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Al Qaeda Using Iraqi Government Vehicles and Ambulances

Posted by wdporter on October 22, 2007

Al Qaeda Using Iraqi Government Vehicles, Ambulances
October 22, 2007 7:53 AM
Brian Ross and Luis Martinez Report:
Citing evidence that insurgents and al Qaeda terrorists are using Iraqi government vehicles and ambulances to carry out missions, Gen. David Petraeus has ordered a new system of checkpoints for almost all Iraqi official convoys and motorcades.
The only exceptions, according to an unclassified version of Gen. Petraeus’ order, obtained by the Blotter on ABCNews.com, are “Tier 1″ motorcades, such as that of Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki.
U.S. officials in Washington confirmed the order and say it has been in effect since early October.
Click Here for Full Blotter Coverage.
The checkpoints, according to the order, expressly target Iraqi government vehicles because of reports they are being used to “transport weapons and contraband, and to generally support illegal activity.”
Gen. Petraeus, in the order, says the checkpoints are intended to “undermine the movement of terrorists and armed militias” and “to reduce corruption within the Iraqi government.”
Under the order, special authorization placards and other procedures will be used to allow U.S. military vehicles and third-country diplomatic convoys to bypass inspections.
http://blogs.abcnews.com/theblotter/2007/10/us-al-qaeda-usi.html

Posted in Iraq, Terrorists, US Military, al-Qaeda | Leave a Comment »

Al-Qaeda In Iraq Reported Crippled

Posted by wdporter on October 15, 2007

Al-Qaeda In Iraq Reported Crippled

Many Officials, However, Warn Of Its Resilience
By Thomas E. Ricks and Karen DeYoungWashington Post Staff WritersMonday, October 15, 2007; A01
The U.S. military believes it has dealt devastating and perhaps irreversible blows to al-Qaeda in Iraq in recent months, leading some generals to advocate a declaration of victory over the group, which the Bush administration has long described as the most lethal U.S. adversary in Iraq.
But as the White House and its military commanders plan the next phase of the war, other officials have cautioned against taking what they see as a premature step that could create strategic and political difficulties for the United States. Such a declaration could fuel criticism that the Iraq conflict has become a civil war in which U.S. combat forces should not be involved. At the same time, the intelligence community, and some in the military itself, worry about underestimating an enemy that has shown great resilience in the past.
“I think it would be premature at this point,” a senior intelligence official said of a victory declaration over AQI, as the group is known. Despite recent U.S. gains, he said, AQI retains “the ability for surprise and for catastrophic attacks.” Earlier periods of optimism, such as immediately following the June 2006 death of AQI founder Abu Musab al-Zarqawi in a U.S. air raid, not only proved unfounded but were followed by expanded operations by the militant organization.
There is widespread agreement that AQI has suffered major blows over the past three months. Among the indicators cited is a sharp drop in suicide bombings, the group’s signature attack, from more than 60 in January to around 30 a month since July. Captures and interrogations of AQI leaders over the summer had what a senior military intelligence official called a “cascade effect,” leading to other killings and captures. The flow of foreign fighters through Syria into Iraq has also diminished, although officials are unsure of the reason and are concerned that the broader al-Qaeda network may be diverting new recruits to Afghanistan and elsewhere.
The deployment of more U.S. and Iraqi forces into AQI strongholds in Anbar province and the Baghdad area, as well as the recruitment of Sunni tribal fighters to combat AQI operatives in those locations, has helped to deprive the militants of a secure base of operations, U.S. military officials said. “They are less and less coordinated, more and more fragmented,” Lt. Gen. Raymond T. Odierno, the second-ranking U.S. commander in Iraq, said recently. Describing frayed support structures and supply lines, Odierno estimated that the group’s capabilities have been “degraded” by 60 to 70 percent since the beginning of the year.
Lt. Gen. Stanley McChrystal, head of the Joint Special Operations Command’s operations in Iraq, is the chief promoter of a victory declaration and believes that AQI has been all but eliminated, the military intelligence official said. But Adm. William J. Fallon, the chief of U.S. Central Command, which oversees Iraq and the rest of the Middle East, is urging restraint, the official said. The military intelligence official, like others interviewed for this report, spoke on the condition of anonymity about Iraq assessments and strategy.
Senior U.S. commanders on the ground, including Gen. David H. Petraeus, the head of U.S. forces in Iraq, have long complained that Central Command, along with the CIA, is too negative in its analyses. On this issue, however, Petraeus agrees with Fallon, the military intelligence official said.
For each assessment of progress against AQI, there is a cautionary note that comes from long and often painful experience. Despite the increased killings and captures of AQI members, Odierno said, “it only takes three people” to construct and detonate a suicide car bomb that can “kill thousands.” The goal, he said, is to make each attack less effective and lengthen the periods between them.
Right now, said another U.S. official, who declined even to be identified by the agency he works for, the data are “insufficient and difficult to measure.”
“AQI is definitely taking some hits,” the official said. “There is definite progress, and that is undeniable good news. But what we don’t know is how long it will last . . . and whether it’s sustainable. . . . They have withstood withering pressure for a long period of time.” Three months, he said, is not long enough to consider a trend sustainable.
Views of the extent to which AQI has been vanquished also reflect differences over the extent to which it operates independently from Osama bin Laden’s central al-Qaeda organization, based in Pakistan. “Everyone has an opinion about how franchisement of al-Qaeda works,” a senior White House official said. “Is it through central control, or is it decentralized?” The answer to that question, the official said, affects “your ability to determine how successfully [AQI] has been defeated or neutralized. Is it ‘game over’?”
In Baghdad, the White House official said, the group’s “area of operations has been reduced quite a bit for a variety of reasons, some good and some bad.” Three years of sectarian fighting have eliminated many mixed Sunni-Shiite neighborhoods. Those areas had been the most fertile and accessible places for AQI, which is composed of extremist Sunnis, to attack Shiite civilians, security forces and government officials. But the death of mixed neighborhoods also has made another Bush administration priority — promoting political reconciliation — more difficult.
The expanded presence of U.S. troops in combat outposts in many parts of Baghdad has also put pressure on AQI, but a major test of gains against the organization will come when the U.S. military begins to turn security in those areas over to Iraqi forces next year.
Recent suicide bombings in northern Iraq have convinced some officials that AQI has moved its operations in that direction. But the officials said they do not know whether AQI militants have permanently decamped from Baghdad and Anbar province, or whether they are merely lying low in anticipation of a U.S. departure or the failure of Shiite Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki to end the sectarian divisions that AQI fostered and now feeds upon.
While a victory declaration might have the “psychological aspect” of discouraging recruitment to a perceived lost cause, the White House official said, advantages overall would be minimal. “I recognize that there are pros to saying, ‘Hey, listen, the bad guys are on the run.’ ” But if AQI were later able to demonstrate residual capabilities with a series of bombings, “even though it was temporary,” he said, “the question becomes: How does this play out in terms of public opinion?”

Posted in Iraq, Terrorists, US Military, al-Qaeda | Leave a Comment »

Internal US Traitor and Liberal ABC News Hurt US Efforts to Stop Terrorists by Revealing Secrets to Al-Qaeda

Posted by wdporter on October 9, 2007

October 9, 2007 Edition > Section: Foreign
Qaeda Goes Dark After a U.S. Slip

Enemy Vanishes From Its Web Sites
BY ELI LAKE – Staff Reporter of the SunOctober 9, 2007URL: http://www.nysun.com/article/64163
WASHINGTON — Al Qaeda’s Internet communications system has suddenly gone dark to American intelligence after the leak of Osama bin Laden’s September 11 speech inadvertently disclosed the fact that we had penetrated the enemy’s system.
The intelligence blunder started with what appeared at the time as an American intelligence victory, namely that the federal government had intercepted, a full four days before it was to be aired, a video of Osama bin Laden’s first appearance in three years in a video address marking the sixth anniversary of the attacks of September 11, 2001. On the morning of September 7, the Web site of ABC News posted excerpts from the speech.
But the disclosure from ABC and later other news organizations tipped off Qaeda’s internal security division that the organization’s Internet communications system, known among American intelligence analysts as Obelisk, was compromised. This network of Web sites serves not only as the distribution system for the videos produced by Al Qaeda’s production company, As-Sahab, but also as the equivalent of a corporate intranet, dealing with such mundane matters as expense reporting and clerical memos to mid- and lower-level Qaeda operatives throughout the world.
While intranets are usually based on servers in a discrete physical location, Obelisk is a series of sites all over the Web, often with fake names, in some cases sites that are not even known by their proprietors to have been hacked by Al Qaeda.
One intelligence officer who requested anonymity said in an interview last week that the intelligence community watched in real time the shutdown of the Obelisk system. America’s Obelisk watchers even saw the order to shut down the system delivered from Qaeda’s internal security to a team of technical workers in Malaysia. That was the last internal message America’s intelligence community saw. “We saw the whole thing shut down because of this leak,” the official said. “We lost an important keyhole into the enemy.”
By Friday evening, one of the key sets of sites in the Obelisk network, the Ekhlaas forum, was back on line. The Ekhlaas forum is a password-protected message board used by Qaeda for recruitment, propaganda dissemination, and as one of the entrance ways into Obelisk for those operatives whose user names are granted permission. Many of the other Obelisk sites are now offline and presumably moved to new secret locations on the World Wide Web.
The founder of a Web site known as clandestineradio.com, Nick Grace, tracked the shutdown of Qaeda’s Obelisk system in real time. “It was both unprecedented and chilling from the perspective of a Web techie. The discipline and coordination to take the entire system down involving multiple Web servers, hundreds of user names and passwords, is an astounding feat, especially that it was done within minutes,” Mr. Grace said yesterday.
The head of the SITE Intelligence Group, an organization that monitors Jihadi Web sites and provides information to subscribers, Rita Katz, said she personally provided the video on September 7 to the deputy director of the National Counterterrorism Center, Michael Leiter.
Ms. Katz yesterday said, “We shared a copy of the transcript and the video with the U.S. government, to Michael Leiter, with the request specifically that it was important to keep the subject secret. Then the video was leaked out. An investigation into who downloaded the video from our server indicated that several computers with IP addresses were registered to government agencies.”
Yesterday a spokesman for the National Counterterrorism Center, Carl Kropf, denied the accusation that it was responsible for the leak. “That’s just absolutely wrong. The allegation and the accusation that we did that is unfounded,” he said. The spokesman for the director of national intelligence, Ross Feinstein, yesterday also denied the leak allegation. “The intelligence community and the ODNI senior leadership did not leak this video to the media,” he said.
Ms. Katz said, “The government leak damaged our investigation into Al Qaeda’s network. Techniques and sources that took years to develop became ineffective. As a result of the leak Al Qaeda changed their methods.” Ms. Katz said she also lost potential revenue.
A former counterterrorism official, Roger Cressey, said, “If any of this was leaked for any reasons, especially political, that is just unconscionable.” Mr. Cressey added that the work that was lost by burrowing into Qaeda’s Internet system was far more valuable than any benefit that was gained by short-circuiting Osama bin Laden’s video to the public.
While Al Qaeda still uses human couriers to move its most important messages between senior leaders and what is known as a Hawala network of lenders throughout the world to move interest-free money, more and more of the organization’s communication happens in cyber space.
“While the traditional courier based networks can offer security and anonymity, the same can be had on the Internet. It is clear in recent years if you look at their information operations and explosion of Al Qaeda related Web sites and Web activities, the Internet has taken a primary role in their communications both externally and internally,” Mr. Grace said.

Posted in ABC News, Afghanistan, Iraq, Liberal Media, Liberal Treason, Osama Bin Laden, Terrorists, US Military, al-Qaeda | Leave a Comment »

Islamic group with links to Al Qaeda wants to open muslim school in Britain

Posted by wdporter on October 1, 2007

Islamic group ‘with links to Al Qaeda’ wants to open school near Olympic village
An Islamic group accused of having links to al Qaeda wants to open a school near the 2012 Olympic village.
Tablighi Jamaat wants the school for 500 boys to form part of an 18-acre complex which would include Britain’s biggest mosque for 19,000 worshippers.
The group, which already runs a school in Dewsbury, West Yorkshire, has always denied being linked to terror groups.
But the FBI has described it as “a recruiting ground” for al Qaeda.
Shoebomber Richard Reid and 7/7 bombers Mohammed Sidique Khan and Shehzad Tanweer were members.
The proposal for the West Ham site has yet to be submitted to Newham Council for planning approval.
At its institute in Dewsbury, teenage boys devote six mornings a week to Islamic history, theology, law, Qur’an recitation and Arabic. Afternoons are set aside for the national curriculum.
A 2005 Ofsted report praised the institute’s “secure Islamic environment” but criticised the “unsatisfactory” teaching of secular subjects.
Tablighi members say students, who will be charged up to £3,000 a year, will be taught the national curriculum at the east London site and that staff will be recruited locally.
About 40 per cent of places will be reserved for boarders.
Abdul Rashid Bhatti, a Tablighi member, said: “Tablighi Jamaat has been the subject of many investigations but nobody has proved anything.
“We are not radicals, we are not extremists, we are not political. If anyone came here with radical views, they moved on because nothing we do resonated with them.”
Tablighi does not have a registration scheme and there is no leadership or hierarchy.
This open door policy makes the group vulnerable as no one, not even the most senior members, can vouch for someone’s involvement with Tablighi or the extent of his participation.

Posted in Islam - Religion of Peace (*Ahem*), Terrorists, UK, al-Qaeda | Leave a Comment »

CBS News’ Katie Couric Admits Her Liberal Bias

Posted by wdporter on September 26, 2007

Couric weighs in on Iraq, Rather
September 26, 6:23 AM
Her take on the newsSpeaking at the National Press Club Tuesday evening, CBS “Evening News” anchor Katie Couric pulled back the curtain on her personal views of both the war in Iraq and former “Evening News” anchor Dan Rather.“Everyone in this room would agree that people in this country were misled in terms of the rationale of this war,” said Couric, adding that it is “pretty much accepted” that the war in Iraq was a mistake. “I’ve never understood why [invading Iraq] was so high on the administration’s agenda when terrorism was going on in Afghanistan and Pakistan and that [Iraq] had no true connection with al Qaeda.”Further, Couric said the Bush administration botched the war effort, calling it “accepted truths” that it erred by“disbanding the Iraq military, and leaving 100,000 Sunni men feeling marginalized and angry…[and] whether there were enough boots on the ground, the feeling that we’d be welcomed as liberators and didn’t need to focus as much on security.” She added “I’d feel totally comfortable saying any of that at some point, if required, on television.”The former “Today” show anchor traced her discomfort with the administration’s march to war back to the aftermath of the Sept. 11 attacks. “The whole culture of wearing flags on our lapel and saying ‘we’ when referring to the United States and, even the ‘shock and awe’ of the initial stages, it was just too jubilant and just a little uncomfortable. And I remember feeling, when I was anchoring the ‘Today’ show, this inevitable march towards war and kind of feeling like, ‘Will anybody put the brakes on this?’ And is this really being properly challenged by the right people? And I think, at the time, anyone who questioned the administration was considered unpatriotic and it was a very difficult position to be in.”Couric referenced comments made by Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on Monday’s “The Charlie Rose Show,” and said she actually agreed with Ahmadinejad on one point. “Oftentimes Westerners don’t really understand fully the values of this particular culture,” said Couric. “And I think the jury is still out as to whether democracy can really thrive in Iraq.”Couric, a native of Arlington, Virginia, was at the Club to discuss “Democracy and the Press” for a recording of “The Kalb Report,” a public affairs series hosted by journalist and scholar Marvin Kalb. The series is sponsored by George Washington University, the National Press Club and Harvard’s Shorenstein Center. People in the audience included Couric’s parents, “Evening News” executive producer Rick Kaplan, Shorenstein Center founder Walter Shorenstein and NPR’s Dan Schorr.Couric also weighed in on the lawsuit recently filed by Dan Rather against CBS, in which Rather alleges he was unfairly squeezed out of CBS by network executives following a controversial 2004 story about President George W. Bush’s Texas Air National Guard service record. After evidence emerged that the story’s primary documents were possibly faked or forged, Rather stated on air that “if I knew then what I know now, I would not have gone ahead with the story as it was aired, and I certainly would not have used the documents in question.”Couric took Rather to task for his reporting. “There were things in there that were quite egregious in terms of how it was reported,” she said. “And sloppy work is sloppy work…They did not dot their I’s and cross their T’s when it came to that story…And our job is to get right.”

http://www.examiner.com/blogs/Yeas_and_Nays/2007/9/26/Couric-weighs-in-on-Iraq-Rather

Posted in Afghanistan, Dan Rather, Democrat / Liberal / Communists, George W. Bush, Iraq, Katie Couric, Liberal Media, Liberal Propaganda, National Press Club, Terrorists, al-Qaeda | Leave a Comment »

Sept. 11 Anniversary Marked Overseas

Posted by wdporter on September 11, 2007

Sept. 11 Anniversary Marked Overseas
Tuesday, September 11, 2007 5:56 AM
KABUL, Afghanistan — U.S. soldiers in Afghanistan marked the sixth anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks Tuesday by watching in silence as an American flag was lowered to half-staff at a U.S. base.
Meanwhile, Canada’s leader used the anniversary to urge his Australian allies not to abandon their role in Afghanistan, saying the shared fight against Afghan militants is “noble and necessary.”
In the Afghan capital, Kabul, Maj. Gen. Robert Cone told some 100 U.S. soldiers that there is “no alternative” to victory over terrorism.
“We are here now six years later, not as a conquering force, not as an invader seeking to vanquish the Afghans, but rather to do what is right _ to seek out and destroy our common enemy,” Cone said. “As allies, we will train and equip the Afghans. We will help them to provide for their people because we are Americans.”
Earlier in the day, Prime Minister Stephen Harper became the first Canadian leader to address Australia’s parliament in its 106-year history.
“As 9/11 showed, if we abandon our fellow human beings to lives of poverty, brutality and ignorance in today’s global village, their misery will eventually and inevitably become our own,” Harper told a special joint sitting of the House of Representatives and Senate.
Canada, a wartime ally of Australia’s since World War I, has more than 2,000 troops in Afghanistan. It has lost 70 soldiers plus a diplomat and a civilian contract worker in the conflict.
Australia has almost 1,000 troops in Afghanistan, with just one killed since the U.S.-led invasion in 2001.
Violence is soaring this year in Afghanistan amid a resurgence by the Taliban, the Islamic militant movement that controlled the country prior to the U.S.-led invasion. More than 4,200 people, mostly militants, have died in insurgency-related violence in 2007, according to an Associated Press count based on figures from Afghan and Western officials.
In Japan, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has said he would stake his job on his parliament agreeing to continue the country’s effort in Afghanistan, once a safe haven for al-Qaida.
The Japanese navy has been providing fuel for coalition warships in the Indian Ocean since November 2001 under a special anti-terrorism law, which already has been extended three times. The legislation, which expires in November, is a key issue in a special parliament session that opened Monday.
In poll results published Tuesday in Japan’s Yomiuri newspaper, 39 percent of respondents said they opposed the extension, while 29 percent said they support it. Another 29 percent said they had no opinion.
Separately, 27 percent of respondents to a poll by public broadcaster NHK said they supported an extension, and another 27 percent opposed it, with 38 percent undecided. Margins of error were not given, as is customary in Japan.
Abe could push the extension through because his ruling Liberal Democratic Party controls the lower house, which has the final say in most legislation. The issue has been shaping up to be a major showdown with opposition parties.
President Bush recently expressed hope that Tokyo would extend the mission. Critics in Japan say such operations violate Japan’s pacifist constitution, which strictly limits the country’s military activities.
The Yomiuri poll used face-to-face interviews with 1,787 eligible voters nationwide on Saturday and Sunday. NHK interviewed 1,146 people Friday through Sunday.

Posted in Islam - Religion of Peace (*Ahem*), Osama Bin Laden, Terrorists, US Military, United States of America, al-Qaeda | Leave a Comment »

US man jailed for al-Qaeda links

Posted by wdporter on September 11, 2007

US man jailed for al-Qaeda links
Hamid Hayat was convicted in April 2006A US federal judge has sentenced a Californian man to 24 years in jail for attending an al-Qaeda training camp in Pakistan and lying about it.
The judge said Hamid Hayat, 25, had returned home ready and willing to wage violent jihad.
He was arrested in 2005 after returning from a two-year trip to Pakistan.
Prosecutors said he received terrorist training and plotted against targets in California, including banks, hospitals and government buildings.
Father and son
Hayat, a Pakistani American, was found guilty in April 2006 of providing “material support” to al-Qaeda training in Pakistan.
He was also convicted on three counts of lying about it to FBI agents.
He faced 39 years in jail, but the judge set the sentence at 24 years after taking into account this was his first offence.
“It was a sad day for us, but we are very confident he is going to get out on appeal,” Umer Hayat, the father of the sentenced man told reporters on the steps of the court after the sentencing.
“He is innocent.” he added.
In April 2006, a jury in a separate trial of Umer Hayat failed to agree on charges he lied to the FBI about his son’s visit. A mistrial was declared.
Both Umer Hayat, a 48-year-old ice cream vendor in Lodi, California, and his son were arrested in June 2005.
The charge sheet filed in Sacramento alleged that Hamid Hayat provided support for terrorist acts between March 2003 and June 2005.

Posted in Islam - Religion of Peace (*Ahem*), Terrorists, United States of America, al-Qaeda | Leave a Comment »