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Within al-Qaida, a Numbing Bureaucracy - Baltimore Sun

UK Suspect 'May be Part of Terror Group' - London Daily Telegraph

The Torture Sessions - New York Times editorial

Al Qaeda in Yemen: Mercenaries or Terrorists? - The Long War Journal

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Muslims Press McCain on 'Islamic' Terror Label - Washington Times

Hurdles Beset Gitmo Tribunal - Washington Times

Real Facts on REAL ID - Washington Times editorial

Which Came First: Memos or Torture? - Los Angeles Times opinion
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Al-Qaida No. 2 Says Still Targeting the West - Maggie Michael, Associated Press
The Al-Arian Times - Steve Emerson, National Review opinion
Al-Qaeda Speaks - Richard Fernandez, The Belmont Club
Dereliction of Duty - Phil Carter, Intel Dump
Radio To Stay Tuned To - Anne Applebaum, Washington Post opinion
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Al Qaeda Chief Slams Muslims for Lack of Support - Agence France Presse
Saudi Government has Bankrolled Hardline Islam - The Australian editorial
UK: "Foiled 15 Terror Plots Since 7/7" - Richard Edwards, London Daily Telegraph
Brit Ex-Jihadis for Tolerance - Mark Rice-Oxley, Christian Science Monitor
Brown's Global Vision Flawed - Irwin Stelzer, London Daily Telegraph opinion
Denmark Evacuates Embassies in Algeria, Afghanistan - Associated Press
Euro-Muslim Tension - Tony Blankley, Washington Times opinion
Keeping up with Ayman - Marc Lynch, Abu Aardvark
“______” Terrorism - Abe Greenwald, Contentions
Radicalization on the Web in Europe - Olivier Guitta, Counterterrorism

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THE LONG WAR

'Jihadist' Booted from Government Lexicon - Matthew Lee, Associated Press
US Kills Jihadists with Stroke of Pen - James Joyner, Outside the Beltway
To Name An Enemy - Marvin Hutchens, Threats Watch
‘Top al-Qaeda Agent’ Lives Openly in UK - Sean O’Neill, London Times
When 'Inevitable' Isn't Inevitable - James Loy, Washington Times opinion

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Try 'Pakistan First' - Jim Hoagland, Washington Post opinion
Two Fronts, Same Worries - David Ignatius, Washington Post opinion
Particulars May Trump Geneva Protections - Joby Warrick, Washington Post
Letters Give CIA Tactics a Legal Rationale - Mark Mazzetti, New York Times
Brown’s U-turn on Terror - Shami Chakrabarti, London Times editorial
Dire Thoughts, No Action - Clifford May, Washington Times opinion
Complex and Fundamental Contradictions - Jay Fraser, Threats Watch
No More Jihadists - Max Boot, Contentions
Complications From the Jihad Lexicon - Jeffrey Breinholt, Counterterrorism
'G' Is For Ghabra, 'J' Is For Jihad - Steve Schippert, Threats Watch

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Progress in Selling Al-Qaeda As an Enemy - Walter Pincus, Washington Post
New Ways to Quell al-Qaeda? - Christian Science Monitor editorial
An Anatomy of Surrender - Bruce Bawler, City Journal opinion
Cruel Intentions - Phillip Carter, Intel Dump

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From Chief Prosecutor To Critic at Guantanamo - Josh White, Washington Post
The Myth of Grass-Roots Terrorism - Bruce Hoffman, Foreign Affairs
After Guantánamo - Kenneth Roth, Foreign Affairs
Precision in the Global War on Terror - Sherifa Zuhur, Strategic Studies Institute
Progress in the War of Ideas - David Betz, Kings of War
Britain's First Jihadi 'Lone Wolf' Bomber? - Roderick Jones, Counterterrorism
'Head in Sand' Torture - Daniel Gallington, Washington Times opinion
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The Necessary Three-Front War - Michael Gerson, Washington Post opinion
Fight AQ's Plan, Not Ideas - Howard and Iverson, Christain Science Monitor opinion
The Myth of Grass-Roots Terrorism - Bruce Hoffman, Foreign Affairs
After Guantánamo - Kenneth Roth, Foreign Affairs
Precision in the Global War on Terror - Sherifa Zuhur, Strategic Studies Institute

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CIA Chief Sees Unrest Rising With Population - Joby Warrick, Washington Post
Mullen Cites U.S. 'Vulnerability' - Ann Scott Tyson, Washington Post
Al-Qaeda 'Greatest Threat' to US - BBC News
When it's Time to Act with Honor - James Lyons, Washington Times opinion
Jihad Newspeak - New York Post editorial
Using Info Operations to Defeat AQ - Marc Lynch, Abu Aardvark
Wider Anti-terror Powers Needed - The Australian editorial
Real Terror Found Australia's Legislation - Mike Steketee, The Australian
RFI: Terror TTP and the Internet - Abu Muqawama, Abu Muqawama
Suleimani and Anonymous Sources - Warren Strobel, Nukes and Spooks

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...But Elsewhere Terrorism Grows - Peterson and Crilly, Christian Science Monitor
Al-Qaeda's Ideology is Losing - London Times editorial
Notes From the War on Terror - New York Times editorial
Excising and Smuggling - Walter Williams, Washington Times opinion
Where Are We Losing? - Abe Greenwald, Contentions
Half-Won, Half-Lost War - Victor Davis Hanson, National Review opinion
How Juggernaut is the AQ Online Juggernaut? - March Lynch, Abu Aardvark
The Palestinian Islamic Jihad's "Education Wing" - Counterterrorism
The Disembodied Insurgent - Michael Innes, The Complex Terrain Laboratory
But What About Those Terrorist Camps? - Abe Greenwald, Contentions
It’s More Than Rachel’s Law; It’s All Our’s Law - Bruce Kesler, Democracy Project

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Hybrid Wars - Greg Grant, Government Executive
Diplomacy: What is it Good For - Matthew Yglesias, The Atlantic
Diplomacy As Coercion - James Joyner, Outside the Beltway
US Rejects Canadian's 'Child Soldier' Defense - Jane Sutton, Reuters
Close Gitmo, Open the National Security Court - Max Boot, Contentions
Gut Check for the "Close Guantanamo" Crowd - Jeffrey Breinholt, Counterterrorism
Memos Curtailing Speech in War on Terror - Steven Emerson, Counterterrorism
Somalia Air Strike Draws Counter Attack - David Axe, Danger Room
Increasing Maritime Attacks off HOA - J. Peter Pham, The Tank

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Probe of USS Cole Bombing Unravels - Craig Whitlock, Washington Post
Hybrid Wars - Greg Grant, Government Executive
Unrepentant View From the Neocon Bunker - Sarah Baxter, London Times
Gut Check for "Close Guantanamo" Crowd - Jeffrey Breinholt, Counterterrorism

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Probe of USS Cole Bombing Unravels - Craig Whitlock, Washington Post
Hybrid Wars - Greg Grant, Government Executive
Homeland Security to Test High-tech Buoys - Mimi Hall, USA Today
War of the Rockets - Jackson Diehl, Washington Post opinion
'Willful Blindness' to the Jihad - David Limbaugh, Washington Times opinion
Behind the Wire - Max Boot, Contentions
Teaching Moderate Islam - Max Boot, Contentions
We Need Connectivity with Foreign Militaries - Tom Barnett, Thomas PM Barnett
Coming Clean on Torture - Washington Post editorial
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Growing Threat from al-Qaeda's New Allies - David Sharrock, London Times
Amerabia - Frank J. Gaffney Jr., Washington Times opinion
Just Like Us! Really? - Robert Satloff, Weekly Standard opinion
Separating Friend from Foe - David Schuler, Outside the Beltway
The Muslim Peace Corps - Chris Blattman, Chris Blattman
Hospitals Ill-Equipped to Handle Terror Attack - Mary Sheridan, Washington Post

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US Aims to Unlink Islamic, Terrorism - United Press International
'The Godfather' Doctrine - Hulsman and Mitchell, Los Angeles Times opinion
Ships of Fools? - J. Peter Pham, Washington Times opinion
The Global Defeat of al Qaeda - Herschel Smith, The Captain's Journal
America’s Role in Building Arab Democracy - Tamara Wittes, Abu Aardvark
In the Library with a Leading Islamic Liberal - Jeffrey Fleishman, Los Angeles Times
Rethinking the War on Terror - Victorino Matus, Weekly Standard Blog
South Africa Seeks New Laws to Fight Terror Financing - Reuters
US Charges Russian 'Arms Dealer' - BBC News

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Sublimation of the Primal Soul - Michael Innes, Complex Terrain Laboratory
The Disembodied Insurgent - Michael Innes, Complex Terrain Laboratory
Insurgency, Media... - Will Hartley, Insurgency Research Group
Highlighting al-Qaeda's Bankrupt Ideology - Matthew Levitt, Counterterrorism
Assess the Counter-terrorist Financing Effort - Andrew Cochran, Counterterrorism
Cambridge University of Saud - Abe Greenwald, Contentions

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'A Lot' Pose Threat if Freed from Gitmo - David Sands, Washington Times
Judge Says He May Suspend Detainee's Trial - Associated Press
FBI Called Slow to Join the Terrorism Fight - Richard Schmitt, Los Angeles Times
Abu Qatada Gets Bail - O'Neill and Ford, London Times
Radical Muslim Preacher Abu Qatada Granted Bail in Britain - Associated Press
A New Language Code - Diana West, Washington Times opinion
Al Qaeda Calls For Naval Terror Cells - Galrahn, Information Dissemination
Latest Shots on the "War of Ideas" - Marc Lynch, Abu Aardvark
The Recent and the Distant Past - Richard Fernandez, The Belmont Club
Sublimation of the Primal Soul - Michael Innes, Complex Terrain Laboratory
The Disembodied Insurgent - Michael Innes, Complex Terrain Laboratory
Insurgency, Media... - Will Hartley, Insurgency Research Group
Military Use of Cyberspace - Jules Crittenden, Forward Movement

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FBI, ATF Battle for Control Of Cases - Jerry Markon, Washington Post
An Anatomy of Surrender - Bruce Bawler, City Journal
Does the US Need the UN to Fight Terror? - Drew Kumpf, Foreign Policy
Jihad and US Intelligence Resources - Jeffrey Imm, Counterterrorism
Resource Tradeoffs and the War on Ideas - Marc Lynch, Abu Aardvark
Crack of Dawn? - Jules Crittenden, Forward Movement
The J Word - Jennifer Rubin, Contentions
Guantanamo Detainees Spead Word to Boycott Trials - Associated Press
Needed Testimony - Washington Post editorial
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A Victory for Free Speech - Washington Times editorial
Military Tribunal Fiasco - Baltimore Sun editorial
Information Squeeze Play - John Guardiano, Washington Times opinion
Petronomics 101 - Oliver North, Washington Times opinion
2nd Thai Counterfeit Passport Ring Broken Up - Zachary Abuza, Counterterrorism

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Spying Outpaces Terrorism Prosecutions - Richard Schmitt, Los Angeles Times
Let the Sunshine In - Nat Hentoff, Washington Times opinion
The Grim Truth on Gitmo - Mark Goldblatt, New York Post opinion
Regulating Complex Terrain in COIN - Michael Innes, Complex Terrain Laboratory
Prisons in Counterinsurgency - Herschel Smith, The Captain's Journal
Media Power and Terrorists - Brigitte Nacos, Complex Terrain Laboratory
State Secrets - Phillip Carter, Intel Dump
Gitmo Out of Bounds - Phillip Carter, Intel Dump

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The 'Long War' Fallacy - Andrew Bacevich, Los Angeles Times opinion
Why We Need Nukes and Gitmo - Jonah Goldberg, Los Angeles Times opinion
Shielding Official Leakers - Frank Gaffney Jr., Washington Times opinion
Counterfeiting: A Matter of National Security - Jay Fraser, Threats Watch
Owning ‘the Means of Communication’ - Will Hartley, Insurgency Research Group
Regulating Complex Terrain in COIN - Michael Innes, Complex Terrain Laboratory
Blood Debts and Exotic Others - Patrick Porter, Kings of War
Prisons in Counterinsurgency - Herschel Smith, The Captain's Journal
Media Power and Terrorists - Brigitte Nacos, Complex Terrain Laboratory

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Al Qaeda Reward Slashed by US - Associated Press
Case Against 9/11 Detainee Is Dismissed - William Glaberson, New York Times
The Government’s Jihad on Jihad - Andrew McCarthy, National Review opinion
Iran, Al Qaeda and Liberal Denial - Daniel Mandel, New York Post opinion
Assessing the Muslim Brotherhood "Firewall" - Marc Lynch, Abu Aardvark
Civilians Missing From Action - Spencer Ackerman, Washington Independent

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France: 7 Convicted on Terror Charges - Molly Moore, Washington Post
French Iraq Recruiters are Jailed - BBC News
2,500 Juveniles as Enemy Combatants - Walter Pincus, Washington Post
Nuclear Lab Fails Terrorist Exercise - Bill Gertz, Washington Times
The Government’s Jihad on Jihad - Andrew McCarthy, National Review opinion
Two Real Alternative Models of Development - Max Boot, Contentions
Budgets and Priorities and the War of Ideas - Matt Armstrong, MountainRunner
Assessing the Muslim Brotherhood "Firewall" - Marc Lynch, Abu Aardvark
Civilians Missing From Action - Spencer Ackerman, Washington Independent

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Euro 2008: al-Qa'eda Threatens Attack - Alexandra Williams, London Daily Telegraph
Torture's Blowback - Washington Post editorial
Former 'Islamic Extremists' - James Zumwalt, Washington Times opinion
The French for Terrorist Prosecution - Phillip Carter, Intel Dump
We’re the Real Enemy - Emanuele Ottolenghi, Contentions

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US Not at War with Islam Faith, Bush Says - Jon Ward, Washington Times
Osama bin Laden Targets Israel - David Blair, London Daily Telegraph
Bin Laden says Palestinian Cause at Heart of Jihad - Associated Press
Insurgent Propaganda, Western Response - Andrew Exum, Arab Media and Society
Bounties a Bust in Hunt for Al-Qaeda - Craig Whitlock, Washington Post
US Postpones First Guantanamo War Crimes Trial - Associated Press
Coddling Terrorists In Yemen - Ali Soufan, Washington Post opinion
Be-bop Galula - Richard Fernandez, The Belmont Club
UK Muslims: Identity, Integration, Policy - Tim Stevens, Complex Terrain Laboratory
Bin Laden Has New Tape Out And He... Zzzzzzz - James Meek, Counterterrorism

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Insurgent Propaganda, Western Response - Andrew Exum, Arab Media and Society
The Spectacle of War by Andrew Exum - Matt Armstrong, MountainRunner
Terror Terminology - Oliver North, Washington Times opinion
The Ray-ban Theory of History - Richard Fernandez, The Belmont Club
Smuggler's Round-Up - Michael Innes, Complex Terrain Laboratory

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Bin Laden Lashes Out at Arab Leaders - Associated Press
Al-Qaeda Operative Loses Freedom in Yemen - Craig Whitlock, Washington Post
Bin Laden Lashes Out at Arab Leaders in New Msg - Associated Press
Insurgent Propaganda, Western Response - Andrew Exum, Arab Media and Society
The Spectacle of War by Andrew Exum - Matt Armstrong, MountainRunner
Blaming the Media is So 2004 - Marc Lynch, Abu Aardvark
Terror Terminology - Oliver North, Washington Times opinion
The Ray-ban Theory of History - Richard Fernandez, The Belmont Club
Smuggler's Round-Up - Michael Innes, Complex Terrain Laboratory
Guantanamo Bay Facility's Revolving Door - Frank Hyland, Counterterrorism

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Report Details Interrogation Debate - Lichtblau and Shane, New York Times
Report: FBI Slow in Reporting Detainee Abuse - Carrie Johnson, Washington Post
High Court Affirms Terrorism Conviction - William Branigin, Washington Post
The Lawyers War - Wall Street Journal editorial
After Guantánamo - Kenneth Roth, Foreign Affairs opinion
Islam's History of Anti-Semitism - Raymond Ibrahim, Washington Times opinion
Combating Cyber-terrorism - Mohd Noor Amin, Washington Times
Senator Lieberman and YouTube - Richard Fernandez, The Belmont Club

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Counterterror Staff Falls to 62% - Jerry Seper, Washington Times
Agent Says the FBI is Not Prepared - Richard Schmitt, Los Angeles Times
Interrogation Tactics Were Challenged - Johnson and Whie, Washington Post
What the FBI Agents Saw - New York Times editorial
Al Qaeda’s ‘War Amongst the People’ - David Betz, Kings of War

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Gates Says Lack of Patience Could Cost Victory - AFPS
Petraeus Discusses Challenges in Central Command Area - AFPS
Senate Approves $165B for Iraq, Afghanistan - Jonathan Weisman, Washington Post
US to Review Gitmo Juvenile Numbers - Associated Press
Thinking Through Doomsday - David Ignatius, Washington Post opinion
Al Qaeda’s ‘War Amongst the People’ - David Betz, Kings of War
Why is There Jihad? - Herschel Smith, The Captain's Journal

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Key Al Qaeda Figure Died in US Strike - Meyer and Rotella, Los Angeles Times
Pentagon Charges Detainee with Terrorism Support - Reuters
How to Have Successful Negotiations - Dennis Ross, Wall Street Journal opinion
Retrospective - Richard Fernandez, The Belmont Club
Jihadi Suicide Bombers: The New Wave - Ahmed Rashid, New York Review of Books

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Terror Attack Seen to Follow '08 Vote - Rowan Scarborough, Washington Times
Defending 'the Most Hated Man in the World' - Josh Meyer, Los Angeles Times
The Torture Scandal's Heroes - Washington Post editorial
Either Allah Isn’t On Their Side... - Rod Liddle, London Times opinion
Retrospective - Richard Fernandez, The Belmont Club
Jihadi Suicide Bombers: The New Wave - Ahmed Rashid, New York Review of Books

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States Chafing at US Focus on Terrorism - Schmitt and Johnston, New York Times
Koran Target Practice - Diana West, Washington Times opinion
Guantanamo's Day in Court - James Carroll, Boston Globe opinion
Resilient Structures - Chet Richards, Chet Richards
Daniel Kimmage at the ICSR - Tim Stevens, Ubiwar

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Abu Qatada Release Puts Britain in a Spot - Sebastian Rotella, Los Angeles Times
Bearing No Burden - Washington Post editorial
Homeland Security Newspeak - Bret Stephens, Wall Street Journal opinion
Censoring the United States - Matt Armstrong, MountainRunner
Sui Generis - Richard Fernandez, The Belmont Club

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AQ Supporters' Tape to Call for Use of WMD - Thomas and Cook, ABC News
Osama bin Laden 'Hiding in North Pakistan' - AFP
AQ Warrior Uses Internet to Rally Women - Sciolino and Mekhennet, New York Times
Internet Warrior Rallies Women to Support al-Qaeda - Gregory McNeal, The Tank
She Wages Online Jihad - Noah Shachtman, Danger Room
"See You in Court" - Richard Fernandez, The Belmont Club
How to Win the ‘War of Ideas’ - David Betz, Kings of War
Good Jihadists v. Bad Jihadists - Walid Phares, Counterterrorism
Patterns of Piracy, Potential for New Partners - Galrahn, Information Dissemination

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US Cites Big Gains Against Al-Qaeda - Joby Warrick, Washington Post
Lawyers Want 9/11 Trial Dismissed - Associated Press
US Military Charges 3 Gitmo Detainees - Associated Press
The President Has Kept Us Safe - Thane Rosenbaum, Wall Street Journal opinion
Constantinople Fell Just 555 Years Ago - Clifford May, National Review opinion
War of Words - Stephen Schwartz, Weekly Standard opinion
The Revolt Against al-Qaeda - Richard Fernandez, The Belmont Club

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Intel Official Sees Little Progress Through Jan - Karen DeYoung, Washington Post
Chertoff: Conventional Terror Arms a Key US Focus - Associated Press
Chertoff Downplays Terrorist Nuclear Threat - Associated Press
Army Judge Is Replaced for Trial of Detainee - William Glaberson, New York Times
Judge Critical of War Crimes Case Dismissed - Carol Williams, Los Angeles Times

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S. Asia 'Focus for al-Qaeda Fight' - BBC News
Al-Qaida's Stance on Women Sparks Extremist Debate - Associated Press
Al Qaeda on the Run - Wall Street Journal editorial
Al-Qaeda's Potency is Exaggerated - Simon Jenkins, London Times opinion
Who’s Winning the War of Ideas? - Stephen Tankel, Kings of War

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Homeland Security Chief: No al-Qaida Negotiations - Associated Press
Darool-Uloom Deoband's Fatwa Against Terrorism - Rhys Blakely, London Times
Women Plead with al-Qa'eda to Join Jihad - London Daily Telegraph
What Do You Call a Terror(Jihad)ist? - Singer and Noor, New York Times opinion
Bush Must Confront Rogue States - Rivkin and Casey, Wall Street Journal opinion
The Axis of Weakness - Daniel Freedman, Wall Street Journal opinion
UK: 42-day Detention; A Fair Solution - Gordon Brown, London Times opinion
A Fateful Election for Liberty - Nate Hentoff, Washington Times opinion
Conversation with a Jihadi - Herschel Smith, The Captain's Journal

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Al-Qaida on Ropes: Bin Laden Losing - New Hampshire Union-Leader editorial

"According to Pew polls, support for Al Qaeda has been dropping around the Muslim world in recent years," wrote Peter Bergen and Paul Cruickshank. "The numbers supporting suicide bombings in Indonesia, Lebanon, and Bangladesh, for instance, have dropped by half or more in the last five years. In Saudi Arabia, only 10 percent now have a favorable view of Al Qaeda, according to a December poll by Terror Free Tomorrow, a Washington-based think tank. Following a wave of suicide attacks in Pakistan in the past year, support for suicide operations amongst Pakistanis has dropped to 9 percent (it was 33 percent five years ago), while favorable views of bin Laden in the North West Frontier Province of Pakistan, around where he is believed to be hiding, have plummeted to 4 percent from 70 percent since August 2007."
There Is a Military Solution to Terror? - Bret Stephens, Wall Street Journal opinion

When military strategies fail – as they did in Vietnam while the U.S. pursued the tactics of attrition, or in Iraq prior to the surge – the idea that there can be no military solution has a way of taking hold with civilians and generals eager to deflect blame. This is how we arrived at the notion that "political reconciliation" is a precondition of military success, not a result of it. There's also a tendency to misjudge the aims and ambitions of the insurgents: To think they can be mollified via one political concession or another.
Islamists Are Naive - Max Boot, Contentions

What is fascinating is that the lesson of Basra confirms the lesson of Afghanistan and Iran: every place where a fundamentalist interpretation of Islam has been imposed it has proven to be wildly unpopular. It can only be imposed, in fact, at the point of a gun. That is probably true even of Saudi Arabia, which, lest we forget, is one of the most complete dictatorships on the planet. What this suggests is that President Bush and others who think that there is a fundamental desire for liberty inherent in most people are not being naïve. It is Islamists who are naïve (or simply deluded) for thinking that their crazed version of Islamic teaching provides a viable model for a modern society.
When a Terrorist Leader Gives a Press Conference - Brigitte Nacos, CT Lab

While fundamentalist jihadi leaders decry the ills of modernity and globalization, they surely know how to exploit modern, global media and communication for their propaganda - in favor of turning back the clock of history to times past. Benjamin Barber's important mid-1980s book Jihad vs. McWorld attached the “jihad” label not specifically to Muslim fundamentalists but to other religious and secular anti-globalization/modernization extremists as well; he concluded that the two sides need each other in spite of the deep gap between them.
Strategic Communication of Unmanned Warfare - Matt Armstrong, MountainRunner

Modern conflict is increasingly a struggle for strategic influence above territory. This struggle is, at its essence, a battle over perceptions and narratives within a psychological terrain under the influence of local and global pressures. One of the unspoken lessons embedded in the Counterinsurgency Manual (FM3-24) is that we risk strategic success relying on a lawyerly conduct of war that rests on finely tuned arguments of why and why not. When too much defense and too much offense can be detrimental, we must consider the impact of our actions, the information effects. The propaganda of the deed must match the propaganda of the word.
Unmanned Systems and the Accident - Tim Stevens, Ubiwar

Mark Safranski has already nominated Matt Armstrong as ‘Public Diplomacy/IO Czar in the next administration‘ and with good reason, judging by an article he’s written for Serviam Magazine. In Combat Robots and Perception Management Matt outlines his take on the overlooked implications of the use of unmanned systems in the battlespace of the future.
On Properly Insulting our Enemies - Uncle Jimbo, Blackfive

I've been talking a lot recently about the information war and moving from kinetic operations to hearts and minds COIN. One major aspect of that is how we speak about our enemies and how we frame the struggle we are in. GWOT is out as it always sucked. We fight a Global Counterinsurgency against violent religious extremists and we need a common reference for them. We have gone all the way around our ass getting to our elbow in this attempt and nothing has stuck. Radical religious extremists who have hijacked an otherwise peaceful religion and now conduct terrorist acts in pursuit of a return to the gloris of the Caliphate and worldwide sharia law is a little clunky and all attempts to shorten it have simply failed. Recently all kinds of folks birthed cows when the State Department stated that we should mind our wording and choose terms that advance our arguments.
The Detainee Issue Has a Naval Twist - Galrahn, Information Dissemination

The Guardian has an article out regarding the use of US Navy ships as floating prisons. Actually the accusations aren't quite to that extent, in fact the headline appears to be misleading based on the facts presented. What is presented though does have the feel of being potentially legitimate, does pass the smell test, however is also presented under a political slant from a certain perspective.
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Hybrid Warfare Demands Indirect Approach - Robert Killebrew, Armed Forces Journal

Recent discussions about military advisers and advising allied security forces would benefit from some context. It would be useful to put the larger subject of military assistance into a discussion of future military strategy. First, no matter how we deal with future military strategies, the reality is that we must deal first with the 50-meter target of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Without descending into the Strategy 101 morass of defining victory, the wars there have got to be won, and the U.S. and its armed forces must do whatever it takes to do so. Title 10 concerns about rebuilding the Army and strategizing beyond the current wars will all be useless if we lose and the U.S. becomes a defeated nation. I speak from bitter experience: Losing cuts into a nation’s soul, cuts its willingness to lead in foreign affairs, and cuts as well into our nation’s willingness to fund its armed forces. Have we forgotten the wilderness years after Vietnam? If history is any guide, the willingness of the government to fund reset of our land forces will be questionable if we are driven out of Iraq, particularly. So even if the wheels fall off vehicles at Fort Hood, Texas, our overseas commanders have got to get the troops and materiel they need to fight both wars to a successful conclusion.
9/11 Mastermind Prepares for Arraignment - Michael Melia, Associated Press

Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, who could face the death penalty for his role in the Sept. 11 attacks, has been peppering his lawyer with questions in advance of his arraignment Thursday before a military tribunal. It will be the first public appearance for the No. 3 al-Qaida leader since his capture in 2003, and his lawyer, Navy Capt. Prescott Prince, told The Associated Press that he doesn't know what Mohammed will say when he addresses the judge Thursday with dozens of journalists in attendance.
Detainee to be Charged with War Crimes - Carol Williams, Los Angeles Times

The Pentagon announced Tuesday that it planned to charge an Ethiopian educated in the United States and Britain with war crimes, including an alleged Al Qaeda plot to unleash a "dirty bomb" and blow up apartment buildings in US cities. Binyam Mohammed, whose repatriation to Britain was sought by Prime Minister Gordon Brown last year, could face life in prison if convicted on the charges of conspiracy and material support for terrorism.
US Charges British Resident at Gitmo - Michael Melia, Associated Press

US military prosecutors at Guantanamo Bay have filed war-crimes charges against a former British resident accused of plotting with al-Qaida to bomb apartment buildings in the United States, the Pentagon said Tuesday. Ethiopian national Binyam Mohamed, 30, was charged despite a request from the British government last year to release him from the US Navy base in southeast Cuba.
Guantanamo Is a Model Prison (Really) - Mark Busby, Wall Street Journal opinion

There is much talk in the media, in our capital and elsewhere about the detention facility at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. I have paid close attention to this dialogue, and after a year in command, it is clear that there are two Guantanamos: the one that exists in popular culture, and the one most discover when they actually see conditions there. We house enemy combatants in one of several facilities according to their compliance with camp rules. Highly compliant detainees, approximately 20% of the population, live in Camp 4. Here they enjoy a communal, barracks-style environment, with movie nights, classes in Pashtu, Arabic and English, shared meals and prayers, and up to 12 hours of recreation per day.
The Counterterrorism Paradox - Brian Burton, Armed Forces Journal

Almost seven years after the 9/11 attacks, the primary military manifestations of America’s global war on terrorism are the seemingly interminable campaigns in Iraq and Afghanistan. Yet there is little evidence that these operations are doing much to reduce the international terrorist threat to America’s homeland, people and interests. International terrorism cannot be neutralized through large-scale employment of armed forces. What these wars have demonstrated is that the US does not possess a clear understanding of the threat environment, nor does it have an effective overall strategy or appropriate military forces to mitigate this threat. America faces a threat that is globally diffuse and adaptable. It is, therefore, necessary for the US to adopt a subtler strategy that enlists the aid of allies around the world, and develop similarly subtle forces to counter terrorist groups abroad.
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Earliest Known "American Al Qaeda" Pleads Guilty to Terrorism Charges

By Andrew Cochran


Christopher Paul of Columbus, Ohio, pleaded guilty today to conspiring with others to use a weapon of mass destruction, namely explosive devices, against targets in Europe and the United States. Paul is the last of three Ohio men charged with terrorist activities after the FBI opened an investigation over five years ago. Iyman Faris pleaded guilty in May, 2003, in the plot to destroy the Brooklyn Bridge (see Evan Kohlmann's July 2007 post on the NEFA Foundation report on that plot). Nuradin Abdi, pleaded guilty last year in the plot to bomb a Columbus-area shopping mall (see Evan's August 2007 post on the NEFA Foundation report on that plot). But attorneys for the Faris and Abdi told reporters last year that as many as 10 men might have been involved in Paul's circle of jihadists. See Patrick Poole's excellent website on jihadists in Central Ohio for more.

The statement of facts released by the Justice Department reveals that Paul is probably the earliest known "American Al Qaeda," having joined the group in the early 1990s. He was clearly committed to Al Qaeda's goals and assisted Al Qaeda-linked terrorists in Afghanistan, Bosnia, and Germany until he was arrested last year. Some excerpts:

"In the early 1990s, defendant traveled to Pakistan and Afghanistan to join the mujahadeen. Upon his arrival in Pakistan, defendant stayed at the Beit Ul Ansar guest house, located in Peshawar, Pakistan. Beit Ul Ansar was a guest house affiliated with al Qaeda. While at Beit Ul Ansar, defendant went to Afghanistan and received initial training at an al Qaeda training camp. The training included, but was not limited to, map reading, climbing, use of assault rifles, grenades, rocket-propelled grenades, small unit tactics, and hand-to-hand combat. Successfully completing his initial training defendant joined al Qaeda and then stayed at Beit ur Salam guesthouse, which was exclusively for al Qaeda members. Distinguishing himself to al Qaeda, defendant was selected for and obtained advanced training in rappelling, military history, and explosives and explosive devices. Upon joining al Qaeda and having received their training, the defendant fought with other mujahadeen in Afghanistan. Over time and through his association with al Qaeda, the defendant became an individual dedicated to committing jihad, including causing the death of human beings and the destruction of property and furthering the objectives of al Qaeda and other radical Islamic fundamentalists.

From 1993 through 1995 defendant, using various passports and aliases, returned to the Balkans area in Europe and fought jihad in conflict zones such as Bosnia establishing further contacts with the radical Islamic fundamentalist movement and creating a master list of contact numbers for senior al-Qaeda leadership and other radical Islamic fundamentalists and operatives world-wide. On this master list, investigators also found listings of component parts for bombs/detonation devices. Defendant’s master list of terrorist contacts and bomb-making information was seized by the Columbus JTTF in a search warrant at defendant’s residence.

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As established by defendant’s passport and cooperating witnesses, on April 16, 1999, defendant traveled to Germany to meet with members of a radical Islamic fundamentalist terrorist cell in Germany. Paul, who was known to the cell as an expert in bomb-making/detonation devices, was asked to travel to Germany to provide explosives training and information to this German terrorist cell. The government’s investigation and witnesses establish that defendant provided such training knowing that the German terrorist cell was planning to use such training and information to construct bombs, car bombs, and similar devices to be used against Americans while they vacationed at foreign tourist resorts. The government’s investigation and witnesses establish that the German terrorist cell also planned to use bombs and similar devices against Americans within the United States and against property that was owned, leased, or used by the United States outside the United States such as U.S. embassies, diplomatic and consular premises and military bases located in Europe.

In November 1999, defendant’s bank records show defendant wired transferred $1,760 to one of the principal members of the German terrorist cell."

« Close It

June 3, 2008 02:39 PM Link
Snuffysmith
9/11 Planners Face Military Tribunal - Andrew Selsky, Associated Press

Almost seven years after terrorists hijacked airliners and used them as missiles to kill 2,973 people, five men who purportedly plotted the attacks face a military tribunal Thursday. Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, the confessed mastermind of the Sept. 11 attacks, will be arraigned simultaneously with the four other detainees inside a high-security courthouse at the remote US Navy base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
Ban on War Propaganda Faces Fight - Anne Flaherty, Associated Press

Congressional Democrats want to ban Pentagon propaganda on the Iraq war, but they are likely to find that enforcement is easier said than done. An existing legal prohibition, for example, didn't deter a Pentagon program aimed at influencing retired military officers frequently interviewed by the news media. It also didn't prevent a culture within the Bush administration that former White House spokesman Scott McClellan claims favored propaganda over honesty in selling the war to the public. And what is propaganda anyway? Nearly every press briefing involves a military or civilian official trying to influence the interpretation of events.
The Land of the Free - Richard Fernandez, The Belmont Club

Congress bans US "military propaganda". According to the Washington Times. In an globalized world, what constitutes a domestic release of information? Is there any form of communication that can be directed at the enemy that lacks the potential to reach an American audience? A video on YouTube? A blog post? A telephone interview given to bloggers? A briefing given before network correspondents and cameras in Baghdad? All of those are likely to be seen by American audiences. Should they be proscribed? The days of short range radio stations and leaflet drops are over.
A Jihadi by Any Other Name Smell as Foul? - Raymond Ibrahim, American Thinker

The terminology we use to describe our enemy in the war on terror matters a lot. A spirited debate is underway among specialists and in the press. An op-ed published Monday in the New York Times entitled "What do you call a Terror(Jihad)ist?", by P.W. Singer and Elina Noor, attempts to defend the recent State Department memo advising government personal to refrain from using theologically-laden terms-"jihadi," "mujahidin," "caliphate," "Islamo-fascism," "salafi," "wahhabi," "ummah" when describing Islamic radicals and their motives. Instead, generics-"terrorists," "extremists" should suffice.
Global Threat, Local Response - Insurgency Research Group

This analysis of the recent bomb attack in Exeter was contributed by IRG reader Weichong Ong - a PhD researcher at the Centre for the Study of War State and Society, University of Exeter and a Visiting Research Associate at the Rajaratnam School of International Studies, Singapore.
Bin Laden's Latest Messages - Evan Kohlmann, Counterterrorism

The NEFA Foundation has released the fifth episode of its TerrorWatch video-on-demand service. This week, TerrorWatch takes a look at the most recent pair of audio recordings from Al-Qaida leader Usama Bin Laden.
Snuffysmith
Pakistan's Worrisome Pullback - Ahmed Rashid, Washington Post opinion

Relations between the US military and the Pakistani army, critical allies in the "war on terror," are at their worst point since Sept. 11, 2001, senior Western military officers and diplomats here say, as Pakistani troops withdraw from several tribal areas bordering Afghanistan that are home to Taliban and al-Qaeda leaders and thousands of their fighters. Gen. Ashfaq Kiyani, chief of the Pakistani army, has told US military and NATO officials that he will not retrain or reequip troops to fight the counterinsurgency war the Americans are demanding on Pakistan's mountainous western border.
Under-Resourcing and Force Protection - Herschel Smith, The Captain's Journal

In spite of the success the U.S. Marines have had in the Helmand Province (and the example that this has provided to NATO), the balance of NATO forces in Afghanistan are focused primarily on force protection, and in order to procure that protection, some shady deals have been struck. Spiegel recently interviewed Hamid Karzai, and while the entire piece is worth studying, one exchange stands out as descriptive of the campaign thus far. NATO forces are buying protection from criminals and warlords.
IRAN

Sciences A Part of Its Revolution - Thomas Erdbrink, Washington Post

Iran's determination to develop what it says is a nuclear energy program is part of a broader effort to promote technological self-sufficiency and to see Iran recognized as one of the world's most advanced nations. The country's leaders, who three decades ago wrested the government away from a ruler they saw as overly dependent on the West, invest heavily in scientific and industrial achievement, but critics say government backing is sometimes erratic, leaving Iran's technological promise unfulfilled.
Talking Iran - Jonathan Schanzer, Weekly Standard opinion

The debate continues over the benefits of engaging with the Islamic Republic of Iran, a state that has been dedicated to Islamist terrorism since 1979. The notion of a productive meeting with Iranian leaders is fantasy. However, the debate is important because it reveals how the proponents of engagement fail to understand the realities in Iran. Among those who advocate engagement with Iran, the prevailing argument is that a meeting with Iran would not necessarily have to include Iran's current president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.
THE LONG WAR

9/11 Mastermind Seeks Death Penalty, Martyrdom - Josh White, Washington Post

Khalid Sheik Mohammed, the self-proclaimed mastermind of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, calmly told a U.S. military court Thursday that he wishes for a death sentence so that he can become "a martyr." Sitting at the front of a line of white-clad detainees who allegedly carried out the most devastating terrorist attack in U.S. history, Mohammed stroked his long, bushy, gray beard and spoke in confident English of his contempt for the U.S. Constitution and the military commissions designed to try him.
9/11 'Architect' Vows to Seek Martyrdom - Jerry Seper, Washington Times

Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, the accused mastermind of the Sept. 11 attacks on the United States that killed nearly 3,000 people, told a military tribunal at Guantanamo Bay Naval Base in Cuba on Thursday that he wanted to be executed and become a martyr. "This is what I wish. I wanted to be a martyr for a long time," Mr. Mohammed told Marine Col. Ralph Kohlmann, chief military judge for the tribunal, during the death penalty trial for him and four others accused in the attacks using hijacked commercial jetliners that destroyed the World Trade Center's Twin Towers and crashed into the Pentagon.
9/11 Suspects Arraigned at Gitmo Hearing - William Glabberson, New York Times

Five detainees who the government says were high-level coordinators of the Sept. 11 terror attacks were arraigned in a military courtroom here on Thursday morning. The five included Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, who has long cast himself in the role of super terrorist and has said he planned the attacks, which killed 2,973 people and set America on a course for war. He has also claimed responsibility for some thirty other acts of terror, including the decapitation murder of Daniel Pearl, a Wall Street Journal reporter.
Charges Against Detainees (PDF) - Washington Post

FindLaw.com copy of charge sheet.
General Sings the Gitmo Blues - Phillip Carter, Intel Dump

Unfortunately, the military commissions at Guantanamo are not fair, just and transparent -- nor legitimate. Repeating this mantra will not make it true, any more than repeating platitudes about victory in Iraq made those statements true in the dark days of 2005 and 2006. Hartmann may believe in the military commissions system and procedures. But the rest of the world doesn't.
The Uighur Dilemma - James Traanto, Wall Street Journal opinion

"Lawmakers chastised the Bush administration on Wednesday for allowing the Chinese government to interrogate Chinese Muslim detainees at the U.S. military prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and demanded that they be freed in the United States," the Associated Press reports. We heard about the Uighurs when we visited Guantanamo in 2006. It is true that they do not belong at Guantanamo. But the AP's benign account of their having "settled" in Afghanistan and been "swept up" is at variance with what we learned at Guantanamo.
42-day Law Will Help Terrorists - Sean O’Neill, Times of London

Gordon Brown’s case for holding terrorism suspects without charge for 42 days is bogus and little more than scaremongering, according to Sir John Major. The former Conservative Prime Minister, writing in The Times today, said that Mr Brown’s security measures were more likely to encourage terrorist recruitment than defeat the extremist threat to Britain.
42-day Detention: Threat to our Liberty - John Major, Times of London opinion

The Government's legislation to permit 42 days pre-charge detention brings to the fore the wider question of civil liberties. In their response to the security threat ministers have dragged us ever closer to a society in which ancient rights are seriously damaged. I doubt this is the Government's intention, but it is the effect.
Cluster Behind the Cluster Ban - Austin Bay, Washington Times opinion

I have yet to encounter a "surgical" weapon. A weapon exists to kill or damage living beings and material objects. "Surgical" is a questionable word, anyway, when applied to a weapon. It yokes scalpel and dagger. Both cut, but one cuts while performing medical service and the other cuts to harm or slay. When you need a dagger, however, you really need a dagger. When you need a B-52, you really need a B-52. The "when" of course reflects either a threatened (defensive) or threatening (offensive) situation, though in our complex existence being threatened and being threatening are often simultaneous conditions.
Declare Independence - Mike Rogers, Washington Times opinion

Foreign oil is funding our enemies. Hugo Chavez in Venezuela is funding the Castro regime in Cuba and narcoterrorists in Columbia. Iran is funding Hezbollah militias. The Persian Gulf nations are funding al Qaida, Hamas, Islamic Jihad, and the Taliban. Russia has doubled its military spending in the last five years. Why? Because they are charging American consumers more than $130 for a barrel of oil and we have no choice but to pay it. America needs to declare its energy independence from dictators, extremists, and those who want to destroy our freedom and our democracy.
Pirate Attacks Up 75% - Noah Shachtman, Danger Room

Somewhere on the world's waterways, a pirate will try to strike today. Another will tomorrow. And another the day after that. Piracy is on the rise, across the globe -- up nearly 75%, from last decade to this one, according to a new report from the RAND Corporation. There's now at least an attempt at a pirate attack nearly every day. Why? Mainly, the RAND report says, because there are now more targets to loot. "First and most fundamentally, there has been a massive increase in commercial maritime traffic. Combined with the large number of ports around the world, this growth has provided pirates with an almost limitless range of tempting, high-payoff targets."
Snuffysmith
Al-Qaeda: The Cracks Begin to Show - Abul Taher, Times of London

For the first time, they reported, men whose previous pronouncements had been used as a justification for jihad were speaking out against it. They were not embracing the West, by any means, but they were questioning the ideological basis upon which Al-Qaeda, as a scattered movement, relies. In the battle for “hearts and minds” the group appeared to have scored an own goal. What is behind this change in thinking and what effect is it having on Al-Qaeda abroad and in Britain?
A Not Very Private Feud Over Terrorism - Sciolino and Schmitt, New York Times

A bitter personal struggle between two powerful figures in the world of terrorism has broken out, forcing their followers to choose sides. This battle is not being fought in the rugged no man’s land on the Pakistan-Afghan border. It is a contest reverberating inside the Beltway between two of America’s leading theorists on terrorism and how to fight it, two men who hold opposing views on the very nature of the threat.
GG Progress - John Robb, Global Guerrillas

John Robb provides a 'global guerrilla' update on Iraq, Mexico, and Nigeria.
Images of Self and Enemy - Mark Grimsley, BTOOTSA

America is at war with a transnational terrorist movement fueled by a radical ideology of hatred, oppression, and murder. Our National Strategy for Combating Terrorism, first published in February 2003, recognizes that we are at war and that protecting and defending the Homeland, the American people, and their livelihoods remains our first and most solemn obligation. Our strategy also recognizes that the War on Terror is a different kind of war. From the beginning, it has been both a battle of arms and a battle of ideas. Not only do we fight our terrorist enemies on the battlefield, we promote freedom and human dignity as alternatives to the terrorists’ perverse vision of oppression and totalitarian rule. The paradigm for combating terrorism now involves the application of all elements of our national power and influence. Not only do we employ military power, we use diplomatic, financial, intelligence, and law enforcement activities to protect the Homeland and extend our defenses, disrupt terrorist operations, and deprive our enemies of what they need to operate and survive. We have broken old orthodoxies that once confined our counterterrorism efforts primarily to the criminal justice domain.
NY Detainee Allegedly Hosted Bomb Plotter - Evan Kohlmann, Counterterrorism

Several interesting pieces of information have surfaced in legal documents relating to the immigration case of Mourad El Hamyani, a permanent U.S. resident who is currently detained in New York. In February, a federal immigration judge denied the government's request to deport El Hamyani, but DHS is challenging that ruling. According to a recently released DHS document (available on the NEFA Foundation website), El Hamyani "attended a terrorist training camp in Afghanistan...assisted in the planning and execution of an armed robbery...intended to fund terrorist activities...[and] hosted a terrorist, Abdelkarim Mejjati, during two trips Mejjati made to the United States."
Snuffysmith
Al-Qaeda: The Cracks Begin to Show - Abul Taher, Times of London

For the first time, they reported, men whose previous pronouncements had been used as a justification for jihad were speaking out against it. They were not embracing the West, by any means, but they were questioning the ideological basis upon which Al-Qaeda, as a scattered movement, relies. In the battle for “hearts and minds” the group appeared to have scored an own goal. What is behind this change in thinking and what effect is it having on Al-Qaeda abroad and in Britain?
A Not Very Private Feud Over Terrorism - Sciolino and Schmitt, New York Times

A bitter personal struggle between two powerful figures in the world of terrorism has broken out, forcing their followers to choose sides. This battle is not being fought in the rugged no man’s land on the Pakistan-Afghan border. It is a contest reverberating inside the Beltway between two of America’s leading theorists on terrorism and how to fight it, two men who hold opposing views on the very nature of the threat.
Young Radicals Of Next-Gen Jihad - Marc Sageman, Washington Post opinion

We are fighting the wrong foe. Over the past six years, the nature of the international Islamist terrorist threat to the West has changed dramatically, but Western governments are still fighting the last war -- set up to fight an old al-Qaeda that is now largely contained. Unless we understand this sea change, we will not be able to ward off the new menace. The version of al-Qaeda that Osama bin Laden founded is a fading force. After a week in which five detainees who allegedly planned the Sept. 11, 2001, atrocities were arraigned before a US military tribunal at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, it's worth remembering that the terrorists behind 9/11 were mostly young, well-educated middle-class expatriates from Muslim countries who had become radicalized abroad, especially in the West. Such key 9/11 plotters as Mohamed Atta, Ramzi Binalshibh, Ziad Jarrah and Marwan al-Shehhi met and became radicalized as students in Hamburg, then went to Afghanistan looking for al-Qaeda. But over the past six years, most of the professional terrorists who fit this profile have been eliminated during the US-led manhunt for "high-value targets." The few that remain are huddled in the Afghan-Pakistani border area, struggling to extend their reach beyond Pakistan.
Hoffman, Sageman Dustup Goes Mainstream - Stephen Tankel, Kings of War

You no longer need a subscription to Foreign Affairs (or an Athens password) to read about the feud between Bruce Hoffman and Marc Sageman regarding the nature of the jihadist threat. First there was Hoffman’s takedown in the current issue of Foreign Affairs, in which he accused Sageman of “a fundamental misreading of the Al Qaeda threat.” Sageman’s rebuttal, in which he accuses Hoffman of a “gross misrepresentation”, is on the way. But thanks to the NYT Week in Review, we’re all treated to a little preview of what Sageman will have to say. Along with some trans-Atlantic commentary on the feud and a summary of why this matters beyond the realm of the ivory tower.
House Advocates Probe Of Interrogation Tactics - Joby Warrick, Washington Post

Nearly 60 House Democrats yesterday urged the Justice Department to appoint a special counsel to examine whether top Bush administration officials may have committed crimes in authorizing the use of harsh interrogation tactics against suspected terrorists. In a letter to Attorney General Michael B. Mukasey, the lawmakers cited what they said is "mounting evidence" that senior officials personally sanctioned the use of waterboarding and other aggressive tactics against detainees in U.S.-run prisons overseas. An independent investigation is needed to determine whether such actions violated U.S or international law, the letter stated.
Detainee's Attorney Seeks Dismissal Over Abuse - Josh White, Washington Post

A military defense attorney for a detainee held at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, has asked that all charges against his client be dismissed after prosecutors provided him documents that show the detainee was subjected to an abusive technique that had been banned at the facility, calling the treatment a violation of the law of war and U.S. laws and policies. According to Guantanamo prison records, Mohammed Jawad was subjected to the military's "frequent flier program" in May 2004, which meant he was moved repeatedly from one detention cell to another in quick intervals and usually at night, a program designed to deprive detainees of sleep. Such sleep deprivation was banned at the facility in March 2004, and other prison records indicate that it was used on detainees as late as July 2004.
Are US and Canada Talking? - Peter Brown, Washington Times opinion

A few months ago, in mid-February, Canada and the United States announced a new bilateral "Civil Assistance Plan." While the new plan may look good on paper and suggests much improved communications and coordination between the two countries in times of emergency, a noticeable communications gap still lingers. Evidence of this first surfaced when Maine's adjutant general, Maj. Gen. Bill Libby (also commissioner of Maine's Department of Defense, Veterans and Emergency Management) told the press weeks after the plan was announced that it caught him completely by surprise and that he was never contacted by USNORTHCOM or Homeland Security let alone any of his Canadian counterparts about it in advance.
GG Progress - John Robb, Global Guerrillas

John Robb provides a 'global guerrilla' update on Iraq, Mexico, and Nigeria.
Images of Self and Enemy - Mark Grimsley, BTOOTSA

America is at war with a transnational terrorist movement fueled by a radical ideology of hatred, oppression, and murder. Our National Strategy for Combating Terrorism, first published in February 2003, recognizes that we are at war and that protecting and defending the Homeland, the American people, and their livelihoods remains our first and most solemn obligation. Our strategy also recognizes that the War on Terror is a different kind of war. From the beginning, it has been both a battle of arms and a battle of ideas. Not only do we fight our terrorist enemies on the battlefield, we promote freedom and human dignity as alternatives to the terrorists’ perverse vision of oppression and totalitarian rule. The paradigm for combating terrorism now involves the application of all elements of our national power and influence. Not only do we employ military power, we use diplomatic, financial, intelligence, and law enforcement activities to protect the Homeland and extend our defenses, disrupt terrorist operations, and deprive our enemies of what they need to operate and survive. We have broken old orthodoxies that once confined our counterterrorism efforts primarily to the criminal justice domain.
NY Detainee Allegedly Hosted Bomb Plotter - Evan Kohlmann, Counterterrorism

Several interesting pieces of information have surfaced in legal documents relating to the immigration case of Mourad El Hamyani, a permanent U.S. resident who is currently detained in New York. In February, a federal immigration judge denied the government's request to deport El Hamyani, but DHS is challenging that ruling. According to a recently released DHS document (available on the NEFA Foundation website), El Hamyani "attended a terrorist training camp in Afghanistan...assisted in the planning and execution of an armed robbery...intended to fund terrorist activities...[and] hosted a terrorist, Abdelkarim Mejjati, during two trips Mejjati made to the United States."
Snuffysmith
No Time for 'Nobody Home' - Armitage and Flournoy, Washington Post opinion

The early months of 2009 may well be the most precarious period in recent American history. As the next president takes office, some 350,000 US military personnel deployed overseas will await orders from their new commander in chief, the first wartime transition since Johnson-Nixon 40 years ago. The next administration will not only take charge of two wars but will also inherit daunting national security challenges: a global struggle against violent extremism; the continued proliferation of nuclear weapons to hostile states; growing challenges associated with energy security and climate change; an overstretched military under enormous strain; an economy sliding toward recession; and US global standing at an all-time low. The "nobody home" phenomenon that occurs between Election Day and the inauguration, as the old administration empties out and the new one has yet to fill its ranks, poses serious risks. It is imperative that this transition proceed quickly and effectively. As Adm. Michael Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, recently noted, "It's important for us to get as many principals in positions as rapidly as possible in a time of war."
Asian Gains Seen in Terror Fight - Eric Schmitt, New York Times

The deadliest terrorist networks in Southeast Asia have suffered significant setbacks in the past three years, weakened by aggressive policing, improved intelligence, enhanced military operations and an erosion of public support, government officials and counterterrorism specialists say. Three years after the region’s last major strike - the attacks on three restaurants in Bali that killed three suicide bombers and 19 other people - American and Asian intelligence analysts say financial and logistical support from Al Qaeda to other groups in the region has long dried up, and the most lethal are scrambling for survival.
West Overlooks Abuses Against Women - Katie Falkenberg, Washington Times

The plight of tens of thousands of abused Pakistani women doesn't garner the headlines of Darfur's genocide in Sudan, the sympathy afforded Burma's forgotten victims or the outrage unleashed in New Orleans after Katrina. These battered women also don't attract the outpouring of financial support that so many other recent global tragedies have drawn. The reason is rooted deep in the war on terror, which has made the United States and other Western allies reticent to forcefully address issues of human rights in an unstable country strategically essential to the pursuit of al Qaeda, the Taliban and other Islamist extremists, according to US experts.
Trial Evidence Was Allegedly Destroyed - Michael Melia, Associated Press

The Pentagon urged interrogators at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, to destroy handwritten notes in case they were called to testify about potentially harsh treatment of detainees, a military defense lawyer said Sunday. Lt. Cmdr. William Kuebler, the attorney for Toronto-born Omar Khadr, said the instructions were included in a 2003 operations manual shown to him by prosecutors. He said they suggest that the United States deliberately thwarted evidence that could help terrorism suspects defend themselves at trial.
Extremists are Turning on Bin Laden - Paul Cruickshank, NY Daily News opinion

New Yorkers last week were reminded yet again of the horrors of the 9/11 attacks, when their unrepentant mastermind Khalid Shaikh Mohammed was arraigned in Guantanamo Bay. But few are aware a tectonic shift has taken place beneath the headlines in the wider war on terrorism - one that could within a few years significantly lower the likelihood of terror returning to New York's streets. This is because Al Qaeda has gotten itself into hot water with the one constituency that it cannot afford to alienate: its fellow jihadists.
Fallacy of Islamic 'National Suicide' - George Bisharat, Los Angeles Times opinion

A new buzzword is arising from the network of Israeli think tanks and security-oriented academic departments bent on instigating a U.S. attack on Iran: "national suicide." The term describes a supposed Arab Muslim tradition of politically motivated suicide at the national, not just individual, level. Arab Muslim regimes have purportedly launched ruinous wars they could not have reasonably hoped to win, condemning their nations to destruction. The notion of an "irrational" and thus untrustworthy Iranian regime has already been widely discussed in the US. It is regularly invoked by Sen. John McCain on the stump. The term "national suicide" advances the notion and gives it a patina of academic respectability.
Al-Qaeda: The Cracks Begin to Show - Abul Taher, Times of London

For the first time, they reported, men whose previous pronouncements had been used as a justification for jihad were speaking out against it. They were not embracing the West, by any means, but they were questioning the ideological basis upon which Al-Qaeda, as a scattered movement, relies. In the battle for “hearts and minds” the group appeared to have scored an own goal. What is behind this change in thinking and what effect is it having on Al-Qaeda abroad and in Britain?
A Not Very Private Feud Over Terrorism - Sciolino and Schmitt, New York Times

A bitter personal struggle between two powerful figures in the world of terrorism has broken out, forcing their followers to choose sides. This battle is not being fought in the rugged no man’s land on the Pakistan-Afghan border. It is a contest reverberating inside the Beltway between two of America’s leading theorists on terrorism and how to fight it, two men who hold opposing views on the very nature of the threat.
Young Radicals Of Next-Gen Jihad - Marc Sageman, Washington Post opinion

We are fighting the wrong foe. Over the past six years, the nature of the international Islamist terrorist threat to the West has changed dramatically, but Western governments are still fighting the last war -- set up to fight an old al-Qaeda that is now largely contained. Unless we understand this sea change, we will not be able to ward off the new menace. The version of al-Qaeda that Osama bin Laden founded is a fading force. After a week in which five detainees who allegedly planned the Sept. 11, 2001, atrocities were arraigned before a US military tribunal at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, it's worth remembering that the terrorists behind 9/11 were mostly young, well-educated middle-class expatriates from Muslim countries who had become radicalized abroad, especially in the West. Such key 9/11 plotters as Mohamed Atta, Ramzi Binalshibh, Ziad Jarrah and Marwan al-Shehhi met and became radicalized as students in Hamburg, then went to Afghanistan looking for al-Qaeda. But over the past six years, most of the professional terrorists who fit this profile have been eliminated during the US-led manhunt for "high-value targets." The few that remain are huddled in the Afghan-Pakistani border area, struggling to extend their reach beyond Pakistan.
Hoffman, Sageman Dustup Goes Mainstream - Stephen Tankel, Kings of War

You no longer need a subscription to Foreign Affairs (or an Athens password) to read about the feud between Bruce Hoffman and Marc Sageman regarding the nature of the jihadist threat. First there was Hoffman’s takedown in the current issue of Foreign Affairs, in which he accused Sageman of “a fundamental misreading of the Al Qaeda threat.” Sageman’s rebuttal, in which he accuses Hoffman of a “gross misrepresentation”, is on the way. But thanks to the NYT Week in Review, we’re all treated to a little preview of what Sageman will have to say. Along with some trans-Atlantic commentary on the feud and a summary of why this matters beyond the realm of the ivory tower.
Rushing to Misjudgment - Michael Tanji, Threats Watch

In the military and national intelligence spheres the phrase is “intelligence drives operations;” in law enforcement its “intelligence led policing,” but whatever the domain the point is the same: More data collected and analyzed effectively is more effective than tripling the number of trigger-pullers. Terrorism is a waning issue? Perhaps, but while Islamists feel the heat and lay low you have suburbs turning into ghost towns (with all that that implies crime-wise) and narco-gangs defeating state forces at the border (the list goes on). Does anyone think that going back to dozens of discrete entities each operating autonomously to tackle these problems is a smart idea?
Snuffysmith
Rethinking the National Interest - Condoleezza Rice, Real Clear Politics opinion

What is the national interest? This is a question that I took up in 2000 in these pages. That was a time that we as a nation revealingly called "the post-Cold War era." We knew better where we had been than where we were going. Yet monumental changes were unfolding - changes that were recognized at the time but whose implications were largely unclear. And then came the attacks of September 11, 2001. As in the aftermath of the attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941, the United States was swept into a fundamentally different world. We were called to lead with a new urgency and with a new perspective on what constituted threats and what might emerge as opportunities. And as with previous strategic shocks, one can cite elements of both continuity and change in our foreign policy since the attacks of September 11.
Detention Centers Give Glimpse Into al-Qaida - Gerry Gilmore, AFPS

Officials who manage detention centers in Iraq are getting a valuable look inside the mind of al-Qaida in Iraq, a senior US military officer said here today. “We have learned so much about who al-Qaida is; we have learned so much about how they recruit and what their intent is; we have learned so much about how to counter them and how to engage [the detainee population] with a very clear program that breaks away their support base,” Marine Corps Maj. Gen. Douglas M. Stone told Pentagon reporters. About 21,000 detainees are being held in detention centers in Iraq under a United Nations resolution, said Stone, who recently completed a 14-month duty tour as the deputy commander of detention operations for Multinational Force Iraq. Stone said he implemented a system last fall that separated hard-core extremists from more moderate members of the detention population. Moderate, well-behaved detainees, he told reporters, are rewarded with family visitation times, literacy and vocational training classes and more.
Sheik Offers To Take Fight to Bin Laden - Eli Lake, New York Sun

The leader of the tribal confederation that has fought to expel Al Qaeda from most of Iraq 's Anbar province is offering his men to help gin up a rebellion against Osama bin Laden's organization along the Afghanistan-Pakistan border. In an interview, Sheik Ahmad al-Rishawi told The New York Sun that in April he prepared a 47-page study on Afghanistan and its tribes for the deputy chief of mission at the American embassy in Kabul , Christopher Dell. When asked if he would send military advisers to Afghanistan to assist American troops fighting there, he said: "I have no problem with this; if they ask me, I will do it."
Fighting Al-Qaeda From Iraq To Afghanistan - Steve Schippert, Threats Watch

In response to a post earlier today regarding Sheikh Ahmad al-Rishawi’s offer to assist the US in creating a mirror anti-al-Qaeda movement in Afghanistan similar to Sahwa al-Iraq (Iraq Awakening), I added an update post that looks back at the words of al-Rishawi’s late brother, Sheikh Abdul Sattar. I titled the update “Sheikh Ahmad al-Rishawi: Acting On Late Brother’s Pledge,” and the term ‘pledge’ was perhaps not the most accurate choice of words.
MI5 Says it Gave No Advice on Terror Laws - David Stringer, Associated Press

In a rare public comment, the head of Britain's MI5 domestic spy agency said Monday it has not offered the government any advice on contentious proposals for tougher anti-terrorism laws. The statement by MI5 director general Jonathan Evans appeared designed to prevent those on either side of the debate from casting the agency's silence as an endorsement of their views. British lawmakers vote Wednesday on Prime Minister Gordon Brown's proposal to increase the period suspected terrorists can be detained without charge from 28 to 42 days.
Counterterrorism Strategy That's Working - Jonathan Winer, Counterterrorism

According to today's New York Times , a number of counterterrorism experts and governments have concluded that JI and other major terrorist networks in Southeast Asia have suffered significant setbacks in the past three years. The Times article found that the major elements in combatting the terrorist groups were effective law enforcement, heightened intelligence, ongoing military operations and "an erosion of public support." The implication is that an actual strategy, implemented over an extended period in a sustained fashion, has had actual success.
Online Social Networks Expand - Madeleine Gruen, Counterterrorism

Hizbollah has a page on Facebook. So does Tanzeem-e-Islami and the Muslim Brotherhood. Hizb ut-Tahrir has at least three pages on Facebook and another four on Orkut - And those are just the official pages. There are many more pages to browse that were assembled as paeans by devotees of these Islamist groups and others. Facebook, Orkut, and other online social networks, are designed to provide a way for people to maintain existing relationships and to make new relationships with others who share common interests in one tidy cyber environment. The social networks promote a sense of belonging that might not be available in the physical world. This is particularly true for members or sympathizers of Islamist groups who live in countries whe