View Full Version : Training for the Jihad (merged thread)
Jedburgh
04-03-2007, 09:16 PM
The Jamestown Foundation's Terrorism Monitor, 29 Mar 07:
The New Issue of Technical Mujahid: A Manual for Jihadis (http://jamestown.org/news_details.php?news_id=230)
The al-Fajr Information Center, a jihadi organization, recently published the February 2007 issue of Technical Mujahid, a magazine released once every two months that is available online. The release marks the second issue of the publication. The various jihadi websites have posted links to different locations to download the publication, that way stifling any attempts by outside forces to remove the document from the web. According to the editor-in-chief of Technical Mujahid, Abu al-Mothanna al-Najdi, the objectives of the magazine are to eradicate the phobia and anxiety suffered by those who refrain from participating in jihad because they erroneously believe that intelligence services are monitoring their every move. Additionally, the publication aims to spread a sense of security, vigilance and self-confidence, in a scientific way, among members of jihadi forums by educating them in jihadi propaganda and enhancing their knowledge of field operations. To achieve these objectives, the magazine is organized into six sections of technical training that are aimed at helping the mujahideen carry out certain tasks.
Section 1: Covert Communications and Hiding Secrets Inside Images...
Section 2: Designing Jihadi Websites from A-Z...
Section 3: Smart Weapons, Short Range Shoulder-Fired Missiles...
Section 4: The Secrets of the Mujahideen, an Inside Perspective...
Section 5-6: Video Technology and Subtitling Video Clips...
SoiCowboy
08-03-2007, 12:42 PM
My thesis. (http://www.geocities.com/locinca/SoiCowboy.pdf)
What do you think?
Edit: Whoops. OK, does that work?
sgmgrumpy
08-03-2007, 01:04 PM
Link don't work:confused:
marct
08-03-2007, 03:18 PM
Hi SoiCowboy,
Interesting. I noticed that you mentioned that most of the material was from the 80's and 90's. Does that include the material coming off the latest sites as well? Also, what sort of material is actually available on the tactics of use, outside of the videos? Have you found specifics on employment, etc.?
Also, is this published? I'm writing an article on virtual warfare right now and I'd like to reference this piece.
Marc
SoiCowboy
08-03-2007, 05:34 PM
Does that include the material coming off the latest sites as well?
Most of the materials is from the 1960s to the 1980s. It ranges from survivalist stuff to technical manuals. It got uploaded into text files by the first BBSs in the 1990s and the information has been degrading in quality since then. I used Internet Haganah (http://tinyurl.com/2surwf) and google translator to look at Irhabi sites. Al Qaeda in Maghreb was the one I looked at the most since it had the Al Qaeda brand name. It has since been taken down but they didn't appear to be the sharpest tools in the shed. Instructions like, don't use your real name, don't use your real town, use a proxy being said over and over again. Smart people would already being doing that and not need telling. As for the latest material, most terrorist literature is parasitical. They rarely come up with their own stuff. They tend to plagiarise and just insert religious statements all over the place. I only looked at three or four of their own in house pdf's from different places. There's only so much Islamic mumbo jumbo I can handle.
Also, what sort of material is actually available on the tactics of use, outside of the videos?
Beyond videos, dvds and a handful of posts on boards, I haven't come across much written material. I guessed that its cheaper, quicker and easier to burn a DVD and show through images than write a file. Added advantage is that you don't have to worry about the readers literacy and that soon near enough everyone is going to be near an internet cafe.
Have you found specifics on employment, etc.?
I made an assumption on employment. Newspapers report terrorists are captured in XXX, and among their materials were DVDs of bomb making material downloaded off the internet. Terrorists in the area suddenly have become twice as effective at making bombs. Iraqi bomb making videos are available for download from torrents. Whether those three dots actually join up is another thing. I haven't come across anything like "Hi I'm a terrorist, I downloaded this DVD, put it to use, and here's my results!" but then again I haven't been on any of their password protected members only BBSs. Judging by Irhabi007 and others, they love to boast about getting one over on the crusaders/infidels/etc.
Also, is this published? I'm writing an article on virtual warfare right now and I'd like to reference this piece.
The thesis gets published September-ish. Feel free to reference now.
marct
08-03-2007, 06:21 PM
Hi SoiCowboy,
The thesis gets published September-ish. Feel free to reference now.
Excellent. Can you either post or pm me the proper reference?
Marc
SoiCowboy
08-15-2007, 01:14 PM
PM sent.
For some reason I can't edit my first post.
This is the final edition, all polished up. (http://tinyurl.com/ypvwfe)
marct
08-15-2007, 01:22 PM
Hi SC,
PM sent.
For some reason I can't edit my first post.
This is the final edition, all polished up. (http://tinyurl.com/ypvwfe)
Weird - hmmm. Anyway, I got the PM and thanks for posting the latest version.
Merv Benson
08-17-2007, 02:43 AM
From my post (http://prairiepundit.blogspot.com/2007/08/taliban-write-how-to-manual-for.html) with excerpts from the UK Telegraph:
The Taliban has published its first military field manual detailing how to spring ambushes, run spies and conduct an insurgency against coalition forces in Afghanistan.
At 144 pages, Military Teachings - for the Preparation of Mujahideen, is a minutely detailed "how to" book on subjects ranging from tactics and weapons to building training camps and spycraft.
The guide, which is similar in its aims to British and American military field manuals, was obtained by The Daily Telegraph from a source in Pakistan who claimed to be close to the Taliban. Its cover bears the image of two crossed swords and the Koran, the arms of the Taliban's ousted government of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan.
...
The military manual is divided into 10 chapters and appears to be the result of a collaboration between religious scholars and specialists in terrorist, logistical and intelligence tactics. It is illustrated with simple formulas for the preparation of explosives, pictures and diagrams of light and heavy weaponry, ammunition and communication equipment.
The bulk of the manual details basic military skills such as firing positions and how to use different weapons. It advises on how to carry out remotely controlled attacks on enemy vehicles, and shows how to strike aircraft and armoured vehicles by targeting weak points.
It shows with diagrams how to target vehicles passing through rough terrain at low speed and how telegraph poles and trees can be used to range in on a target.
It also explores methods of blowing up bridges, railway tracks and power and telephone lines.
I'm sure our intel guys will be eager to get their hands on it, although they seemed to have done a pretty good job of figuring out their doctrine. If you follow the link back to the Telegraph they also have photos of some of the pages of the manual.
MattC86
08-17-2007, 04:34 AM
I'm sure our intel guys will be eager to get their hands on it, although they seemed to have done a pretty good job of figuring out their doctrine. If you follow the link back to the Telegraph they also have photos of some of the pages of the manual.
The intel guys may know it, but I don't and I'd like to. Any chance we might see it available for us poor laymen?
Or is it safe to say Taliban "doctrine" is pretty close to Mujahideen tactics described in "The Other Side of the Mountain" or other similar works?
Matt
Cavguy
08-17-2007, 02:01 PM
The intel guys may know it, but I don't and I'd like to. Any chance we might see it available for us poor laymen?
Or is it safe to say Taliban "doctrine" is pretty close to Mujahideen tactics described in "The Other Side of the Mountain" or other similar works?
Matt
The joke here at the COIN Center is that more people outside the army have read FM 3-24 than inside...... and probably more of our enemies.
And if it wasn't already easy, you get this kind redirect during your search for the free download :rolleyes:
FAS Note: This “final draft” of FM 3-24 on Counterinsurgency has
been superseded by the final version of the document dated 15
December 2006 and posted here: http://www.fas.org/irp/doddir/army/fm3-24.pdf
Merv Benson
08-17-2007, 02:22 PM
Use the link on my post to get to the Telegraph story. There is a link to several pictures from the manual. I have not been able to copy the link directly but it reads "In pictures: Taliban 'how to' manual."
Sarajevo071
08-17-2007, 06:57 PM
http://img501.imageshack.us/img501/653/t2fx8.jpg
http://img441.imageshack.us/img441/2217/t3ey0.jpg
http://img110.imageshack.us/img110/4252/t4wr2.jpg
http://img411.imageshack.us/img411/8779/t5bu8.jpg
Sarajevo071
08-17-2007, 06:58 PM
http://img62.imageshack.us/img62/1121/t1mp0.jpg
Hey Sarajevo !
Thanks for the pics !
This image looks as if it came directly out of a manual for the Army Corps of Engineers (http://www.usace.army.mil/publications/eng-manuals/em.htm). .500 to 1.0 kg explosives placement, shape charges et al.
Nonetheless, fairly basic stuff found on the internet.
I'd be interested in the IED construction sections if any.
Regards, Stan
http://img411.imageshack.us/img411/8779/t5bu8.jpg
Sarajevo071
08-18-2007, 12:48 AM
N/p Stan. You are welcome... About other stuff, I do not know much about engineering, mines or explosives so I will not be able to help you. Sorry. Once you guys get hand on the manual maybe you will be able to learn more.
bye
AQ & affiliates have published many megs of .pdf manuals on the web. Much is translation of U.S. Mil documents (n.b. much of the survival and weapons stuff in Al-Battar). If this sample is representative, the media is making much ado again.
The two really scary ones were the Jihadi encyclopedias of poisons and explosives. I'd really like to hear if the processes in those manuals are good or would leave dead kitchen chemists lying around (but that could be an up side).
http://www.e-prism.org/articlesbyotherscholars.html
has many such pubs online, and some in translation.
SoiCowboy
08-19-2007, 01:52 PM
Still can't edit.
Last one, with bibliography. (http://tinyurl.com/3dcghp)
Thanks for your help.
Still can't edit.
Last one, with bibliography. (http://tinyurl.com/3dcghp)
Thanks for your help.
She still doesn't work, all I get is a 'megaupload' page with typical pop ups.
Do we need to register and login ?
She still doesn't work, all I get is a 'megaupload' page with typical pop ups.
Do we need to register and login ?
You weren't kidding when you said you were thick on that other thread....:D
Look at the top. There should be a three letter code. type it into the blank to the left of the "Download" button.
BTW, I spent twenty minutes on that page trying to figure out how to download.:D
You weren't kidding when you said you were thick on that other thread....:D
Look at the top. There should be a three letter code. type it into the blank to the left of the "Download" button.
BTW, I spent twenty minutes on that page trying to figure out how to download.:D
Okay, now I get it, along with 'wait 38 seconds or continue with premium downloads and your visa card number'. Could you give me yours, mine's dead :D
It's now been 2 minutes and the $69.99 special is still friggin there !If I wasn't on a 12 hour shift, I'd have had a beer and smoke by now.
Thanks anyway RTK :rolleyes:
Okay, now I get it, along with 'wait 38 seconds or continue with premium downloads and your visa card number'. Could you give me yours, mine's dead :D
It's now been 2 minutes and the $69.99 special is still friggin there !If I wasn't on a 12 hour shift, I'd have had a beer and smoke by now.
Thanks anyway RTK :rolleyes:
After the prerequesite 45 seconds, hit the second download button that appears. Then you'll be reading. I'm gonna have to e-mail this thing to you soon so you won't go postal in Estonia.
I'd use the full up URLs for websites you're sourcing. Additionally, use a common bibliographical format. For instance, for movie quotes I don't think using the fictional character's name as a source is correct. Also, you have opinions footnoted (ie. #74) which is not correct.
Interesting thoughts, though I'm not sure what the "so what" factor is here.
After the prerequesite 45 seconds, hit the second download button that appears. Then you'll be reading. I'm gonna have to e-mail this thing to you soon so you won't go postal in Estonia.
You've obviously never met an Ethnic Russian Postal worker in Estonia :cool:
Remember the films with Russian migrant workers in gray dresses, a few missing teeth and fuzzy mustaches (the female workers RTK) ?
Slapout can tell you where some of them are...in the South...Lower Alabama (LA) :eek:
The bottom line is this. A lot of the information on bombs online is rubbish. Terrorists tend to make two types of bombs; ANFO and AP. The instructions are easy to find, the materials easy to get, and the manufacturing very simple.
I would have to disagree with that. The vast majority of IEDs has not been Ammonium Nitrate Fuel Oil (ANFO). Such a device requires far too much raw material and no place to hide a 50 gallon drum along a dirt road.
Where I am and have recently been, most have been modified projectiles without fuses, or simple command detonated IEDs with extracted HEs from projectiles.
slapout9
08-19-2007, 11:30 PM
Remember the films with Russian migrant workers in gray dresses, a few missing teeth and fuzzy mustaches (the female workers RTK) ?
Slapout can tell you where some of them are...in the South...Lower Alabama (LA) :eek:
Yea baby:) Don't they call them potato mama's?
Slapout can tell you where some of them are...in the South...Lower Alabama (LA) :eek:
I've seen more than a few of them in Western Kentucky. Which is another reason I will retire to the Colorado Springs area.
selil
08-20-2007, 02:34 AM
Can i just put it on my website and let y'all download it? Or is that like farting in public? I've got unlimited bandwidth...
SoiCowboy
08-21-2007, 12:57 PM
Sorry about the hassle with megaupload. Yeah, selil, feel free to host it.
Thanks for the heads-up Stan, I'll add that. I was thinking more of terrorism worldwide and using IED and bomb interchangeably (whether that's right or not).
RTK, my 'so what' factor is me trying to say three points. That a lot of US institutions, like the Department of Justice and some of the US Army's doctrine writers, are about 20 years behind the curve, that Iraq is the most important thing happening for making bombs, and that other groups are copying the Iraqis using the internet.
selil
08-21-2007, 01:21 PM
SoiCowboy your document is located here (276KB, pdf) (http://cit-dept.calumet.purdue.edu/liless/media/SoiCowboy_Final.pdf)
Thanks Sam, it works and I no longer need RTK's credit card :D
SoiCowboy,
I need to do some research, but during our last course with the METs SO13 and SO15 earlier this year, the stats for ANFO were less than 20 percent. Large devices or incidences such as The Oklahoma Bomber Mcveigh require far more background and, to say the least room for the IED (you need a lot because correctly mixed ANFO has barely 75% of commercial grade TNT's explosive force). Furthermore, ANFO is extremely unstable and sensitive to electrostatic discharge (ESD).
Comp. B and C (aka C4) (military grade explosives used in artillery shells and demolitions) are very stable or insensitive, and relatively easy to come by, especially in Iraq.
I'll get off my soapbox now :D
SoiCowboy
08-21-2007, 03:24 PM
No, I'm glad for your input.
Was the Mets stats just for England or worldwide? Are they classified?
I was under the impression that ANFO is fine as long as the blasting cap and booster were kept separately from the main device and only assembled on site.
Of course if you have it all rigged together ready to go I can see how an electric current would detonate it.
Do you need any special knowledge to detonate C4 beyond needing a detonator and booster?
No, I'm glad for your input.
Was the Mets stats just for England or worldwide? Are they classified?
The materials we have are marked FOUO, but I only have paper versions as they could not legally send us e-versions. The book's about 7 inches of paper. The training we performed together was mostly post blast and anti-terrorism. The stats were collected together with NATO and other LEs and are world-wide figures.
I was under the impression that ANFO is fine as long as the blasting cap and booster were kept separately from the main device and only assembled on site.
Of course if you have it all rigged together ready to go I can see how an electric current would detonate it.
Actually, even high grade ANFO will not explode with just a detonator (a bit stronger version of the movie favorites 'blasting cap"), and you will also need a good primary explosive source (like TNT) (booster as you put it) to create the "explosive train". You're right, better assemble things on site or those pesky ESDs will get ya :D
Do you need any special knowledge to detonate C4 beyond needing a detonator and booster?
Nope, almost none at all. You can even take a piece and light it with a match, heat your rations, or throw it in a fire and just watch it burn. But, don't go stompin' out the fire or hit it with a hammer :rolleyes:
No primary explosive is needed - just a good detonator - carefully push it into the C4 (or make a hole like the detonator wells on Claymores), apply 9 to 12 VDC (Ooops, forgot, get far away first and use plenty of WD1 wire), and there you go.
C4 unlike in the movies is not the high explosive most would think, it's only about 1,3 times stronger than commercial grade TNT. It is however the military's favorite, as you can do just about anything with it and it won't detonate (save putting a detonator in it).
SoiCowboy
08-21-2007, 04:34 PM
Would it be fair to say that ANFO is the bomb of choice for beginner bombers and truck bombers?
I'm going to go away and read up more now. Thanks again.
Would it be fair to say that ANFO is the bomb of choice for beginner bombers and truck bombers?
I'm going to go away and read up more now. Thanks again.
In short, yes, the vehicle borne ANFO IED is still the choice for young terrorists, but it’s growing harder to make something of sufficient size (tractor-trailer) and not attract attention buying tons of fertilers, etc.
Secondly, the terrorist must be able to negotiate the beheamoth through town safely in order to reach his target. In my warped opinion, if you set the skills bar too high, the bubba may begin to wonder why he’s going to meet his maker :D
As I recall, the first ANFO IED was a mere accidental creation of the IRA in the early 70s. We would later learn that the new generation of car bombers were coincidently all graduates of CIA and/or Pakistani Intelligence schools. Some say the Saudis financed the Mujahedin trainees who later would terrorize the Russians in Kabul.
Well, it seemed like a good idea at the time :rolleyes:
There some good reading out there that may just surprise you (well before the internet):
You have shown no pity to us! We will do likewise. We will dynamite you!
Anarchist warning (1919)
Buda's Wagon (1920)
Preliminary Detonations (1948-63), "Reds' Time Bombs Rip Saigon Center".
Regards, Stan
RTK, my 'so what' factor is me trying to say three points. That a lot of US institutions, like the Department of Justice and some of the US Army's doctrine writers, are about 20 years behind the curve, that Iraq is the most important thing happening for making bombs, and that other groups are copying the Iraqis using the internet.
I'm not trying to slap you down, it's just that after a long day of molding LTs I tend to be short and to the point.
I think if the above stated concept is the thesis than you can probably go a little further to develop it. And, again, I'd use the full URLs so one can see the variety of sources that you've used instead of cross-referencing each and every one.
SoiCowboy
08-21-2007, 06:13 PM
RTK, its no worries here. I like short and to the point. Will do on the urls.
Stan, I wasn't thinking about 18 wheelers, more like dumpsters and beer trucks that can get away with being large and in a town center. As you say with the anarchists and their dynamite, whats old is new again. The difference (as far as I can see) is this time, you can innovate much faster.
Jedburgh
08-21-2007, 06:58 PM
...a lot of US institutions, like the Department of Justice and some of the US Army's doctrine writers, are about 20 years behind the curve....
I strongly disagree with this statement. By pre-OEF/OIF standards, doctrine has been developing at an amazing speed. Most importantly, entirely new FMs, TMs & TCs have been developed (for subjects that were never previously addressed in doctrine - especially regarding the IED threat, and on SSE, which is closely related), and the drafts put out to the key stakeholders out in the field with relative rapidity. It still takes a while for the drafts to be worked and re-worked (inital draft, draft, final draft, final approved draft, etc.) into final approved doctrine - but that is due nearly as much to the evolving nature of the threat as it is to administrative processes required for the doctrine to be approved and published for implementation.
And, despite your statement in the paper, you ain't gonna find most of these on GlobalSecurity.org, Cryptome.org or FAS.org.
Stan, As you say with the anarchists and their dynamite, whats old is new again. The difference (as far as I can see) is this time, you can innovate much faster.
Certainly true, but then forensic science has also come a long way. This may not hold true in Iraq, but look how quickly a forensic post blast found Yousef (sp?) in the 93 WTC bombing, or better yet, how quickly McVeigh & Nichols were caught.
The Tube bombings took a bit more time, but again forensic science also caught up with them.
I'll still check around for some current stats as promised.
I'll close with echoing what Jedburgh posted:
Such sites as GlobalSecurity.org, Cryptome.org or FAS.org are at best references and barely touch the surface. While you may find the chemical combinations and terms for explosives, much like the IRA in the early 70s, you won't find out just what percentage translates to hghly unstable. Those manuals are all classified, tried and true.
I don't know what the DOJ is doing, but I do know that the Army is not behind the curve.
SoiCowboy
08-21-2007, 07:20 PM
I hadn't thought about the rewrites/updating of doctrine. I know that sounds stupid because they might have nailed it recently.
The first doctrine manual that comes to my mind is:
US Army (15th August 2005), A military guide to terrorism in the Twenty-First Century, U.S. Army Training and Doctrine Command, TRADOC DCSINT Handbook No.1, Version 3.0
Because it cites the anarchist cookbook as a source for instructions to make homemade bombs.
I'll go away and look up some of the more recent ones. I think I've read some from 2004/5/6.
Tom Odom
08-21-2007, 07:38 PM
I hadn't thought about the rewrites/updating of doctrine. I know that sounds stupid because they might have nailed it recently.
The first doctrine manual that comes to my mind is:
US Army (15th August 2005), A military guide to terrorism in the Twenty-First Century, U.S. Army Training and Doctrine Command, TRADOC DCSINT Handbook No.1, Version 3.0
Because it cites the anarchist cookbook as a source for instructions to make homemade bombs.
I'll go away and look up some of the more recent ones. I think I've read some from 2004/5/6.
Try a bit more finesse on whether you are talking doctrine or TTP. Doctrine by definition is longer term. TTP--my business--is short term and often pushes doctrine in front of it like a bow wave. That has been very true for the past 5 years. You are correct that some doctrinal quarters are less amenable to change and indeed I still hear tensions expressed between "real War" and "COIN stuff". Sometimes the tensions between the doctrine side and the TTP side erupt into full disputes.
The other issue is manning. The old days where every proponent had a stable of doctrine writers is no more; they are short staffed and working priorities. In this regard, TTP chasers like me fill in the needs.
Best
Tom
Jedburgh
08-21-2007, 07:43 PM
I hadn't thought about the rewrites/updating of doctrine. I know that sounds stupid because they might have nailed it recently.
The first doctrine manual that comes to my mind is:
US Army (15th August 2005), A military guide to terrorism in the Twenty-First Century, U.S. Army Training and Doctrine Command, TRADOC DCSINT Handbook No.1, Version 3.0
Because it cites the anarchist cookbook as a source for instructions to make homemade bombs.
I'll go away and look up some of the more recent ones. I think I've read some from 2004/5/6.
The TRADOC DCSINT Handbook series are not doctrine. They are essentially reference materials that provide background on select subjects along with limited lessons learned. CALL materials are also not doctrine - however, they focus on capturing valuable TTPs and lessons learned that often are later translated into doctrine. "Doctrine" that addresses the IED threat in the Army will be found in published Field Manuals (FMs) and Training Manuals (TMs), with a few other designations not mentioned.
SoiCowboy
08-21-2007, 07:56 PM
Well there we are then. I'm using the wrong terms and I stand corrected.
Jedburgh
08-31-2007, 03:58 PM
If you're not aware of it, this one has been around for a few years. It was down for quite a while, but it appears to be running again:
The Explosives and Weapons Forum: A Weapon of Mass Instruction (http://www.roguesci.org/theforum/index.php)
SoiCowboy
09-04-2007, 10:50 AM
Thanks. Well aware of them. They're more technical than the average pyro, though they still come across as a bunch of elitists.
Thanks. Well aware of them. They're more technical than the average pyro, though they still come across as a bunch of elitists.
The link to the forum is dead, or experiencing problems. So, off to the home page for Rogue Science or the Chem Lab "Thunder in a Test Tube (http://www.roguesci.org/chemlab/energetic_materials.html)" for a quick look.
At first glance not too technical, but even after my many years, I won't be trying any of these home-made cocktails without at least a 9 suit and helmet.
This paragraph immediately got my attention:
There must be danger, there must be excitement, and there must be passion to ignite the spark of scientific curiosity in the next generation. We face a dark world where all that could be dangerous is destroyed, and all who seek to learn are persecuted for what they might do. What may, what might, what could, the ignorant fear only dreams and vague possibilities, veiled threats, and hypothetical scenarios. Explosives harm very few people, and are the most important industrial tools in the world. Without explosives there would be no modern world.
The author has not been kept up to date, or rarely reads the papers :wry:
SoiCowboy
09-04-2007, 11:16 PM
You've got to remember that a lot of the stuff comes from the same mindset of the militias in the 1990s after Waco and Ruby Ridge; that federal government is omniprescient, omnipotent and 1984 is a very real near future.
In the forum they've got the basic peroxide based stuff like AP and HMTD down pat. Mid range stuff like ANFO/ANNM and PETN is pretty well covered as well. From there its pretty much reader beware.
By technical, I mean they pretty much use the scientific symbols and discuss chemistry as opposed to buy this, that and the other from walmart and mix them.
Jedburgh
09-27-2007, 08:02 PM
The Jamestown Foundation's Terrorism Monitor, 27 Sep 07:
GIMF Develops Defensive and Offensive Software for Jihadi Operations (http://www.jamestown.org/terrorism/news/article.php?articleid=2373681)
In July 2007, jihadi forums announced the creation of a new computer program called the Secrets of the Mujahideen, version 1.0. The objective of the program—which was published and distributed by the Global Islamic Media Front (GIMF) through many jihadi websites—is to replace the old and unreliable PGP corporation encryption tools that jihadis had used in the past. Since the release of the program, jihadi websites, especially the GIMF, are instructing their subscribers to communicate using the program's encryption keys. Furthermore, al-Qaeda operatives are using Secrets of the Mujahideen in an attempt to avoid U.S. eavesdropping operations against them.
Separately, and on the offensive front, jihadi hackers have also invented their own programs to steal data off other computers, part of a larger "Electronic Jihad." Some of the Islamic hackers' targets are computers attached to cameras transmitting live videos from intersections and other busy areas. They claim that these videos can be used to case potential targets.
This article will elucidate the documentation of the Secrets of the Mujahideen, in addition to providing information on the ongoing Electronic Jihad.....
Tom Odom
09-27-2007, 08:12 PM
The GIMF's asleep....
Wake him up...
Interesting post, Jed!
Jedburgh
10-11-2007, 12:52 PM
RAND, 10 Oct 07: Assessing the Value of Information and Communication Technologies to Modern Terrorist Organizations (http://www.rand.org/pubs/technical_reports/2007/RAND_TR454.pdf)
....This analysis focuses on the potential application of information and communication technologies that may be used across the full range of activities that make up terrorist operations and whether these applications can lead to new and different approaches to terrorist operations. Its purpose is to identify which of these network technologies terrorist organizations are likely to use in conducting their operations and to suggest what security forces might do to counter, mitigate, or exploit terrorists’ use of such technologies.
To highlight the merger of software and computer technologies with communication and display technologies that digitalization has made possible and to encourage thinking beyond military technologies, this report uses the term network technologies to describe what are referred to as command, control, communication, computer, intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (C4ISR) technologies in military parlance, as well as the consumer-oriented technologies that can often provide the functionality needed for terrorist operations. These network technologies can include connectivity technologies (e.g., wireless routers), mobile computing (e.g., xiv Network Technologies for Networked Terrorists laptop computers), personal electronic devices (e.g., personal digital assistants and cell phones), IT services and Internet access, and video recording, among others.....
Norfolk
10-11-2007, 03:07 PM
Amongst other things that this report describes, one particularly disturbing capability available to jihadi and other terrorist organizations is the ability afforded by digital technology to alter or completely fabricate digital images or audio recordings; a potent instrument at the strategic level, and one that allows terrorist/insurgent groups to go toe-to-toe with state governments in the media war, often the decisive theater in Western countries at least. Terrorist/insurgent groups, as we have seen for the last few years, have been able to negate politically much of what they have failed to accomplish militarily (albeit often in tandem with media outlets that have their own axes to grind; fellow travellers in some respects, so to speak).
Although such digital technology to allow for altered or fabricated imagery and recordings has been availble since the 1980's, and the possibilities of that pondered over the last 20 years, I don't think that Governments and Publics that are the intended targets of jihadi information operations are really prepared for the day when the airwaves and the net are dominated by news, imagery, and sound-bites of some incident in some sensitive place or on some sensitive issue that is either heavily altered by jihadis wielding digital techonology to do so, or outright fabrications of things that do not exist or never actually occurred. Disturbing.
Jedburgh
04-02-2008, 02:40 AM
The Jamestown Foundation's Terrorism Focus, 1 Apr 08:
An Online Terrorist Training Manual - Part One: Creating a Terrorist Cell (http://www.jamestown.org/terrorism/news/article.php?articleid=2374069)
Jihadis continue to pursue terror training and knowledge exchange with fellow jihadis through Internet forums. Often, the jihadi forum participants post short, though significant, details pertinent to terror conduct drawn from real life experience in Iraq and Afghanistan. Recently, a forum participant posted six training episodes comprised of the basic knowledge needed by a novice jihadi to become a full-fledged terrorist. The episodes begin with two basics lessons on "How to set up a terrorist cell." Four more episodes followed, over a week, on sniper attacks, assassination techniques, attacking and looting government centers, and conducting massive terror strikes. Terrorism Focus will cover all six episodes of this important training manual, beginning with this issue and continuing over the next two weeks.
Posted by an Islamist forum participant nicknamed “Shamil al-Baghdadi,” the first of the training lessons is entitled, “Do you want to form a terror cell?” and is directed at setting up a terrorist cell behind enemy lines under tight security conditions. The cell, says al-Baghdadi, should commence with one, strong, monotheistic and valorous man as the nucleus. This individual should meet the following conditions:
• He must be a strong adherent of the Sunni ideology and well educated in the history of jihad.
• He should be experienced in—at the very least—light weapons such as pistols and rifles because these are available in nearly any society.
• He should be trained in secure communications through the Internet and mobile devices.
• He should be tolerant and display perseverance in religious preaching and teaching.
• He should maintain a good cover and not be on any security watch lists in order to allow free mobility
Jedburgh
04-10-2008, 01:22 PM
The Jamestown Foundation's Terrorism Focus, 9 Apr 08:
An Online Terrorist Training Manual - Part Two: Assassinations and Robberies (http://www.jamestown.org/terrorism/news/article.php?articleid=2374084)
The last issue of Terrorism Focus discussed the first two of six terrorist training lessons posted on a pro-al-Qaeda jihadi forum. These lessons, dealing with the creation of a terrorist cell, also briefly touched on the subject of assassination techniques. This issue will discuss the next two lessons which focus on assassination methods and procedures for raiding and looting small “enemy” installations.
The author of the lessons, who gives his name as Shamil al-Baghdadi, commences the third episode by expanding on the assassination techniques he touched on in lesson two......
Check out the articles at the bottom of this (http://www.e-prism.org/articlesbyotherscholars.html) page, gleaned from numerous jihadi sites.
I can't read Arabic, but the in Al Battar series and others, the pictures speak for themselves. Lots of other links to jihadi materials.
Jedburgh
04-17-2008, 02:42 PM
The Jamestown Foundation's Terrorism Focus, 16 Apr 08:
An Online Terrorist Training Manual - Part Three: Striking U.S. Embassies (http://www.jamestown.org/terrorism/news/article.php?articleid=2374102)
This issue of Terrorism Focus will conclude the look at the terrorist training lessons of Shamil al-Baghdadi, posted on a pro-al-Qaeda website. Episodes five and six of the training discuss the perpetration of “quality terror attacks”—high-impact, high-risk operations that include tourist abductions, sniper attacks and strikes on American embassies and other U.S. interests.....
AdamG
08-18-2008, 07:49 PM
Police Discover Online Al Qaeda Manual The 8-page manual offers instructions how to prepare a remote car bomb attack and pilotless craft attack.
http://www.javno.com/en/world/clanak.php?id=169313
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,403902,00.html
New Al Qaeda Manual Reflects Changing Face of Terror
Most shocking are the lessons on kidnapping, with orders to slaughter hostages in a way that will terrify the public.
"I propose you start with those that have blood on their hands torturing and suppressing Muslims like high-ranking intelligence officers, the governor or any foreign official," writes al-Baghdadi.
davidbfpo
02-14-2009, 03:19 PM
The link is to a Norwegian think tank report The Internet: a virtual traing camp: http://www.mil.no/multimedia/archive/00101/Anne_Stenersen_Manu_101280a.pdf
Might fit somewhere else, but another suitable thread not readily id'd.
A longer version is in the periodical Terrorism and Political Violence, No.20 April 2008.
From the conclusion: 'the Internet is best viewed as a resource bank for self-radicalized and autonomous cells, which is used alongside more traditional ways of training and preparing. In many cases, jihadi Internet manuals may function as a preparation for real-life training, rather than a substitute for it. This also seems to be a common view among the jihadis themselves. The idea that Internet training material should be used to learn the basics—before moving on to classical jihadi training—makes it perhaps more accurate to talk about the Internet as a ‘‘pre-school of jihad’’ rather than a ‘‘university.’’
The link (fee to pay) is: http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/content~content=a792712309~db=all~order=page
A wider perspective is on: http://www.mil.no/multimedia/archive/00107/FFI-FOCUS_nr1_08_107488a.pdf (free too) and a 2006 report: http://rapporter.ffi.no/rapporter/2006/00915.pdf
davidbfpo
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