April 17, 2006

Frustrated Zawahiri Risks Detection to Send Email.


ItÂ’s hard hiding in a cave when you are supposed to be in command.

MSNBC :CAIRO - In January 2003, one of the two most wanted men in the world couldn't contain his frustration. From a hiding place probably somewhere in South Asia, he tapped out two lengthy e-mails to a fellow Egyptian who'd been criticizing him in public.

"I beg you, don't stop the Muslim souls who trust your opinions from joining the jihad against the Americans," wrote Ayman al-Zawahiri, deputy leader of al-Qaeda. He fired off the message even though it risked exposing him.

"Let's put it this way: Tensions had been building up between us for a long time," explained the e-mail's recipient, Montasser el-Zayat, a Cairo lawyer who shared a prison cell with Zawahiri in the 1980s and provided this account. "He always thinks he is right, even if he is alone."

Since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, Zawahiri has broadcast his views to the world relentlessly. Despite a $25 million price on his head, he has published memoirs, given interviews and recorded a dozen speeches that find their way to the Internet and television. Video of a speech was posted Thursday on a Web site.

Zawahiri's visibility, eclipsing Osama bin Laden's, reminds al-Qaeda's enemies that the network is capable of more attacks. But a closer look at his speeches and writings, and interviews with several longtime associates in radical Islamic circles, suggests another motive: fear of losing his ideological grip over a revolutionary movement he has nurtured for 40 years.

All who have power fear loosing it.
"He's trying to stay in control and give the impression that he's behind everything in the Middle East and everywhere else, fighting against the Americans in Iraq and against Britain in Europe," Rushdi said in an interview. "He is trying to take responsibility as a leader for what is going on in Iraq. But he knows, and everyone knows, that that is not true, that he has nothing to do with anything in Iraq."

Al-Qaeda was founded as a decentralized coalition of Islamic extremists. That structure has complicated efforts by intelligence services to penetrate the network. But the lack of clear chains of command also can make it difficult for leaders to maintain control.

And thatÂ’s a good thing. The lack of control means they will make even more errors than we do. In the long run al-QaedaÂ’s structure (or lack of) may become it's greatest weakness.

Posted by: Howie at 03:35 PM | Comments (9) | Add Comment
Post contains 419 words, total size 3 kb.

1 So that's where the libtard spam has been coming from!

Posted by: Improbulus Maximus at April 17, 2006 04:25 PM (0yYS2)

2 He's back! This time without a glove. RUN!

Posted by: Leatherneck at April 17, 2006 05:01 PM (D2g/j)

3 the only news that comes from this, is yet another missed opportunity. They hit that tribal region of Pakistan to attempt to kill him last time, that didn't look like the sort of place you get out your laptop, dialup and send an Email. I have no idea how the hell we're ever going to take him out with the passive response by the Pakistani Government. That's even if he is there, anymore.

Posted by: davec at April 17, 2006 10:11 PM (CcXvt)

4 " Look at the size of this goober! "

Posted by: Last word Larry at April 18, 2006 09:10 AM (FCC6c)

5 The media led us to believe that al Qaeda were this new type of enemy, everywhere yet nowhere, the CIA and FBI etc were all no match for their jihadist cells, cut one head off and another 10 appear elsewhere, we'd be chasing shadows till our throats were slit. But recently we hear Zarqawi got the punt in iraq for giving terrorist scum a bad image!! He's been relegated to desk duties, pushing paper, the wanker. We have an Osama commanding millions of jihadists and on the brink of wreaking terror on all of us, yet no one has seen this legendary leader and he enjoys so much support that he cannot go out in public anywhere. Now this crazy buffoon is desperately clinging to the spotlight.

Posted by: MathewK at April 18, 2006 05:17 PM (pVHqF)

6 If it weren't for Western liberals, we would have had all these scumbags long ago, but our gutless politicians are afraid someone might protest against them if they did their jobs, so we continue on a course of half-measures. It's time to send out the National Guard and have a few Kent State moments whenever the libtards open their traps, and we should round up the muslims and put them on a leaky boat back to whatever turd-world hellhole they came from.

Posted by: Improbulus Maximus at April 19, 2006 05:11 AM (0yYS2)

7 a leaky slow-boat

Posted by: Last word Larry at April 19, 2006 10:51 AM (FCC6c)

8 Last word Larry is banned for 7 days becuase he has been the last five comemnts all day long without saying anything at all and that's just too much. I;s a bummer too cause he acutally made a couple good comments I liked. But not the annoyance outweighs any contribution he is making.

Posted by: Howie at April 19, 2006 10:55 AM (D3+20)

9 He is saying PULL MY FINGER AND WATCH ME EXPLODE

Posted by: sandpiper at April 20, 2006 02:50 PM (4v/PL)

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