Saturday, June 25, 2011

Al Queda Publishes Hit List Of Forty Americans, Calls For Lone-Wolf Jihad Attacks

From Jihad Watch:


Al-Qaeda publishes hit list of 40 Americans, calls for lone wolf jihad attacks







If this starts happening, it would certainly up the ante. Thus far jihadists have not targeted individuals in the U.S. If they begin doing so, one may only hope that it would awaken the media and raise the general awareness of the jihad. "Possible Al-Qaida Hit List Targets Specific Americans," by Jonathan Dienst and Shimon Prokupecz for NBC New York, June 16 (thanks to Pamela Geller):



An al-Qaida-linked website has posted a potential hit list of targets that include names and photos of several U.S. officials and business leaders, calling for terrorists to target these Americans in their own homes, NBC New York has learned.

The FBI has sent out a new intelligence bulletin to law enforcement agencies, warning that this new web-based threat, while not a specific plot, is very detailed. The bulletin said the list includes leaders "in government, industry and media."



The FBI has notified those individuals who are named.



NBC New York will not identify them or their companies. The list includes Wall Street firms, political leaders, leaders with think tanks and contractors who do business with the military.



The websites contain 40 specific names, 26 of them with photos attached, and they call for posting home addresses. One jihadist called for sending package bombs to any listed address as just one possibility. [...]



The FBI is calling the list of names the most detailed web-based al-Qaida-linked threat since Osama bin Laden was killed. The list has also been discussed on another al-Qaida-linked web forum.



The concern is a lone actor could try to use the specific information for a plot.



The FBI letter says the information on the overseas websites "is aspirational and it's unknown if the threat will progress beyond these discussion forums."



These specific postings follow calls by Adam Gadahn -- al-Qaida’s American-born communication chief -- for individual attacks.



Officials are concerned the list has been shared on numerous jihadist sites.



“What’s scary about this is how specific the individual information is,” said former New York State Homeland Security Director Michael Balboni. “What you don't know is, when does aspirational become operational in cases like this, involving a possible lone actor here inspired by a website.”...





Posted by Robert on June 17, 2011 5:46 PM

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