"One- man cell, the new face of Al Qaeda terror."
15 Aug 2008 (ANI): The creation of one-man cell seems to be the new strategy of Al Qaeda terrorists.
According to the Fox News, intelligence officials have discovered an online Al Qaeda manual that prescribes that group leaders should training new recruits to operate as smaller cells around the globe.
The manual, called "Method for Building the Personality of a Terrorist Mujahid" and written by an Islamist forum contributor nicknamed "Shamil al-Baghdadi," encourages militant followers to stop focusing on pulling off attacks on the scale of 9-11 and to start executing numerous smaller attacks.
If for some reason the mission fails, the Jihadi must not abort, but instead carry on alone, as a one-man cell, the paper quotes New York City Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly as saying while quoting from the manual.
It advocates assassinations by shooting, poisoning and booby-trapping cell phones and computers.
Further, targets are to be prioritised by ranking them into categories such as "high profile," which represent presidents and prime ministers.
Recruits are also told to organize credit card scams and to rob police stations in order to get hold of weapons.
However, the most shocking revelation are the lessons on kidnapping, with orders to slaughter hostages in a way that will terrify the public.
Dr. Matthew Levitt, director of The Washington Institute''s Stein Program on Counterterrorism and Intelligence, said that the structure has shifted from a centralized operation toward smaller cells at a global scale.
"You know, it used to be that the face of Al Qaeda was bin Laden and the core. That is still the case, but now we are reminded about Al Qaeda on a regular basis more because of the activities of the local cells," added Levitt.
Referring to the manual as being specifically tailored to its audience Levitt said, "What this does more than anything else is provides people who are inclined to carry out such attacks with the sense that they now have some information and pushes them to actually go through with it." (ANI)
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We have legitimate law and a legitimate government in America, and we are obligated to obey our state as citizens, not resorting to our own private interpretations of laws, obeying those we like and disregarding the rest. It's an all or nothing proposition. The following might shed some light on what the government thinks of us, regardless of our obeyance.
An interview with Ralph Peters, a retired U.S. Army lieutenant colonel who served in infantry and intelligence units before becoming a Foreign Area Officer and a global strategic scout for the Pentagon, shows the following:
FP: Tell us about the military officers who had vital knowledge who were dismissed by Washington during the Clinton years. What were the consequences?
Peters: It was heartbreaking. My close circle of comrades and I--all Russian speakers and adventurers by nature--would dive into the guts of the Soviet Union (often at our own expense, by the way--there was always money to buy new billion-dollar satellites, but no money for officers like us to crawl over the Soviet sickbed and discover things no satellite can see). We'd come back with first-hand accounts of the developing ethnic strife, of the corruption, of the KGB/FSB's machinations, even with battlefield reports we risked our lives to gather--and back in Washington we were just blown off (not by the Army, but by the CIA, the other intel agencies and the administration).
If the intelligence didn't benefit Boeing or Lockheed Martin and cost billions, it was written off as worthless. There was zero value placed on human intelligence--it was surreal. I'd come back from Country X with an eyewitness account and some twenty-something Clintonista who'd never been farther from the USA than Cancun would tell me that I didn't know what I was talking about. And the State Department, with its pathetic apparatchiks, was the worst of all--as the book recounts, I once returned to our embassy in Armenia with a first-hand account of fighting where there wasn't supposed to be any--and our diplomat on duty, who was cowering in the embassy, terrified of leaving the Yerevan city limits, essentially called me a liar. My views just didn't match the Clinton administration's, and State actually trusted the reports from the Armenian government over the word of a U.S. Army officer.
[T]he State Department--the most dysfunctional agency in our government--just wanted to maintain smooth relations with Russia. In trying to uncover the truth, we faced two enemies: The Russian security services (the old KGB in new suits) and our own diplomats. Again, it was heartbreaking.... But, thanks to State, we'll never really know. (Our diplomats just hated military officers--it seemed downright Freudian--and, frankly, it hasn't changed all that much.)
[....]
Peters: I saw the Saudis doing damage while I was in uniform, and I keep seeing it now. They are our enemies. They cozy up to our "elite," then fund extremism all around the Muslim world (personally, I wish I could apply Sharia law against any American university or think-tank that accepts Saudi Funding). Again and again, from Central Asia to Kenya to northern Virginia, and from Indonesia to Senegal, I've seen how the Saudis use their oil profits to prevent Muslims from integrating into host societies and to foster ferocious anti-American hatred. If I could do one single thing to make this a better world, I'd make the entire Saudi royal family disappear. And by the way--they're also the worst enemy Muslims have, too. The key to understanding the Saudis is to realize that they don't give a damn about individual Muslims--they only care about their perverted Wahhabi vision of Islam. Human suffering doesn't bother them at all--as long as those bloated pigs in nightgowns don't suffer themselves.
[....]
FP: What is Washington in denial about? Peters: You name it. Reality. Islamist extremism. Putin. China. Immigration. Washington is clinging passionately to the pathetically failed 20th-century theories of international relations its creatures learned at Harvard or Princeton. Washingtonians, Democrat and Republican alike, are as out of touch with global down-and-dirty reality as Osama bin Laden in his cave--if not moreso. Washington is a city that indulges itself in pleasant foreign-policy fantasies--at our expense.... http://www.frontpagemag.com/