November 6,2008:
Another side effect of the al Qaeda defeat in Iraq is the exodus of
surviving foreign terrorists to their home countries. Many of these men are
demoralized and no longer interested in terrorism. But dozens, perhaps
hundreds, of these survivors are still in the fight. Three of them returned to
Yemen earlier this year, and were found to have been behind the September
attack on the U.S. embassy. This involved two suicide car bombs and several
gunmen, and left 16 dead, including six attackers, six policemen and four
civilians.
The police
were quick to run down who the attackers were, and arrest those involved. This
speed is the result of Yemen's policy of trying to reform Islamic terrorists.
Many are jailed briefly, then released on their promise, and often assurances
from family or tribal elders, that the man will terrorize no more. The
government is rethinking this policy in light of the September attack, and
several others that were aborted, or fell apart from lack of resources or poor
planning. Police recently found at least one workshop used to install the bombs
into cars used for suicide attacks. Dozens of weapons were also seized.
Many of the
al Qaeda veterans returning from Iraq are very radicalized, and have no problem
lying to the government, family or tribal elders about their intentions. This
creates problems with the government, which still risks tribal unrest when they
refuse to release a "former" Islamic terrorist, despite the man
promising family and tribe that he will sin no more. Some families are willing
to write off their wild child, but many are not. Tribal politics is still a big
deal in Yemen, where peace is fragile, and highly dependent on a complex web of
relationships between tribal elders and government leaders (who are often the
same). But the government has drawn the line when it comes to young fanatics
who believe they are above these traditional relationships, on a Mission From
God, and can do what they please. In the aftermath of the September attack, the
tribal leaders are stepping back. But the Islamic radicals are still there, and
still being produced by radical clerics, and even some radicalized tribal
leaders.