From IntelNews:
German police have uncovered what appears to be the most significant
collection of al-Qaeda planning documents to be acquired by Western
intelligence since last year’s assassination of Osama bin Laden. It has
been reported that the United States Navy Seals, who raided the late bin
Laden’s compound in Pakistan nearly a year ago, obtained thousands of
al-Qaeda documents.
But the latest acquisition, which reportedly
consists of over 100 digital documents, is described by Western
intelligence sources as “pure gold”. The documents were in possession of
Maqsood Lodin, a 22-year-old Austrian, who was detained by German
police last year as he was returning to Europe from a trip to Pakistan,
via the Hungarian capital Budapest.
During his detention, German
authorities found hidden in his underwear a number of digital storage
devices. One of them contained a pornographic video called “Kick Ass”,
which, upon further investigation, was found to contain encrypted
documents, in .pdf format, that had been disguised to look like video
files.
According to German newspaper Die Zeit, which first reported
on the finding in March, many of the documents were training manuals
written in several different languages, including Arabic, German, and
English. But intelligence experts are mostly interested in a collection
of documents entitled “Future Works”. These contain notes from what seem
like al-Qaeda brainstorming sessions on plans for possible terrorist
plots in Europe. Among them is a suggestion to “seize passenger ships
and use them to put pressure on the public”, according to Die Zeit.
A subsequent section in the document discusses the idea of ordering
passengers in the hijacked ship or ships to dress in orange-color
jumpsuits, similar to those used by the United States in the Guantánamo
Bay prison in Cuba. That section is somewhat obscure, but Die Zeit
interprets it as a plan to stage public executions of passengers as a
way of pressuring Western governments to release al-Qaeda-affiliated
detainees.
Other plans, according to the
German newspaper, discuss the possibility of carrying out armed suicide
raids in European cities, similar to the 2008 Mumbai attacks
that killed nearly 200 people in India’s most populous city.
The paper
quotes “intelligence sources” who argue that the documents —most of
which date to 2009— show that al-Qaeda has been considering plans to
carry out several low-profile attacks as decoys to preoccupy Western
intelligence services, while secretly planning a large-scale,
high-profile attack reminiscent of 9/11.
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