Finger points to British intelligence as al-Qaeda websites are wiped out
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2087-1715166,00.html

Over the past fortnight Israeli intelligence agents have noticed something
distinctly odd happening on the internet. One by one, Al-Qaeda¹s affiliated
websites have vanished until only a handful remain, write Uzi Mahnaimi and
Alex Pell.

Someone has cut the line of communication between the spiritual leaders of
international terrorism and their supporters. Since 9/11 the websites have
been the main links to disseminate propaganda and information.

The Israelis detect the hand of British intelligence, determined to torpedo
the websites after the London attacks of July 7.

The web has become the new battleground of terrorism, permitting a freedom
of communication denied to such organisations as the IRA a couple of decades
ago.

One global jihad site terminated recently was an inflammatory Pakistani
site, www.mojihedun.com, in which a section entitled How to Strike a
European City gave full technical instructions. Tens of similar sites, some
offering detailed information on how to build and use biological weapons,
have also been shut down. However, Islamic sites believed to be ³moderate²,
remain.

One belongs to the London-based Syrian cleric Abu Basir al-Tartusi, whose
www.abubaseer.bizland.com remained operative after he condemned the London
bombings.

However, the scales remain weighted in favour of global jihad, the first
virtual terror organisation. For all the vaunted spying advances such as
tracking mobile phones and isolating key phrases in telephone conversations,
experts believe current technologies actually play into the hands of those
who would harm us.

³Modern technology puts most of the advantages in the hands of the
terrorists. That is the bottom line,² says Professor Michael Clarke, of
King¹s College London, who is director of the International Policy
Institute.

Government-sponsored monitoring systems, such as Echelon, can track vast
amounts of data but have so far proved of minimal benefit in preventing, or
even warning, of attacks. And such systems are vulnerable to manipulation:
low-ranking volunteers in terrorist organisations can create background
chatter that ties up resources and maintains a threshold of anxiety. There
are many tricks of the trade that give terrorists secure digital
communication and leave no trace on the host computer.

Ironically, the most readily available sources of accurate online
information on bomb-making are the websites of the radical American militia.
³I have not seen any Al-Qaeda manuals that look like genuine terrorist
training,² claims Clarke.

However, the sobering message of many security experts is that the
terrorists are unlikely ever to lose a war waged with technology.



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