Terrorists Turn to the Web as Base of Operations

This is why Richard Clarke's pre-9/11 focus on internet terrorist disruptions was so wrong-headed. Jihadists love the web. From the Washington Post, with thanks to Jeffrey Imm.

In the snow-draped mountains near Jalalabad in November 2001, as the Taliban collapsed and al Qaeda lost its Afghan sanctuary, Osama bin Laden biographer Hamid Mir watched "every second al Qaeda member carrying a laptop computer along with a Kalashnikov" as they prepared to scatter into hiding and exile. On the screens were photographs of Sept. 11 hijacker Mohamed Atta.

Nearly four years later, al Qaeda has become the first guerrilla movement in history to migrate from physical space to cyberspace. With laptops and DVDs, in secret hideouts and at neighborhood Internet cafes, young code-writing jihadists have sought to replicate the training, communication, planning and preaching facilities they lost in Afghanistan with countless new locations on the Internet.

Al Qaeda suicide bombers and ambush units in Iraq routinely depend on the Web for training and tactical support, relying on the Internet's anonymity and flexibility to operate with near impunity in cyberspace. In Qatar, Egypt and Europe, cells affiliated with al Qaeda that have recently carried out or seriously planned bombings have relied heavily on the Internet...

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Jihadists love the web. From the Washington Post, with thanks to Jeffrey Imm.
Posted by Rebecca at 08:10 AM

From http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/08/05/AR2005080501138.html we find:
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… Abu Musab Suri. His document described "how the pneumonic plague could be made into a biological weapon," if a small supply of the virus could be acquired, according to a translation by Rebecca Givner-Forbes, an analyst at the Terrorism Research Center, an Arlington firm with U.S. government clients.
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Is our Rebecca the analyst at the Terrorism Research Center?

The double-edge of this cyber-sword is that while the techno-nerd jihadists use the devices, they don't know their meaning.

For that you have to grasp the world (from Archimedes to Roger Bacon, DaVinci to Einstein, Ben Franklin to Thomas Edison, Pasteur to Curie, Paracelsus to Jenner, Turing to Gates)
that underlies the tools.

As these mechanisms become more and more complex, they also inherently contain the built-in 'methodologies' that can enable them to be used against the simple-minded and malicious.

(I won't even begin to tell them how.)

But the 'swords' themselves have their own 'minds', now.