Top 5 Foreign Threats To National Security
Jan 1, 2014 1 Comment Infidel Alie
Excerpted from Defcon Hill: Obama and his national security team are facing a number of security threats in the New Year.
From turmoil in Afghanistan to the growth of al Qaeda cells, defense
and intelligence officials are grappling with a host of challenges.
Here are the top five threats facing the nation in 2014.
AFGHANISTAN
The Pentagon and Afghan President Hamid Karzai are at odds over the
terms of a bilateral security agreement that would set the ground rules
for U.S. forces after 2014.
U.S. officials pressed Karzai to ratify the pact by the end of 2013, but backed down over concerns that a deal might collapse.
President Obama is considering a complete withdrawal from
Afghanistan, but many fear the “zero option” would lead to a repeat of
Iraq, where the lack of U.S. forces allowed for a resurgence of al Qaeda
and a wave sectarian violence against Iraqi forces and civilians.
Defense officials also fear that the Taliban could quickly return to power.
A recent assessment by U.S. intelligence officials on postwar
Afghanistan, first reported by The Washington Post, predicted the
Taliban would become increasingly influential in Afghanistan, even if
the U.S. leaves several thousand troops behind for training after 2014.
SYRIA
Concern is also mounting in Washington about the rise of al Qaeda in war-torn Syria.
Most recently, the group’s Iraqi cell and offshoots in Syria have
united into the Islamic State of Iraq and Levant. The White House and
intelligence officials say the group aspires to hit the U.S. and allied
targets in the West.
There are also signs that militant Islamist groups have gained the upper hand in Syria’s civil war.
The unexpected departure of Gen. Salim Idris, head of the secular
U.S.-backed Syrian Military Council, “is a big problem” for
administration officials who saw the group as the legitimate successor
to President Bashar Assad, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said last
month.
Washington was recently forced to suspend aid shipments to Syrian rebel
groups after members of the Islamic Front took over several warehouses
in northern Syria, raising the possibility that the U.S. might have to
reassess its strategy.
RESURGENT AL QAEDA
Al Qaeda’s resurgence hasn’t been limited to Syria and the Mideast.
The group’s Yemeni faction, dubbed al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula
(AQAP), and the North African affiliate, known as al Qaeda in the
Islamic Maghreb (AQIM), arethe two most dangerous and most active terror
cells looking to strike inside the United States.
The State Department in August was forced to shutter 19 embassies
across the Middle East and North Africa in response to an AQAP plot that
was picked up by U.S. intelligence.
Most recently, fighters from the Yemeni branch launched a deadly
suicide bombing in the country’s capitol of Sanaa, targeting Yemen’s
Defense Ministry.
In Africa, meanwhile, AQIM leaders have strengthened their ties to
local terror groups like Al Shabaab and the Nigerian-based terror group
Boko Haram. Keep Reading
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