Monday, May 12, 2008

SOMALIA: AL QAEDA & AL SHABAAB and Dotster Web Co. in Vancouver WA USA is hosting their terrorist web site

Somalia: Al Qaeda & Al Shabaab and Dotster Web Co in Vancouver WA USA is hosting their terrorist web site.
The Al-Shabaab website hosted by Dotster is seen here . Click map image to enlarge for USA air strikes.

Summary; Research by the
Strategic Forecasting Inc . In the predawn hours of May 1, a U.S. AC-130 Spectre gunship dispatched from a nearby airbase destroyed a house in central Somalia where members of the Islamist militant group al Shabaab were meeting.

Killed in the attack were two militant leaders:
Aden Hashi Ayro, a senior member of al Shabaab and al Qaeda’s military commander in Somalia, and Sheikh Muhyadin Omar, a senior al Shabaab commander. The two have direct links to al Qaeda prime and a long history of terrorism in the Horn of Africa. The May 1 incident, in conjunction with a multitude of other factors, raises the question of how connected al Qaeda and al Shabaab have become in Somalia and what the implications of that relationship are.

SEE VIDEO OF AL-SHABAAB TERRORIST LEADER ADEN AYRO BEFORE US MISSILE ATTACK BLEW HIM INTO LITTLE PIECES, CLICK HERE

Analysis;
Editor’s Note: This is the first in a four-part series on the rebuilding of a key al Qaeda node in Somalia. Early May 1, a U.S. AC-130 Spectre gunship destroyed a house in central Somalia where members of the Islamist militant group al Shabaab (Arabic for “the youth”) were holding a meeting. Two men with close ties to al Qaeda prime were killed in the attack. With the U.S. government reporting recently that the al Qaeda node along the Afghan/Pakistani border is reorganizing, and with evidence surfacing recently that the al Qaeda node in Yemen is reorganizing as well, it seems that a select few al Qaeda groups have been undergoing a period of rebuilding. The same situation could be playing out in Somalia with al Shabaab. Although there have been some small-scale successes in targeting elements of al Shabaab’s command and control structure, the link between the Somalian group and al Qaeda prime has been established, and al Shabaab’s expansion in the near future is a very real threat.

Al Qaeda and Somalia
Al Qaeda has a long operational history in East Africa; Osama bin Laden himself spent time there, operating out of Sudan from 1994 (when he was expelled from Saudi Arabia) to 1996 (when he left for Afghanistan). The group’s involvement in Somalia was first evident to the Western world in 1993 — during Operation Gothic Serpent — when al Qaeda sent operatives to Somalia to train the militias of Mohamed Farah Aided, a powerful local warlord and the main target of U.S. operations.

In 1998, al Qaeda made its presence felt in East Africa with the embassy bombings in Nairobi, Kenya, and Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. More recently, al Qaeda has been implicated in the bombing of a hotel in Mombasa, Kenya, and an attempt to shoot down an Israeli airliner, both in 2002. The group of al Qaeda operatives sent to aid the Somalian militias in 1993, which likely included Fazul Abdullah Mohamed is credited with instructing the Somalis on how to disable military helicopters by targeting them with rocket-propelled grenades as they flew low over the city. This tactic was what allowed the Somalis to disrupt U.S. operations and ultimately contributed to the U.S. pullout in late 1993. This serves as the first known example of al Qaeda providing direct material support to the Somalian cause. Al Qaeda’s motivation for supporting the militias at this time came partly from Somalis within al Qaeda prime’s ranks wanting to support their brethren in Somalia and partly from the group’s desire to take advantage of an opportunity to strike at the United States at a point of vulnerability. As a predominantly Sunni country, Somalia has been a source of al Qaeda fighters over the years, with a number of ethnic Somalis traveling to Afghanistan to train with al Qaeda prime and then returning to organize and command local al Qaeda nodes. Al Qaeda prime was known to have sent numerous operatives to East Africa in the early to mid-1990s to locate potential targets. In more recent years, there have been numerous reports of Somalis fighting alongside members of the local al Qaeda nodes in Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan.

The Development of Al Shabaab;
After Ethiopian forces beat back the Supreme Islamic Courts Council (SICC) in 2007, the SICC’s armed wings dissolved into the ungoverned savannah in the south, the Mogadishu underground and safe zones in central Somalia. They eventually re-formed under the leadership of Aden Farah Ayro (one of the men killed in the May 1 U.S. air strike) and Sheikh Hassan Turki (who is suspected to be along the border between Somalia and Kenya), assumed the name al Shabaab and sought to continue the fight against the new Somalian government and its Ethiopian backers with an insurgency-style approach. Portions of al Shabaab have also been known to call themselves the Mujahideen Youth Movement (MYM); this is largely suspected to be a twist on the name of the main group and not an indication that the MYM is a separate entity. The group’s core leadership comprises senior militants, some of whom trained directly and fought with al Qaeda prime in Afghanistan, while its rank-and-file membership is largely untrained Somalian youths. Al Shabaab is estimated to have 6,000 to 7,000 members, with cells having several hundred members. As a result of Somalia’s turbulent past, the group’s members have had no shortage of practice in asymmetrical warfare and small unit tactics, as well as experience using a wide array of weaponry. From an operational standpoint the group is fairly new. As the SICC’s militant wing, it gained notoriety before the SICC took over Mogadishu in June 2006 for its desecration of Italian graves and the killing of a British journalist.

The U.S. State Department formally labeled al Shabaab as a foreign terrorist organization in March — a mostly bureaucratic action, but nonetheless a demonstration of the extent to which the group had been able to develop and progress. The group actually publicly addressed (on it's website see here) its addition to the U.S. list of foreign terrorist organizations, saying it would only help support al Shabaab’s cause, as its justification as an official terrorist group would bring it more attention and subsequently more material support. Helping to speed al Shabaab’s growth is the fact that when it was SICC’s militant wing, it had an organized command and control structure and many rank-and-file members already in place. The group was able to transfer that structure, and many of its members, to its new incarnation as al Shabaab.

Visitors...Estimated number of visits for www.kataaib.net 5,037 visits per day

This — coupled with the leadership’s operational experience and links to al Qaeda prime — has helped create a capable and fairly strong group. From a tactical standpoint al Shabaab does not yet exhibit any of the trademarks commonly associated with al Qaeda prime. The group employs a tactical doctrine that places a strong emphasis on small-unit, hit-and-run-style assaults, mainly targeting lightly guarded towns and villages and subsequently retreating to the countryside before reinforcements arrive. While they have begun to employ more traditional tactics such as improvised explosive devices in more urban environments, the militants have been operating more as a traditional insurgent force than as a traditional terrorist organization as commonly defined.
Next: Al Shaabab’s Leadership Links to Al Qaeda

Rep. Myrick Unveils “Wake Up America” Agenda(Washington, D.C.) –
Rep. Sue Myrick (NC-9) released her “Wake Up America” agenda. Rep. Myrick’s goal in releasing her agenda is to alert, and educate, Americans to terrorist threats here at home posed by radical Islamic extremists. This is her agenda, this is not the agenda of the Congressional Anti-Terrorism Caucus.This agenda is the start of Rep. Myrick’s work on these issues. As she moves forward on these points, she will update the public on her findings.

Her ten point agenda is below.
1). Will call for a government investigation of all U.S. military chaplains who were approved by Abdurahman Alamoudi.
2). Will call for a government investigation of all U.S. prison chaplains who were approved by Abdurahman Alamoudi.
3).
Will call for the Government Accounting Office (GAO) to investigate the selection process of Arabic translators in the FBI and DoD.
4). Will call for the Internal Revenue Service to investigate the Council on American-Islamic Relations’ (CAIR) 501(c)(3) non-profit status which restricts “lobbying on behalf of a foreign government.”
5).
Introduce a bill to make the preaching, publication, or distribution of materials that call for the death of American citizens, attacks on the United States Government or Armed Forces, or the financing of the means and/or operations to accomplish these acts, acts of sedition and/or solicitation of treason.
6). Will call on the Government Accountability Office to conduct an audit to verify the total sovereign wealth fund investment in the United States.
7). Will attempt to cancel scholarship student visa program with Saudi Arabia until they reform their textbooks.
8). Will introduce a bill to restrict R-1/R-2 religious visas for imams who come from countries that do not allow reciprocal visits by non-Muslim clergy.
9).
Will introduce a bill to cancel contracts to train Saudi police and other security forces in US Counterterrorism tactics until the Saudi’s certify the prosecution of Al Qaeda financiers, like Yasin al-Kadi, and the detention of repatriated Guantanamo terrorists that keep being released into the general population after being “rehabilitated.”
10). Will introduce or sponsor a bill to block the sale of sensitive military munitions, especially Joint Direct Attack Munitions (JDAMs), to Saudi Arabia.

Bill Warner
Private Investigator