Wednesday, March 20, 2013

al-Qaeda 2010 Strategy developed for attacks on international infrastructure

 

Al Qaeda 2010 Strategy developed for attacks on international infrastructure

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The terrorist network al-Qaeda in 2010 developed a comprehensive strategy

for attacks on critical infrastructure such as cable internet, undersea

pipelines, tunnels, bridges and dams. That's according to U.S. authorities

from a previously unknown letter of the al-Qaeda strategists Younis

al-Mauretani to show Osama bin Laden. American special forces found the

document, as they Bin Laden on 2 May 2011 in his hideout in Pakistan's

Abbottabad tracked down and killed. The TIME has obtained a copy of the

letter.

 

 

It states, among other things, the Al-Qaeda branch in North Africa could

help finance the planned attacks. For strategy, that belonged to train

cadres in Western countries could - in jobs that could be useful later for

terrorist purposes, as in a gasoline or gas transport. Europe should only be

attacked, "then we beat against America." The sender of the letter,

Al-Mauretani, was arrested in September 2011 in Pakistan. Previously German

al Qaeda recruits who reported that he had spoken of plans for

unconventional attacks against the West.

 

The U.S. Department of Justice sent a letter in April 2012, the German

Federal Office of Justice. From this week the document will play in a terror

trial at the High Court Dusseldorf a role, because it also contains

information about a Moroccan. Whose birth with the accused Abdeladim El-K

match. Meanwhile defender Johannes Pausch told TIME that he had "fundamental

doubts" about the authenticity of the document. It is hard to believe that

Al-Qaeda working around so carelessly with data.

 

Now, three FBI agents describe in court how they came into possession of the

document and who had access to them except him. So far, the U.S. has

released the probably thousands of documents captured in Abbottabad 17th

 

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