Terrorism
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Al-Qaida seen eyeing less complex attacks on US

WASHINGTON — Ever since al-Qaida attacked the United States in 2001, U.S. authorities have worked to detect and prevent the next big terrorist strike.

But officials and counterterrorism experts say the Christmas airline plot and last November's shooting at Fort Hood, Texas, may have shown al-Qaida that smaller-scale attacks also can prove unsettling, without the complexity and risk of bigger attempts.

The Christmas Day attempt to bring down a Detroit-bound flight — allegedly by a young Nigerian man with explosives in his underwear — was not successful. The attempt, however, shook the government, set agencies against each other and led to months of political second-guessing.

Short of mass casualties, the attack produced the kind of reaction that al-Qaida desires.

Now it appears that the group, which has prided itself on its ideological purism, seems to be eyeing a more pragmatic and perhaps more dangerous shift in tactics. The emerging message appears to be that big successes are great, but sometimes simply trying can be just as good.

It's not clear what Osama bin Laden and his senior leaders are thinking and plotting. But U.S.-born al-Qaida spokesman Adam Gadahn made a public pitch for such smaller, single acts of jihad in a recent Internet video.

"Even apparently unsuccessful attacks on Western mass transportation systems can bring major cities to a halt, cost the enemy billions and send his corporations into bankruptcy," Gadahn said in the video.

Officials believe this message has been evolving for the past year. It's turned upside down the prevailing wisdom that the next attack must be bigger and bolder than the one on Sept. 11, 2001.

"It's pretty clear that while al-Qaida would still love to have home runs, they will take singles and doubles if they can get them," said Bruce Riedel, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution Saban Center and a former CIA officer. "And that makes the job of counterterrorism much, much harder."

The partisan bickering that followed the Christmas bombing may have played into al-Qaida's hands.

Counterterrorism officials note that al-Qaida leaders monitor the U.S. closely and watched the reverberations of the attack. They saw the scramble to boost security, the members of Congress criticizing agencies for intelligence and screening failures, the political drumbeat against the Obama administration's national security efforts and the agency leaders who rushed to blame each other.

The shift is ideological as well as tactical. Before Gadahn's latest video message, al-Qaida leaders bin Laden and Ayman al-Zawahiri had not seemed to embrace the call for smaller, more singular insurgent operations.

"Big al-Qaida still has too much of an ego. They still want big, synchronized, high-visibility attacks," said Jarret Brachman, an expert on jihadist groups. "They haven't yet said, 'Let a thousand flowers bloom.'"

Al-Qaida's senior leaders have worried that unleashing scattered and untrained insurgents who could make mistakes could do more harm than good to the greater jihadi message.

Brachman pointed to the November 2005 hotel bombings in Amman, Jordan, when one of the bombers set off his suicide belt in a wedding reception at a hotel rather than the lobby — killing the groom's father and 16 other family members and in-laws.

Killing vast numbers of innocent civilians — including fellow Muslims — was one of the factors leading to the erosion of al-Qaida in Iraq, a mistake the group doesn't want to make again.

In larger, more elaborate plots there are often many people involved, and the chances are greater that one will make a mistake or that law enforcement authorities will get a tip or notice something is going on.

For example, Najibullah Zazi's plot to bomb the New York City subway system late last year unraveled after investigators got a tip and gathered information from an imam who was communicating with the 24-year-old Afghan immigrant, as well as others at the same mosque.

Zazi, who has said he was recruited by al-Qaida and received training in a camp in Pakistan on how to build a bomb, was arrested in Denver before he was able to make his planned drive back to New York to set the plot in motion.

In contrast, officials allege that Maj. Nidal Hasan acted alone at Fort Hood after exchanging e-mails with radical Muslim cleric Anwar al-Awlaki.

Officials have raised concerns that while U.S. authorities were aware that Hasan was communicating with al-Awlaki, that information wasn't passed along to the military. But the assault did not include other people and occurred on a base where he was allowed to be, so it would have been difficult to predict or prevent.

Referencia: http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5heAbKqtLsFG7_-uMJEc1N_wIm6UgD9ECMN200

 
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English - Terrorism

‘Jihad Jane,’ Gadahn: The new Barbie, Ken for self-loathing America

On the lookout for acute social trends? Look no further than the current ominous results of 50 years of American social engineering.

Are you a mid-forties Pennsylvania housewife, low on romance? Online dating not netting you Mr. Wonderful? Career options limited? Retirement a fantasy? Hope and change not panning out? What’s a girl to do when even Oprah can’t stop eating with a billion bucks in the bank?

Well, girlfriend, it’s time to grab your mouse and go Jihad. Who says you don’t have options? Do you have an American passport? If you do, you’re the belle of the ball” in Yemen! (Pronounced, Yeah, men!)

Just ask Colleen LaRose, aka Fatima LaRose, aka Jihad Jane. LaRose found it ALL on the Internet. She told the boys she was up for Jihad, would raise money and kill cartoonists, and the marriage proposals began rolling in.

LaRose got burqad out,” started raising money and organizing a team of men and women terrorists to plan murder and mayhem. She had an assignment, a raison d’être, to go to Sweden with her new pals and kill Lars Vilks, the hapless cartoonist who published a cartoon of Muhammad and now lives in constant fear for his life.

Jihad Jane

Through the wonder of the Internet, LaRose began posting on YouTube in June 2008 as Jihad Jane and, by March 2009, received her marching orders and was jetting off to Europe in August for her rendezvous with Lars.

Adam Gadahn grabbed his mouse and changed his life, too. After years of moping around college classrooms and sponging off his grandparents, Gadahn found Jihad. In the blink of an eye, he went from a Death Metal loser with no prospects to Azzam the Amerikan. All it took was an American passport and the promise to harm the homeland that had not met his expectations.

Gadahn now has a promising career in PR with al-Qaeda, has a $1 million price on his head and went from no dates to multiple wives.

Through the power of the Internet and the phenomenon of social networking, it is now possible to create an online persona that is way more exciting than a real life.

Americans of pre-Internet generations were content with the basics: a job, plenty to eat, a place to live, a dinner out on special occasions, three channels, a week of vacation and a movie now and then.

Now, more and more Americans are grabbing the mouse and changing their lives. In fact, so many have found Jihad on the Web that the government has no idea how many of the country’s mal-content neighbors, friends and co-workers currently are being trained to find meaning in their lives by ending others’.

In a time when G.I. Joe has become Jihad Jane and Campus Spirit Barbie is now Azzam the Amerikan, many of our neighbors, due to hopelessness, a popular culture of self-loathing and an economic future of uncontrolled variables, are selling their souls to terrorists

Referencia: http://theklaxon.com/jihad-jane-gadahn-new-barbie-ken-for-self-loathing-america/5695

 
Al-Qaeda Reeling PDF Imprimir E-mail
English - Terrorism

While many are disappointed American turncoat Adam Gadahn was not the al-Qaeda operative arrested in Pakistan, as erroneously reported on Monday, there is still good cause to celebrate: Al Qaeda is on the run.

Videos of Al-Qaeda

And it is a fitting irony that Gadahn’s latest propaganda video, released last Sunday, serves as an indicator al-Qaeda’s time in Pakistan may be running out. In it, al-Qaeda’s English-language spokesman unsurprisingly praises Fort Hood murderer, Nidal Hasan, and callously calls on al-Qaeda sympathizers in the West to launch similar homicidal attacks.

You shouldn’t make the mistake of thinking that military bases are the only high-value targets in America and the West. On the contrary, there are countless other strategic places, institutions and installations which, by striking, the Muslim can do major damage,” said the first American charged with treason since World War II.

But it was Gadahn’s telling potential al-Qaeda terrorists they need not travel abroad (meaning Pakistan) for training that constituted the video

 
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English - Terrorism

No confirmation Gadahn is in custody: White House

Washington, Mar 10 (PTI) The White House has said it has no confirmation that Adam Gadahn, a senior al-Qaeda operative, has been arrested in Pakistan.

"We have always maintained that we did not have independent confirmation that he (Gadahn) was in custody," White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs said.

There was a similar response from the State Department too.

"The US Embassy in Islamabad is in contact with Pakistani authorities and we have no information indicating that an American has been arrested," Assistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs P J Crowley told reporters.

Videos of Al-Qaeda

Referencia: http://www.ptinews.com/news/556508_No-confirmation-Gadahn-is-in-custody--White-House

 
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