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 You are in: Under Secretary for Management > Bureau of Diplomatic Security > News from the Bureau of Diplomatic Security > Bureau of Diplomatic Security: Testimonies, Speeches, and Remarks > 2004 

The Nexus Between the Global War on Terrorism, Soft Targets, and Energy Security

Ambassador Francis X. Taylor, Assistant Secretary for Diplomatic Security and Director, Office of Foreign Missions
Keynote Speech Before the Energy Security Council
Dallas, Texas
April 5, 2004

Good morning. It's a pleasure to be here this morning. I'm accustomed to talking to the troops in the morning, of course, from my active duty time. And now that I run a police agency, a law enforcement agency, a security agency, I have a lot of young folks and I like wake them up in the morning with a rousing good morning.

It's a pleasure to be here. As Mike (Evanoff, Executive Director of OSAC) mentioned, this whole notion of a public-private partnership is an important one, particularly in the current threat environment that we are all experiencing.

Sharing intelligence and information is critical to winning the war on terrorism. This was never so evident as in the period following September the 11th and the information has to be shared with all the different entities affected by what is going on in the world today.

The U.S. Government must share its information as much as it can with private businesses just as businesses must work together to exchange information and intelligence with each other and with the U.S. Government.

As we have continued to harden government facilities overseas, primarily our diplomatic establishments, and reduce the vulnerability of American diplomats and their families, a trend that began with the embassy bombings in 1998 in East Africa, terrorists have sought other targets for their terrorist activities. Many of you represent those targets because increasingly they are identifying American businesses operating overseas as what they consider soft targets.

The battleground, tactics, and philosophy of the war we have been fighting have changed for both sides. I'd like to talk to you today about three fundamental changes we have seen since the war on terrorism began two and one-half years ago.

Immediately following 9/11, our focus, indeed the focus of most of the international community, was on Al Qaeda. We are now seeing that focus change, and let me take a moment to describe certainly what I think has been the most—the greatest—war our nation has ever been called to fight, and that is the war against terrorism. President Bush announced on the 20th of September that this would be the most unusual war in our nation's history.

As a former military person, we generally think of warfare as something done by our Department of Defense alone. Our President said that this would be a war that would use all of our instruments of national power. It would use our diplomacy, our intelligence, our law enforcement, our financial arms and certainly the military to conduct an all-out assault against terrorist groups operating against the free world.

But it would not only include us. It would also include our coalition partners, more than 150 nations that joined the coalition against terror after the events of 9/11. Arguably, that has been most effective weapon against al Qaeda. We have captured or killed 70 percent of the al Qaeda leadership.

We have been very successful in Afghanistan, primarily in ridding al Qaeda of its organizational base, its training apparatus, and the place where most of these plots were launched. We have taken away an ally in Pakistan in terms of Pakistan being a conduit into Afghanistan and a covert supporter of the Taliban and therefore al Qaeda.

Al Qaeda as we knew it before 9/11 is no longer the same organization. Our success, however, has created other problems in the sense that al Qaeda as an organization is no more. Al Qaeda is no longer this hierarchical organization being run by Bin Laden's own training centers in Afghanistan. It is changing because of what I call the phenomenon of Islamic extremism. This was boldly represented by bin Laden and al Qaeda, who has begun to be represented by a political philosophy that is spreading far beyond those individuals who served in Afghanistan with the Islamic resistance and who have trained at the al Qaeda training camps that have come to be known as the al Qaeda group.

This phenomenon of Islamic extremism, and let me be careful to mention that I'm not talking about Muslims who practice Islamic faith fundamentally. There is nothing wrong with practicing one's religion in a fundamental way, but what I am discussing when I talk of the "ism" of Islamic extremism is the political philosophy that says that in order to defend Islam as a religion and Islamic people around the world, one has to impose, essentially, a 14th and 15th Century nihilistic political structure over the people of the Islamic world to defend them against the people of the West.

And that philosophy is being spread in many of the Islamic schools, in many of the mosques all over the world. There is no part of the world where there aren't people who believe in this extreme ideology and have worked to spread that ideology among their adherents, however small they may be in our country and in many countries around the world.

There was, just after 9/11, a show on CNN that went to the northwest frontier province of Pakistan. The focus was on the madras’ of Pakistan, which in Pakistan if you are a parent and you want your children to get some education, is the only way that you generally can do this unless you're a member of the elite.

They interviewed an 8-year-old young man who had spent 3 years in a madras in the northwest frontier province. What was most chilling for me was the fact that this young man, who had never been out of the northwest frontier province and had never met an American, at age 8 wanted to grow up and do jihad against Americans.

It was a part of who he was. He had been taught this kind-of thing and that is happening in thousands of place across the globe. That is the "ism" of Islamic extremism that is now coming to fruition around the world and generating the warriors that we see in places like Madrid recently, where most of the people involved in the attack in Madrid were unknown to Spanish or international law enforcement as being members of the radical Islamic movement around the world.

So that's the first thing that has happened since 9/11. Our success against al Qaeda has brought on a new group of people that I believe will take a generation to be (eradicated), this philosophy is almost like communism or fascism or totalitarianism in that it becomes its own kind of body politic that we have to address in ways other than through military force.

The second change we've seen is one that affects all of you, and that is a shift in targeting. As we have hardened our political and diplomatic and military facilities overseas, terrorists are striking at soft targets, targets with strong symbolic value, economic or capitalist targets, and targets guaranteed to bring many fatalities.

You all recognize this. A quick glance at your schedule over the next 2 days shows sessions on surveillance detection and vehicle bomb vulnerabilities and facility security. The Bali nightclub bombing heralded this new targeting mindset. The J.W. Marriott in Jakarta, the hotel attack in Casablanca, the HSB Bank and British consulate in Istanbul, the trains in Madrid all represent targets of opportunity.

All of these are economic targets or key government targets. These attacks were calculated to intimidate the population and elicit a fear reaction and, increasingly, to influence politics. That, in my view, is even more sinister that our adversaries now believe that they can influence the political process of democratic countries.

Since 9/11, the terrorists have adapted their tactics and techniques to fit whatever environment they are confronted with during their attack planning. Take Madrid as an example. It is fundamentally different from the 9/11 attacks. Yes, the numbers of people killed and injured are equally horrific in each circumstance, but Madrid represents a very different approach. An attack just days before a hotly contested election pitting an incumbent government supporting United States actions in Iraq versus a contender that did not.

Was the purpose of bombing four commuter trains solely to kill innocent people? Or was the true purpose to influence the election? Because if it was, it seems to have worked, hasn’t it? Just as no one could have imagined on September the 10th that 19 hijackers would seize control of four airplanes and use them as weapons of mass destruction, no one expected terrorists to attack commuter trains in Spain last month for the purpose of influencing an election.

Al Qaeda and its adherents again are evolving. Now we are seeing al Qaeda employ loose affiliations with terrorist organizations to achieve their aims. They are employing unknown people in their plans. This makes vigilance on all of our parts even more important.

The third change we are seeing is the phenomenon of local linkages. While terrorism has been with us for hundreds of years, the global war on terrorism obviously is a recent one. While it is the shocking events of 9/11 that precipitated a global effort to deal with the issue of terrorism, I think that one reason why the global war on terrorism has been the success that it has been thus far is the ability of people to connect instantaneously across the world using technology, technology that did not exist a few decades ago.

Fax machines, internet, cell phones, and such other technology has enhanced our ability to communicate globally. It is also the same technology that has allowed terrorists to strike effectively. Just as technology allows a soldier on the battlefield to pass intelligence to a law enforcement officer thousands of miles away so that an arrest can be effected and another tragedy averted, technology also allowed hijackers, the 9/11 hijackers, to pinpoint the exact coordinates of the World Trade Center, enter that data into the cockpit data recorder, and steer that plane unerringly into the side of the building.

Technology is allowing al Qaeda to proselytize its message far and wide across the internet. Al Qaeda is able to reach out to people who have never been to Afghanistan or Iraq. The same technology that allows two 6th grade pen pals on different sides of the world to share with one another their cultures and lives through word and picture is also being used by terrorists to share knowledge, plans and ideology.

I am obviously not saying that technology is bad or that we should return to the pre-Information Age. I don't think that would serve much good even if it were possible. But I am saying that technology and the Information Age allows global linkages to be formed. This means that al Qaeda and other Islamic extremists are able to connect with other terrorist organizations such as the JI in Southeast Asia or ETA in Spain and franchise their ideas.

Does it matter that it wasn't an al Qaeda operative that set off the bombs in the trains in Spain or blew up the Marriott in Jakarta? Probably not. The reaction was still the same. Fear, intimidation and scores of innocent people killed.

What does that mean for members of the Energy Security Council? It means that al Qaeda and Islamic extremists or, more generally, terrorism is everywhere and anywhere. You could be a target today. But your soft profile businesses remain vulnerable and you, as representatives of the energy sector, are very attractive targets. Energy, particularly fuel, is the lifeblood of western society. What hurts Exxon Mobile or BP also hurts the United States and Europe.

Saudi and other areas in the Middle East and South Asia will remain high value targets for terrorists. The Saudis turned a blind eye until last May when they, too, became the targets of a terrorist attack in their own backyard. Yet, al Qaeda is making mistakes and from mistakes come opportunities.

Each time Islamic extremists hit civilian targets, every time their actions cause innocents to die, they are actually hurting their own cause. Your government is doing everything it can to keep Americans safe at home and abroad. Later you will hear from the Department of Homeland Security who will tell you what actions we are taking domestically, but I will talk to you about what we are doing overseas.

We are identifying the front line states in the war on terrorism, identifying their vulnerabilities and providing training to their civilian law enforcement and security forces through the Antiterrorism Assistance Program, and we have had tremendous success with this.

Colombia's anti-kidnapping units rescued three American hostages last year. The first responder crime scene investigators that responded to the Marriott bombing in Jakarta were graduates of our Antiterrorism Assistance Program. Diplomatic Security’s regional security officers are working with those foreign police and securities agencies overseas to share information.

We are aggressively inaugurating OSAC country councils around the world and we hope to have 100 by the end of the year. And our RSOs are always available to you as an in-country resource.

Iraq represents a different paradigm for energy security. In any other country, at any other post, if we had the same situation we now have in Iraq and will likely face after July 1 with the hand-over of power, we would have ordered departure and evacuated our mission by now.

Iraq represents a call to fanatics to come and serve the cause of Islamic extremism. Iraq is their crucible, the place where fledgling terrorists can cut their teeth, practice with explosives and go to war training for future battles on their own ground.

I am reminded of the letter that (Abu Mussab) al-Zakawi sent to bin Laden talking about what al Qaeda should do in Iraq to foment civil war between the Sunni Shiites and the Kurds to undermine U.S. foreign policy. Iraq is the new battleground for the global war on terrorism.

But the challenges there notwithstanding, we cannot fail either in Afghanistan or Iraq. They represent the cornerstones of our current war on terrorism. If either of those countries fall, our fight to create a safer and more secure world for our children and for our children's children will certainly be significantly damaged.

I do not mean to imply that this is a fight we will win quickly. We are dealing with generations of problems that have coalesced into al Qaeda and other Islamic extremist organizations, and it may take us generations to defeat those organizations and remove them.

Our enemy is like a seven-headed hydra. We can kill one head, like al Qaeda, and another head representing another terrorism organization will take its place. This is why military force alone will not win this fight.

As President Bush said, it is the combined efforts of our military, diplomatic, economic, political, and law enforcement efforts that will win this war. Your actions daily represent the economic effort. So what you do also helps us to fight the global war on terrorism.

And it is our pleasure to work with you and your colleagues across the world to ensure that the economic engine that serves this nation is robust and protected as we conduct our business around the world. Without the economic arm, we cannot be successful in defeating our adversaries.

It is my pleasure to be here with you today. I am happy in the next 15 minutes to take your questions on this or any other area that I can address. Thank you very much.


Released on April 28, 2004

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