Al Qaeda makes its armed training camps mobile

Written By DNA Web Team | Updated:

The changes in the terror group's training operations have made them increasingly difficult to target by US intelligence forces.

Under growing pressure from US missile strikes, the al Qaeda terror network is relying more heavily on local insurgent groups along the Pakistan border to house training camps that are growing smaller and more mobile, according to counter terrorism officials.

The changes in the terror group's training operations—often hidden inside walled compounds deep in Pakistan's mountains—have made them increasingly difficult to target by US intelligence forces as they have stepped up drone attacks over the past year.

While the training still includes forays into deserted hillsides to practise planting and detonating explosives, al Qaeda trainers are now also taking their instruction on the road, moving temporary training operations from compound to compound, where fellow insurgents welcome them.

The attacks on the camps, which have become an integral part of the Obama administration's war against the terror group, also risk civilian casualties—which in turn have inflamed anti-American sentiment among the Pakistanis, critical allies in widening the anti-terror campaign.

The camps took on a heightened profile in recent months as US investigators probed the case of accused New York terror suspect Najibullah Zazi. The Afghan emigre reportedly flew to Pakistan late last year and travelled to Peshawar, in the northwest frontier, where he received training on weapons and explosives.

Counterterrorism officials estimate that Zazi is one of the 100 to 150 westerners who have gone to the Pakistan border region for terror training in the last year.

Their ability to filter in and out of the isolated camps has fuelled fears that "sleeper" operatives bearing US or western passports are travelling back and forth with ease to train and plot attacks destined within America's borders.

Counterterrorism officials say an exact number of camps along the border is impossible to pin down, but say they are easily in the dozens.

Vahid Brown, a researcher at the Combating Terrorism Centre at West Point, the elite military academy, said that recent trends suggest al Qaeda is now moving its trainers and resources around, operating within camps operated by a variety of militant groups, including some that have long-standing relationships with Pakistan's Directorate for Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) and military intelligence.

That indirect protection offers al Qaeda some degree of security it might not have on its own, he said.

Militant groups that have provided al Qaeda with training centres include Jaish-e-Mohammed, Lashkar-e-Janghvi, and Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan – factions that have connections to Taliban insurgents and have also been linked to brutal attacks against the government.

Jaish-e-Mohammed was known for ties to the Pakistani military, but more has recently sided with Taliban militants to fight security forces along the border.

The groups have reportedly hosted al Qaeda training in compounds in Waziristan and Swat Valley, and officials have more recently started seeing similar activities in the Punjab province, where some militant groups have stronger ties to the Pakistani government.