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Al-Qaeda's Growing Online Offensive 369

andy1307 brings us a story from the Washington Post about al-Qaeda's technological capabilities and the methods they use to protect themselves and their networks from opposing military forces. Quoting: "US and European intelligence officials attribute the al-Qaeda propaganda boom in part to the network's ability to establish a secure base in the ungoverned tribal areas of western Pakistan. Analysts said that as-Sahab (AQ's propaganda network) is outfitted with some of the best technology available. Editors and producers use ultralight Sony Vaio laptops and top-end video cameras. Files are protected using PGP, or Pretty Good Privacy, a virtually unbreakable form of encryption software that is also used by intelligence agencies around the world. [Al-Fajr, a propaganda distribution network] is heavily decentralized, with its webmasters generally unaware of one another's true identities for security reasons, intelligence analysts said. It also has separate 'brigades' devoted to hacking, multimedia, cybersecurity and distribution."
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Al-Qaeda's Growing Online Offensive

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  • Aw, c'mon. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by leoofborg ( 803260 ) on Sunday June 29, 2008 @09:09AM (#23990005)
    Why *wouldn't* AQ have all this stuff? We pay $$$$$ to the house of sa'ud, some of that money makes it to Pakistan. We outsource and train people in that region of the world and expose them to the best tech we have here. Why wouldn't *some* of them have a hobby? The next thing the Washington Post fearmonkeys will tell us is they use PEX bittorrent, SSH, and twofish crypto. And they embed marching orders in Flash and Postscript files. [yawn] Next!!
    • Re:Aw, c'mon. (Score:4, Insightful)

      by flnca ( 1022891 ) on Sunday June 29, 2008 @09:22AM (#23990097) Journal
      It's not like they're underdeveloped countries. All Arabian countries do have an IT industry, and there's plenty of IT graduates as well. Also, some of these countries make lots of money on oil-related stuff. There's plenty of people who've become rich enough to afford just about any type of technology. "Organizations" like Al-Quaeda make money by fundraising. Many Islamic people with an extremist mindset are happy to make donations, because they want to break free from the "evil West" (which they see as being ruled by the Pope and the Jews, no kidding!!). I've known some of those folks. They seemed to have a very bizarre view of the world. So I guess, they'd have no trouble finding supporters, just like Western conspiracy theorists.
      • Re:Aw, c'mon. (Score:5, Informative)

        by MrNaz ( 730548 ) on Sunday June 29, 2008 @09:50AM (#23990283) Homepage

        As a Muslim, I'm calling you on that one.

        After having lived in Saudi Arabia for a year (admittedly 14 years ago, but I doubt the view has changed hugely since then) I can tell you that the primary gripe the population have there is the U.S. propping up an unpopular monarchy that is mismanaging and/or stealing the country's wealth. The U.S. could make friends of the Saudi people by simply telling the Saudi government that they're on their own. Then the Saudi royal family would need to either make the people happy, or prepare to be overthrown as soon as the last shipment of U.S. supplied weapons started rusting.

        I don't know *anyone* (with the possible exception of that crazy lunatic in charge of Iran, who is about as representative of Iranians as the Saudi royals are of the Saudi people) who thinks the West is some evil regime that needs to be toppled. Heck, I live in a Western country quite happily. I've traveled extensively to Middle eastern countries and (remember I'm Muslim, with Muslim friends and relative and we all travel to Muslim countries, so I'm not pulling this out my backside) it's utter BS that Muslims have some kind of chip on their shoulder with regards to the West. The problem is Western interference in Muslim countries' politics, and that primarily is the propping up of the Saudi government. I think I can speak for the majority of Muslims when I say that Muslims don't like the Saudi government. They call themselves "custodians of Islam", yet they are a corrupt, self-serving bunch of monarchical fascists.

        Oh, and we don't need the U.S. to come in and "liberate" the place. Just butting out will do the trick. They'll save the hundreds of millions spent on military support and they'll make friends of the majority of the Arabian peninsula to boot. Bargain!

        • You do realize that the hand-full of raving maniacs,
          that make up the Islamic terrorist movement is all most Americans and Europeans see of Muslims? I do agree it time to say to both the Saudis and the Israelis you've had 60 years to get your shit together the gravy train is coming to a stop.

        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by tukang ( 1209392 )

          the primary gripe the population have there is the U.S. propping up an unpopular monarchy that is mismanaging and/or stealing the country's wealth

          I agree with your post but it's not only support of the Saud government that upsets many middle easterners - it's also support of Israel - and I think if the US was at least a little more fair and impartial it would go a long way towards improving its image in the mideast because many there believe (and rightly so IMHO) that the US enables Israel to commit human

      • by LilGuy ( 150110 )

        Not quite sure where you got your information from, but AFAIK they don't go knocking door to door to get donations. Illicit activities provide the cash cow they need to survive including drug running and arms trading.

  • by Ritz_Just_Ritz ( 883997 ) on Sunday June 29, 2008 @09:11AM (#23990015)

    I can't imagine that it's THAT hard to create a fairly distributed network of "propaganda" outlets with most of the key people using encryption, small laptops, mobile communications....you know, stuff that most folks on this site do every day. And most of us aren't internationally wanted fugitives.

  • Bullshit (Score:5, Insightful)

    by brxndxn ( 461473 ) on Sunday June 29, 2008 @09:12AM (#23990023)

    This is just more made-up generalized bullshit to get the easily-influenced people to go with more government spending on counteracting the nonexistent problem of terrorism. When was the last time terrorism was in your back yard? When did it affect you personally? How often is it happening?

    And.. if it did affect you, chances are that your back yard is in Iraq..

    The government keeps pushing 'Our enemy is huge, organized, centralized, and powerful' but we are seeing more and more than 'Our enemy is a disorganized populace tired of what the US is doing.'

    It's like we're building a tank to try to destroy a wasp.. while the wasp keeps stinging everyone because we're sitting by its nest.

    • Re:Bullshit (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward on Sunday June 29, 2008 @09:14AM (#23990035)

      There are a few thousand dead people from a few years back who, if they could be asked, would tell you that it's hardly a 'non-existant' problem. Is it being used to scare people for political reasons? Sure, just like most issues are bent to manipulate the sheeple. Is it real? Yes. Will they kill you if they can? Sure.

      The world isn't black and white, all or nothing.

      • Re:Bullshit (Score:5, Interesting)

        by brxndxn ( 461473 ) on Sunday June 29, 2008 @09:26AM (#23990127)

        At what point do we stop using the events on 9/11 as a blanket excuse for government to drive itself all over the backs of the American people? Yes, we should be reasonably vigilant against terrorism - but we should never give up a single bit of our rights!

        We, the people, have to pay over $1trillion for the 'war on terrorism' using the 9/11 excuse.. Yet, there's little to no progress made for combating illegal immigration - while illegal immigrants are killing more Americans than died on 9/11 every year..

        This is a sick fucked up system.. where our companies that directly benefit from wars also run our media.. who build up our screwed-up politicians.. who systematically screw America into oblivion. It's time we quit believing every goddamn 'trrrist' story and start seeing through the bullshit. Am I afraid of a terrorist coming after me or my family? fuck no.. Am I afraid of our out-of-control government? absolutely - look at history

      • Re:Bullshit (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Curtman ( 556920 ) on Sunday June 29, 2008 @09:40AM (#23990219)

        There are a few thousand dead people from a few years back who, if they could be asked, would tell you that it's hardly a 'non-existant' problem.


        There's also a few hundred thousand dead people in another part of the world who would tell you to put things into perspective and realize which is the greater tragedy.

        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by hacker ( 14635 )

          There's also a few hundred thousand dead people in another part of the world who would tell you to put things into perspective and realize which is the greater tragedy.

          You mean Darfur? Sudan? Some other place where the US has not provoked those deaths intentionally, to solidify its presence?

          More people should familiarize themselves with Operation Northwoods [go.com] and look at the date posted on that article, as well as the date of the original intent of those ideas.

          • You do realize that the United States is bordered by four countries, Canada, Mexico, Russia and Cuba; two of those countries conspired to bury the US in nuclear bombs. The Military is tasked with having plans for every possible contingency and being able to provide the civilian Government with the requested plans and implement on short notice. Just because a plan exists doesn't mean anyone is championing its implementation.

            • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

              by Raenex ( 947668 )

              That plan was evil, and should never have even been drafted, let alone approved by the military and brought to the Secretary of Defense. The people who proposed it should have been brought up on treason charges.

        • I think he was referring to our subsequent [antiwar.com] invasion of other middle eastern countries on false premises.
      • Re:Bullshit (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Znork ( 31774 ) on Sunday June 29, 2008 @10:19AM (#23990589)

        There are a few thousand dead people from a few years back

        And since then, as many people have died in bathtub related accidents.

        it's hardly a 'non-existant' problem.

        Indeed. Neither are bathtubs. Almost 300 people die every year in bathtubs. Both terrorism and bathtub related fatalities are serious issues that need to have appropriate levels of funding.

        Will they kill you if they can?

        If any terrorists wanted to kill Americans they'd be selling oil to Americans. That would nail about 50K citizens every year, 20 times more efficient than blowing up random things.

        The world isn't black and white

        And in a greyscale world, 'terrorist killings' merit about the same level of attention as bathtub safety.

    • by myCopyWrong ( 1310641 ) on Sunday June 29, 2008 @09:31AM (#23990169)

      It is surprising that the Washington Post would run editorial against free press as a news article.

      "In many, many ways, the damage has already been done," said Evan F. Kohlmann, an expert on al-Qaeda's online operations who serves as a consultant to the FBI, Scotland Yard and other agencies. "It certainly would have been a lot easier if the U.S. government had taken this seriously back in 2004. Back then, these guys were looked upon as miscreants and cretins, like they were just Internet terrorists and not for real."

      This is flabbergasting. Does the US stand for democracy and freedom of speech or is it a place where you can't get Al-Jazeera on cable TV? When you step over the lines of disrupting military communications into full blown censorship, you become the oppressor.

      The disproportionate use of force is obvious because it's aimed at you. Domestic spying aims at identifying and disrupting communications deemed unfavorable to US interests as defined by GWB and corporate interests. The idea is to keep any opposition disorganized, despised and ineffective. If you want to know how far it goes, have a look at Fox News "mistakes" about the democratic presidential candidate, Osama Barak.

      • by Curtman ( 556920 )

        Does the US stand for democracy and freedom of speech


        That's awesome buddy. I'll still be chuckling about that one tomorrow. Thanks man.

  • by petes_PoV ( 912422 ) on Sunday June 29, 2008 @09:14AM (#23990037)
    What this article boils down to is that the analysts (whose job it is to talk up any threat) reckon there's a guy up a mountain 10,000 miles away with a laptop and a video camera. He's downloaded some free software to encrypt his emails and that's a "propaganda boom".

    Now I realise it's the government's role to instill fear, uncertainty and doubt in the population but, if that's all they've got then I reckon we're all pretty safe.

    • by Ritz_Just_Ritz ( 883997 ) on Sunday June 29, 2008 @09:19AM (#23990073)

      And this is coming from a government that can't even catch organized gangs spamming and selling prescription drugs online....presumably where it is a LOT easier to follow the money trail.

      Nothing to see here.

      • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

        by Threni ( 635302 )

        > And this is coming from a government that can't even catch organized gangs spamming and selling prescription drugs online....presumably
        > where it is a LOT easier to follow the money trail.

        And..uh..the same government who created/were responsible for the rise of groups like Al-Queda in the first place through its policy of arming/training fundamentalists in Afghanistan in the 1980s.

        • by dbIII ( 701233 )

          And..uh..the same government who created/were responsible for the rise of groups like Al-Queda in the first place

          Although some incredibly stupid things were done especially regarding Afganistan it wasn't quite as stupid as that. It was mostly Saudi extremists behind the start of it although they were also our allies in an earlier gulf war against Iran.

          Reagan's attempt to restart the cold war for whatever weird reasons he had certainly sent a lot of money to dubious groups in Afganistan but they were alread

          • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

            by leoofborg ( 803260 )

            Um, I think you're a little loose on the timeline there.. Reagan was trying to END the cold war by economically breaking the Russians.

            The Russians occupied Afghanistan, and the only faction with the 'fight' was the Mujahdeen. [some of whom became the Taliban].

            So yes, unused weapons have a LONG shelf life, and yes, the Taliban undoubtedly retained what we sent over there [like Stinger missiles used to shoot down Russian Mil-Hind gunships].

            If you really need a perspective on this, Adam Curtis's _The Power of

        • by Curtman ( 556920 )
          Not to mention it's the same government who thinks it can still win "the war on drugs" using a strategy that makes drugs more profitable.
  • by mlwmohawk ( 801821 ) on Sunday June 29, 2008 @09:25AM (#23990117)

    The more I see this stuff the more I remember a philosophical point my history teacher told me once. In the revolutionary period, the "news papers" were far more attacking and had far more offensive rumors and accusations.

    Now we see freedom being abused to spread "their" propaganda better than "our" propaganda. Whether or not we have the monopoly of truth is debatable. However, we are in a fight here and the *only* way to win a war of ideas is the freedom of expression of these ideas and hope that your ideas win.

    As an american, I'm not sure our ideals, as currently practiced, will win. We have to do a better job of things. Al Qaeda is only winning the war of ideals because we, the western world, have turned its back on democracy and society in favor of raw and savage unregulated capitalism which is destroying our economies and an aggressive preemptive war strategy designed to suppress any dissent in foreign nations which is emptying our treasury.

    Suppressing information is not a way to win the hearts and minds of people, especially while we are doing such a bad job living up to our ideals.

    • by h4rm0ny ( 722443 )

      I personally would like to see some of these videos and in particular the Q&A session that the Al-Quaeda leader held. But not speaking Arabic, I probably wouldn't be able to find a copy I understand, even if I knew where to start looking for this material. If the propaganda is that impossible to stop, anyone know where I can find it? It's always interesting to understand where people are coming from.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by jez9999 ( 618189 )

      As an american, I'm not sure our ideals, as currently practiced, will win.

      And you wonder why the US government wants to suppress freedom.

  • Al Qaida = CIA (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward

    Blowback.

    HAIL RED ARMY IN AFGHANISTAN! Extend the gains of the October socialist revolution to the peoples of Afghanistan!

    The Trotskyists were right.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by leoofborg ( 803260 )

      1980: The enemy of my enemy is my friend.

      2000: The enemy of my enemy of my enemy is... my enemy.

      Politicians should take up, like, basically Boolean logic, y'know?

  • by Swampash ( 1131503 ) on Sunday June 29, 2008 @09:50AM (#23990289)

    I'm confused. Is this new decentralised online digital five-nines 256-symmetric multimedia Al Qaeda the same bunch of guys who are starving, cut off from support, and cowering in fear for their lives in caves?

    Just wondering.

  • by Doc Ruby ( 173196 ) on Sunday June 29, 2008 @10:38AM (#23990807) Homepage Journal

    To fight the Qaeda we must suspend the Constitution, take off our shoes and surrender our toothpaste getting on airplanes, invade Iraq (but not Pakistan or Saudi Arabia, but maybe Iran), pay $5 a gallon for gas. Rich people must pay no taxes, but everyone else must maximize oilcorp, pharmaco, telco, and bank profits, and hand Social Security and Medicare over to Wall Street. Free 12MPG Hummers for everyone with a credit rating, and subprime mortgages for everyone without one! Because that's the American Way that the terrorists hate us for.

    I feel safer already.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Uh oh. PGP is a terrorist tool. We better outlaw it!!! Or at least investigate anyone who uses it.

    Distributed content networks are a terrorist tool. We better spend money counteracting such activity!!!

    Looks like someone's been paying attention [slashdot.org].

  • Absolute Rubbish (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Karem Lore ( 649920 ) on Sunday June 29, 2008 @11:08AM (#23991067)
    I am sorry, I can not believe this utter rubbish. The US and UK governments can shutdown international bank accounts, can trace mobile phones, phones, internet connections. They can track the electricity usage of areas, they can use electro magnetic weaponry to take out computers, they can use heat source signature to identify target computers. In other words, if they use computer attached equipment, they know where you are and what you do. This story stinks, and so does the current US administration.

    Karem

  • by billcopc ( 196330 ) <vrillco@yahoo.com> on Sunday June 29, 2008 @11:31AM (#23991269) Homepage

    What irks me about this article is not the technical content itself, it's the power of association that has been at the heart of this conflict from the very beginning.

    Planes were crashed, and someone with weakly-diversified chromosomes indicated the Iraqi terrorists hated us, so we blamed them.

    We were "at war" with "Iraq", so anyone who might look even a tiny bit middle-eastern was assumed to be a terrorist, and that was dumb.

    Now we believe they use common network failover tactics and widely-used encryption software to protect their network, things that several thousand North American network engineers do on a daily basis, but the laypeople will think these are "terrorist tools".

    Be warned, I'm biased here, and I'm personally concerned about the use of such finger-pointing tactics against The Pirate Bay, who are well known for employing the same techniques to ensure their uptime and continue to deliver their anti-copyright message, which the right-wingers consider a threat - to the common pureblood, that makes copyright offenders strangely similar to Iraqi terrorists. I'm talking about the same people who coined the term "freedom fries".

  • by DragonTHC ( 208439 ) <{Dragon} {at} {gamerslastwill.com}> on Sunday June 29, 2008 @12:00PM (#23991505) Homepage Journal

    it's faceless monster created to give us a common enemy.

    it doesn't exist.

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