Al Qaeda still remains a threat.

I've dealt with the Taliban and al Qaeda.

Big Pharma's the Taliban... They're Al Qaeda.

The chief al Qaeda recruiting tool is the net.

Al Qaeda is closely aligned with the Chechens.

ISIL is not your parents' al Qaeda. It's a very different model.

ISIS is even at war with its most natural ally, al Qaeda in Syria.

Staying in a very public fight with the U.S. is exactly what Al Qaeda wants.

Al Qaeda is alive and well in Libya, Iraq, Syria and the wars are not receding.

Your parents' al Qaeda was a very different model than the threat we face today.

To blame the existence of al Qaeda on poverty like Egypt's is a slur on the poor.

I would show up at a party for Al Qaeda if you said there's going to be a dinner.

In order to get re-elected, Obama told us Al Qaeda was on the run and all but defeated.

Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula is the largest external operation force within al Qaeda.

Apostasy is a grave crime in Islam and punishable by death in the eyes of members of al Qaeda.

I think these al Qaeda franchise groups have clearly evolved into a much more dangerous strain.

The American incarceration of Sheikh Rahman was a hot-button issue for al Qaeda for many years.

The reality is that al Qaeda has been trying to attack the United States since long before Iraq.

Al Qaeda will always focus on us, the United States. And they will take advantage of any situation.

I was on the front lines in the Cold War, and I was on the front lines in the fight against Al Qaeda.

One letter to bin Laden reveals that al Qaeda was working on chemical and biological weapons in Iran.

At one point people in al Qaeda were actually drawing monthly paychecks when they were based in Sudan.

All around the world one heard or read that there was no connection between Saddam Hussein and Al Qaeda.

What is al Qaeda? It's an open source religious political movement that works off the global supply chain.

There is evidence that some of al Qaeda's nuclear efforts over the years met with swindles and false leads.

There's overwhelming evidence... circumstantial and otherwise, to suggest a connection between Iraq and al Qaeda.

The Salafists, the Muslim Brotherhood, and Al Qaeda in Iraq are the major forces driving the insurgency in Syria.

Success means eliminating Al Qaeda's ability to launch terrorist attacks against the United States and our allies.

President Bashar Assad's regime is in the unique position of being targeted both by Israel and supporters of al Qaeda.

Al Qaeda doesn't abide by the Geneva Conventions, so in my opinion, they should not be afforded the protections of them.

The threat that ISIL presents and poses to the United States is very different in kind, in type and degree than al Qaeda.

The gravest risks from al Qaeda combine its affinity for big targets and its announced desire for weapons of mass destruction.

Preventing radicalization that leads to violence here in America is part of our larger strategy to decisively defeat al Qaeda.

An intelligence analyst may attribute an attack to al Qaeda, whereas a policy maker could opt for the more general 'extremist.'

I fear that our true motivation is about oil and our own flailing economy; about the failure to destroy Al Qaeda and about revenge.

Al Qaeda and ISIS may have global aspirations, but their ability to penetrate a society is strongly influenced by local conditions.

We need to understand that an open society and free speech and press... really are the best weapons against al Qaeda and extremism.

The attacks of 9/11 came out of Afghanistan. It was a failed state, a rogue nation. That's why al Qaeda was there in the first place.

I predict you're going to see more and more of this shifting of al Qaeda fighters going over to ISIS because they are the game in town.

They have called Operation Iraqi Freedom a war of choice that isn't part of the real war on terror. Someone should tell that to al Qaeda.

There were no international terrorists in Iraq until we went in. It was we who gave the perfect conditions in which Al Qaeda could thrive.

The concept of war is not the construct that will govern - psychologically, politically, and legally - our continuing response to Al Qaeda.

P of what al Qaeda tries to do, and terrorists, is disrupt. Americans should live their lives just as they have every day, but just be aware.

Public discussion of how we determine al Qaeda intentions, I just - I can't see how that can do anything but harm the security of the nation.

By the end of 2008, clearly the Al Qaeda and Sunni insurgency had been relatively stabilized. And in the Al Qaeda's mind, they were defeated.

I think it is important for Europe to understand that even though I am president and George Bush is not president, Al Qaeda is still a threat.

We tend to forget in the West that the United States has more Muslim blood on its hands than Al Qaeda has on its hands of innocent non-Muslims.

The Taliban didn't attack us on 9/11 - Al-Qaeda did. That's why I and other people joined the military - to go after Al Qaeda. Not the Taliban.

Mistreatment of al Qaeda members and their friends and hangers-on is something I number among my moral concerns. But it's number 1,000,000,001.

Counterterrorism analysts have known for years that al Qaeda prepares for attacks with elaborate 'targeting packages' of photographs and notes.

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