Feral Jundi

Thursday, January 7, 2010

Maritime Security: Somali Militants Training Pirates

Filed under: Al Qaeda,Maritime Security,Somalia — Tags: , , , , , — Matt @ 7:56 AM

   So here we go.  This is the trend to watch, and jihadist privateering is now a reality.  My guess is that not only will piracy be lucrative for Al-Shabab, but they will soon be front and center with the drug trade and smuggling. And hey, they might even make some time to play holy war in Yemen. Stay tuned. –Matt

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Somali militants training pirates

‘Relationship of convenience’: Canadian report

Thursday, December 3, 2009

Stewart Bell,  National Post

The Somali militant group Al-Shabab has been arming and training pirates in exchange for a share of their spoils, says a newly released Canadian intelligence document.

Al-Shabab has formed a “relationship of convenience” with one of the two main pirate networks operating off the Horn of Africa, the “Top Secret” intelligence assessment says.

The report describes an “Islamist extremism-piracy nexus” that involves Al-Shabab providing “weapons, combat training and local protection” to the Mudug pirates of southern Somalia.

(more…)

Saturday, January 2, 2010

Maritime Security: Pirates Hijack Another Chemical Tanker, And Al Shabab Is Going To Yemen

Filed under: Maritime Security,Somalia — Tags: , , , , , , — Matt @ 11:42 AM

   Ok, just a heads up to any of the fleets floating around out there.  If Al Shabab is wanting to get to Yemen, more than likely they are going to hitch a ride with some pirates.  It is the cheapest and easiest way for them to get over.  Plus, Yemen is just across the way, so it would totally make sense to try and take out a few of these bums as they cross.

   Further more, if there is any doubt that arming ships is not sensible, then behold this latest round of hijackings.  These guys actually grabbed another chemical tanker!  Believe it.  So how is the strategy working out for all of these multi-million dollar ultra-highspeed Navies floating around in the GOA?  It seems to me that it is severely sucking.  It will really suck when one of these days, a pirate either sells a chemical tanker to Al Qaeda or Al Shabab, or they are contracted by these guys to take a ship.  Then what?  Does it take thousands of people killed in some terrorist attack involving a large ship filled with explosives and chemicals?  Arm the ships I say! Or continue with this current strategy, and see what happens when terrorism and piracy do a waltz in the Gulf of Aden.-Matt

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Somali Rebels Pledge to Send Fighters to Aid Yemen Jihad

January 2, 2010

By MOHAMMED IBRAHIM

MOGADISHU, Somalia — Senior leaders of the Shabab rebels promised Friday to send their fighters beyond Somalia to Yemen and wherever jihad beckoned.

In a military ceremony here, where the rebels publicly showed off hundreds of new recruits, Sheik Muktar Robow, a senior rebel official, said the group would “send fighters to Yemen to assist our brothers.”

He said that the fighters had been trained to fight the African Union peacekeeping force and the transitional federal government in Somalia but that Yemen was just across the Gulf of Aden and that “our brothers must be ready for our welcome.”

(more…)

Al Qaeda: Al Shabab FAIL!!–Danish Cartoonist Intruder Shot

Filed under: Al Qaeda,Somalia — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 9:17 AM

   That’s right!  That is a big fat FAIL for the Al Shaboobs! What else do you have, because this weak sauce. lol –Matt

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Danish cartoonist intruder shot

January 2, 2010

Danish police have shot and wounded a man at the home of Kurt Westergaard, whose cartoon depicting the Prophet Muhammad sparked an international row.

Mr Westergaard scrambled into a panic room at his home in Aarhus after a man wielding an axe and a knife broke in.

Danish officials said the intruder was a 28-year-old Somali, who they did not name, but said was linked to the radical Islamist al-Shabab militia.

The cartoon, printed in 2005, prompted violent protests the following year.

ANALYSIS

By Malcolm Brabant, BBC News This attack will force the Danish secret service Pet to review their protection.

Mr Westergaard’s house was supposed to have been turned into a fortress, with blast proof windows, and yet a determined individual came within a whisker of killing him.

(more…)

Friday, January 1, 2010

Al Qaeda: The Gitmo ‘Catch And Release’ Program

Filed under: Al Qaeda,Cuba,Yemen — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 10:05 AM

Overall, 14 percent of the more than 530 detainees transferred out of Guantanamo are confirmed or suspected to have been involved in terrorist activities since their release. 

*****

    This is as ridiculous as what we are doing with these Somali pirates when we catch them, which is release them. So what do you know! Piracy and terrorism is a kick as means of crime or waging war in today’s world.

   To me, this is a prime example of non-state actors, utilizing their strategic advantage of ignoring or abusing the borders and laws of states, in order to achieve their goals. It works very well.

  The question I have, is how do you defeat non-state actors?  Terrorists, pirates, organized crime, and drug cartels are all non-state actors…so how do you defeat them?

    I have some ideas based on how societies and countries have dealt with these issues in the past, but I guarantee the ‘state’ really doesn’t want to hear it. Here is a hint. Laws like Article 1, Section 8 in the U.S. Constitution are in there for a reason. –Matt

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Former Gitmo detainees help al-Qaida grow in Yemen

By MIKE MELIA and SARAH EL DEEB

Dec 31, 2009

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico – As a prisoner at Guantanamo, Said Ali al-Shihri said he wanted freedom so he could go home to Saudi Arabia and work at his family’s furniture store.

Instead, al-Shihri, who was released in 2007 under the Bush administration, is now deputy leader of al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula, a group that has claimed responsibility for the Christmas Day attempted bomb attack on a Detroit-bound airliner.

His potential involvement in the terrorist plot has raised new opposition to releasing Guantanamo Bay inmates, complicating President Barack Obama’s pledge to close the military prison in Cuba. It also highlights the challenge of identifying the hard-core militants as the administration decides what to do with the remaining 198 prisoners.

Like other former Guantanamo detainees who have rejoined al-Qaida in Yemen, al-Shihri, 36, won his release despite jihadist credentials such as, in his case, urban warfare training in Afghanistan.

He later goaded the United States, saying Guantanamo only strengthened his anti-American convictions.

“By God, our imprisonment has only increased our persistence and adherence to our principles,” he said in a speech when al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula formed in Yemen in January 2009. It was included in a propaganda film for the group.

(more…)

Saturday, December 26, 2009

Al Qaeda: Nigerian Arrested In Failed Plane Attack, Hero Passenger Stops Him

Filed under: Al Qaeda,Nigeria — Tags: , , , , , — Matt @ 12:40 AM

Federal authorities have been told that Abdulmutallab allegedly had taped some material to his leg, then used a syringe to mix chemicals with the powder while on the airplane, one official said.

But doing so “caused him to catch on fire,” Richelle Keepman, who sat a few rows in front of Abdulmutallab, told WDIV-TV.

Another passenger on Flight 253, Syed Jafry of Holland, Mich., told the Detroit Free Press that he noticed a glow three rows ahead in the Airbus 330, then smelled smoke. The next moment, Jafri recounted, “a young man behind me jumped on” Abdulmutallab. 

*****

    Now that is what I am talking about!  This booger eater not only fails to do what he set out to do, but a passenger on the plane actually reacted to the guy and jumped on him.  That’s like the equivalent of jumping on a hand grenade, and this hero needs to be recognized.

   This falls in line with the ‘hero in waiting’ stuff that Philip Zimbardo introduced and I keep talking about here.  It’s not going to be a cop, or a soldier, or whatever that is going to protect people all the time and in every situation.  Most of the time, it’s going to be a civilian with the courage and conviction to do what has to be done, and during those mad minutes.  We should be celebrating heroes that stepped up to stop these animals and make them examples as to the kinds of citizens the world needs in order to stop Al Qaeda and any other criminals or murderers.

   Another way to look at this is the one thing that can stop a super empowered individual, whom has the intent to do bad things, is another super empowered individual intent on doing good things. We need heroes in waiting, and this attack is a prime example of why. So start watching those Surviving Disaster shows and get the word out! –Matt

Edit: Cannoneer #4 just posted a similar deal in praise of the passengers that took this guy down.

Edit#2: 12/27/2009 Jasper Schuringa was the hero.  Here is his Facebook page, and I guess he is a director and into film stuff.

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Nigerian arrested in failed plane attack claims links to al-Qaeda

By Michael Leahy and Spencer S. HsuSaturday, December 26, 2009; 12:16 AM

A Nigerian man, claiming to be linked to al-Qaeda, allegedly tried to set off an incendiary device aboard a transatlantic airplane Friday as it descended toward Detroit’s airport in what the White House called an attempted act of terrorism.

The man was quickly subdued after another passenger leapt on top of him, others on the plane said, and Northwest Airlines Flight 253 from Amsterdam landed safely around 1 p.m. Friday. The suspect was being treated at a hospital for burns he suffered while igniting the device, the Transportation Security Administration said.

The FBI is investigating the incident. President Obama, celebrating Christmas in Hawaii, was informed about it, a spokesman said, and he asked aides to ensure that all measures are in place to provide secure air travel.

Officials said they are not prepared to raise the terrorism alert level, currently at orange — or the second-highest of five levels — for domestic and international air travel. However, the Homeland Security Department said late Friday that passengers “may notice additional screening measures, put into place to ensure the safety of the traveling public on domestic and international flights.”

(more…)

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