|
This new cyber-battlefield is allowing
al-Qaeda and other groups to stay "several steps ahead" of the
U.S.-led war on terrorism, a senior U.S. law enforcement
official says.
Most of the information on the Web sites
is written in Arabic and encrypted, or scrambled. The encrypted
data is then hidden in digital photographs, which makes it
difficult, if not impossible, to find or read, officials say.
The groups regularly change the addresses of their Web sites to
confound officials.
"Under the present circumstances of the
global war against terrorism, the Internet has become a vital
tool and, obviously, an easy one to exploit," says terrorism
analyst Reuven Paz of the International Policy Institute for
Counter-Terrorism, an independent think tank based in Herzliya,
Israel. It's "the most efficient way (for terrorists) to spread
their message on a daily basis."
U.S. officials have little doubt that
al-Qaeda and other militant groups are using the Web to set up
terrorist attacks against the United States. They tell USA TODAY
that Abu Zubaydah, 30, a Palestinian who was arrested in
Pakistan last March and is suspected of being bin Laden's
operations chief, used a Web site to plan the Sept. 11 attacks
and to communicate with the terrorists who hijacked jets and
flew them into the World Trade Center and Pentagon.
Earlier this year, officials say, they
found nearly 2,300 encrypted messages and data files in a
password-protected section of an Islamic Web site that had been
downloaded onto Zubaydah's computer. The messages began in May
2000, peaked in August 2001 and stopped Sept. 9, two days before
the attacks, officials say. They declined to identify the Web
site.
Volume of messages doubles
Lately, al-Qaeda operatives have been
sending hundreds of encrypted messages that have been hidden in
files on digital photographs on the auction site eBay.com. Most
of the messages have been sent from Internet cafes in Pakistan
and public libraries throughout the world. An eBay spokesperson
did not return phone calls.
The volume of the messages has nearly
doubled in the past month, indicating to some U.S. intelligence
officials that al-Qaeda is planning another attack.
Tuesday, al-Qaeda spokesman Suliman Abu
Ghaith told an Arabic newspaper that the group's suicide
militants were "ready and impatient" to attack U.S. targets in
America and around the world.
Since Sept. 11, the FBI, CIA and National
Security Agency say they have hired dozens more Arabic-speaking
analysts and mathematicians to interpret and decode the
information on the Web sites.
They add that there's little they can do
to stop the terrorist groups from using the Web to communicate.
There are no laws directly regulating the sites or preventing
them from operating. Instead, officials must persuade the
companies that host the sites to shut them down. But as soon as
a terrorist site is taken off one Web server, it often appears
on another, officials say.
In the past five weeks, al-Qaeda's Arabic
Web site, alneda.com, has emerged on three different servers, in
Malaysia, Texas and Michigan. The site was eventually removed
from the servers after the Web hosting companies, which say they
often don't screen or translate the sites, received complaints
from the public and law enforcement agencies. U. S. officials
are expecting the site, which began operating in January, to
re-emerge soon.
"The U.S. enemy, unable to gain the upper
hand over the mujahedin on the battlefield, has since Sept. 11
been trying to gag the world media," said a statement posted on
alneda.com last week. "The more the United States tries to
stifle freedom of expression, the more determined we will become
to break the silence. America will lose the media war, too."
Hatred, hidden messages
There are dozens of suspected terrorist
Web sites, many of which were started after the U.S.-led war on
terrorism began last fall. Most of the Web sites are written in
Arabic. All carry statements that express hatred for the United
States and its allies and fatwas, or religious rulings,
that call on militant Muslims to kill Americans and attack U.S.
interests. USA TODAY examined many of the sites and had the
information there translated from Arabic into English. Among the
most prominent sites:
- Azzam.com, a site that U.S. officials believe is linked
with al-Qaeda, is urging Muslims to travel to Pakistan and
Afghanistan to fight "the Jewish-backed American Crusaders,"
or U.S. soldiers. It gives such travelers tips on how to
avoid raising suspicions of employers, diplomats and police.
"If you are working, either resign
from your job and take a year off or request unpaid leave
from your employer. Many large companies offer unpaid leave
to their employees for periods ranging from two months to
one year. That way you can fulfill your obligation (of
jihad) and not have to give up your job," the site says.
U.S. officials say azzam.com contains
encrypted messages in its pictures and texts — a practice
known as steganography. They say the hidden messages contain
instructions for al-Qaeda's next terrorist attacks.
Mathematicians and other experts at the National Security
Agency at Fort Meade, Md., are using supercomputers to try
to break the encryption codes and thwart the attacks.
At least one known al-Qaeda operative
has accessed the site, European officials say. German
intelligence agencies, which broke into the site last fall,
found an e-mail address for Said Bahaji, a suspected member
of the al-Qaeda cell in Hamburg, Germany, that planned parts
of the Sept. 11 attacks. Bahaji, who was last seen in
Germany, has since disappeared.
- Almuhajiroun.com, an English-language Web site also
linked to al-Qaeda, urges sympathizers to assassinate
Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf. The Web site, which
pictures Musharraf, refers to him as "the American puppet."
It calls U.S. troops in Pakistan and Afghanistan "soldiers
of Satan."
"The punishment of those who wage war
against Allah and His apostle and strive to make mischief in
the land is only this: that they should be murdered or
crucified or their hands and their feet should be cut off on
opposite sides or they should be imprisoned," the site says
in apparent reference to Musharraf.
- Qassam.net, a site U.S. officials believe is linked to
the militant Muslim group Hamas, is appealing for donations
to purchase AK-47 rifles, dynamite and bullets "to assist
the cause of jihad and resistance until the (Israeli)
occupation is eliminated and Muslim Palestine is liberated."
It recommends donations of $3 per bullet, $100 per kilogram
(2.2 pounds) of dynamite, $2,000 for a Kalashnikov assault
rifle and $12,000 for a rocket-propelled grenade.
Donors are asked to send an e-mail to
an address on the Web site. Recently, they received a
response telling them to transfer money to "Ahmed Mohammed
Ali, Elbatech Bank, account no.: 38926/9/510 Arab bank —
Gaza branch — Palestine." The account name and number appear
to change every 48 to 72 hours. "Dear Donor: Please tell us
the field in which you prefer your money to be spent on such
as: martyrdom attacks; buying weapons for the mujahadeen;
training the youth; or inventing and developing missiles,
mortars (and) explosives," the e-mail said.
U.S. officials say they are
monitoring the site, which is hosted by an American company,
to see who is using it to donate to Hamas. They say they
intend to prosecute those Americans who contribute.
Until the site was taken down,
alneda.com carried a warning from Abu Ghaith saying the
United States should "fasten its seat belt" and prepare for
more terrorist attacks. The site, which featured the words
"No pride without jihad," also contained encrypted
information that directed al-Qaeda members to a more secure
site where instructions for attacks were given, U.S.
officials say.
Other Internet sites, including
jihadunspun.net, offer a 36-minute video of bin Laden, with four
minutes of previously unaired footage; pictures of President
Bush with his head in the sights of a gun; and other propaganda.
Not all the Islamic Web sites are calling
for a jihad against the United States. The alsaha.com site has
hosted chat rooms where members criticize bin Laden and al-Qaeda
for their misuse of Islam. "(Bin Laden) is a disgrace to our
religion and has made a mockery of everything we believe," said
one comment posted on alsaha.com. "He is not an Islamist; he is
a terrorist who deserves to be killed. God bless and protect
America!"
Easy to set up
It's easy for terrorists to set up a Web
site, officials and experts say.
In the case of alneda.com, al-Qaeda
members used a made-up name, "The Center for Islamic Studies and
Research," a bogus street address in Venezuela and a free
Hotmail e-mail account to contact a Web hosting company in
Malaysia called Emerge Systems, U.S. intelligence officials say.
The group then wired $87 to a Malaysian bank to pay for the cost
of the Web site for a year.
"Internet communications have become the
main communications system among al-Qaeda around the world
because it's safer, easier and more anonymous if they take the
right precautions, and I think they're doing that," former CIA
counterterrorism chief Vince Cannistraro says.
But al-Qaeda operatives now are urging
their members to use caution. Just before alneda.com was pulled
off its server, it warned its members that the site was probably
being monitored by the FBI, CIA and Customs Service. It promised
to e-mail members the new address of the Web site once it was in
operation. It also told them they could find the address in chat
rooms on other terror sites, such as Hamas' qassam.net.
"We strongly urge Muslim Internet
professionals to spread and disseminate news and information
about the jihad through e-mail lists, discussion groups and
their own Web sites," says a statement on azzam.com. "The more
Web sites, the better it is for us. We must make the Internet
our tool." |