After losing a lot of propaganda cells in Iraq throughout the last year, al Qaida is pushing for new computer literate recruits. Al Qaida needs needs more people to churn out propaganda on the internet to recruit other muslims for the jihad. The propaganda war, though few are aware of it, is raging on the internet at the present. It is also very important component to al Qaida's strategy. Fox News
See even Ph.D.s misunderstand Islam....
PESHAWAR, Pakistan — In an Internet age, Al Qaeda prizes geek jihadis as much as would-be homicide bombers and gunmen. The terror network is recruiting computer-savvy technicians to produce sophisticated Web documentaries and multimedia products aimed at Muslim audiences in the United States, Britian and other Western countries.
Already, the terror movement's al-Sahab production company is turning out high quality material, some of which rivals productions by Western media companies. The documentaries appear regularly on Islamist Web sites, which Al Qaeda uses to recruit followers and rally its supporters.
That requires people whose skills go beyond planting bombs and ambushing American patrols in Iraq and Afghanistan.
"The Al Qaeda men who are coming today are not farmers, illiterate people," said Qari Mohammed Yusuf, an Afghan and self-declared al-Sahab cameraman. "They are Ph.D.s, professors who know about this technology. Day by day they are coming. Al Qaeda has asked them to come."Nevertheless, Western experts who monitor Islamist Web sites say the technical quality of Al Qaeda postings — including those from Iraq and Afghanistan— has dramatically increased from the grainy, amateurish images that were the hallmark of al-Sahab's work only a few years ago.
Read the whole thing!
Now, postings are often in three languages — Arabic, English and Urdu, the language of Pakistan where Al Qaeda hopes to draw fresh recruits. Videos look like professionally edited documentaries or television news broadcasts, with flashy graphics, maps in the background and split screens.
Footage lifted from Arab and Western television is often interlaced into the videos — and al-Sahab appears to have a wide-ranging video library.
A speech by deputy Al Qaeda leader Aymen Al-Zawahiri issued to mark last year's 9-11 anniversary included U.S. television interviews with wounded American soldiers, CIA analysts and talking-head journalists and experts, excerpts from a President Bush press conference, audiotape of Malcolm X, even old World War II footage — all edited in to back Al-Zawahiri's case that the United States is losing the war on terror.
"What has changed dramatically is the quality, with documentaries and messages sometimes in three languages," said Rita Katz, director of SITE Intelligence Group, a U.S. terrorism research center. "They are trying to outreach to as many people as possible."
Use of the Internet enables Al Qaeda to reach a broad global audience within the worldwide Muslim community rather than having to rely on Arabic language satellite stations, whose audiences are limited to the Middle East and who exercise some degree of editorial control.
"What is really amazing to me is watching how would-be terrorists living in the West are drawn in and captivated by al-Sahab videos," said Evan Kohlmann, a terror consultant for Globalterroralert.com.
He said watching al-Sahab videos eventually leads some Muslim youth in the West into "making official contact with the Al Qaeda organization."
Katz said the quality of some recent al-Sahab productions was "good enough to be on the Discovery Channel."
"We are not talking about people who don't know technology," she said. "They are very skilled. Al-Sahab must have a large team of people who have specific computer skills. These type of technically adept individuals are in high demand by Al Qaeda."
Friday, March 7, 2008
Al Qaida Recruiting Geeks for al Sahab
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