Appendix C – Statement of Reasons – Al-Qa’ida (AQ)
  (Also
known as: Al-Jihad Al-Qaeda, Al-Qaida, The Base, Egyptian al-Jihad, Egyptian
Islamic Jihad, The Group for the Preservation of the Holy Sites, International
Front for Fighting Jews and Crusaders, Islamic Army,  The Islamic Army for the
Liberation of the Holy Places, Islamic Army for the Liberation of Holy Sites,
Islamic Salvation Foundation, The Jihad Group, New Jihad, Usama Bin Laden
Network, Usama Bin Laden Organisation, The World Islamic Front for Jihad
against Jews and Crusaders)
The
  following information is based on publicly available details about al-Qa’ida.
  To the Australian Government’s knowledge, these details are accurate and
  reliable and have been corroborated by classified information.
Basis
  for listing a terrorist organisation 
Division
  102 of the Criminal Code provides that for an organisation to be listed
  as a terrorist organisation, the Attorney-General must be satisfied on
  reasonable grounds that the organisation:
(a)   
  is directly
  or indirectly engaged in, preparing, planning, assisting in or fostering the
  doing of a terrorist act (whether or not a terrorist act has occurred or will
  occur); or
(b)  
advocates the
doing of a terrorist act (whether or not a terrorist act has occurred or will
occur).
Details of the organisation 
Objectives 
In 1988,
  al-Qa’ida emerged from the Maktab al-Khidamat, a recruitment and fundraising
  network for the Afghan resistance to the Soviet Union’s occupation of
  Afghanistan. The impetus for establishing al-Qa’ida was to retain a common
  purpose for Islamic extremists following the end of the conflict with the
  Soviets. During the late 1990s, al-Qa’ida was transformed from providing a
  unifying function for extremist elements into a global network of cells and
  affiliated groups.
Al-Qa’ida
  seeks to remove governments in Muslim countries that it deems are ‘‘un‑Islamic’’
  in order to establish an Islamic Caliphate. The United States and its allies
  are believed by al‑Qa’ida to represent the greatest obstacle to this
  objective, given their perceived support for these governments.
Leadership
Al-Qa’ida
  is a Sunni Islamic extremist organisation whose core leadership is located in
  the border regions between Afghanistan and Pakistan. Usama bin Laden co‑founded
  al-Qa’ida with Dr Abdullah Azzam and gained full control after the
  assassination of Azzam in 1989. Usama bin Laden and his deputy, Ayman al‑Zawahiri
  continue to lead al-Qa’ida.
Al-Qa’ida
  maintains core support networks and operations in the Afghanistan and Pakistan
  border region. This region has served as a sanctuary for the leadership since
  the loss of the group’s facilities in Afghanistan in late 2001, and where it
  continues to be well protected by local tribes and other sympathisers.
However,
  due to counter-terrorism measures against it, the al-Qa’ida core has become
  increasingly isolated, short of funds and is having more trouble recruiting and
  equipping fighters. While bin Laden and al-Zawahiri remain at large, unmanned
  drone attacks continue to kill other senior al-Qa’ida leaders, making it more
  difficult to raise funds, recruit and plan operations.
Membership
The exact
  size of the organisation is unknown, although some estimates have suggested a
  strength of approximately several thousand fighters. Originally, al-Qa’ida
  recruited veterans of the Soviet-Afghan conflict of 1979-89 and from campaigns
  in places such as Bosnia-Herzegovina, Kashmir, Mindanao, Chechnya, Lebanon,
  Algeria and Egypt.
More
  recent recruits include fighters who have gained experience in the conflicts in
  Afghanistan and Iraq. While al-Qa’ida has inspired a new generation of
  extremists, not all of those who travel to Afghanistan/Pakistan actually join
  al-Qa’ida. For some it is easier to join a local extremist group.
Recruitment and funding 
Funding is
  often obtained through donations from Muslim charities and individuals. The US
  9/11 Commission report attributed much of al-Qa’ida’s funding to money diverted
  from charities. In addition, funds are also probably raised through criminal
  means, such as credit card fraud and the use of assumed identities. It is
  believed al‑Qa’ida stopped using legitimate banking institutions for
  moving funds by mid-2002, turning instead to alternative systems such as the
  hawala system, couriers and precious stones.
Arabs
  dominate al-Qa’ida’s senior leadership. Less is known about the group’s
  recruitment methods since the loss of its training camp infrastructure in Afghanistan
  in late 2001. It is likely a similar system has been established in the tribal
  areas of Pakistan, but on a smaller scale, using covert training camps and safe
  houses.
However,
  US drone attacks have made it more difficult for al-Qa’ida’s efforts in
  fundraising and recruiting. Reports suggest al-Qa’ida is struggling to raise
  funds and is having more trouble recruiting and equipping fighters.
Terrorist
  activity of the organisation 
Directly
  or indirectly engaged in the doing of terrorist acts 
Al-Qa’ida
  has directly or indirectly engaged in a number of terrorist attacks, including
  assassinations, suicide bombings, aircraft hijackings and attacks using
  improvised explosive devices (IEDs), including vehicle-borne and vessel-borne.
  Significant attacks which al‑Qa’ida has claimed responsibility for, or
  that can be reliably attributed to individuals affiliated with al‑Qa’ida,
  include:
  - 7 August
    1998: the bombing of  the US embassies in Nairobi, Kenya, and Dar es Salaam,
    Tanzania, killing over 200 people;
    
   
  - 12 October
    2000: the bombing of the USS Cole in the port of Aden, Yemen, killing 17
    sailors; 
    
   
  - 9 September
    2001: the assassination of  Northern Alliance leader Ahmad Shah Masood in
    Afghanistan; 
    
   
  - 11 September
    2001: the hijacking of four US passenger planes and crashing them into the
    World Trade Center buildings in New York, the Pentagon in Washington, and a
    field in Pennsylvania, killing approximately 3,000 people, including ten
    Australians; 
    
   
  - 11 April
    2002: the bombing of a synagogue on the Tunisian island of Djerba, killing 20
    people; 
    
   
  - 14 June 2002:
    the car bombing outside the US Consulate in Karachi, Pakistan, killing 12
    people; 
    
   
  - 6 October
    2002: the bombing of the French oil tanker MV Limburg off the coast of Yemen,
    killing one sailor; 
    
   
  - 28 November
    2002: in Mombasa, Kenya, the car bombing of a hotel, killing 15 people, and the
    firing of two surface-to-air-missiles that missed an Israeli passenger plane
    after takeoff from Mombasa airport; 
    
   
  - 24 February
    2006: the attack on the Abqaiq oil refinery in Saudi Arabia, killing two
    security guards; 
    
   
  - 2 June 2008:
    the bombing of the Danish Embassy in Islamabad, Pakistan, killing 6 people; and
    
    
   
  - 20 September
    2008: the bombing of the Marriott Hotel in Islamabad, Pakistan, killing 60
    people. 
 
Directly
  or indirectly preparing and/or planning the doing of terrorist acts 
Al-Qa’ida
  lost its primary base for training, planning and preparing for terrorist
  operations following the US intervention in Afghanistan in late 2001. Since
  then, al‑Qa’ida has sought alternative locations in which to train and
  regroup, and members continue to gain combat experience in the ongoing
  conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Despite
  sanctions against al-Qa’ida’s extensive financial networks, al-Qa’ida continues
  to find means of raising and transferring money for terrorist attacks,
  including through donations, criminal activity and via couriers.
Directly
  or indirectly assisting in the doing of terrorist acts 
Reporting
  indicates al-Qa’ida has encouraged, inspired and assisted like-minded
  individuals, as seen in the 7 July 2005 attacks on the London transport system.
  While there has been no confirmation of al-Qa’ida command and control over
  these attacks, there have been indications of al-Qa’ida involvement in training
  and influencing those involved. Two of the perpetrators of the London attacks,
  Mohammed Siddique Khan and Shehzad Tanweer, had travelled to Pakistan and,
  according to a statement by al‑Zawahiri, had been trained by al-Qa’ida operatives.
Al-Qa’ida
  has also provided financial and material assistance in support of terrorist
  acts by other groups. These include:
  - 12 October
    2002: assisting in funding attacks on night clubs and the US Consulate in Bali,
    Indonesia, killing 202 people, including 88 Australians;
    
   
  - 15 November
    2003: assisting in planning and preparing car bomb attacks on two synagogues in
    Istanbul, killing 20 people; 
    
   
  - 20 November
    2003: assisting in planning and preparing car bomb attacks on the HSBC Bank
    headquarters and the British Consulate in Istanbul, killing 30 people;
    
   
  - 7 July 2005:
    assisting in training those involved in IED attacks on London’s transport
    system, killing 56 people, including one Australian; and
    
   
  - 2 March 2006:
    assisting in bombing a diplomatic vehicle outside the US Consulate in Karachi,
    Pakistan, killing three people.
 
Directly or indirectly fostering the doing of
  terrorist acts or advocating the doing of terrorist acts
Senior
  members of al-Qa’ida have made numerous statements advocating the conduct of
  terrorist attacks against the US and countries perceived to have allied
  themselves with the US and Israel. The February 1998 statement issued under the
  banner of the ‘‘World Islamic Front for Jihad against Jews and Crusaders’’
  decreed that civilians in these countries were legitimate targets for terrorist
  attack.
Al-Qa’ida
  continues to provide inspiration, encouragement and influence to other Sunni
  extremist groups around the world. Moreover, al-Qa’ida leadership relies on its
  franchise organisations to plan and execute attacks. This relationship is best
  demonstrated by the decisions of the Salafist Group for Call and Combat in
  Algeria and the Jamaat Tawhid wa’al-Jihad group in Iraq to merge with
  al-Qa’ida. Now known as al-Qa’ida in the Lands of the Islamic Maghreb and
  al-Qa’ida in Iraq respectively, both groups accept strategic direction and at
  times receive funding from al-Qa’ida.
Al-Qa’ida
  has recently expressed support for Uighur separatists in China. In an October
  2009 statement, senior al-Qa’ida member Abu Yahya al-Libi declared ‘‘It is the
  duty of Muslims today to stand by the side of their wounded and wronged
  brothers in East Turkestan ... there is no way to lift oppression and injustice
  but with truthful return to their faith and ... to seriously prepare for
  jihad.’’
Al-Qa’ida
  also encouraged extremism in Somalia in 2009. A statement by al-Zawahiri in
  February and another one by bin Laden in March called on the mujahideen of
  Somalia to reject the government and fight for an Islamic state.
Senior
  al-Qa’ida leaders continue to make public statements promoting al-Qa’ida’s
  ideology, supporting attacks undertaken by other groups and advocating violent
  jihad against the West. According to the UN Monitoring Team on al-Qa’ida and
  the Taliban, ‘‘the main way the (al-Qa’ida) leadership imposes some control and
  uniformity of purpose is through its broadcasts and web postings. These have
  attained increasing sophistication and follow a clear pattern, promoting
  recruitment, keeping local groups motivated, suggesting targets, and providing
  overall direction.’’
As-Sahab,
  al-Qa’ida’s media wing, has continued to produce high-quality videos that
  reinforce al-Qa’ida’s ideology, defend its actions, recruit new members and
  inspire others to conduct terrorist attacks. From 2002 to 2009, as-Sahab
  produced 250 videos, peaking at 97 in 2008. The drop in production in 2009 may
  be attributed to a lack of funding and/or increased counter-terrorism measures
  against al-Qa’ida. However, there is no indication the decline in the numbers
  of productions has degraded the effectiveness of al-Qa’ida’s message to
  like-minded individuals.
Al-Qa’ida
  also exploits the terrorist attacks conducted by individuals and groups not
  linked with it to further spread its message. Following the suicide bombing on
  the CIA base at Khost, Afghanistan, on 30 December 2009, the chief of al-Qa’ida
  in Afghanistan released a statement on 6 January 2010 in which he praised the
  bomber, stating ‘‘Your brothers will continue the march on your path and they
  will not rest and their populace will not part with the populace of the
  Americans till they inflict upon them the greatest and most astonishing deaths
  and wounds...’’
In a 29
  January 2010 statement attributed to bin Laden, the people of the world are
  urged to wage economic terrorism on the US by boycotting American products and
  disposing of the US dollar. Bin Laden also called on the ‘‘mujahideen’’ to
  ‘‘continue their fight against the unjust in Iraq and Afghanistan.”
Conclusion
ASIO
  assesses al-Qa’ida is continuing to directly and indirectly engage in,
  preparing, planning, assisting in and fostering the doing of acts involving
  threats to human life and serious damage to property. ASIO also assesses that
  al-Qa’ida advocates the doing of terrorist acts. This assessment is
  corroborated by information provided by reliable and credible intelligence
  sources, as well as by the terrorist acts conducted by al-Qa’ida in the past.
In the
  course of pursuing its objective of creating an Islamic Caliphate, al-Qa’ida is
  known to have committed or threatened action:
  - with the
    intention of advancing al-Qa’ida’s political, religious or ideological causes;
    
   
  - that causes,
    or could cause, serious damage to property, the death of persons or endangers a
    person’s life; and 
    
   
  - with the
    intention of creating a serious risk to the safety of sections of the public
    globally.
 
  
In view of the above information, al-Qa’ida is assessed to
  be directly and indirectly engaged in, preparing, planning, assisting in and
  fostering the doing of terrorist acts and advocating the doing of terrorist
  acts. Such acts include actions which have been done or threatened with the
  intention of advancing a political, religious or ideological cause and with the
  intention of coercing, or influencing by intimidation, governments and
  individuals globally. The actions or threatened actions which al-Qa’ida is
  assessed to be involved in would, if successfully completed, cause serious
  physical harm and death to persons and serious damage to property.
Other
  relevant information 
Links
  to other terrorist groups or networks 
In 1998,
  key figures of five terrorist groups, including Usama bin Laden, issued a
  declaration under the banner of the ”World Islamic Front for Jihad
  against Jews and Crusaders,” announcing a jihad and stating the US and its
  allies should be expelled from the Middle East.
In
  addition to the groups al-Qa’ida has incorporated ”officially” under its
  banner, al‑Qa’ida also has provided encouragement and inspiration to
  other Islamic terrorist groups. Among such groups are: Al-Shabaab, Abu Sayyaf
  Group, Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, Islamic Army of Aden, Asbat al-Ansar,
  Jemaah Islamiyah, Jamiat ul-Ansar/Harakat ul-Mujahideen, Lashkar-e-Tayyiba,
  Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, Jaish-e-Mohammad and Ansar al-Islam.
Threats
  to Australian interests 
Since
  2004, a number of statements have been made by bin Laden and al-Zawahiri
  calling for attacks against the US and its allies, including Australia. The
  most recent al-Qa’ida reference to Australia was on 2 April 2008, when as-Sahab
  posted to extremist internet forums an audio file of al-Zawahiri responding to
  questions from forum participants. Al-Zawahiri referred to Australia when responding
  to a question criticising al-Qa'ida for killing Muslims in Muslim lands and not
  conducting attacks in Israel. Al-Zawahiri responded by citing attacks against
  the US and its allies, including Australia, in various locations and that these
  countries supported Israel.
Proscription
  by the UN and other countries 
Al-Qa’ida
  is listed in the United Nation’s 1267 Committee’s consolidated list and as a
  proscribed terrorist organisation by the governments of Canada, New Zealand,
  the United Kingdom and the United States. Al-Qa’ida also is listed by the
  European Union for the purposes of its anti-terrorism measures.