Dan's Winds of War: 2003-10-30

by Dan Darling at October 30, 2003 11:24 AM

Welcome! Our goal is to give you one power-packed briefing of insights, news and trends from the global War on Terror that leaves you stimulated, informed, and occasionally amused every Monday & Thursday. In addition, we also have our in-depth Iraq Report. Today's briefings are brought to you by Dan Darling of Regnum Crucis.

Top Topics

  • Most readers of my Winds of War by now are quite familiar with the antics of a certain Jordanian Palestinian named Ahmed al-Khalayeh, the real name of an al-Qaeda leader far better known as Abu Musab Zarqawi. Rewards for Justice has now placed a $25,000,000 reward, putting him in the same category as al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, second-in-command Ayman al-Zawahiri, unemployed potenate former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein, and al-Qaeda military commander Saif al-Adel.
  • As my colleague Andrew Olmstead noted in his own Winds of War on Monday, suicide bombers in Baghdad celebrated the beginning of Ramadan with four simultaneous attacks on three Iraqi police stations and the headquarters of the International Red Cross. The death toll from those bombings now stands at 40, with 200 wounded. See more on this in today's Iraq Briefing.

Other Topics Today Include: Iran Reports; USA Homeland Security Briefing; al-Qaeda bases in the Sahara; GSPC plot against the US Embassy in Mali; Jemaah Islamiyyah training camps in Indonesia; a fresh round of violence in Sulawesi; Willie Brigitte Virgile's resume and arrest; Australia on alert; Bimbo's arrest in General Santos; US/Afghan troops vs. the Taliban in Afghanistan; support for the Taliban in northern Pakistan; the Saudi airline threat; Hizb-ut-Tahrir's global sha'riah plans; Mugabe has a stroke; and a Turkish brothel on wheels!

IRAN REPORTS

  • The conservative Weekly Standard is claiming that al-Qaeda has a new home: eastern Iran.
  • Muhsin Mirdamadi, the head of Iran's National Security and Foreign Policy Commission in Damascus, pledging support for Syria in the event that it is hit by US sanctions.
  • Radio Free Europe summarizes the recent Iranian flip-flop regarding uranium enrichment as well as the international community's fears concerning the Iranian nuclear program.

U.S.A HOMELAND SECURITY BRIEFING

  • UPI is reporting that Osama Kandil, the chairman of the Islamic Society of Boston, has been linked to the Safa Group that I noted in my last Winds of War. More discussion of the situation involving Kandil can be found here and here.
  • Al-Qaeda sleeper Iyman Faris has been sentenced to 20 years for conspiracy and aiding and abetting terrorism.

THE WIDER WAR

  • Al-Qaeda has reportedly established bases throughout the Sahara Desert in countries like Algeria, Libya, Mali, Niger, and Mauritania to serve the influx of al-Qaeda operatives arriving from Yemen, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and Pakistan. Given the past activities of al-Qaeda and the GSPC in West Africa, one can easily speculate that something big may be in the works.
  • MILF commander Guindatu Mamantal Dulang, who goes by the rather appropriate alias of "Bimbo," has been arrested by Filippino intelligence for involvement in a series of bombings in General Santos.
  • In Pakistan meanwhile, support for the Taliban is running strong in the Northwest Frontier Province and Baluchistan where the pro-Taliban Mutahidda Majlis-e-Amal holds power. And while you'd never know it from the body count, the Taliban and al-Qaeda fighters inside of Afghanistan are said to have reorganized into a more effective fighting force.
  • Hizb-ut-Tahrir, a Wahhabi political organization that among other things serves as the "legitimate" front for the al-Qaeda affiliate Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, tells Forum 18 what their Islamic utopia looks like. The funniest thing is that this is actually rather "moderate" given the worldviews of other al-Qaeda front organizations like the UK-based Khalifah and al-Muhajiroun movements.
  • We try to end on a lighter note if possible. It appears that the first Turkish bus brothel is in trouble for its, um, unique take on Turkish law in regard to prostitution.


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