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Threat Matrix: Daily Terror Threat - Thread Twenty-One

Posted on 11/03/2004 12:20:59 AM PST by nwctwx

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To: Labyrinthos

Bookmark


3,141 posted on 11/11/2004 4:59:43 PM PST by Labyrinthos
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To: Cindy

ROP strikes again. I would love to pull the trigger on this cowardly POS!!! AND On the cowardly POS sheeple in Philly who stood there and watched like a bunch of cowards they are.

Damn this world!!


3,142 posted on 11/11/2004 5:16:10 PM PST by Indie (Ignorance of the truth is no excuse for stupidity.)
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To: tmp02
"The current phase is to show the United States that we're serious,"

To which we had better be saying "Don't even think about it."

3,143 posted on 11/11/2004 5:27:20 PM PST by Godzilla (I'm really easy to get along with once you people learn to see it my way.)
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To: Indie

I understand how you feel.


3,144 posted on 11/11/2004 5:38:22 PM PST by Cindy
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To: tmp02; Turk; a_Turk; Turk2; All

"Turkey Warns US It Plans to Invade Northern Iraq Shortly After Elections"

OPINION: I'd like to see what the Turks and the Turkish press know and feel about invading Iraq (while Americans will still probably be in Iraq).


Thanks for posting the link:

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1277827/posts


3,145 posted on 11/11/2004 5:47:45 PM PST by Cindy
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To: All

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1277897/posts


"After 34 years, POW reunites with rescuer"
The State (Columbia, S.C.) ^ | 11/11/2004 | Jean Gordon


Posted on 11/11/2004 5:18:36 PM PST by BansheeBill



"After 34 years, POW reunites with rescuer"
By JEAN GORDON
The Associated Press


3,146 posted on 11/11/2004 5:51:33 PM PST by Cindy
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To: JohnathanRGalt; yonif; fullwave; ganeshpuri89; All

http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?pagename=JPost/JPArticle/ShowFull&cid=1100147302028

Nov. 11, 2004 20:27  | Updated Nov. 11, 2004 20:33
"Al Aksa now Arafat Martyrs Brigades"
By KHALED ABU TOAMEH

ARTICLE SNIPPET: "The armed wing of Fatah on Thursday announced its decision to change its name from the Aksa Martyrs Brigades to the Brigades of Martyr Yasser Arafat.

The decision came as many young guard Fatah activists in the West Bank expressed dissatisfaction with the new division of powers in the Palestinian Authority and the PLO, saying they were once again being shunned by the old guard."


3,147 posted on 11/11/2004 5:56:53 PM PST by Cindy
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To: jerseygirl

freepmail!


3,148 posted on 11/11/2004 6:26:48 PM PST by knak (The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing)
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To: Chani

snippet:

book


3,149 posted on 11/11/2004 6:34:26 PM PST by Chani
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To: All

Roommate's computer led to arrest of student on terrorist charge

By ROBERT W. BLACK
Associated Press Writer

November 10, 2004, 7:49 PM EST

CHEYENNE, Wyo. -- Using the computer of a roommate whose job involves campus security led to the arrest of a Wyoming Technical Institute student on suspicion of supporting a Somalian terrorist group, a spokesman for the Laramie trade school said Wednesday.

Mark Robert Walker, 19, of suburban Rochester, N.Y., is charged with providing support or resources to a foreign terrorist organization, which carries a maximum sentence of 15 years.

http://www.newsday.com/news/local/wire/ny-bc-ny--terrorsuspectarre1110nov10,0,2294095.story?coll=ny-ap-regional-wire


3,150 posted on 11/11/2004 6:47:45 PM PST by DAVEY CROCKETT (Character exalts Liberty and Freedom, Righteous exalts a Nation.)
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To: All

The New Terrorist Screening Center: Feds working with local cops in the war on terrorism
By Jim Kouri, CPP
MichNews.com
Nov 11, 2004




The creation of the Terrorist Screening Center to consolidate terrorist watchlists and provide operational support for thousands of federal screeners across the country and around the world is one of the most important law enforcement developments in the US. The TSC will ensure that America’s government screeners are working from the same unified set of anti-terrorist information and comprehensive anti-terrorist list when a suspected terrorist is screened or stopped anywhere in the Federal system.

Better Informed



The TSC will allow federal, state, and local officials to make better-informed decisions to protect the United States from terrorist attacks. For example, better access to information will make it easier for a consular officer posted in another country to determine whether to grant a visa, or an immigration official at a U.S. airport to decide whether a person is eligible to enter the United States.

Building Capabilities



Creation of the TSC marks another significant step forward in the President’s strategy to protect America’s communities and families by detecting, disrupting, and disabling terrorist threats. The TSC builds on improvements to U.S. watchlist capabilities that began in 2001, immediately following the September 11 attacks, including, most recently, the President’s creation of the Terrorist Threat Integration Center (TTIC).

Consolidating Information



The TSC will receive the vast majority of its information about known or suspected terrorists from the TTIC after TTIC has assembled and analyzed that information from a wide range of sources. In addition, the FBI will provide the TSC with information about purely domestic terrorism. The TSC will consolidate this information into an unclassified terrorist screening database and make the database accessible to queries for federal, state, and local agencies for a variety of screening purposes.

The TSC, through the participation of the Department of Homeland Security, Department of Justice, Department of State, and Intelligence Community representatives, will determine which information in the Database will be available for which types of screening.

For example, The Attorney General’s and the Secretary of Homeland Security’s representatives to the TSC will decide which persons to include in those records that may be queried directly by law enforcement officials through the National Crime Information Center (NCIC) database. Similarly, the State Department representative, consulting with the Department of Justice, Department of Homeland Security, and Intelligence Community representatives, will determine which information may be screened by foreign governments.

Safeguarding Information



The TSC will not independently collect any information on U.S. citizens. In fact, the TSC does not collect information at all - it only receives information provided by the TTIC and the FBI. The TTIC will provide to the TSC all appropriate and necessary information connected to international terrorism about any individuals - U.S. citizens or not – that TTIC partner agencies hold pursuant to their own authorities, and the FBI will provide to the TSC appropriate and necessary information concerning domestic terrorism, regardless of whether it involves U.S. citizens. If the TSC receives information on U.S. citizens connected with terrorism, its use of that information is subject to the same legal limitations to which it would be subject if the information were not included in the Database. Purely domestic terrorism information will not go through TTIC, but will be placed directly into the TSC Database by the FBI. The Attorney General has been directed to implement procedures and safeguards with respect to information about U.S. persons, in coordination with the Secretary of State, the Secretary of Homeland Security, and the Director of Central Intelligence.

The creation of the TSC does not provide any new law enforcement or collection powers to any government official; it simply consolidates information that law enforcement, the Intelligence Community, the State Department, and others already possess and makes it accessible for query to those who need it - federal security screeners, State and local law enforcement officers, and others. The TSC will have no independent authority to conduct intelligence collection or other operations.

All information the TSC maintains will have been collected in accordance with existing law, and TSC officials will continue to be bound by any applicable laws and constitutional requirements that restrict the use of that information and that protect privacy interests and other liberties.

Information technology and information handling procedures will be designed to comply with constitutional and other legal requirements, and participants will continue to be answerable both to internal agency oversight and congressional oversight.

Supporting the Mission



The Federal Bureau of Investigation will administer the TSC. The Department of Homeland Security, the Department of State, and others will coordinate with and assign operational and staff support to the TSC.

The FBI is the appropriate administrator of the TSC’s start-up operations because of the Bureau’s technical experience in watchlist integration. Although the FBI will administer the TSC, the TSC will be an interagency effort. As noted, the Departments of Homeland Security and State and others will coordinate with and assign operational and staff support to the TSC. The Principal Deputy Director of the TSC will be a Department of Homeland Security official. In addition to the Department of Justice, the Department of State, and the Department of Homeland Security, the Intelligence Community and other federal agencies will assign representatives to the TSC. Each of these agencies will be responsible for specific aspects of the TSC’s work.

Sources:Federal Bureau of Investigation
Department of Homeland Security
US Department of State
US Department of Justice
National Association of Chiefs of Police
National Security Institute


http://www.michnews.com/artman/publish/article_5739.shtml


3,151 posted on 11/11/2004 6:52:21 PM PST by DAVEY CROCKETT (Character exalts Liberty and Freedom, Righteous exalts a Nation.)
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To: DAVEY CROCKETT

Davey, thank you for pinging me.

Yes, I worked this in Google, when it was first reported.

It is a very large group of not nice people, not a simple
local group. Found al Qaeda links also.

I used my normal, simple/general search.


3,152 posted on 11/11/2004 6:55:34 PM PST by nw_arizona_granny (On this day your Prayers are needed!!!!!!!)
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To: freeperfromnj; Calpernia; Velveeta; Alabama MOM

Does anyone recall the schools last spring in the east, the kids were coming down with a rash.

I think nerves was the final answer, but wouldn't bet on that.

It was "Unknown cause" for a long time.


3,153 posted on 11/11/2004 7:00:04 PM PST by nw_arizona_granny (On this day your Prayers are needed!!!!!!!)
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To: Chani

SMILING...totally unbookmarked


3,154 posted on 11/11/2004 7:14:39 PM PST by Cindy
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To: Cindy; Velveeta; All

November 15, 2004

On Osama's trail

Amateur sleuths scour the Web for jihadist plots. Sometimes they even find them.

MICHAEL SNIDER

On an uncommonly hot day in late September, the bucolic town of Norwood, Ont., population 1,300, seems light years away from suicide bombings and jihad warriors. But appearances can be deceiving. A few blocks south of Norwood's only stoplight, Brent Astley is hunting terrorists. A portly man with broad features and thick hair, Astley is the director of 7-Seas Global Intelligence, a small group of international amateur detectives who spend their days scouring the Internet for al-Qaeda's virtual fingerprints. When they find something suspicious -- a hint on a message board of a planned attack or the latest address of a fly-by-night militant website -- they tip off the authorities.

Yes, it sounds a bit far-fetched, especially when you first meet the 44-year-old unemployed software developer. He looks decidedly rumpled in wrinkled shorts and a short-sleeve shirt. He plies his trade on the second floor of his house (which he rather generously calls a fixer-upper), on a laptop so well-used the original black veneer has worn away to reveal the plastic underneath. But, again, appearances can be deceiving. Astley sinks into a ratty chair and nods at a website on his computer screen. "This is an individual who goes by the Net handle of Abu Banan," he says, scrolling down the page. "He's been called al-Qaeda's webmaster, and he's right here in Canada."

In the aftermath of Sept. 11, the Internet has emerged as a major weapon for extremists. Every known terror group uses it to expound ideology, recruit supporters and raise money. In response, a small but growing subculture of citizen warriors has volunteered to staunch this proliferation, fashioning themselves as resistance fighters rising up against a hostile force. Not surprisingly, most make little impact on the war on terror; what's noteworthy is that some actually have. In the two years since it formed, 7-Seas has helped put one extremist behind bars, and claims to have helped foil other terrorist plots. Astley says he maintains regular contact with intelligence agencies in Canada and the U.S., and last month spent a day lecturing members of a federal agency on 7-Seas' terrorist-tracking methods.

The inescapable question: why does he do it? "The seriousness of the threat became pretty obvious when I realized 9/11 was going to shape the rest of my life and my kids' life," says Astley, a father of three. "My dad was in World War II, my grandfather in World War I. Well, this is my war."

The sight has become tragically familiar. A man dressed in an orange jumpsuit kneels in front of kidnappers whose faces are covered with black ski masks, and pleads for his life. Then: a gruesome death by beheading. In the era of 24-hour news channels and weblogs, terrorists find it's no longer enough to dump a victim's body on the roadside and claim responsibility with a call to a local news station. Now, they want to control the message by distributing videos of their victims' final moments over the Net.

This "theatre of terror" is the latest gambit for gaining attention, says Gabriel Weimann, a communications professor at University of Haifa in Israel, who's been studying extremists' use of the Internet for seven years. "It used to be that hijacking a plane and holding passengers hostage did it," says Weimann, who has monitored more than 4,000 sites linked to militant groups. "Today it's executions. It is so dramatic, it is so cruel, nobody can ignore it." The videos also serve as recruiting tools, encouraging sympathetic Arabs to rise up against Western invaders, and as means of spreading fear among the enemy. "You can post the videos and they can be downloaded worldwide in seconds," says Weimann. It's a strategy tailor-made for the digital age.

Even before the wave of graphic videos, Muslim extremists had been using the Web as a virtual madrassa, providing disciples with manuals on how to make bombs, kidnap people and research targets. Since late 2003, for example, al-Qaeda has been publishing the online magazine al-Battar, which means "holy sword." A recent issue discusses a speech by Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the most feared insurgent in Iraq, while the instructional section offers part two of a lesson on the use of pistols for assassination.

Intelligence agencies maintain constant watch over the Net, knowing that a surge in traffic or an encrypted message may hold the key to a plot. Intercepted emails led investigators to Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl's killers. And, in July, U.S. authorities alerted Italy after a third cryptic message appeared on a website known to be closely watched by Islamic terrorists. "The Internet obviously gained prominence after the invasion of Afghanistan," says Special Agent Kim Jensen, an FBI counterterrorism expert. "For the most part it's filled with propaganda and hyperbole, but once in a while something of substance comes along."

In December 2003, for example, an analyst at the private Norwegian Defense Research Establishment discovered a document entitled "Jihadi Iraq, Hopes and Dangers" on a Yahoo! forum called Global Islamic Media. It laid out a strategy for breaking up the U.S.-led coalition by directing attacks at America's allies, particularly Spain, which, it argued, could not tolerate major hits in the run-up to an election. "If its troops still remain in Iraq after these blows, the victory of the Socialist Party is almost secured, and the withdrawal of the Spanish forces will be on its electoral program." Two days before the March 2004 election, several bombs detonated in Madrid's Atocha train station, killing 191 people. Although the online paper dealt more with attacking Spanish soldiers in Iraq, its prediction came true nonetheless: the Socialists swept into power and pulled troops out of Iraq.

Stories like these spur amateurs to pore over forums, sites and blogs with the dedication of public avengers. And, on rare occasions, they hit pay dirt. Astley's group operated in secrecy ever since its eight members -- two in Canada, four in the U.S., and one each in Singapore and Australia -- met on a current-events message board after 9/11. That was until 7-Seas nabbed its first terrorist. National Guardsman Ryan Anderson, a 26-year-old Muslim convert, wanted to join al-Qaeda and fight in Iraq against the U.S. He left a posting on a website under the name Amir Abdul Rashid and was contacted by someone he thought was an al-Qaeda associate. Actually, it was Shannen Rossmiller, a small-town Montana judge and member of 7-Seas, posing as a Muslim extremist. It took four weeks, but Astley and Rossmiller tracked down "Amir Abdul Rashid" (see sidebar next page). In January, the group passed the information to the FBI, which arrested Anderson after a sting operation during which he offered to help train al-Qaeda fighters on the best ways to attack U.S. tanks.

Tracking terrorists is a laborious process. 7-Seas digs up information using search engines and data-mining programs, then converts it from Arabic into English. That's how it stumbled upon a series of postings that suggested a plot to attack Western compounds in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. In the spring of 2003, the group found a message asking for addresses of Americans and Britons in Riyadh and southern Jeddah. The writer said he wished to reward the foreigners "as they do to our brothers in Palestine and Afghanistan." 7-Seas also saw postings discussing how to detonate bombs by cellphone. It passed the information to the FBI. A mere eight hours later, terrorists attacked compounds in Riyadh, killing 35 people, including nine foreigners. Investigators later discovered the bombs were detonated by cellphone. "We had sufficient information to prevent the attack," says Astley, "and if we had got it to the authorities a couple days earlier, it might have been enough to stop them."

Astley's main target now is Abu Banan, operator of the Global Islamic Media forum, which news reports have called the "de facto al-Qaeda website." The site comes and goes as its Web host is notified of its existence and shuts it down, only to see it pop up again with a slightly different name. U.S. officials say Banan has ties to al-Qaeda and previously used the site to signal attacks. According to Astley, Banan is in Canada. Astley has tracked down the current incarnation of the site and traced the author's Internet origin -- called a router hub -- to a Toronto suburb. He says he's forwarded all the information to the RCMP, but rarely hears back. (An RCMP spokesman says that while the agency encourages the public to report possible threats, any leads provided -- and details of subsequent investigations -- are confidential.)

Not all freelance terrorist hunters are content with passing tips to the authorities -- some take a more direct approach. Internet Haganah, a group named after the clandestine military wing of the Jewish leadership during British rule in Palestine, for example, investigates sites related to Islamic extremism and, depending on what it finds, either monitors or "engages" them by asking the Web-hosting company to shut them down. "The point," says Aaron Weisburd, the group's American leader, "is to let terrorists know there are consequences to waging jihad." For his efforts, he's received copious amounts of hate mail, was the subject of a fatwa by a Muslim cleric, and has had to fight off countless attempts to overload and crash his site. More ominously, in June he received a handwritten letter addressed to "the Jewish asshole Aaron Weisburd," giving him a week to shut down his site or he'd be beheaded.

Some anti-jihad activists go so far as to set up phony terrorism websites, cataloguing who visits them before turning the information over to the authorities. Others embed homemade Trojan horse programs into bomb-making documents and other digital files; when someone downloads and opens such a file, the embedded program sends information about the user's email and surfing habits back to the program's creator. But this sort of "hacktivism" is frowned upon by most anti-terrorism activists because it can morph into vigilante acts. "I'm not sure I like the idea of individuals fighting this by themselves," says Weimann. "Once they move to hacking, I would argue it's counterproductive."

Occasionally, tactics get downright bizarre. The Northeast Intelligence Network, an anti-terrorism publication, posts beheading videos on its site, arguing the public needs to see the pictures to understand the enemy's nature. "Our objective is to show what these men really are," says NEIN director Douglas Hagmann. "They're not militants, freedom fighters or activists. They're savages."

For all the dedication and even risk-taking, does all this amateur activity make a difference? Intelligence agencies, after all, have entire departments dedicated to monitoring online traffic. For some Web detectives, the chase seems as much a hobby as a public service, with groups competing to be the first to translate a new posting and put it on their sites. Most troll the same sources, and hardly any know Arabic. "There are numerous well-meaning civilian groups," says FBI's Jensen. "Sometimes they provide helpful information that initiates investigations, but mostly they provide information on sites with which we are already familiar."

Astley admits that he sometimes wonders if he's wasting his time. He gets no money for his labours, and he hasn't worked as a programmer in six months. His wife isn't crazy about the 16 hours a day he spends on the computer. And often the leads he follows turn into dead ends. "I spent three days on this one site with jihad marching songs," he says with a chuckle. "I finally realized they were cellphone ring tones." Still, Astley finds consolation and encouragement in his few successes, and has no intention of stopping. "I just keep telling myself there would be people dead except for what we've done."

http://www.macleans.ca/topstories/world/article.jsp?content=20041115_92448_92448


3,155 posted on 11/11/2004 7:36:08 PM PST by Donna Lee Nardo
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To: BearWash

Hey, BearWash - good to see you back on FR!


3,156 posted on 11/11/2004 7:59:45 PM PST by Hegemony Cricket (Spreading a lie is as bad as suppressing the Truth!)
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To: All

Quiet, too quiet.
Bookmarking for nite.


3,157 posted on 11/11/2004 8:13:33 PM PST by Godzilla (I'm really easy to get along with once you people learn to see it my way.)
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To: Donna Lee Nardo

Geez, kinda recalls the whole "pajama" thing, a little, doesn't it? Still, very enlightening. I hope this guy has good security on his "fixer upper", because he's just been exposed in a big way.


3,158 posted on 11/11/2004 8:16:45 PM PST by SlowBoat407 (Go sell jihad somewhere else. We're all full here.)
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Wish I hadn't deleted the link, I did a search and nada on NPR


3,159 posted on 11/11/2004 8:21:25 PM PST by JustPiper (NoE-the Enemy !!!)
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To: freeperfromnj; bored at work

Thanks much FFNJ!!!
(Big surprise a Mosque!)
In the course of locating seven weapons caches in a single block around a mosque in northeast Fallujah, an Iraqi platoon Wednesday found a suitcase full of vials labeled "Sarin," a deadly nerve agent.


3,160 posted on 11/11/2004 8:23:38 PM PST by JustPiper (NoE-the Enemy !!!)
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