This is going to do NOTHING but escalate things.
About that, we'll see. ObL (or UbL, if you like; perhaps you'd like to give Arabic lessons to the international press corps?) made an excellent spokesman and a first-rate rallying point. And yes, the willingness of his movement to look on death in battle as "martyrdom" is awkward.
But even accepting all of that, I'm not sure I buy your argument.
Actually, I'm pretty sure I don't.
ObL was at war with the United States. He declared it before we really took him seriously, and then proved he was serious with four planeloads of innocents and a heaping helping of jet fuel. Al Qaeda is the absolute last organization able to argue that attacks by U.S. forces on its leaders are "attacks on Islam." They get more ground out of civilian-killing anti-Taliban drone strikes than they will out of this on that front.
As far as motivating the troops? Okay, yeah, ObL has "gone to paradise" to hang out with his crop of virgins, but at the same time it's pretty clear that they did not actually
want the man to get shot. They'd successfully kept him hidden from the most powerful single nation on Earth for close to a decade-- them thar be some serious bragging rights. But we caught up to him in the end, so he's looking slightly less blessed by God, now.
Incidentally, failing threes, nice round numbers are handy for religiously-significant matters, as a rule. From a "our cause is favored by God" angle, they'd have been vastly better off with "over ten years" than a sort of flaccid "just short of ten years."
Al Qaeda's most serious threat has never come so much from a few die-hards (dangerous, yes, but die-hards can be killed): it has come from its capacity to look like a force of righteousness on the "Arab street"-- to attract the young and eager, a virtually boundless source of recruits.
Martyrdom or no, that quasi-mythic status has just taken a hit. ObL did not have a bullet-proof vest granted by God. ObL did not have God's hand forever shielding him from infidel eyes. ObL did not even have a nice, appealingly-round number of years of safety before getting offed.
Of
course they'll cry "martyr!" --but will the one who takes his place be able to speak in as dangerously effective a voice? Of
course they'll try something. --but will they be able to come up with anything they wouldn't have eagerly done under ObL?
I doubt it. Competent motivated charismatic visionaries with a gift for management are not that freaking common, folks, certainly not serving any single cause, and I wish Al Qaeda all the ill luck in the world in replacing their dear leader.
Furthermore, this comes at a moment when Al Qaeda's star is on the wane. The wave of pro-democratic uprisings across the Middle East may result in all manner of outcomes, but its present faces appear to have less to do with Islamic militancy than at any point in the last decade. Maybe two. That's an important sign: the "Arab street" has, at least for now, an outlet for its frustrations outside of attacks on foreigners, and the educated Arab moderates have found a voice.
The question is whether it will last. If it does, the "martyrdom" of the Qaeda "figurehead" may have come at just the wrong moment for it to have the hoped-for-by-terrorists effect. Even if it does not, your "intensification" argument seems far-fetched.
We've been accidentally bombing wedding parties in the Middle East for ten years now. We've done the "pre-emptive" invasion of an MWD-less nation. We've done Guantanamo. We've done Abu Grahaib (sp?). We've done the idiot American general nattering on about "my god is stronger than your god."
From an Arab emotional standpoint, we've been doing our worst for ages.
Ah-- also, about President Obama?
I don't love every last thing the man's done. He's far too much beholden to the constructs of law known as corporations. He goes for moderation even when the other side's arguments verge on the fraudulent-- even when they're well over that verge.
But I respect his caution, and his mindfulness. What he did here was what he should have-- the only thing he could have without validating every "the government is keeping ObL alive because ..." conspiracy theory ever.
And he is a much-needed bulwark at a time when the Right has gone mad. Just because I think it would be great fun to watch you Libertarians out there try to keep the country functional doesn't mean I actually want to see it happen.
Four more years. Just
try to stop us.