The Algerian Connection
by Jacob A. Mundy
In a broadcast dating October 25, PBS's Frontline told the tale of a
terrorist well known to residents of the Pacific Northwest. Ahmed Ressam,
the "Millennium Bomber," was featured in Frontline's "Trail of a
Terrorist," an episode that sought to connect bin Laden's Al Qaeda with
Algerian Islamic insurgents.
Frontline reported: "Ahmed Ressam has been linked to the Armed Islamic
Group (GIA), an Algerian extremist group that began conducting terrorist
attacks when the government overturned the victory of an Islamic political
party in the 1992 legislative elections." Beyond their ruthless and vile
campaigns in Algeria, the GIA has been linked to bombings in Paris and the
foiled 1994 hijacking of an Air France jet that the terrorists hoped to
have the pilots fly into the Eiffel Tower (an attempt thought to be the
inspiration for the September 11 attacks).
Frontline's website directs readers to the Department of State's Patterns
of Global Terrorism, 2000. There the GIA is painted in these terms: "An
Islamic extremist group, the GIA aims to overthrow the secular Algerian
regime and replace it with an Islamic state. The GIA began its violent
activities in early 1992 after Algiers voided the victory of the Islamic
Salvation Front (FIS)--the largest Islamic party--in the first round of
legislative elections in December 1991."
This is the standard picture that one gets from the media these days: in
January 1992, Algeria's long standing National Liberation Front (FLN)
nullified elections in which the FIS won by a landslide; the Muslim rebels
then took to the hills and began a terror campaign, slaughtering civilians,
reporters, artists, liberals, intellectuals, and foreigners in their
attempts to overthrow Algeria's military regime. This deviates little from
what is commonly accepted as the truth regarding Algeria's almost ten year
old, very bloody civil war that has claimed over 100,000 lives. Maintaining
this picture in the coming months will be required if Bush's war on
terrorism is to go beyond the borders of Afghanistan.
Bush and Algeria's President Abdelaziz Bouteflika met in the White House on
November 5. Their talks covered Algeria's problem with its own terrorists.
No doubt Bouteflika asked the US to aid his military regime's fight against
insurgents. (Producing over 800,000 barrels of oil a day, Algeria is not
short on bargaining chips.)
According to Noam Chomsky: "[It] turns out that Algeria is very
enthusiastic about the US war against terror." Drawing comparisons with US
sponsorship of Turkey's genocidal war against the "terrorist" Kurds,
Chomsky says, "Algeria is one of the most vicious terrorist states in the
world and has been carrying out horrendous terror against its own
population in the past couple of years, in fact. For a while, this was
under wraps. But it was finally exposed in France by defectors from the
Algerian army. It's all over the place there and in England and so on. But
here, we're very proud because one of the worst terrorist states in the
world is now enthusiastically welcoming the US war on terror and in fact is
cheering on the United States to lead the war. That shows how popular we
are getting." ("The New War Against Terror", October 18, 2001.)
Human Rights Watch has found: "[Algeria's] Security forces have been
implicated in torture, forced disappearances, arbitrary killings, and
extrajudicial executions on a scale that can only be characterized as
systematic." And: "The series of massacres in Algeria that, especially
since 1996, have claimed the lives of thousands of innocent women, men, and
children, which the [Algerian] government and many outside observers
attribute exclusively to armed Islamic insurgent groups, are a part of a
larger human rights crisis. This larger crisis is characterized by grave
and systematic human rights violations by or seemingly with the collusion
of the [Algerian] security forces..." ("Algeria's Human Rights Crisis",
August 1998.)
The GIA's involvement in Algeria's brutal civilian massacres (sometimes
involving blunt weapons) and international terrorism (like bomb attacks in
the Paris Metro) has been well established in the media. What has not been
established is the precise nature of the GIA. Is the GIA the al-Qaeda of
Algeria--or more like the Contras of North Africa?
In the book An Inquiry into the Algerian Massacres (Hoggar Books),
the chapter "What is the GIA?" establishes beyond a doubt that the GIA is a
counter insurgency (COIN) or counter-guerilla army along the lines of
Selous Scouts in the Rhodesia-Zimbabwean war (1972-1979) and, ironically,
France's Force K in the Algerian war of liberation (1954-1962). Operating
like a guerilla force in tactics and organization, COIN groups are the
photo-negative image of the insurgents, taking the war back to the
guerillas, sowing distrust among the rebels and reaping terror among their
civilian support base.
In Algeria, the government-supported GIA has sought to disrupt and
discredit any Islamic opposition though deadly infighting and the
indiscriminate massacring of civilians in the name of Allah. The military
regime's monster is thought to be the most vicious player in the unending
cycle of violence that is tearing Algeria apart.
Meanwhile, the millions of voices for democracy and human rights in Algeria
get almost no airtime. How many news sources carried stories of the June 14
million-strong march on Algiers? Very few. Those outlets that did cover the
March For Democracy took note of the violence and downplayed the calls for
freedom and justice. Following the party line of Algeria's military rulers,
the BBC described the demonstrations as "fierce clashes between mainly
ethnic Berber protestors and police in the Algerian capital Algiers" (June
14). According to Middle East Reports (MER 220): "[Algerian state] TV
played extensive footage of fights and the destruction of property." Sound
familiar, Seattle?
These recent demands for democracy and justice sprang from Algeria's most
repressed ethnic group, the Berbers, but are not limited to them.
Berbers, who prefer call themselves Imazighen (Free People), are the
indigenous peoples of North Africa, spanning from the High Atlas of Morocco
to the deserts of Libya, including, among others, the Tuaregs of Niger and
the Kabyles of Algeria, all united by their common language (Tamazight) and
their Amazigh culture. Seventy percent of Morocco and thirty percent of
Algeria is thought to be Amazigh.
When gendarmes in Beni Duala shot Massinissa Guermah, an Amazigh youth in
their custody, on April 18, they touched off a string of riots and protests
unseen since Algeria's fight for independence.
The killing took place in the Amazigh heartland of Algeria, the mountainous
Kabylia. The killing also took place close to the anniversary of the Berber
Spring, the events of April 20, 1980, that mark the birth of the Amazigh
cultural awareness movement when riots engulfed the Kabylia following the
cancellation of a series of lectures on Amazigh culture. The days following
the death of Massinissa saw almost 100 protesters killed.
However, what followed was a broad-based civilian uprising in Algeria for
more democracy, despite the ruling party's attempts to divide the country
into Arabs and "Berber Separatists". Marchers in protests all over the
country, suffering from the same conditions as Berbers--massive (30%)
unemployment, IMF structural readjustment policies, and state
terrorism--have been heard chanting "We are all Kabyles" (MER 220). The
protests have continued to this day.
It is doubtful that Algeria's military regime will heed popular calls for
democracy and human rights, given that they have been waging a war against
their own population since 1992. What is more likely, given the current
climate of irrationalism surrounding the war on terrorism, is that Bush
will give Bouteflika what he most wants: a "Plan Columbia" for Algeria.
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