onedomino
SCE to AUX
- Sep 14, 2004
- 2,677
- 482
- 98
I do not understand why these sites cannot be either physically attacked or taken down by remotely with software or electronic methods. Why can’t the Army hack these sites? Does anyone know?
U.S. Army: Enemy Posting How-To Manuals Online
5,000 Terrorist Web Sites Estimated
By Mark A. Keller
Al–Qaida and other terrorist organizations have created “more than 5,000 Web sites” that both spread jihadist messages and contain detailed instructions about how to attack targets in the Middle East and elsewhere, Lt. Gen. Steven Boutelle, the U.S. Army’s chief information officer, told the Association of the United States Army’s Institute of Land Warfare breakfast on April 11.
“Al-Qaida is the first terrorist movement to go from physical space to cyberspace” in its warfare, said Boutelle, who retires from the Army in August.
He noted that one report said there was “a notebook computer under the arm of every second” member of the group, headed by Saudi-born terrorist Osama bin Laden, as it fled Afghanistan during the 2001 American invasion.
“Instead of [each member] carrying incriminating information, it’s all online,” Boutelle said. Such Internet-enabled terrorism is “probably the greatest threat to this nation since the Civil War.”
Moreover, he added, suggestions that the Army move to somehow block Internet Web sites such as “Jihad Unspun”, which posts, among other items, videos of attacks on coalition forces “in theater,” may be unrealistic.
“How can you block what your enemy does?” he asked. What?!!
Instead, Boutelle suggested mining the data available from such sites and other sources.
At the same time, he conceded, “we’ve got systems that are gathering a terabyte of information a day — how do you sort [all of] it?” He said a terabyte is equal to “one-sixteenth” of the contents of the Library of Congress, and that the Army is at a “20 percent to 30 percent level” of effectiveness in mining that incoming information, versus what he said is a 75 percent to 80 percent effectiveness rate in building out the service’s networks.
More: http://defensenews.com/story.php?F=2677432&C=america