Khorasan: Qaida Offshoot Planning 'Major Attacks'

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A little-known al-Qaida offshoot, Khorasan found itself in the crosshairs of the United States on Tuesday as the extremist outfit finalized imminent attacks on Western targets from bases inside Syria.

With Islamic State jihadists terrorizing the region and seizing large chunks of Iraq and Syria, it came as a surprise to many that the Pentagon aimed its Tomahawk cruise missiles and other firepower not just at IS positions, but at a far smaller band of former al-Qaida operatives in northwestern Syria who had largely operated in secret.

The Khorasan group's under-the-radar status was obliterated overnight. 

The Pentagon accused Khorasan of planning "major attacks" against the West, saying it had eliminated the group's militants who were in the "final stages" of plots to wreak havoc against Europe or the United States.

The group -- led by a former Osama bin Laden cohort and including veteran operatives -- is not new, experts and President Barack Obama's administration said.

Officials were so concerned about the group that new restrictions for passengers on U.S.-bound flights were imposed in July to prevent a possible attack, Attorney General Eric Holder told Yahoo News. 

The previously little-known organization's plots, reportedly discovered in the past week, included using a bomb made of a non-metallic device like a toothpaste container or clothes dipped in explosive material, CNN reported, citing an intelligence source.

Deputy National Security Advisor Ben Rhodes described the group as including "core al-Qaida operatives from Afghanistan and Pakistan who made their way to Syria," and that the Pentagon acted because it believed attacks against western targets were "imminent."

The Pentagon said a majority of the 40-plus Tomahawk cruise missiles launched into Syria were aimed at the Khorasan lair and training camps near Aleppo.

Action against Khorasan had long been considered and was "separate and apart from the growing threat from ISIL," a senior U.S. official said, using one of several names for IS.

Matthew Henman, who heads IHS Jane's Terrorism and Insurgency Center, said Khorasan's warriors slipped into Syria to link up with the al-Nusra Front, al-Qaida's affiliate in the war-torn country.

Its funding and weaponry are limited, but Khorasan came "to exploit the vacuum and the very chaotic situation in Syria," Northeastern University professor Max Abrahms, who is also a terrorism analyst at the Council on Foreign Relations, told AFP.

 

- 'Like a hyena' -

 

By preying on the chaos and destruction in Syria, and less interested than IS jihadists in seizing territory, "Khorasan is like a hyena which basically picks up pieces of carcasses" in a brutalized landscape, Abrahms said.

Its maximum 1,000 members pale in comparison with the estimated 31,000 Islamic State fighters.

Khorasan leader Muhsin al-Fadhli is believed to have had close ties to al-Qaida founder bin Laden, and the group should be considered an al-Qaida affiliate "in more international-minded terms" than IS, according to Abrahms.

"The fact that the U.S. targeted the Khorasan group in the very first wave of attacks really underscores how seriously the U.S. takes this group," he said.

In brief remarks, Obama bluntly justified attacking Khorasan bases: "We will not tolerate safe havens for terrorists who threaten our people." 

Lieutenant General William Mayville, director of operations for the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, said the group "is clearly not focused on the Syrian people" or the regime of Bashar Assad. 

"They are establishing roots in Syria in order to advance attacks against the West," he said, warning that Khorasan was recruiting foreign fighters who could use their western passports to return to their countries and carry out attacks.

"It's nothing new that al-Qaida wants to attack the U.S.," said Aron Lund, editor of the Syria in Crisis website run by the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

"The fact that news about this al-Qaida-run anti-Western cell linked to al-Nusra Front emerged just over a week ago, through U.S. intelligence leaks -– it's certainly an interesting coincidence," he told AFP.

Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said some 50 al-Qaida militants -- presumably linked to Khorasan -- were killed in the air strikes, in addition to 70 IS jihadists.

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