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From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
Mario Profaca
Sent: Friday, May 18, 2007 5:23 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [SPY NEWS] A Guide to Jihad on the Web



http://ianlivingsto
<http://ianlivingston.com/threatmatrix/handbook/guide_to_jihad.htm>
n.com/threatmatrix/handbook/guide_to_jihad.htm
A Guide to Jihad on the Web
By Stephen Ulph

The role of the internet in providing a communications medium for the
statements of high profile mujahideen figures such as Bin Laden, Ayman
al-Zawahiri and Abu Mus'ab al-Zarqawi is well known. Many will be aware of
the existence of jihadi chat forums as well - Terrorism Focus itself makes
ample use of this medium for gathering primary source material - but the
sheer wealth of materials now made available on the web may perhaps not be
generally appreciated. For in addition to the publication of 'official'
jihadi statements, or the ad hoc ruminations on the discussion forums, the
internet now holds a constantly expanding library of military and technical
monographs along with ideological treatises underpinning the culture of
jihad. Most of this literature, in terms of quantity, detail and spectrum,
is in the Arabic language and therefore remains unknown to the western
media.

The literature can be distributed in several ways. For instance, via sites
belonging to specific jihadist groups or at non-specific jihadist-oriented
websites. These may be sites belonging to individual radical ideologues and
sheikhs or doctrinally focused sites carrying literature and opinion
concerned with internal ideological conflict - anti-Shia or anti-Wahhabist
sites in the main. Some of the most productive of locations, both from the
point of view of the delivery to publication of jihadist works, or
originating material, are the jihadist-oriented websites, news magazines and
chat forums. Broadly speaking the jihadist web literature falls into three
categories: military and technical training (periodical publications;
individual essays; manuals and encyclopedias); operational communications
(single declarations and notices; news updates) and propaganda and morale
(periodical publications; individual treatises and essays).

A 'Virtual Afghanistan'

While the literature of jihad, as such, has been flying around the web
almost as long as the web has been a mass communication medium, the
post-9/11 period saw its conversion into a major distribution system for
jihad-related material to a mass readership. In a sense, it has compensated
for the loss of Afghanistan as a major training arena in both the
ideological and tactical senses.

The best illustration of this is perhaps the Peninsular Arab productions
from the Sawt al-Jihad (The Voice of Jihad) stable, primarily the Sawt
al-Jihad magazine itself, which deals primarily with doctrinal matters and
the Mu'askar al-Battar (Al-Battar Training Camp), a publication specializing
in the more practical aspects of the jihad. Though both web magazines ceased
publication since late 2004, they remain the model, in terms of both
production quality and format, for subsequent publications. Their
complementary doctrinal-military role, for instance, has been imitated in
Iraq with the new publications Majallat al-Fath (Conquest Magazine) and
Dhurwat al-Sanam (The Pinnacle).

The Mu'askar featured heavily the work of Shaykh Yusuf al-Ayyiri (killed in
June 2003) on physical training, the former Egyptian military officer Sayf
al-Adel on security and communications, and the one-time head of the
Peninsular Al-Qaeda organization, Abd al-Aziz al-Muqrin (killed in June
2004) on military tactics and guerrilla warfare. Over its 22-volume history
it has published a full sample of military and ideological preparation, much
of which must have formed part of the curriculum in Afghanistan. Issues of
tactical application covered by the magazine include: the planning of
special and covert operations, maneuvering skills in towns and urban
warfare, communications security and the use of codes, surveillance and
covert reconnaissance techniques, intelligence gathering, camouflage and
concealment techniques, the use of safe houses, the tactical employment of
propaganda and counter-propaganda. Issue 6 of the Mu'askar is particularly
of interest, in that it contains a detailed description of how to form a
secure operational cell, with separate teams designated for command and
control, reconnaissance, preparation and execution.

The Military Arts

Much of the material in these publications was drawn not only from published
works in print, but also from monographs still circulated on the net. These
range from monographs on tactical training, often translated from western
originals, such as the Al-Baqaa fi al-Zuruf al-Sa'ba (Survival in Difficult
Circumstances), a translation of an U.S. army manual, to more original
productions, such as Abu Miqdad al-Falastini's Harb al-Ightiyalat,
specializing in war through assassination and dedicated to Bin Laden and Abu
Mus'ab al-Zarqawi. Chapters of this work cover all methods of assassination
- letter bombs, point blank range and the use of poisons and also include
topical materials on assassination through explosives-laden cars, detonated
either through suicide drivers or through remote control.

The technical side of military training is understandably more amply catered
for. Individual monographs, along with extracted chapters from longer works,
are circulated on the internet forums in subjects ranging from detailed
instructions on artillery and range-finding, to the manufacture and use of
poisons, suicide explosive belts, anti-amour shells, rockets and chem-bio
weaponry. The breadth of military technology finds its reflection in the
provision of reference works for the mujahideen in the field. In May 2000
the discovery of an extensive manual, the 'Military Studies in the Jihad
against the Tyrants,' at the home of an al-Qaeda suspect in the United
Kingdom caused a stir, not least for the details given on recipes for the
manufacture of poisons. But the publications now available on the net dwarf
that work. The contents list of Mawsu'at al-Aqsa al-Jihadiyya (The Al-Aqsa
Jihad Encyclopedia) contains a detailed library of instructions for the
preparation of explosives. A more comprehensive manual still, indeed one
phenomenal for its exhaustiveness, is the Mawsu'at al-I'dad, (Encyclopedia
of Preparation). This is unique in its form, since the contents list on
weaponry, guerrilla warfare, training and tactics - which is itself
extensive - is a construction of myriad URLs leading to further pages - with
further URLs leading the researcher to ever more precise information.
Constantly updated, it is now available, according to a recent posting on
the Al-Ma'sada jihadi forum, as a CD.

Propaganda and Operational Morale

In the Sawt al-Jihad productions, attention was paid to maintaining the
morale of the mujahideen via post-operation debriefings, the justification
for activities and excuses for failures. The 'culture of jihad' was also
maintained by interviews with mujahideen famous for successful operations,
eulogies of martyred mujahideen and the correction or denial of news reports
from the regional and international media. This function was particularly
put to the test in Saudi Arabia where for the first time the issue of Muslim
victims in the violence came to dominate media discussion. This caused the
Peninsular mujahideen much vexation. The online web magazines countered the
negative propaganda as far as they could, but the Sawt al-Jihad publishers
eventually felt the need to put out two treatises to extinguish the flames
of dissent; a first bullish response entitled "Myths and Idle Talk",
followed by a more considered 82-page treatise, entitled "Doubts and
Questions Concerning the Jihad in the Arabian Peninsula".

The above documents marshaled a hefty complement of Islamic law citations to
make the case. But the mujahideen have long been serviced by radical shaykhs
to help negotiate the doctrinal terrain, all of which are available to the
web surfer at times of need. The case of Shaykh Hamid bin al-Fahd and his
treatise in defense of employing weapons of mass destruction against the
infidel is famous. But the ideological underpinning is responsive at the
detailed level, and impacts on the operational procedures of Islamist
militants. A good example of this is Shaykh Ayyiri's Hidayat al-Hayara fi
Jawaz Qatl al-Asara (The Gift for the Perplexed on the Permissibility of
Killing Prisoners), where the practical considerations of the militant
captors are embedded in doctrinal precedents to assuage potential doubts.

Up to now the information war has been waged by the mujahideen in a largely
inward focusing way - countering what it holds to be tainted media coverage,
and interpreting events through the lenses of jihad ideology. But the
formation early in March of the new Katibat al-Jihad al-I'lami (Information
Jihad Brigade) in Iraq has taken the militants' propaganda war onto the
offensive. Here, interestingly, the value of the jihadi forums as an active
vehicle of the new warfare, enlisting the participation of a diaspora of
armchair mujahideen across the globe in a collective effort to translate,
design and distribute the material, is well illustrated.

The Jihadi Internet Forums

But it is perhaps the web forums themselves that encapsulate this new
warfare best. In a typical jihadist forum, the sections divide themselves
equally between elements of information, and pro-active reader communication
and contribution. The list of information sub-sections include da'wa
(Islamic preaching), news from the front lines, official declarations from
jihadist groups, audio-visual productions and photo essays on jihad, and a
general text distribution section. All forums include general discussion
sub-categories where highly detailed experiences mingle with material often
of a banal nature. But the most interesting categories are the 'Jihadi
cells' and 'electronic jihad' sections. In the first of these are found the
detailed exchanges of participants requesting or providing specific
information on military technology, requests for supplies or funding, or
enquiries on how to join a cell on the front line. The 'electronic jihad'
section hosts the cyber war and gives up to the minute instructions or
warnings of website penetration, suggestions for targets or timing of
attacks, with detailed advice on method.

But aside from the 'virtual warfare' which both the counter-propaganda unit
and the electronic jihad units illustrate, no less vital an ingredient is
the 'virtual culture' of education and doctrine which the internet manages
to sustain among the mujahideen. Taken as a whole, this element fully
complements the military resources and, as reflected in its heavy
representation online, forms a fundamental part of the jihad warfare.
Source: Jamestown Foundation



 


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