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November 28, 2004
Terrorists turn up the dial in global PR war
Topics: War on Terror - the issues.Reported in Christian Science Monitor , not exactly new but worthy of knowing! Most notably, Osama bin Laden, invisible to the world for more than
two years, sent a videotape to Al Jazeera just three weeks ago. Before
that, a young man claiming to be an American recorded a 75-minute
screed on a videotape that was delivered to ABC News along the
Afghanistan-Pakistan border. But the communication is hardly limited to the
airwaves. Abu Musab al-Zarqawi alone has posted messages on the
Internet to his followers in Iraq several times in the past week,
urging them to resist the US campaign in Fallujah. The routine appearance of these tapes and Internet postings, despite
tighter security, highlights Al Qaeda's growing sophistication in
producing and airing messages for internal communication as well as for
shaping global opinion. They also show how, in an era of satellite television and the World
Wide Web, it is nearly impossible to stop boutique terror groups -
small homegrown cells that can reach mass audiences with just a
videocamera and a few stylish graphics. "If they can communicate [through] these tapes to us, and not worry
about getting caught, they can communicate clandestinely to their
followers," says Brian Jenkins, a terror expert at the RAND Corp. in
Santa Monica, Calif. "This suggests there's a bit of machinery working
here." Phones aren't all Military officials have thought it would be difficult for Al Qaeda
leaders to coordinate operations because they couldn't use telephones,
which are traceable. But marines in Fallujah this past week found
computers that appear to indicate that Mr. aZarqawi and Al Qaeda
leaders outside Iraq at least tried to talk with one another in
cyberspace. "I think there are attempted communications between Zarqawi and bin
Laden," Lt. Gen. Lance Smith, deputy commanding general of the US
Central Command said recently. "And whether it is to congratulate him
on having announced that he wants to be part of Al Qaeda, or whether
it's to communicate and give him instructions, or what it is, we don't
know." Still, it's the recruitment value of other tapes that has government
officials and terror experts most concerned. Al Qaeda leadership videos
are almost always played in their entirety to the Muslim world on Al
Jazeera, the Qatar-based 24-hour news channel. Small segments of them are normally shown in the US. And the transcripts are almost always posted on the Internet. The tape that was delivered to ABC News nearly a month ago, by a man
calling himself Azzam the American, still baffles intelligence
community officials here. The FBI posted a four-minute segment of the tape and a partial
transcript, along with an "urgent" request for help in identifying the
individual, on its website on Oct. 30, the day after ABC aired a
similar segment. According to an FBI spokesman, the bureau has received several tips
but still hasn't identified the man definitively. Yet some intelligence
officials believe he is Adam Gadahn, a young man who converted to Islam
and left California for Pakistan six years ago. That tape is a 75-minute diatribe echoing bin Laden's claims that
Islam is under attack by the West - occupying lands and exporting
corrupt values. It says that continuous jihad is the only solution. A new audience Like bin Laden's message that followed it, where he appeared to sit
statesmanlike in a broadcast studio and lecture Americans, Azzam's
message was aimed at the US public. This is a new development, Jenkins says. Al Qaeda is expanding its
recruitment efforts beyond the traditional Arab and Muslim world,
reaching out to people who can more easily move among the cities of
Western Europe or North America. "It's a recruiting pitch," says Jenkins, who has spent much of the
past year trying to look at the world from Al Qaeda's viewpoint and who
evaluated a transcript of this 75-minute interview obtained by the
Monitor. "For them, recruiting is much closer to missionary work.... Above
all, the purpose of this screed is to enlist people in the greater
cause of jihad." Arab broadcasts longer Circulation of the message is the key to its success, say Jenkins
and other intelligence officials. Bin Laden's messages, for example,
are almost always aired in their entirety in the Muslim world, although
only 15- to 30-second sound bites are broadcast in the US. Only a few
minutes of the Azzam tape were aired in the first ABC broadcast, and
most newspapers carried only a few of Azzam's quotes. But the FBI may be unwittingly helping Azzam spread his message by
its online posting. "The FBI's helping him out here, more than ABC
actually," Jenkins says. But the overarching message from the tape is that Al Qaeda's
communications systems are evolving to outwit security measures imposed
by governments and are succeeding as a recruiting tool. "Their communications systems are light-years more sophisticated
than they were on 9/11," says Michael Scheuer, a former senior
intelligence official who studied Al Qaeda for more than a decade. "Not
only is it sophisticated, but prompt and the quality is high. They
pretty much dominate the Internet in terms of Islamic literature. -
it's of very high quality, controversial, interesting to read, and
appeals to Muslims." Source... This report falls into the category of knowing the elephant in our living room, and is evidence of increasing efforts on the part of Al Queda and fundamentalist Islam to win the PR war. Truth isn't always the easiest thing to communicate, and hate being an emotion - seems so easy to stir-up. The West has got to do a better job of getting our message of truth out, while at the same time learning how to stop terrorists from hiding their agendas behind velvet gloves. We cannot let these terrorists continue recruiting under the vale of international agencies and interfaith outreach. This is not to say that all Muslim groups have hidden agendas, but we need to be sufficiantly educated to such dangers and learn how to do a better job of meeting and combating the threat of radical Islam. What ever happened to Rumi?
Al Qaeda is using the Internet and video outlets with growing speed, volume, and sophistication:
WASHINGTON -
The gist of their messages hasn't changed much. But the frequency of
them has. Since Sept. 11, 2001, members of Al Qaeda have released an
audio- or videotape about once every six weeks.
Posted by Hyscience at November 28, 2004 11:05 AM
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