Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Al-Qaeda document suggests attacking 'pipelines, internet and tankers' A secret al-Qaeda document discovered at Osama bin Laden's hideout in Pakistan sets out a strategy for attacking economically important targets including "pipelines, internet cables and tankers".

Al-Qaeda document suggests attacking 'pipelines, internet and tankers'

A secret al-Qaeda document discovered at Osama bin Laden's hideout in Pakistan sets out a strategy for attacking economically important targets including "pipelines, internet cables and tankers".

The compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan, where it is believed Osama bin Laden had been living
The document was discovered at Osama bin Laden's hideout in Pakistan Photo: EPA
The document, written by al-Qaeda planner Younis al-Mauretani, suggests planting recruits in jobs which could later be useful in attacks, such as oil or gas transportation, and directing supporters to study chemistry and physics.
The US Department of Justice passed the letter to German prosecutors last year for use in an ongoing trial in Düsseldorf, according to the German newspaper Die Zeit.
Three FBI agents were in court in Düsseldorf to give evidence about the authenticity of the letter.
The four defendants in the case are accused of plotting a bomb attack in Germany under the direction of al-Qaeda. The trial is due to hear from the FBI agents again on Thursday.
A Moroccan recruit mentioned in the letter has the same date of birth as one of the defendants in the Düsseldorf case.
The plan, which was sent to Bin Laden in March 2010, proposes attacks against large tunnels and bridges, dams, and financial centres. It also suggests attacking thinktanks, and names the Rand Corporation, a US government-funded research institute in California. The Love Parade, a dance music festival in Germany, is another proposed target.
The letter says that al-Qaeda should continue using aircraft, but that its pilots should fly regularly with airlines before carrying out an attack.
The co-pilot could be drugged with sleeping pills before an operation, the letter suggests. Al-Mauretani identifies the massive petrochemical facility at Abqaiq in Saudi Arabia as a potential target for aerial attack.
The 17-page document includes a suggestion that al-Qaeda should use submarines to explore the layout of underwater gas pipelines, in order to mine them. This idea is given serious consideration in the document which notes that the pipelines have safety valves every 6 miles that need to be taken into account when planting mines.
Al-Mauretani writes that the al-Qaeda branch in north Africa would be able to help finance attacks, and that they have "millions" available to them.
Pakistan's army announced in 2011 that it had captured al-Mauretani in the suburbs of the south-western Pakistani city of Quetta.
Yassin Musharbash, an investigative reporter with Die Zeit in Berlin, said there were no explicit references to Britain in the document.
Defence lawyers in the Düsseldorf trial say they have "fundamental doubts" about the veracity of the document, according to die Zeit.

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