Order Code RL32759
CRS Report for Congress
Received through the CRS Web
Al Qaeda: Statements
and Evolving Ideology
Updated June 20, 2005
Christopher M. Blanchard
Analyst in Middle Eastern Affairs
Foreign Affairs, Defense, and Trade Division
Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress

Al Qaeda: Statements and Evolving Ideology
Summary
Osama Bin Laden and the Al Qaeda terrorist network have conducted a
sophisticated public relations and media campaign over the last ten years. Terrorism
analysts believe that these messages have been designed to elicit psychological
reactions and communicate complex political messages to a global audience as well
as to specific populations in the Islamic world, the United States, Europe, and Asia.
Some officials and analysts believe that Al Qaeda’s messages contain signals that
inform and instruct operatives to prepare for and carry out new attacks. Bin Laden
has referred to his public statements as important primary sources for parties seeking
to understand Al Qaeda’s ideology and political demands. Global counterterrorism
operations in the aftermath of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks appear to have
limited Bin Laden’s ability to provide command and control leadership to Al Qaeda
operatives and affiliated groups. However, he and other Al Qaeda leaders continue
to release statements that sanction, encourage, and provide guidance for future
terrorist operations. Iraq, in particular, has become a focal point for Al Qaeda’s
rhetoric, as recent statements have underscored Al Qaeda’s interest in Iraq and
support for the ongoing insurgency.
The release of new statements by Osama Bin Laden and his deputy Ayman Al
Zawahiri in late 2004 and early 2005 rekindled public debate surrounding Al Qaeda’s
ideology, motives, and future plans to attack the United States. The ideological
content and highly political tone of the recent statements have led some terrorism
analysts to speculate that the messages may signal a renewed attempt by Bin Laden
and his associates to create a lasting leadership role for themselves and the Al Qaeda
organization as the vanguard of an emerging, loosely organized international jihadist
movement. Others have argued that the presently limited operational capabilities of
Al Qaeda’s central leaders have inspired them to revive ideological outreach efforts.
Many observers believe that the group’s primary goal remains carrying out terrorist
attacks against the United States and its allies around the world, with particular
emphasis on targeting economic infrastructure and fomenting unrest in Iraq, Saudi
Arabia, Pakistan, and Afghanistan.
This report reviews Al Qaeda’s use of public statements from the mid-1990s to
the present and analyzes the evolving ideological and political content of those
statements. The report focuses primarily on statements made by Osama Bin Laden,
but also considers: statements made by his deputy Ayman Al Zawahiri, who some
experts consider to be Al Qaeda’s chief ideologue; remarks by Abu Musab Al
Zarqawi, who has been recognized by Osama Bin Laden as an Al Qaeda ally and the
leader of “mujahideen” operations in Iraq; and a May 2005 statement from Al Qaeda
military leader Sayf Al Adl. The report will be updated periodically. For background
on the Al Qaeda terrorist network, see CRS Report RS22049: Al Qaeda: Profile and
Threat Assessment
.

Contents
Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
Al Qaeda: Statements 1994-2001 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Founding Principles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Declaration of Jihad . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
“Clash of Civilizations” . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Al Qaeda Post-9/11 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
“The Goals of the New York Strike” . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
Al Qaeda Statements in 2004-2005 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
Iraq and Al Qaeda’s Ideology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
The Three Foundations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
Al Qaeda on Democracy and Reform . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
A Strategic Framework . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Implications for Al Qaeda’s Evolving Ideology and Strategy . . . . . . . . . . . 10
Al Qaeda’s Audiences . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
Pragmatic Messianism . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
Conclusion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
Al Qaeda and the Jihadist International . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13

Al Qaeda: Statements
and Evolving Ideology
Introduction
Osama Bin Laden and the Al Qaeda terrorist network have conducted a
sophisticated public relations and media campaign over the last ten years using a
series of faxed statements, audio recordings, video appearances, and Internet
postings.1 Terrorism analysts believe that these messages have been designed to elicit
psychological reactions and communicate complex political messages to a global
audience as well as to specific populations in the Islamic world, the United States,
Europe, and Asia. Bin Laden and his deputies have personally stated their belief in
the importance of harnessing the power of international and regional media for Al
Qaeda’s benefit, and Al Qaeda’s central leadership structure has featured a dedicated
media and communications committee tasked with issuing reports and statements in
support of the group’s operations.2 Some officials and analysts believe that Al
Qaeda’s messages contain signals that inform and instruct operatives to prepare for
and carry out new attacks.
Bin Laden has referred to his public statements as important primary sources for
parties seeking to understand Al Qaeda’s ideology and political demands.3 Through
his public statements over the last ten years, Bin Laden has portrayed himself both
as the leader of a consistent ideological movement and a strategic commander willing
to tailor his violent messages and acts to respond to specific political circumstances
and to influence specific audiences and events. Global counterterrorism operations
in the aftermath of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks appear to have limited
Bin Laden’s ability to provide command and control leadership to Al Qaeda
operatives and affiliated groups. However he and other Al Qaeda leaders continue
to release statements that sanction, encourage, and provide guidance for future
terrorist operations.
1 Unless indicated, all translated citations are derived from “Compilation of Usama Bin
Ladin Statements 1994 - January 2004,” FBIS Report - GMP20040209000243, Feb. 9, 2004.
2 Recent Al Qaeda messages have been produced by a dedicated studio, known as the Al
Sahab.Institute for Media Productions.
3 For example, in Bin Laden’s October 2004 pre-U.S. presidential election message he
referred to specific pre-9/11 interviews with a variety of media outlets as previous
indications of Al Qaeda’s ideology and demands.

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Al Qaeda: Statements 1994-2001
Founding Principles. Osama Bin Laden’s experiences as a logistical
coordinator and financier for the Afghan and Arab resistance to the Soviet invasion
of Afghanistan during the 1980s are thought to have provided the backdrop for his
belief that Muslims could take effective military action inspired by select Islamic
principles. His exposure to the teachings of conservative Islamist scholars in Saudi
Arabia and his work with Arab militants in Afghanistan provided the theological and
ideological basis for his belief in the desirability of puritanical Salafist Islamic reform
in Muslim societies and the necessity of armed resistance in the face of perceived
aggression — a concept Al Qaeda has since associated with a communally-binding
Islamic principle known as “defensive jihad.”4 After the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait in
1990, Bin Laden expressed these views in opposition to the introduction of foreign
military forces to Saudi Arabia. Bin Laden characterized the presence of U.S. and
other non-Muslim troops in Saudi Arabia after the 1991 Gulf War as cause for
renewed commitment to defensive jihad and the promotion of violence against the
Saudi government and the United States.
Declaration of Jihad. In the early 1990s, Bin Laden emphasized his desire
to secure the withdrawal of U.S. and other foreign troops from Saudi Arabia at all
costs. Bin Laden criticized the Saudi royal family publicly and alleged that their
invitation of foreign troops to the Arabian peninsula constituted an affront to the
sanctity of the birthplace of Islam and a betrayal of the global Islamic community.5
Finding his rhetoric and efforts rebuffed by Saudi leaders, Bin Laden was expelled
from Saudi Arabia and his ire increasingly focused on the United States. Following
a period of exile in Sudan and Afghanistan in which his radical views sharpened, Bin
Laden issued a declaration of jihad against the United States in 1996 that signaled his
emergence as an internationally recognizable figure and offered a full account of his
main critiques of an enemy he described as the “alliance of Jews, Christians, and
their agents.”6 Adopting the sensitive historical and religious imagery of Islamic
resistance to the European Crusades, Bin Laden condemned the U.S. military
presence in Saudi Arabia, criticized the international sanctions regime on Iraq, and
voiced his opposition to U.S. support for Israel.7 The declaration also cited
4 For more on Bin Laden and defensive jihad, see James Turner Johnson, “Jihad and Just
War,” First Things, June/July 2002, pp. 12-14. Bin Laden has identified Salafist thinkers
such as his former mentor Abdallah Azzam, Hamas founder Ahmed Yasin, World Trade
Center bombing conspirator Omar Abdel Rahman, Saudi dissident clerics Salman Al Awdah
and Safar Al Hawali, and 13th century Islamic scholar Ibn Taymiyah as prominent
ideological influences. For more on Salafism see CRS Report RS21695, The Islamic
Traditions of Wahhabism and Salafiyya.

5 Robert Fisk, “Interview With Saudi Dissident Bin Ladin” Independent (London), July 10,
1996.
6 “Declaration of Jihad Against the Americans Occupying the Land of the Two Holy
Mosques,” Al Islah (London), Sept. 2, 1996.
7 At the time, Bin Laden expressed no solidarity or sympathy for Saddam Hussein or his
regime, explaining — “We, as Muslims, do not like the Iraqi regime but we think that the
Iraqi people and their children are our brothers and we care about their future.” Fisk,
(continued...)

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“massacres in Tajikistan, Burma, Kashmir, Assam, the Philippines, Fatani [as
transliterated], Ogaden, Somalia, Eritrea, Chechnya, and Bosnia-Herzegovina” as
examples of a growing war on Islam for which the United States should be punished
(Bin Laden did not recognize the humanitarian aspects of U.S. efforts in Bosnia and
Somalia explicitly).8
“Clash of Civilizations”. Following his declaration of jihad on the United
States, Bin Laden released a series of statements that expanded the vision and scope
of his self-declared conflict with the United States and specified his political
prescriptions for the reformation of Islamic societies. Echoing U.S. academic
Samuel Huntington’s theory on the impending clash of civilizations,9 Bin Laden
repeated his characterization of a so-called “new crusade led by America against the
Islamic nations,” and emphasized his belief that an emerging conflict between Islam
and the West would be fought “between the Islamic world and the Americans and
their allies.”10 Bin Laden argued that the Islamic world should see itself as one
seamless community, or umma, and that Muslims were obliged to unite and defend
themselves. Turning his focus to the internal politics of the Islamic world, Bin Laden
urged Muslims to find a leader to unite them and establish a “pious caliphate” that
would be governed by Islamic law and follow Islamic principles of finance and social
conduct.11 Bin Laden repeatedly argued that Afghanistan had become a model
Islamic state under his Taliban hosts and used religious rhetoric to solicit support for
the Taliban and Al Qaeda.12
Although he possesses no traditional Islamic religious credentials or authority,
Bin Laden issued a fatwa, or religious edict, in 1998 that claimed that the United
States had made “a clear declaration of war on God, his messenger, and Muslims”13
through its policies in the Islamic world. The fatwa made use of the principle of
defensive jihad to argue that U.S. aggression made armed resistance and the targeting
of American civilians and military personnel incumbent upon all Muslims. The
statement also announced the formation of “The World Islamic Front for Jihad
against the Jews and Crusaders,” which consisted of a tacit alliance between Bin
Laden, his supporters, and a number of regional Islamic militant groups. Following
Al Qaeda’s bombings of the U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania (1998) and the
7 (...continued)
“Interview With Saudi Dissident Bin Ladin” Independent (London), July 10, 1996. op. cit.
8 “Declaration of Jihad,” Al Islah (London), Sept. 2, 1996. op. cit.
9 See Samuel P. Huntington, The Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of World Order,
Simon and Schuster, 1998.
10 “Correspondent Meets With Opposition Leader Bin Ladin,” Channel 4 (London) Feb. 20,
1997.
11 “Pakistan Interviews Usama Bin Ladin,” (Islamabad, Pakistan), Mar. 18, 1997.
12 “Website Publishes Bin Ladin ‘Speech’” Internet Supporters of Shariah, June 22, 2000;
and “Al Jazirah Program on Bin Laden” Al Jazirah Television (Doha, Qatar), June 10, 1999.
13 “Text of Fatwa Urging Jihad Against Americans,” Al Quds Al Arabi (London), Feb. 23,
1998. The fatwa argued that defensive jihad was necessary “in order to liberate the al-Aqsa
Mosque [Jerusalem] and the holy mosque [Mecca] from their grip [the U.S. and Israel].”

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U.S.S. Cole in Yemen(2000), Bin Laden refused to take direct responsibility for the
attacks, but claimed that he approved of the strikes and shared the motivations of the
individuals who had carried them out. Bin Laden argued that the bombings should
be seen by Americans and the world as retribution for U.S. policy and compared
them to alleged “massacres” of Palestinians in historic cases familiar to many
Muslims and Arabs.14
Al Qaeda Post-9/11
Osama Bin Laden’s longstanding threats to strike the United States came to
fruition on September 11, 2001, and Bin Laden and others subsequently issued
several statements confirming Al Qaeda’s responsibility for the attacks on New York
and Washington. Following an established pattern, Bin Laden acknowledged his
support for the hijackers and repeated his claim that strikes on American targets
should be viewed by Muslims and Americans as a defensively motivated response
to perceived American aggression in the Islamic world. Statements attributed to Bin
Laden promised further attacks and sought to justify Al Qaeda’s targeting of
American civilians by arguing that American society was morally corrupt and that
American civilians should be held accountable for the policies of their democratically
elected government.15
“The Goals of the New York Strike”
Several Al Qaeda statements have addressed the motives for the 1998 Embassy
bombings and other terrorist operations, but relatively few statements have been
made regarding Al Qaeda’s strategic goals in planning and executing the September
11, 2001, attacks on New York and Washington. A text attributed to Al Qaeda
military commander Sayf Al Adl released in May 2005 identifies three primary
objectives for the September 11 attacks.16 According to Al Adl, Al Qaeda’s “main
objective” in perpetrating the September 11 attacks was to carry out a damaging
strike against the United States in retaliation for its perceived aggression in the
Islamic world. Al Adl indicates that in the opinion of Al Qaeda’s leadership, this
primary objective was “partially achieved,” although “other strikes” would have had
14 Bin Laden specifically cited “Sabra, Shatila, Deir Yasin, Qana, Hebron and elsewhere.”
“Al Jazirah Program on Bin Laden” Al Jazirah Television (Doha, Qatar), June 10, 1999.
15 “It is a fundamental principle of any democracy that the people choose their leaders, and
as such, approve and are party to the actions of their elected leaders... By electing these
leaders, the American people have given their consent to the incarceration of the Palestinian
people, the demolition of Palestinian homes and the slaughter of the children of Iraq. This
is why the American people are not innocent. The American people are active members in
all these crimes.” “Statement From Shaykh Usama Bin Ladin, May God Protect Him, and
Al Qaeda Organization,” Al Qal’ah (Internet), Oct. 14, 2002.
16 Although portions of the text may reflect revised perspectives and the benefit of hindsight,
its key statements of intent correspond to elements of prior statements by Osama Bin Laden
and other Al Qaeda figures. “Detained Al-Qa’ida Leader Sayf al-Adl Chronicles
Al-Zarqawi’s Rise in Organization,” FBIS Report - GMP2005060637100, May 21, 2005.

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a greater impact if they had been successful. However, Al Adl does not identify
specific planned attacks that may have been disrupted since September 2001.
Al Qaeda’s second objective, as identified by Al Adl, was to signal and support
the “emergence of a new virtuous leadership” dedicated to opposing “the
Zionist-Anglo-Saxon-Protestant coalition” that Al Qaeda blames for a litany of social
and political ills in the Islamic world. Analysts have associated this stated objective
with Al Qaeda leaders’ views of themselves as the vanguard of a broader global
Islamic movement and their desire to inspire political upheaval and change across the
Islamic world. The third and “ultimate objective,” according to Al Adl, “was to
prompt [the United States] to come out of its hole.” Al Adl claims that Al Qaeda
wanted to provoke the United States into attacking areas of the Islamic world
associated with the organization and its affiliates. In doing so, Al Adl claims, Al
Qaeda hoped to make it easier to attack elements of U.S. power and to build its
“credibility in front of [the Islamic] nation and the beleaguered people of the world.”
Reflecting on the subsequent U.S. response to the attacks, Bin Laden and others
have described the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq as new “crusades” and
highlighted both the considerable economic impact of the 9/11 attacks and the
subsequent costs of the U.S. military response as indications of Al Qaeda’s
effectiveness. Al Adl and others have conceded that the attacks on New York and
Washington were not totally successful, while arguing that the September 11 attack
“was enough to prompt the Americans to carry out the anticipated response” —
namely direct military action within the Islamic world.17 Al Qaeda appears to have
been less successful in using the purportedly hoped for U.S. military response to
“help the [Islamic] nation to wake from its slumber,” as it claims to have planned.
Both Bin Laden and his deputy Ayman Al Zawahiri have criticized the population
and governments of the Islamic world for failing to answer their calls to arms and for
cooperating with the United States and its allies. These criticisms have been coupled
with renewed calls for armed “resistance” against the United States and its allies from
Al Zawahiri, Al Adl, Al Zarqawi, and others.
Al Qaeda Statements in 2004-2005
Over the last year and a half, Bin Laden has addressed the governments and
citizens of Europe and the United States directly in an effort to discourage support
for their respective foreign policies in the Islamic world. In April 2004, Bin Laden
offered Europeans a “truce” if they agreed to abandon their support for the United
States and their military commitments in Iraq and Afghanistan. The offer was
resoundingly rejected by European leaders and their citizens. In October 2004, on
the eve of the U.S. presidential election, Bin Laden made a similar statement in
which he urged Americans to reevaluate their policies toward the Islamic world and
threatened to bleed and bankrupt the United States. In late November 2004, Al
Zawahiri stated Al Qaeda’s intention to continue its jihad against the United States
17 In his May 2005 statement, Sayf Al Adl argues, “What we had wished for actually
happened. It was crowned by the announcement of Bush Jr. of his crusade against Islam and
Muslims everywhere.” FBIS Report - GMP2005060637100, May 21, 2005.

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indefinitely until its leaders deem “U.S. policy toward Muslims” to be
non-aggressive.
Two audio tapes released by Osama Bin Laden in December 2004 called for
continued attacks on U.S. forces and interests and provided further insight into Al
Qaeda’s ideology and political goals. Each message was addressed to a specific
audience and revealed Bin Laden’s perspectives on unfolding events in Iraq, Saudi
Arabia, and the Palestinian territories. The first tape, released on December 16,
2004, received media attention for its praise of an Al Qaeda-affiliated group’s attack
on the U.S. consulate in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia in early December 2004.18 The
remainder of the tape was devoted to delivering a litany of religiously based
criticisms of the Saudi royal family for its support for the United States and its
insufficient commitment to the implementation of Islamic law and moral principles.
In the tape, Bin Laden appealed directly to “the silent ulema” (religious scholars) and
business and community leaders in Saudi Arabia to withdraw their support for the
ruling Al Saud family.
Iraq and Al Qaeda’s Ideology. A second Bin Laden tape, released on
December 27, 2004, underscored Al Qaeda’s interest in Iraq and support for the
ongoing insurgency. In this recording, Bin Laden personally welcomed and endorsed
Jordanian-born terrorist leader Abu Musab Al Zarqawi as an Al Qaeda affiliate and
leader of Al Qaeda operations in Iraq.19 Bin Laden identified the insurgency in Iraq
as “a golden and unique opportunity” for jihadists to engage and defeat the United
States, and he characterized the insurgency in Iraq as the central battle in a “Third
World War, which the Crusader-Zionist coalition began against the Islamic nation.”20
Describing Baghdad as “the capital of the caliphate,” Bin Laden asserted that “jihad
in Palestine and Iraq today is a duty for the people of the two countries” and other
Muslims.
On a tactical level, Bin Laden has encouraged Islamist insurgents in Iraq to work
with “Socialist” groups (Baathists) and compared cooperation between Islamists and
Baathists to Arab and Persian collaboration against the Byzantine empire in the 7th
18 “Bin Ladin Contests Legality of Saudi Rulers, Praises Attack on US Consulate,” FBIS
Report - GMP20041216000222, December 16, 2004.
19 “Website Posts Full Version of New Audiotape Attributed to Bin Ladin,” FBIS Report -
FEA20041227000762, December 27, 2004. Bin Laden’s endorsement read, “It should be
known that Mujahid brother Abu-Mus’ab al-Zarqawi is the Amir of the Tanzim al-Qa’idah
fi Bilad al-Rafidayn [Al-Qa’ida Organization in the Land of the Two Rivers]. The brothers
in the group there should heed his orders and obey him in all that which is good.”
20 Bin Laden described the stakes of the confrontation between coalition and jihadist forces
in Iraq in the following terms: “The whole world is watching this war and the two
adversaries; the Islamic nation, on the one hand, and the United States and its allies on the
other. It is either victory and glory or misery and humiliation. The nation today has a very
rare opportunity to come out of the subservience and enslavement to the West and to smash
the chains with which the Crusaders have fettered it.” FBIS Report - FEA20041227000762,
December 27, 2004.

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and 8th centuries.21 Bin Laden has also encouraged Muslim Iraqis and non-Iraqis of
all ethnic and linguistic backgrounds to cooperate in opposing the Interim Iraqi
Government and coalition forces in Iraq. He has applied similar disregard for ethnic,
linguistic, and ideological differences in issuing condemnations of so-called
collaborators; identifying Arabs cooperating with Iraqi and coalition authorities as
equally guilty parties.22 On a strategic level, Bin Laden has employed well-known
Quranic injunctions against failing to contribute to “the cause of God” to appeal to
Muslims to support Al Qaeda and its jihadist affiliates in Iraq politically, financially,
and militarily.23
Subsequent statements attributed to Abu Musab Al Zarqawi and Al Qaeda
military leader Sayf Al Adl have underscored the importance of the conflict in Iraq
to the jihadist cause from Al Qaeda’s perspective. Both refer to Iraq as an
opportunity for the global jihadist movement to take advantage of insecurity in the
heart of the Arab world and to spread into neighboring areas. In May 2005, Al
Zarqawi reaffirmed his allegiance to Osama Bin Laden and reflected on the success
of insurgent operations in Iraq as a symbol of Al Qaeda’s success.24 Al Adl has
speculated that the ongoing violence in Iraq may spread into Syria and Lebanon,
which could give “the Islamic action a vast area of action and maneuvering” and help
it to attract “tremendous human and financial resources.” The expansion of violence
in the Middle East could also bring the jihadist movement close to “the border of
occupied Palestine” and into direct confrontation with Israel, according to Al Adl,
which, in his opinion, would further legitimize the jihadist cause and its supporters.
The Three Foundations. Al Qaeda’s strategic analysis and the operations
of its affiliates continue to be supported by centrally planned ideological outreach
activities. In a January 30, 2005 audiotape, for example, Ayman Al Zawahiri
identified “three foundations” of Al Qaeda’s political ideology and applied them to
events in Iraq and elsewhere.25 The three principles were repeated in a June 2005
video message from Al Zawahiri. Al Zawahiri, who is regarded as Al Qaeda’s chief
ideologue, described Al Qaeda’s core principles in sharp contrast to secular and
21 Bin Laden sanctioned cooperation with Baathists “despite our belief in the infidelity of
socialists.” “Usama Bin Ladin’s Message to Iraq,” Al Jazirah Television, Feb. 11, 2003.
22 “The Iraqi who is waging Jihad against the infidel Americans or Allawi’s renegade
government is our brother and companion, even if he was of Persian, Kurdish, or Tukomen
origin. The Iraqi who joins this renegade government to fight against the Mujahidin, who
resists occupation, is considered a renegade and one of the infidels, even if he were an Arab
from Rabi’ah or Mudar tribes.” FBIS Report - FEA20041227000762, December 27, 2004.
23 Bin Laden: “The one who stays behind and fails to join the Mujahidin when Jihad
becomes an individual duty commits a cardinal sin... The most pressing duty after faith is
repelling the aggressor enemy. This means that the nation should devote its resources, sons,
and money to fight the infidels and drive them out of its lands.” FBIS Report -
FEA20041227000762, December 27, 2004. See also the Quran - Al Tawbah, 9:42-72.
24 “Al-Zarqawi Addresses Letter to Bin Ladin on Al-Qa’im Battle, ‘Plan,’” FBIS Report -
GMP20050530549008, May 30, 2005.
25 “Al-Zawahiri Denounces US, Argues for Reign of Islamic Law and Caliphate, Jihad
Against Crusaders and Jews,” FBIS Report - GMP20050131000021, January 31, 2005.

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religious reform ideologies voiced by other Muslims as well as recent U.S. support
for democracy. This may signal an attempt by Al Qaeda’s leadership to renew and
clearly define its goals as a basis for attracting new recruits and inspiring new
affiliates. The “three foundations,” as outlined by Al Zawahiri are as follows:
! “The Quran-Based Authority to Govern.” According to Al
Zawahiri, Al Qaeda supports the creation of an Islamic state
governed solely by sharia law. Secular government or “man-made”
law is considered unacceptable and deemed contrary to Islamic faith.
! “The Liberation of the Homelands.” Al Zawahiri argued that
reforms and free elections will not be possible for Muslims without
first establishing “the freedom of the Muslim lands and their
liberation from every aggressor.” He also emphasized the
importance of establishing control over the Middle East’s energy
resources and described the Muslim world as “impotent and exposed
to the Israeli nuclear arsenal.”
! “The Liberation of the Human Being.” Al Zawahiri articulated a
vision of a contractual social relationship between Muslims and their
rulers that would permit people to choose and criticize their leaders
but also demand that Muslims resist and overthrow rulers who
violate Islamic laws and principles. He criticized hereditary
government and identified a need “to specify the power of the sharia
based judiciary, and insure that no one can dispose of the people’s
rights, except in accordance with this judiciary.”
Al Qaeda on Democracy and Reform. Osama Bin Laden and Abu Musab
Al Zarqawi have applied these and other similar principles to current issues of
democracy, reform, and conflict in Iraq, Saudi Arabia, and the Palestinian territories.
In both of his December 2004 statements, for example, Bin Laden clearly stated his
view that democracies, constitutional governments, and insufficiently Islamic
monarchies are equally unacceptable forms of governance for Islamic societies
because they empower human rulers and man-made legal systems rather than “the
law of God.”26 Al Zarqawi expanded on these sentiments in a January 2005
statement that characterized democracy as a rival “religion” to Islam and criticized
adherence to democratic principles such as freedom of speech and freedom of
religion as un-Islamic and tantamount to apostasy punishable by death.27 A statement
released by Al Zarqawi’s group following Iraq’s January 2005 election stated that,
26 For example, Bin Laden has linked his opposition to insufficiently Islamic governance
in Saudi Arabia to his view that under the Saudi monarchy, “absolute obedience and
supremacy are given to the king and his laws, and not to God’s religion.” FBIS Report -
GMP20041216000222, December 16, 2004.
27 “Abu Mus’ab Al-Zarqawi’s Message on Democracy, Iraqi Elections, Shiites,” FBIS
Report - GMP20050123000140. According to Bin Laden, Muslims have a right to
participate in the selection of their rulers only under certain “conditions,” namely the
absence of occupying foreign powers and the presence of candidates willing to rule solely
according to Islamic law. FBIS Report - FEA20041227000762, December 27, 2004.

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“we shall not accept the rule of anyone but that of God and His Prophet
[Mohammed].”28
Bin Laden’s December 2004 statements urged Muslims to oppose the creation
of democratic governments in Iraq, Afghanistan, and the Palestinian territories; to
resist non-Islamic reform movements in other Islamic societies; and to overturn
existing regimes deemed insufficiently-Islamic by Al Qaeda such as the Saudi
monarchy.29 Al Zawahiri repeated Bin Laden’s assertions in February 2005 and
added criticism of U.S. detention centers at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba and Abu Ghraib,
Iraq as examples of U.S. reform plans for the Islamic world. Both speakers based
their calls for revolutionary change in Islamic societies on a stated belief in a model
of governance where Muslims are empowered to choose and depose their leaders
according to Islamic principles.30 Bin Laden specifically argued that, “all Muslims
should embark on reforms” but similarly cautioned that “reforms should be achieved
in accordance with the religious laws.”
A Strategic Framework. Al Qaeda military commander Sayf Al Adl
concluded his May 2005 text with advice for Abu Musab Al Zarqawi and other
affiliates that includes a detailed strategic framework for the jihadist movement.31
While Al Adl’s statement is one among many jihadist strategic documents that have
surfaced in recent years, it is noteworthy because it reflects the current perspectives
of an individual thought to be a key member of Al Qaeda’s scattered leadership. A
summary of Al Adl’s framework follows:
! Jihadist action must have a clear “thought or idea that outlines its
means and objectives.” Al Adl recommends that Al Zarqawi and
others should declare that their strategic “objective is to reintroduce
the Islamic way of life by means of establishing the state of Islam
that will solve the entire problems of the nation.” This objective
should be supported ideologically by “a circle of judicious men and
scholars” and propagated by “a special da’wah (Islamic outreach)
authority.” The goal is to better enable the jihadist movement to
employ “the [Islamic] nation’s potentials, including human and
financial resources” by attracting more supporters.
28 “Al-Zarqawi’s Group Issues Post-Election Statement, Claims Attacks Against US
Embassy, Mosul Targets,” FBIS Report - FEA20050201001026, February 1, 2005.
29 Bin Laden’s critiques of Iraq’s Transitional Administrative Law (TAL) and the
Palestinian Authority reflect these sentiments: “The constitution (TAL), which was imposed
by U.S. occupier Bremer, is a man-made and pagan constitution, which insisted that Islam
should not be the sole source of legislation... Palestine is under occupation and its
constitution is man-made and pagan, and Islam has nothing to do with it.” FBIS Report -
FEA20041227000762, December 27, 2004.
30 “If the ruler renounces the law of God, the governed, on God’s orders, must cease to obey
him... Rights cannot be restored from a regime when the ruler becomes renegade or refuses
to follow religion except by force.” FBIS Report - GMP20041216000222, Dec. 16, 2004.
31 “Detained Al-Qa’ida Leader Sayf al-Adl Chronicles Al-Zarqawi’s Rise in Organization,”
FBIS Report - GMP2005060637100, May 21, 2005.

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! The strategic objectives of the jihadist movement should be rooted
in and motivated by what Al Adl refers to as “the clear banner of
Islam — the banner of ‘there is no deity but God and Muhammad is
the messenger of God.’” This fundamental statement of Islamic
faith is meant to signify the ultimate priority of the principle of
tawhid, or the unity and authority of God and religion, in Al Qaeda’s
ideological framework.
! Detailed strategic and operational plans must be developed with
short-term and long-term components. Al Adl links the failures of
other “contemporary Islamic movements” to the fact that their
“actions were mostly random.” According to Al Adl, “mujahidin
should have short-term plans aimed at achieving interim goals and
long-term plans aimed at accomplishing the greater objective, which
is the establishment of a state.” Throughout his statement, Al Adl
alludes to the existence of a broad plan developed by Al Qaeda’s
leaders, but he declines to describe it in detail.
! The jihadist movement should remain flexible enough to take
advantage of “available opportunities” such as the conflict in Iraq.
Al Adl underlines the importance of using current developments to
widen the movement’s appeal and further strengthen the
movement’s ability to act fluidly across the Islamic world.
Implications for Al Qaeda’s Evolving Ideology and Strategy
Recent statements from Osama Bin Laden, Ayman Al Zawahiri, Abu Musab Al
Zarqawi, and Sayf Al Adl display the uncompromising commitment of Al Qaeda’s
leaders and affiliates to a consistent ideological agenda focused on two goals: the
expulsion of foreign forces and influences from Islamic societies and, ultimately, the
creation of an Islamic state ruled by sharia law. The political prescriptions outlined
in the statements are rooted in the Islamic principle known as tawhid, or the principle
of the absolute unity of God, and an identification of Islam as an all-encompassing
religious, political, and social system.32 According to this perspective, Islamic faith,
adherence to Islamic law, and implementation of conservative Islamic social and
political principles are synonymous. Throughout their recent statements, Bin Laden,
Al Zawahiri, and Al Zarqawi characterized as “infidels” those who do not share these
beliefs, those who oppose the creation of an Islamic state on the terms they describe,
and those supporting existing governments and coalition activities in the Islamic
world.
Al Qaeda’s Audiences. Experts believe that Al Qaeda’s diverse statements
contain calculated variations in tone and content that address or appeal to various
target audiences. In his early statements, for example, Osama Bin Laden adopted a
pseudo-nationalist tone in directly addressing the population of Saudi Arabia and
32 As Bin Laden describes it, “Islam is one unit that can not be divided.” Islam is, “a way
of life revealed by God for men to abide by all of its aspects in all their affairs.” FBIS
Report - FEA2004122700076, December 27, 2004.

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outlining ways that specific groups in Saudi society could support Al Qaeda. In his
2004 statements addressed to the U.S. and European public, Bin Laden downplayed
threats of violence and attempted to portray himself as a statesmanlike figure more
palatable to Western audiences and appealing to moderate Muslims. Bin Laden’s
earlier statements also addressed the American public in several instances that he
since has characterized as attempts to explain his motives and outline steps he and
his followers believed the United States should have taken in order to avoid Al Qaeda
attacks.
Over time, the cornerstone of Al Qaeda’s religious and political rhetoric has
remained consistent: Muslims should view themselves as a single nation and unite
to resist anti-Islamic aggression on the basis of obligatory defensive jihad. Non-
Islamic government is unacceptable, and Muslims should join Al Qaeda and other
sympathetic groups and movements in opposing those seeking to establish secular
democratic governments or maintain existing governments deemed to be
insufficiently Islamic. Bin Laden has often coupled his “Islamic-unity” rhetoric with
litanies of anti-Semitic statements, condemnations of Israel, and allegations of U.S.
complicity in the suffering of Muslims worldwide. In many pre-9/11 statements, Bin
Laden broadened his rhetorical outreach to appeal to non-Arab Muslims, especially
those concerned with or engaged in conflicts in Chechnya, Bosnia, Kashmir, and the
Philippines. Following September 11, 2001, Bin Laden has appealed directly to
national groups on the front lines of robust counter-terrorism operations, particularly
the populations of Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, Iraq, and the Palestinian territories.
Pragmatic Messianism. Although Bin Laden’s ideological rhetoric has
remained relatively consistent, he and other Al Qaeda leaders have placed varying
levels of emphasis on specific strategic objectives and tactics in their statements over
the years. Bin Laden has outlined specific political demands that support an image
of Al Qaeda as a pliable, pragmatic political actor. Nevertheless, Al Qaeda’s
operational record seems to indicate that its leaders’ commitment to specific national
causes and strategic objectives are rhetorical tools designed to elicit support for their
broader ideological agenda of confrontation with the West and puritanical reform in
the Islamic world. For example, Bin Laden’s rhetorical treatment of the presence of
U.S. troops in Saudi Arabia during the 1990s is largely inconsistent with Al Qaeda’s
ongoing terrorist operations there following the almost complete withdrawal of U.S.
military forces from Saudi Arabia in September 2003.33 Although only roughly 500
U.S. military personnel remain in Saudi Arabia, Al Qaeda affiliates have continued
a violent campaign to topple the Saudi government and have targeted non-U.S.
civilians in numerous terrorist attacks.
Similarly, variations in the intensity and prominence of Bin Laden’s anti-Israeli
rhetoric has fueled suggestions that Al Qaeda’s commitment to the Palestinian cause
waxes and wanes depending on the network’s need for support — becoming more
33 In his September 1996 declaration of jihad against the United States, Bin Laden described
the presence of U.S. troops in the Arabian peninsula as “one of the worst catastrophes to
befall Muslims since the death of the Prophet [Mohammed].” In an earlier interview,
however, Bin Laden had indicated that the “the withdrawal of American troops” would
serve as the “solution” to the crisis between the United States and the Islamic world.

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pronounced during periods when Al Qaeda’s actions have alienated supporters or
recently as part of a more outright ideological appeal. Bin Laden has addressed these
charges personally and argued that support for the Palestinians and all Muslims is and
will remain essential to Al Qaeda’s cause, which is the mobilization of the entire
Muslim world in resistance to perceived U.S. aggression.34 Bin Laden and his
deputies have characterized military operations in Afghanistan and Iraq as new
provocations and “crusades” that justify ongoing attacks. In his December 2004
statements, Bin Laden referred to the confrontation between the U.S., its allies, and
jihadist movements as “a war of destiny between infidelity and Islam” and a “Third
World War,” seemingly leaving little doubt about the scope or flexibility of Al
Qaeda’s strategic ambitions, grievances, and demands. Tactically, Bin Laden
consistently has advocated a program of retributional violence against the United
States for alleged crimes against Muslims while demonstrating sophisticated
perspectives on cooperation with non-Arab communities and non-Islamist groups.
Bin Laden’s statements reveal sophisticated consideration of the economic and
military vulnerabilities of the United States and its allies, particularly with regard to
the role of Middle Eastern oil as “the basis of industry” in the global economy.35 Bin
Laden has called for Muslim societies to become more self-sufficient economically
and has urged Arab governments to preserve oil as “a great and important economic
power for the coming Islamic state.” Bin Laden also has described economic
boycotts as “extremely effective”36 weapons. Bin Laden’s recent descriptions of Al
Qaeda’s “bleed-until-bankruptcy plan” and his discussion of the U.S. economy and
the decreasing value of the U.S. dollar fit his established pattern of citing the
economic effects of terrorist attacks as proof of Al Qaeda’s success. Recent
statements urging attacks on oil pipelines and military supply lines could indicate a
shift in Al Qaeda’s strategic and tactical planning in favor of a more protracted
attritional conflict characterized by disruptive attacks on economic and critical
infrastructure. In this regard, Bin Laden has identified “martyrdom operations,” or
suicide attacks, as “the most important operations” for disrupting the activities of the
United States and its allies.37
34 “Interview Held with Usama Bin Ladin on 21 Oct. 2001,” Jihad Online News, Jan. 21,
2003.
35 “One of the most important reasons that made our enemies control our land is the
pilfering of our oil... Be active and prevent them from reaching the oil, and mount your
operations accordingly, particularly in Iraq and the Gulf for this is their fate.” FBIS Report -
GMP20041216000222, December 16, 2004.
36 “Declaration of Jihad” Al Islah (London), September 2, 1996. op. cit.
37 Bin Laden urged his followers to “...become diligent in carrying out martyrdom
operations; these operations, praise be to God, have become a great source of terror for the
enemy... These are the most important operations.” FBIS Report - FEA20041227000762,
December 27, 2004.

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Conclusion
Al Qaeda and the Jihadist International. Overall, Al Qaeda leaders have
displayed a pragmatic willingness to adapt the strategic and tactical content of their
statements to changing circumstances while retaining a messianic commitment to a
broader ideological agenda. Although Bin Laden’s self-professed goal is to “move,
incite, and mobilize the [Islamic] nation”38 until it reaches a revolutionary “ignition
point,”39 Bin Laden’s statements and Al Qaeda’s attacks largely have failed to
effectively mobilize widespread Muslim support for their agenda thus far. Since late
2001, however, public opinion polling and media monitoring in the Middle East and
broader Islamic world indicate that significant dissatisfaction with the United States
and its foreign policy has grown significantly within many Muslim societies. In light
of this trend, Bin Laden’s recent shift toward more explicitly political and ideological
rhetoric and his emphasis on the economic effectiveness of Al Qaeda’s campaign to
date seem to be harbingers of a renewed attempt by Al Qaeda’s central leadership to
broaden the movement’s appeal, solicit greater material support,40 and possibly
inspire new and more systematically devastating attacks. Some experts have argued
however, that the increasingly uncompromising, anti-democratic tone of recent
statements by Bin Laden, Al Zawahiri, and Al Zarqawi may alienate Muslims who
oppose theocracy and who support secular, representative government.
Experience suggests that Al Qaeda’s leaders believe that regular attempts to
characterize Al Qaeda’s actions as defensive and religiously sanctioned will increase
tolerance of and support for their broader ideological program. The identification of
limited political objectives and the implication that their fulfilment will resolve
broader grievances may have broader appeal than the group’s underlying ideological
agenda. Overall, Bin Laden’s statements from the mid-1990s through the present
indicate that he continues to see himself and his followers as the vanguard of an
international Islamic movement primarily committed to ending U.S. “interference”
in the affairs of Islamic countries and supportive of efforts to overturn and recast
Islamic societies according to narrow Salafist interpretations of Islam and Islamic
law. His public statements, and those of his deputies, will likely continue to play an
important, calculated role in reaching these goals.
38 “Usama Bin Ladin’s Message to Iraq,” Al-Jazirah Television, Feb. 11, 2003. Op. cit.
39 “Bin Ladin Interviewed on Jihad Against U.S.,” Al Quds Al Arabi (London), Nov. 27,
1996.
40 According to Bin Laden, “the expenses of Al-Qa’ida Organization in Al-Rafidayn country
[Mesopotamia, Iraq] are estimated at 200,000 Euros weekly, not to mention the expenses
of other groups.” He then urged Muslims to “support all the groups.” FBIS Report -
FEA20041227000762, December 27, 2004.