WASHINGTON, Sept. 24 (UPI) -- Osama Bin Laden "is a man on the run, from a cave, who's virtually impotent other than the tapes" he releases from time to time. That was the mid-September assessment of Frances Fragos Townsend, top adviser to President Bush on homeland security, terrorism and counter-terrorism. A former assistant commandant of the Coast Guard for intelligence, Townsend was also a counsel to the attorney general for intelligence policy. The best and the brightest in the Bush White House, she served as deputy national security adviser for combating terrorism before her elevation to czar (or czarina) for transnational terrorism.
For a terrorist darting from cave to cave, the world's most wanted terrorist wasn't as impotent as he apparently appeared to be in top secret e-mails speeding into Townsend's computers. The view from cyberspace told a different story about al-Qaida. For bin Laden, it is high noon on the electronic frontier. As former Centcom Commander Gen. John Abizaid put it, "Al-Qaida's organizing ability in cyberspace is unprecedented."
Cyberpower has emerged as a complex ether power in which digital grassroots are truly global. Al-Qaida's 6,000-plus Web sites supply the ability to liberate and dominate at the same time. Al-Qaida now operates in virtual space with impunity in recruiting, proselytizing, plotting and planning. In the ether (not the anesthetic), thought is a reality. For millions of Muslim surfers, the global caliphate and Sharia law exist. They have superseded the nation state, whether the
The Muslim world's extremists are roughly estimated at 1 percent of Islam's 1.3 billion adherents (or 13 million who see suicide bombers and other acts of terrorism as legitimate weapons of war against the U.S.-Zionist crusaders). The fundamentalists who approve of bin Laden, though not necessarily his modus operandi, number about 130 million. Extremist ranks include many well-educated, middle-class youngsters with computer skills. Some of the cells under surveillance in the
In
Similar percentages show up in other moderate Muslim states such as
Bin Laden's al-Qaida is not a hierarchical organization, but a network of like-minded Muslim fundamentalists with jihadi "spear carriers." It no longer depends on bin Laden and his deputy, the Egyptian doctor Ayman al-Zawahiri (whose group assassinated Egyptian President Anwar Sadat in 1981) for expansion. The Internet, with more than 1 billion people online, a number that is reckoned to double by 2010, does that job for them automatically.
Republican front-runner Rudy Giuliani's foreign policy adviser Norman Podhoretz's new book is titled "World War IV: The Long Struggle Against Islamofascism." Last June, in an article that appeared in Commentary magazine, a publication he edited for almost four decades, Podhoretz "begged" Bush to bomb
Daniel Pipes, also on Giuliani's team, agrees because the Islamists have "a potential access to weapons of mass destruction that could devastate Western life." Which means
Gingrich's alarm bell is the loudest: "The gap between where we are and where we should be is so large that it seems almost impossible to explain why the Petraeus Report, while important, will be a wholly inadequate explanation as to what is required to defeat our enemies and secure
Beyond Petraeus's testimony, says Gingrich, we need a report "on the larger war with the irreconcilable wing of Islam. This enemy is irreconcilable with the modern civilized world … because it cannot tolerate other religions or other lifestyles … the Islamofascist approach to imposing its views on others and as such it is a mortal threat to our way of life, to freedom, and to the rule of law."
On Sept. 7 CIA Director Gen. Michael Hayden told the Council on Foreign Relations, "Our analysts assess with high confidence that al-Qaida's central leadership is planning high-impact plots against the
Without an understanding of the virtual reality of Islam's global ummah in cyberspace, and a thorough reading of the bin Laden-Zawahiri Islamist catechism, the warnings are likely to go unheeded in the Democratic scramble to bug out of
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Copyright 2007 by United Press International.
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