Submit your comments on this article | ||
Terror Networks & Islam | ||
A split in Jemaah Islamiyah? | ||
2005-01-14 | ||
![]() The "serious disarray" in JI not only raises "the possibility that individuals in JI may decide to go off on their own without reference to the central command structure, but that they can pull together the foot soldiers required in an ad hoc fashion," to stage attacks, Jones told reporters in Manila. She said Indonesian radical groups have established bases in the southern Philippines including the Banten group of West Java, which was believed to be involved in the Oct. 2002 Bali bombings and last year's blast outside the Australian Embassy in Jakarta, Jones said. Another small Indonesian outfit established links in 2003 with Abu Sayyaf extremists in the southern Philippines, while a third operated a camp in territory held by the Moro Islamic Liberation Front, the Philippines' main Muslim rebel group, she said. "The shift from a dominant organization - JI - and a single military academy to this array of much smaller groups and ad hoc arrangements ... also seems to mean that the Indonesians who are here are more likely to undertake operations alongside their hosts than was the case with JI," she told reporters. A JI member arrested in Sabah, Malaysia, in December 2003 said the Abu Sayyaf asked him to conduct training in infantry tactics in the southern Philippines, Jones said, adding that about five top JI fugitives are probably still hiding in the country. Police Intelligence Director Roberto Delfin said authorities know only that Jemaah Islamiyah has camps in the southern Philippines but called reports of camps by other foreign militant groups mere "speculation." | ||
Posted by:Seafarious |
#7 On a wider front, the hope is that the tsunami disaster will give new impetus to a generally more co-operative and less unilateralist approach to solving the world's security problems, both man-made and natural, and greater recognition of the benefits of deploying more assistance, persuasion and empathy, and less military force: more soft power, less hard; more Ukraines and fewer Iraqs. You gotta love this line from Mary's link above. Ah..yes, we just should have had an election in Iraq. The people should have worn orange and Sadaam would have stepped aside. It must be frustrating for these clowns. They keep telling us how dumb we are, yet we keep having success where they have only inaction and failure. They keep telling us that we aren't really successful and we just shrug and do good work anyway. In the good old days, they pronounced what we were to believe, the NYT, Time, Newsweak, NPR/BBC/CBS/NBC/CNN all repeated it. The editorial cartoonists all drew it, Hollywood celebrities applauded, and the lemmings all nodded in agreement. They never understood that we read and rejected their self-proclaimed authority. But, living in their own self-cycling echo chamber, how would they know? |
Posted by: 2b 2005-01-14 7:03:24 PM |
#6 Mary.... And don't forget their President, that Soros wannabe Gareth Evans |
Posted by: tipper 2005-01-14 6:46:24 PM |
#5 mary...thanks..that kind of puts it into perspective doesn't it? |
Posted by: 2b 2005-01-14 6:17:19 PM |
#4 But the entire ICG has to be taken with a grain of salt. Here's a list of their US board members: Morton Abramowitz, Former U.S. Assistant Secretary of State and Former U.S. Ambassador to Turkey Kenneth Adelman, Former U.S. Ambassador and Director of the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency Zbigniew Brzezinski, Former U.S. National Security Advisor to the President Wesley Clark, Former NATO Supreme Allied Commander Stanley Fischer,Vice-Chairman, Citigroup Inc. and former First Deputy Managing Director of International Monetary Fund Carla Hills, Former U.S. Secretary of Housing; former U.S. Trade Representative Swanee Hunt, Founder and Chair of Women Waging Peace; former U.S. Ambassador to Austria Elliott F. Kulick, Chairman, Pegasus International Joanne Leedom-Ackerman, Novelist and journalist Douglas Schoen, Founding Partner of Penn, Schoen & Berland Associates George Soros, Chairman, Open Society Institute William O. Taylor, Chairman Emeritus, The Boston Globe |
Posted by: mary 2005-01-14 6:08:57 PM |
#3 ICG products on Indonesia are outstanding, same for Yemen and "Stan-land", but products on other theaters are sometimes very weak. Still, ICG is an extremely good source of information. Given the cell structures and layered operations structure for JI that previous ICG products have laid out, this doesn't ring as a surprise. All it takes is for a non-JI leader to insert himself with his own flow of weapons/exposives/money, and he's got cells waiting to execute. |
Posted by: longtime lurker 2005-01-14 5:09:10 AM |
#2 Rohan has edited my work (I think Fred's seen at least some of the final copies) and he is definitely the go-to man on everything concerning al-Qaeda. The man is nothing short of a walking encyclopedia on the subject. |
Posted by: Dan Darling 2005-01-14 2:48:47 AM |
#1 I recommend Sidney Jones reports for anyone who want to know the history, leadership, and activities of Jamaah Islamiah. They are almost certainly the best source of infomation available to the public. |
Posted by: Paul Moloney 2005-01-14 12:13:23 AM |