By Scott Stewart
Looking at the world from a
protective-intelligence perspective, the theme for the past week
has not been improvised explosive devices or potential
mass-casualty attacks. While there have been
suicide bombings in Afghanistan,
alleged threats to the World Cup and seemingly endless
post-mortem discussions of the
failed May 1 Times Square attack, one recurring and
under-reported theme in a number of regions around the world has
been kidnapping.
For example, in Heidenheim, Germany, Maria
Boegerl, the wife of German banker Thomas Boegerl, was
reportedly kidnapped from her home May 12. The kidnappers issued
a ransom demand to the family and an amount was agreed upon. Mr.
Boegerl placed the ransom payment at the arranged location, but
the kidnappers never picked up the money (perhaps suspecting or
detecting police involvement). The family has lost contact with
the kidnappers, and fear for Mrs. Boegerl’s fate has caused
German authorities to launch a massive search operation, which
has included hundreds of searchers along with dogs, helicopters
and divers.
Two days after the Boegerl kidnapping,
al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) posted a message on
the Internet claiming to have custody of French citizen Michel
Germaneau, a retired engineer who had previously worked in
Algeria’s petroleum sector. Germaneau was reportedly kidnapped
April 22, in northern Niger, close to the border with Mali and
Algeria. The AQIM video contained a photo of Germaneau and of
his identification card. The group demanded a prisoner exchange
and said that French President Nicolas Sarkozy would be
responsible for the captive’s well-being.
Also on May 14, Diego Fernandez de Cevallos, a
high-profile attorney and former presidential candidate, was
kidnapped near his ranch in the Mexican state of Queretaro.
Fernandez had left his home in Mexico City to drive to his ranch
but never arrived. His vehicle was found abandoned near the
ranch on Saturday morning and the vehicle reportedly showed
signs of a struggle. It is not known who kidnapped Fernandez or
what the motivation for the kidnapping was.
At the moment a kidnapping occurs, the
abduction team usually has achieved tactical surprise and
usually employs overwhelming force. To the previously
unsuspecting victim, the abductors seemingly appear out of
nowhere. But when examined carefully, kidnappings are, for the
most part, the result of a long and carefully orchestrated
process. They do not arise from a vacuum. There are almost
always some indications or warnings that the process is in
motion prior to the actual abduction, meaning that many
kidnappings are avoidable. In light of this reality, let’s take
a more detailed look at the phenomenon of kidnappings.
Types of Kidnappings
There are many different types of kidnappings.
Although kidnappings for ransom and political kidnappings
generate considerable news interest, most kidnappings have
nothing to do with money or political statements. They are
typically
kidnappings conducted by family members in custody disputes,
emotionally disturbed strangers wanting to take a child to raise
or
strangers who abduct a victim for sexual exploitation.
Even in financially motivated kidnappings,
there are a number of different types. The stereotypical
kidnapping of a high-value target comes most readily to
mind, but there are also more spur-of-the-moment
express kidnappings, where a person is held until his bank
account can be drained using an ATM card, and even
virtual kidnappings, where no kidnapping occurs at all but
the victim is frightened by a claim that a loved one has been
kidnapped and pays a ransom to the alleged abductors. Some of
the piracy incidents in Somalia also move into the economic
kidnapping realm, especially in cases where the crew or
passengers are seen as being more valuable than the boat or its
cargo.
Since kidnapping is such a broad topic, for
the sake of this discussion, we will focus primarily on
kidnappings that are financially motivated and those that are
politically motivated. Financially motivated kidnappings can be
conducted by a variety of criminal elements. At the highest
level are highly trained professional kidnapping gangs that
specialize in abducting high-net-worth individuals and who will
frequently demand ransoms in the millions of dollars. Such
groups often employ teams of specialists who carry out a variety
of specific tasks such as collecting intelligence, conducting
surveillance, snatching the target, negotiating with the
victim’s family and establishing and guarding the safe-houses.
At the other end of the spectrum are gangs
that randomly kidnap targets of opportunity. These gangs are
generally far less skilled than the professional gangs and often
will hold a victim for only a short time, as in an express
kidnapping. Sometimes express kidnapping victims are held in the
trunk of a car for the duration of their ordeal, which can
sometimes last for days if the victim has a large amount in a
checking account and a small daily ATM withdrawal limit. Other
times, if an express kidnapping gang discovers it has grabbed a
high-value target by accident, the gang will hold the victim
longer and demand a much higher ransom. Occasionally, these
express kidnapping groups will even “sell” a high-value victim
to a more professional kidnapping gang. (On a side note, most
express kidnapping victims tend to be male and are most
frequently abducted while walking on the street after dark, and
many have impaired their senses by consuming alcohol.)
In the United States, it is far more common
for a relatively poor person to be kidnapped for financial
motives than it is for a high-net-worth individual. This is
because kidnapping groups frequently
target groups of illegal immigrants, who they believe are
far less likely to seek help from the authorities. In some
cases, the police have found dozens of immigrant hostages being
held in safe-houses.
Between the two extremes of kidnapping groups
— those targeting the rich and those targeting the poor — there
is a wide range of kidnapping gangs that might target a bank
vice president or branch manager rather than the bank’s CEO, or
that might kidnap the owner of a restaurant or other small
business rather than an industrialist.
In the realm of political kidnappings, there
are abductions that are very well-planned, such as the December
1981 kidnapping of Gen. James Dozier by the Italian Red
Brigades, or Hezbollah’s March 1985 kidnapping of journalist
Terry Anderson. However, there are also opportunistic cases of
politically motivated kidnappings, such as when
foreigners are abducted at a Taliban checkpoint in
Afghanistan or AQIM militants grab a European tourist in the
Sahel area of Africa. Of course, in the case of both the Taliban
and AQIM, the groups see kidnapping as an important source of
funding as well as a politically useful tool.
Understanding the Process
In deliberate (as opposed to opportunistic)
kidnappings based on financial or political motives, the
kidnappers generally follow a process that is very similar to
what we call the
terrorist attack cycle: target selection, planning,
deployment, attack, escape and exploitation. In a kidnapping,
this means the group must identify a victim; plan for the
abduction, captivity and negotiation; conduct the abduction and
secure the hostage; successfully leverage the life of the victim
for financial or political gain; and then escape.
During some phases of this process, the
kidnappers may not be visible to the target, but there are
several points during the process when the kidnappers are forced
to expose themselves to detection in order to accomplish their
mission. Like the perpetrators of a terrorist attack, those
planning a kidnapping are
most vulnerable to detection while they are conducting
surveillance — before they are ready to deploy and conduct their
attack. As we have noted several times in past analyses, one of
the
secrets of countersurveillance is that most criminals are
not very good at conducting surveillance. The primary reason
they succeed is that no one is looking for them.
Of course, kidnappers are also very easy to
spot once they launch their attack, pull their weapons and
perhaps even begin to shoot. By this time, however, it might
very well be too late to escape their attack. They will have
selected their attack site and employed the forces they believe
they need to overpower their victim and complete the operation.
While the kidnappers could botch their operation and the target
could escape unscathed, it is simply not practical to pin one’s
hopes on that possibility. It is clearly better to spot the
kidnappers early and avoid their trap before it is sprung and
the guns come out.
Kidnappers, like other criminals, look for
patterns and vulnerabilities that they can exploit. Their
chances for success increase greatly if they are allowed to
conduct surveillance at will and are given the opportunity to
thoroughly assess the security measures (if any) employed by the
target. We have seen several cases in Mexico in which the
criminals even chose to attack despite security measures such as
armored cars and armed security guards. In such cases, criminals
attack with adequate resources to overcome existing security.
For example, if there are protective agents, the attackers will
plan to neutralize them first. If there is an armored vehicle,
they will find ways to defeat the armor or grab the target when
he or she is outside the vehicle. Because of this, criminals
must not be allowed to conduct surveillance at will. Potential
targets should practice a heightened but relaxed state of
situational awareness that will help them spot hostile
surveillance.
Potential targets should also conduct simple
pattern and route analyses to determine where they are most
predictable and vulnerable. Taking an objective look at your
schedule and routes is really not as complicated as it may seem.
While the ideal is to vary routes and times to avoid predictable
locations, this is also difficult and disruptive and warranted
only when the threat is extremely high. A more practical
alternative is for potential targets to raise their situational
awareness a notch as they travel through such areas at
predictable times.
Of course, using the term “potential targets”
points to another problem. Many kidnapping victims simply don’t
believe they are potential targets until after they have been
kidnapped, and therefore do not take commonsense security
measures. Frequently, when such people are debriefed after their
release from captivity, they are able to recall suspicious
activity before their abduction that they did not take seriously
because they did not consider themselves targets. One American
businessman who was kidnapped in Central America said upon his
release that he knew there was something odd about the behavior
of a particular couple he saw frequently sitting on a park bench
near his home prior to his kidnapping, but he didn’t think he
was rich enough to be targeted for kidnapping. As soon as he was
abducted, he said that he immediately knew that the awkward
couple had been observing him to determine his pattern. He said
that he often thought about that couple during his two months in
captivity, and how a little bit of curiosity could have saved
him from a terrifying ordeal and his family a substantial sum of
money.
The same steps involved in a deliberate
kidnapping are also followed in ad hoc, opportunistic
kidnappings — though the steps may be condensed and accomplished
in seconds or minutes rather than the weeks or months normally
associated with a well-planned kidnapping operation. And the
same problems with lack of awareness often apply. It is not
uncommon to talk to someone who was involved in an express
kidnapping and hear the person say, “I got a bad feeling about
those three guys standing near that car when I started walking
down that block, but I kept walking anyway.” This frequent
occurrence highlights the importance of situational awareness,
attack recognition and proper mindset maintenance.
Potential targets do not have to institute
security measures that will make them invulnerable to such
crimes — something that is very difficult and that can be very
expensive. Rather, the objective is to take measures that make
them a harder target than other members of the specific class of
individuals to which they belong. Groups conducting
pre-operational surveillance, whether for an intentional
kidnapping or an opportunistic kidnapping, prefer a target that
is unaware and easy prey. Taking some basic security measures
such as maintaining a healthy state of situational awareness
will, in many cases, cause the criminals to choose another
target who is less aware and therefore more vulnerable.
Also, most people who are kidnapped in places
like Afghanistan or the Sahel know they are going into dangerous
places and disregard the warnings not to go to those places.
Many of these people, like journalists and aid workers, take the
risk as part of their jobs. Others, like the European tourists
abducted in the Sahel (and some of the pleasure boaters
kidnapped by Somali pirates), appear to naively disregard the
risk or to be thrill-seekers. In the recent Germaneau case in
Niger, due to the number of highly publicized kidnappings in the
Sahel region over the past eight years, and Germaneau’s personal
history of working in Algeria, it would be hard to argue that he
did not know what he could be getting himself into (though we
are unsure at this point what motivated him to run that risk).
After Germaneau’s kidnapping, his driver was subsequently
arrested, raising the possibility that he was somehow complicit
in the abduction. This is a reminder that it is not at all
unusual for kidnapping gangs to have
inside help, whether a maid, bodyguard, interpreter or taxi
driver.
In retrospect, almost every person who is
kidnapped either missed or ignored some indication or warning of
danger. These warnings can range from observable criminal
behavior to a consular information bulletin specifically warning
people not to drive outside of cities in Guatemala after dark,
for example. This means that, while kidnapping can be a
devastating crime, it can also be an avoidable one.
"This report is republished with permission of
STRATFOR"