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I don't necessarily disagree with you over any of this, I question you over the semantics of the definition of the word "organization":
or·gan·i·za·tion
/ˌɔrgənəˈzeɪʃən/ Show Spelled[awr-guh-nuh-zey-shuhn] Show IPA
–noun
1.
the act or process of organizing.
2.
the state or manner of being organized.
3.
something that is organized.
or·gan·ize
/ˈɔrgəˌnaɪz/ Show Spelled [awr-guh-nahyz] Show IPA verb, -ized, -iz·ing.
–verb (used with object)
1.
to form as or into a whole consisting of interdependent or coordinated parts, especially for united action: to organize a committee.
Whether there's 1000, 100, or 50 individuals basing their actions on a common religious philosophy, if they're capable of grouping, networking, and acting upon a common goal, they can be considered an organization. Al Qaeda may not be a singular organization, but rather pockets of organizations basing their actions on a common belief system. They're still organizations by definition if they're acting in cooperative with one another or within their own core groups.
Your definition is a semantic one rather than a specific concrete, effective, tangible one as it is intended. A dictionary definition is far from the reality of their actual ability to act concertedly, which was limited, they may have had the ability to 'talk' as a limited branch of their 'loose' belief but they could do little practically and Bin Laden wouldn't have been a prime-mover. The 100 or so Al Qaeda of 9/11 are not the Al Qaeda of 2011, it's a 'loose' idea in the minds of certain men rather than a 'collective' that can organize and act together, this fact seems to escape the news media over the course of the last 10 years at war.
Al Qaeda is not an 'networked' terrorist organization, it's a belief, that's '
primarily' what it is, if it were an organization in the 'business' sense of terrorism, you could go destroy it's HQ/infrastructure and it would effectively be gone. This seems to still be how Obama and the Military treat it. As if taking out BL is some kind of effective tactic.
Quote:
if they're capable of grouping, networking, and acting upon a common goal, they can be considered an organization.
This is my point, they were incapable of doing this as a 'communicating' network. They couldn't summon all followers effectively or 'organise' them at will to act in the achiement of a common goal. This is the fantasy aspect. So defining them as an organization is not really primarily what 'they' in loose terms are.
It is not an 'international' network which is how Al Qaeda is usually sold, as if it were an 'army'. It does not have fund connected branches throughout the world as if it were a corporation. The 'connections' are abstractions.
Going back to my original point, Bin Laden as a practical force with the ability to fund and plan attacks is a fantasy. He was effectively defunct and broke, the Pakistan military intelligence knew where he was and knew it was an Al Qaeda safehouse -near a military facility- they could have taken him out if they so desired.