Bali blasts may reveal al-Qaeda fingerprints
Bali blasts may reveal al-Qaeda fingerprints
Jane Macartney, Reuters, Singapore
With hindsight, the warning signs of this weekend's devastating
bomb blasts in Bali were clear for all to see.
An American soldier killed in a Philippines bomb blast; a
grenade outside the U.S. embassy in Jakarta; a suspected terror
cell broken up in Italy; an attack on U.S. Marines in Kuwait.
Join the dots and it becomes clear that either the al-Qaeda
network of Osama bin Laden is still highly active more than a
year after the Sept. 11 attacks on New York and Washington or it
has spawned copycats able to strike with deadly effect. And even
before bombs ripped through packed nightspots and killed at least
182 people and injured more than 130 on the tranquil tourist
island of Bali on Saturday night, Southeast Asia was already
firmly in their sights.
"This should not come as a surprise. The biggest surprise is
that it's taken so long to target Western interests," said Andrew
Tan, researcher at the Institute of Defense and Strategic Studies
in Singapore.
"We should expect more attacks," he said. "This will be just
the beginning of what we have seen so many times in other Muslim
countries in the Middle East."
Not only the United States but regional neighbors as well have
long viewed Indonesia as a weak link in the fight to prevent
extremist attacks in Southeast Asia.
Malaysia and Singapore have been particularly vocal in urging
Indonesia to take action, suggesting Jakarta begin by tackling
the Jemaah Islamiah group -- which is believed to want to set up
an Islamic state in Southeast Asia -- and its alleged leader,
Muslim cleric Abu Bakar Bashir.
Bashir himself spoke with fighting words only last week. "I
defend Islam. Now it is up to the Indonesian government, police
and people to also defend Islam, or to choose to defend America,"
he was quoted as saying in Jakarta on Thursday.
With no immediate claim of responsibility for the Bali bombs
and the inferno that engulfed the Sari nightspot, pinning the
blame on religious extremists risks ignoring other suspects in
the volatile Indonesian archipelago.
"There are lingering doubts about the causes of the explosions
but I have to say at the moment the balance of the evidence
appears to point in the direction of terrorism," Michael
McKinley, a lecturer in international politics at Australian
National University, told Sky Australia television.
The strike could be aimed at destabilizing Indonesian
President Megawati Soekarnoputri, he said. The president has a
tentative grip on power as a woman in the world's most populous
Muslim country and is opposed even by the speaker of parliament.
McKinley and other analysts agree the most likely perpetrator
is a group linked to or inspired by bin Laden's al-Qaeda.
"There is no doubt that we all underestimated the extent to
which militant organizations cooperate in Southeast Asia," Alan
Dupont, fellow of fellow of the Strategic and Defense Study
Center at the Australia National University, said in an interview
just before the Bali bombs.
"Al-Qaeda cells are popping up like mushrooms...," he said,
citing, among others, planned attacks on Singapore that were
thwarted last December.
Al-Qaeda operatives have trained members of the radical Abu
Sayyaf group, which spreads violence in the southern Philippines
and is named after an Afghan mujahideen warrior leader of the
anti-Soviet war days.
In June, the United States took into custody an Arab, Omar al-
Faruq, who was arrested in Indonesia on suspicion of being a
senior al-Qaeda operative for the region. At least one other
leader, an Indonesian known as Hambali, is at large and the
United States fears he could be a moving force behind any strike.
"This is a very significant development because Bali has been
one place spared the violence in the rest of Indonesia," said
Tan.
Until now, mainly Hindu Bali with its luxury resorts and
picture-postcard beaches has seemed like another world, escaping
the religious and political violence that periodically erupts
across the predominantly Muslim archipelago.
"It (the attack) coincides with reports that al-Qaeda has
decentralized to leave local radical groups to take on the
Americans," Tan said. "Given the current situation within al-
Qaeda, this seems to be their modus operandi. It may well be that
local radicals have decided to take advantage of the situation."
McKinley echoed the view that al-Qaeda is happy to leave
radical offshoots, or extremist groups whose only connection is a
convergence of views, to carry the torch while bin Laden and
other leaders are pinned down by a manhunt around Afghanistan.
"It could quite possibly be some of these very small groups
who are known to be highly dedicated and they might have been
able to coordinate this sort of attack," said McKinley.
The violence is not limited to Southeast Asia.
An explosion ripped through a French supertanker off Yemen
last Sunday; reports have differed over whether the ship came
under attack or was the victim of an accident. After a U.S.
Marine was killed and another wounded in Kuwait last week, a
local al-Qaeda-style ring was under investigation.
The scale of the Bali destruction on the second anniversary of
the attack on the USS Cole in Yemen, the huge death toll and the
clear targeting of Westerners mean the bombing is unprecedented
in a region known for death and disaster.