New post on *Ed Schroeder's: MILITARY INTELLIGENCE DAILY*


<http://militarywritersassociation.wordpress.com/author/lhmscadet/>
*Ed Schroeder’s Military Intelligence Daily: How Terrorists
Communicate*<http://militarywritersassociation.wordpress.com/2013/11/11/ed-schroeders-military-intelligence-daily-how-terrorists-communicate/>

by *WRITER*<http://militarywritersassociation.wordpress.com/author/lhmscadet/>

 *Over the last two decades the number of available choices for terrorists,
organised criminals and of course, ordinary, law-abiding citizens to
communicate has proliferated alongside the growth in digital technology.*

*There are essentially two categories here: secret and public messages,
both of which carry a risk of detection for the original sender.*

*Sophisticated terrorists are all too aware of the risks of leaving a
"digital footprint" that can be traced and identified, hence why it took so
long for US intelligence to track down Osama Bin Laden, who relied on
couriers delivering messages and data by hand.*

*Counter-terrorism officials, like MI5's Director-General Andrew Parker,
contend there should be no digital "oasis" where law-breakers or terrorist
planners can hide messages and communicate freely without fear of
surveillance or interception. His critics argue that government
intrusioninto private communications has already gone much too far.*

*Production houses*

*When it comes to disseminating information as widely as possible, the
internet has long been the obvious choice.*

*Back in 2001, in the immediate aftermath of the 9/11 attacks, al-Qaeda's
leadership posted a number of videos from their Pakistan hideouts to the
Qatar-based TV station al-Jazeera. Frustrated by the channel's decision to
broadcast only a small fraction of them, heavily edited, al-Qaeda then
switched to uploading them to the internet.*

*Since then, al-Qaeda, the Taliban and Somalia's al-Shabab have all
developed media production houses to churn out their online messages, some
of which are produced to high production standards.*

*From Yemen, the local al-Qaeda franchise AQAP disseminates the online
magazine Inspire, which famously carried an article aimed at recruits in
America entitled "How to build a bomb in your mom's kitchen". Inspire has
been cited as the inspiration behind a number of jihadist attacks in the US
and Britain but British police warn that anyone caught downloading it will
be arrested and prosecuted.*

*As to secret means of communication, there will doubtless be many obscure
methods known only to practitioners, IT experts and those working in
government Signals Intelligence (often contracted to Sigint).*

*[image: Combo shows pictures broadcast by the Russian state-run Rossiya
television of a young man, allegedly a British spy, in a park outside
Moscow taking a rock being used as a high-tech version of the spy's
traditional letter-box or dead drop, shown on 23 January 2006]*

*A British MI6 agent was caught using a fake rock with a transmitter as a
modern-day "dead drop" in Moscow in 2006*

*Loners leave a minimal trail - so, for example, the convicted Norwegian
mass murderer Anders Breivik spent four years with almost no social contact
while he planned his attacks of 2011. But here are some of the more
commonly known options:*

·         *Disposable Sim cards**. Cheap and legally available for cash,
these can be bought anonymously over the counter, inserted into a mobile
phone, used once and then thrown away. Corporate executives have also used
them in Russia and China for fear of having their regular phones hacked.*

·         *Dead drops**. An old Cold War method used by spies to drop off
physical packages of information or photographs in places like hedges or
behind dustbins. These would then be retrieved by someone else as they
walked past, probably whistling and wearing a Homberg hat and turned-up
collar. In a Moscow park in 2006, Britain's MI6 intelligence agency was
caught red-handed with a "spy rock" - a fake rock containing a transmitter
where informants could wirelessly leave information that could then be
retrieved in a modern-day version of the dead letter drop. In today's
computer age, digital dead drops are a way of one person sending a message
to another over the internet - crucially without pressing the Send button.
A message is prepared in draft but not sent. The intended receiver is then
separately given the sender's login details so they can view the draft
message and if necessary reply.*

·         *Email and SMS text message**. Wary terrorist planners have
tended to communicate in code or use metaphors when discussing targets,
knowing they may well be intercepted. For example, two of the 9/11
planners, Mohammed Atta and Ramzi Binalshibh, referred to the World Trade
Centre as "architecture", the Pentagon as "arts" and the White House as
"politics".*

·         *Social media, chat rooms and gaming**. An increasingly popular
way of disguising messages in seemingly innocuous interchanges between
online "gamers". Many online forums are encrypted and require passwords to
join. Some may well be infiltrated by government intelligence agents posing
as online militants.*

·         *USB sticks**. A small and discreet way to carry large quantities
of data, they are also highly vulnerable to malware and viruses.*

·         *Jpegs or Gifs**. Also known as "steganography" or the art of
hiding a message within a message. Digital images encoded as Jpegs or Gifs
can in theory be used to carry other data with them using an innocuous
subject title.*

·         *Satellite phone.** Despite encryption technology these remain
susceptible to interception and terrorist leaders have long been wary of
using them even from - or perhaps especially from - remote, sparsely
populated areas.*

·         *Courier by hand**. The Bin Laden method that worked for years.
It avoids leaving any digital trail but of course still needs a human
courier who can be tracked to his destination, as was the case with the
al-Qaeda leader, killed by US Navy Seals in Pakistan in 2011.*

*WRITER <http://militarywritersassociation.wordpress.com/author/lhmscadet/>*|
November 11, 2013 at 1:45 pm | Categories:
*Uncategorized* <http://militarywritersassociation.wordpress.com/?cat=1> |
URL: *http://wp.me/p2gQDJ-B4* <http://wp.me/p2gQDJ-B4>

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