The Jerusalem Post, Oct. 21, 2008
Fundamentally Freund: The growing al-Qaida threat to Israel
By Michael Freund
By all accounts, the once vaunted terrorist organization known as al-Qaida now finds itself largely on the run.
In places as far afield as Iraq, Somalia and Yemen, the Islamist terror network has suffered painful setbacks in its deadly campaign for world hegemony. Its redoubts are under attack, its ideology is increasingly discredited and it has little to show for its efforts beyond a gruesome trail of murder and mayhem.
But here in the heart of the Middle East, right under Israel\'s nose, Osama Bin Laden\'s henchmen are busy setting up shop in Gaza virtually unmolested.
Indeed, the growing presence of al-Qaida offshoots along Israel\'s southern border is quite possibly one of the most ominous, yet least discussed threats, currently facing the Jewish state, and it is time we started taking this danger more seriously.
Earlier this month, on October 6, a shadowy group calling itself the "Hizbullah Brigades in Palestine" attempted to fire a rocket at Sderot which failed to reach its target. The previously unknown faction is reported to be one of at least a dozen al-Qaida-inspired radical Islamic terror cells that have sprouted up in Gaza in the past two years (Yediot Aharonot, October 17).
THESE GROUPS, with names such as "the Sword of Islam," "the Army of Islam" and "Soldiers of Allah," reject Hamas\'s occasional tactical decisions to forge cease-fire agreements with Israel and instead call for uncompromising confrontation with the Zionists.
In the past four months alone, these al-Qaida affiliates have fired 21 rockets and 18 mortar shells from Gaza at Israel, and they have planted explosive devices near the security fence in an attempt to kill and maim Israeli soldiers.
They have not shied away from trying to hit Western targets, too.
In January, during US President George W. Bush\'s visit to Israel, "the Army of Believers - al-Qaida in Palestine" attacked the American International School in Gaza twice in a three-day period (Reuters, January 12).
And in July, the police announced that they had arrested six people, including two Israeli Arabs, with links to al-Qaida who had plotted earlier this year to assassinate Bush during his return visit to take part in Israel\'s 60th anniversary celebrations (Associated Press, July 18).
Clearly, Osama\'s minions in Gaza are stepping up their activity as part of their ambitious plan to rid the Middle East of any Western or Jewish presence.
BUT JUST how exactly did they manage to take root in the area and plant a new network of terror?
The growing al-Qaida presence in Gaza is a direct consequence of Israel\'s August 2005 withdrawal and the security vacuum that it created. Just a few weeks after the IDF retreat was complete, Maj.-Gen. Aharon (Zeevi) Farkash, head of IDF Military Intelligence, told a Tel Aviv University audience that al-Qaida had exploited the chaos along the Egyptian-Gaza border to move operatives into the area. "Al-Qaida is in Gaza," Farkash said (Yediot Aharonot, Sept. 29, 2005).
In an interview several months later, Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas concurred, telling the London-based Al-Hayat newspaper that, "We have signs about the presence of al-Qaida in Gaza and th