regrettable inconvenience,
to be nevertheless routinely exploited to justify unmitigated military
expansionism.
That in turn is because of a fundamentally
flawed foreign policy approach — an approach which privileges the power
of the arms and oil industries at the expense of real national
security.
The blind eye of convenience
Byman’s
analysis is complemented by two former British intelligence officers
who spoke exclusively to INSURGE, drawing on their own expertise on how
intelligence policies have often systematically undermined national
security in the pursuit of narrow geopolitical goals.
Far
from merely being caught up in its own unfortunate “dilemma” — being
forced to rely on states that support terror to fight terror — they
argue that the US policy of tolerating allied “support for jihadist
foreign fighters” is due to dubious foreign policy interests.
INSIGHT:
According to Charles Shoebridge, a former British Army and Metropolitan
Police counter-terrorism intelligence officer, British authorities
failed to prevent UK citizens from “joining jihadist groups in Libya and
Syria” not because of inadequate security powers, but due to their
perceived geopolitical utility at the time.
The
‘blind eye’ policy, Shoebridge told me, was consistent with the UK
government position at the time of supporting rebel groups in Libya and
Syria in attempting to “topple Gaddafi and Assad.”
This
was in spite of the fact that these Britons “made no secret on social
media of the fact, even sometimes posting evidence of their
participation in acts of terrorism and war crimes.” There was an
“obvious risk of terrorism blowback were such trained and experienced
extremists to return to Britain.”
It was only after
2013, “when groups such as IS started to harm US and UK interests in
Syria and Iraq, and kill US and UK citizens, that any action at all was
taken to stop British jihadists from travelling, or arresting and
charging those who returned.”
The official defence for
this failure is that before 2013, the legislation necessary to tackle
travelling jihadists did not exist. Shoebridge dismisses this as
nonsense: “First, it’s been illegal to take part in terrorist related
activities abroad since 2006 and, second, the new legislation introduced
since 2013 has itself barely been used.”
Collusion
This self-defeating strategy in Libya and Syria went well beyond simply turning a blind eye, however.
Alastair
Crooke, a former 30 year senior MI6 officer who dealt with Islamist
groups across the Muslim world, told INSURGE that, at the time, the US
and Britain actively facilitated their allies’ sponsorship of militants
in Syria.
“When
the US and British militaries were working with the Turks to train
various Syrian rebel groups, many military officers knew that among
those we were training was the next round of jihadists,” said Crooke.
“But the CIA was fixated on regime change. We knew that even if at any
moment ISIS was eventually defeated, these Islamist groups would move
against secular and moderate forces.”
This collusion
between Western security services and Islamist extremism, Crooke told
me, has very long roots in an intelligence culture that went back as far
as the 1920s, “when in the attempt to gather control of the Arabian
peninsula, King Abdulaziz told us that the key is Wahabism.”
This
alliance culminated in the war in Afghanistan in the 1980s, which was
“the first clear use of fired-up Islamist radicals to provoke Russia
into an invasion. This set the scene ever since. From then, our
intelligence services have had a deeply entwined history with Islamist
groups based on the belief that Saudi Arabia had the power to turn them
on and off at will.”
INSIGHT: Islamist groups have been used
by British and American intelligence services, said Crooke, essentially
“to control and contain the Middle East” against different forces,
Nasserism, nationalists, and more recently Ba’athists.Outsourcing intelligence to terror sponsors
Perhaps
Crooke’s most damning insight was how British intelligence became
increasingly dependent on Gulf state intelligence services to conduct
regional operations:
“In the 1980s, Saudi began paying for operations
with large sums of money — which was considered acceptable in the
interests of landing a blow on the USSR’s influence in the region. As a
result, though, our intelligence services became increasingly dependent
on Saudi funding. If they wanted to avoid Congressional or parliamentary
oversight, and to continue expanding difficult and sensitive
off-the-books operations, they would go instead to their Gulf partners.”INSIGHT:
In other words, British intelligence services have increasingly
outsourced funding for British covert operations to Saudi and Gulf state
money. Rather than simply privatising intelligence to fund off-the
books operations, they have compartmentalised them under the rubric of
foreign repressive regimes.
The impact of this on the integrity of the US and British intelligence community has been devastating:
“The
assumption is that this doesn’t affect the integrity of intelligence,
but clearly it does. The Gulf states have become paymasters for
increasing expenditures on intelligence operations that the security
services would prefer not be disclosed.”
The impact of
this can be seen in the way the CIA ‘vetted’ rebels in Syria by largely
outsourcing the most critical components of the vetting process to the
very same allies who have been sponsored extremists, as I reported previously for Middle East Eye.
I
asked Crooke what should be done to resolve this problem. “We should
start by surfacing these matters into consciousness,” he said. “Only
then can we begin the conversations needed to resolve them. We need to
understand that the tension between fighting a ‘war on terror’ while at
the same time in some ways being in bed with terrorists, has produced a
disaster.”
Action: While we may feel overwhelmed by the sheer
secrecy and power of this unaccountable national security system, it
functions in this unaccountable way precisely because its operations
escape public scrutiny. It is the job of journalists, analysts and
citizens to pry open these matters so that they become more widely
understood and debated.
In this context, whatever
its limitations, Byman’s analysis has done a critical public service in
bringing some of these matters into the light of day.
US
and British regional alliances with various Muslim regimes have
functioned systematically to undermine national security. It is long
past time to re-evaluate these alliances.