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Following the death of Azahari bin Husin during a raid at his
hideout in East Java, the next two weeks could be a crucial period for
the security and intelligence apparatus' long struggle to curb
terrorism in this country, intelligence experts say.
"The raid (and Azahari's death) has encouraged security personnel,
especially from the National Police and the intelligence agencies to
work harder to dig up more information on Azahari's terror network to
break it up for good. The police are racing against time to find
Azahari's compatriot Noordin Moh. Top and his group members," former
chief of the State Intelligence Agency (BIN) A.M. Hendropriyono told
The Jakarta Post on Friday.
Azahari, a Malaysian citizen and one of the most wanted terrorists in
Southeast Asia, along with Budi, alias Arman, a local operative, were
killed during a shootout on Wednesday in East Java. One of their main
cohorts was arrested in Malang, while several others were nearly caught
in Semarang, Central Java.
Giving a thumbs-up to the police, Hendropriyono said security officers
and BIN agents now had the challenge to arrest Noordin and his local
operatives. "The capture of this big fish will show the world
Indonesia's seriousness in the war on terrorism and return the people's
confidence in the government."
Asked whether Azahari's death would eliminate terror threats in the
future, Hendropriyono said it depended on the performance of the police
and BIN over the next few weeks.
"Terror threats will be getting more intense if security forces fail to
find the remaining members of their terrorist network, because
Azahari's death could provoke his followers to become more militant and
set up new cells. The threat will weaken if security forces and BIN
make a significant achievement," he said, while speculating that for
the time being, terror activities would remain dormant because the
operatives had been put into a corner.
Terrorism was essentially psychological warfare and the security forces
should use this crucial time to win that war, he added.
Separately, Insp. Gen. (ret) Ansja'ad Mbai, who heads the antiterror
desk at the Office of Coordinating Minister for Political, Legal and
Security Affairs, said the death of Azahari was a bit of shock therapy
for the members of his terror cells, but he warned that this could also
drive them "to launch triple-strength attacks as part of the
psychological war."
"After the death of Azahari, maybe we'll see bomb attacks taper off for
quite some time, but another kind of terror can be just starting. The
terrorist groups can pursue the terror threats in so many ways: bomb
attacks, vandalism, assassinations or anything to create psychological
trauma among the public," Ansja'ad explained, while referring to the
recent beheadings and shooting attacks on female students in Poso,
Central Sulawesi.
"If we understand more about the 'terrorist triangle', from Sulawesi to
Maluku to the southern Philippines, we can clearly see how the network
has worked so far. Each group within this network has developed another
cell that works independently, and the death of one of its leaders
won't stop their movement," Ansja'ad said.
Local antiterror experts predicted that there are about 300 men
categorized simply as "Islamic militants", who are still roaming about
freely in this country.
Ansja'ad said that most of them had graduated from paramilitary
training camps either in Afghanistan or the southern Philippines.
Ansja'ad also said that security personnel would continue monitoring
some Islamic boarding schools, including Al Zaitun in West Java,
because "some of the individuals that have gone there promote deviant
thoughts about religion."
"The terrorists pursue different methods to meet their goals, from
spreading fanaticism in sermons to forcing their will through violence.
We must remain alert about their methods," Ansja'ad added.
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