Randall A. Blake*
The
9/11 attacks elevated Osama bin Laden and his group to mythical status
in the American psyche. The two wars that followed during the next
decade and his 4,300 day stay on the FBI's Most Wanted List only added
to bin Laden's mystique, establishing him as the central figure in the
post-9/11 chapter of violent global jihad. However, by the time of his
death in May of 2011, paradigms associated with bin Laden and the group
he left behind to Ayman al Zawahiri and other global jihadists were
already shifting significantly. Collectively, these new realities
transcend previous 9/11 paradigms and have led to a new chapter of
global jihad.
This paper acknowledges the lasting impact of 9/11 and Osama bin
Laden but looks beyond the 9/11 paradigms to examine the state of the
next chapter of global jihad, which began to come into focus between
2009 and 2011, and is driving the threat calculations for 2013 and
beyond. It examines the efficacy of the far enemy strategy absent its
chief advocate, the shifting role of affiliates and allies, South Asia's
pivotal role, the Arab Awakening, and the threat of Do-It-Yourself
(DIY) terrorism in the U.S. homeland and the West in general. No
examination of the evolving threat would be complete without a
discussion of the broad technological and societal trends underway that
provide unique opportunities and challenges for global jihadists. The
Postscript concludes with a cautionary tale of expecting the unexpected
in this next chapter.
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* National Counterterrorism Center and Federal Executive Fellow, Foreign Policy, 21st Century Defense Initiative
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