AQIS may use Mali attacks to regroup and strike in India, agencies warn
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Indian intelligence agencies have warned that Al-Qaeda in the Sub-Continent (AQIS) could exploit last week's deadly jihadist attacks in central Mali — which killed over 70 people — to relaunch itself and carry out major strikes in India. The attacks were claimed by Jama'at Nusrat al-Islam wal Muslimin (JNIM), a terror outfit closely affiliated with Al-Qaeda, and officials say the violence is already being used as propaganda fuel by AQIS operatives monitoring events from within the country.
The Mali Attacks and the Al-Qaeda Connection
More than 70 people were killed last week in a fresh wave of jihadist violence across central Mali, a landlocked nation in West Africa. The attacks were claimed by JNIM, which draws its ideology directly from Al-Qaeda and the legacy of Osama Bin Laden. According to officials, the scale and audacity of the Mali strikes are testimony to how significantly Al-Qaeda has rebuilt its operational capacity in Africa — largely because global attention had shifted away from the outfit in the years following Bin Laden's death.
Notably, this is part of a broader pattern. Al-Qaeda has made considerable gains across the African continent over the past decade, operating through affiliates rather than under its own banner — a deliberate strategy, officials say, that allows the group to execute attacks without drawing direct attribution.
AQIS: Quiet but Not Dormant
AQIS was launched in Afghanistan with India as its primary target. While the outfit never achieved the foothold it had anticipated, intelligence officials caution that its relative silence over recent years should not be mistaken for weakness. The group has, according to officials, deliberately maintained a low profile — focusing on online propaganda while avoiding the high-visibility posturing associated with the Islamic State (IS).
An Intelligence Bureau official said the pattern is strikingly similar to how Al-Qaeda rebuilt in Africa.