67FamilyFun
Jul 11th, 07, 06:33 PM
You may have already heard this story, but if you haven't, it is pretty inspirational. We need more Americans like this!:thumbsup::thumbsup::thumbsup:
BTW, it's long for those of you with short attention spans, like me...the short version is: After 9/11 Montana judge and mom Shannen Rossmiller decides to learn about Islam...then ventures into Islamic forums...then takes Arabic classes...then starts to pretend to be an Al Qaeda sympathizer...sets up weapons buys and such...calls in FBI when needed and starts busting terrorists and plots. Unfortunately she has been threatened enough that she need armed protection...doesn't seem to bother her...Great American.
My Cyber Counter-jihad
by Shannen Rossmiller
Middle East Quarterly
Summer 2007
http://www.meforum.org/article/1711
On September 3, 2004, a nine-member officer's panel at Fort Lewis, Washington, found Specialist Ryan G. Anderson guilty of five counts of seeking to aid the enemy during a time of war and attempted espionage. The court martial subsequently sentenced him to five concurrent life terms for his crimes. To date, the sentence represents the most severe penalty meted out to a U.S. citizen in President George W. Bush's global war on terror. The case also marked the triumph of the new field of cyber counterterrorism, which I helped develop. Working from my home computer, I enabled Anderson's capture. There have since been more than 200 other cases although many of these were intelligence cases that, for various reasons, did not result in criminal prosecution.
Discovering Jihad Online
Before 9-11, I had no experience with the Middle East or the Arabic language. I was a mother of three and a municipal judge in a small town in Montana. But the terrorist attacks affected me deeply. I wondered how it could happen. What kind of people could carry out such an atrocity and why? I began to read vociferously about Islam, terrorism, extremist groups, and Islamist ideology.[1] (mailbox:///C%7C/Users/Scott%20and%20Jen/AppData/Roaming/Thunderbird/Profiles/bvelto9t.default/Mail/pop.1and1.com/Inbox?number=25767186#_ftn1) Some of the books satisfied; many did not.
In November 2001, I saw a news report about how terrorists and their sympathizers communicated on websites and Internet message boards and how limited government agencies were in their ability to monitor these web communications. This news report showed me how extensively Al-Qaeda used the Internet to orchestrate 9-11 and how out of touch our intelligence agencies were regarding this Internet activity. Apparently, there were not procedures in place for tracking communications and activity on the Al-Qaeda websites and Internet forums at the time.
The Internet address named in the news report was "www.alneda.com (http://www.alneda.com/)." I wrote it down and proceeded to see for myself what all the fuss was about. I entered another world when I logged on to that site for the first time. I did not know Arabic, so I clicked away at random, looking at featured pictures depicting such things as dead bodies lying around in the aftermath of a car bombing and other atrocities.
Early in January 2002, I began taking an Arabic language course online for eight weeks from the Cairo-based Arab Academy,[2] (mailbox:///C%7C/Users/Scott%20and%20Jen/AppData/Roaming/Thunderbird/Profiles/bvelto9t.default/Mail/pop.1and1.com/Inbox?number=25767186#_ftn2) which, that autumn, I supplemented with an intensive Arabic course at the State University of New York at Buffalo. As I learned more Arabic, the jihadi websites opened for me. Certain individuals stood out for either their radicalism or the information that they sent. I followed and tracked these individuals and kept notebooks detailing each website and person of interest.
Gradually, as I put to use the knowledge and skills I was developing of the Arabic language, I started posting messages on Internet forums and message boards. However, it was not until I was able to find an Arabic language translator through an online translation service[3] (mailbox:///C%7C/Users/Scott%20and%20Jen/AppData/Roaming/Thunderbird/Profiles/bvelto9t.default/Mail/pop.1and1.com/Inbox?number=25767186#_ftn3) who was willing to assist me with constructing contextually accurate messages that I began to elicit responses from individuals at these Internet sites. As time went on, and through the process of trial and error, I eventually figured out what to say and how to say it to start the process of passing myself off as a jihadist sympathizer.
I created my first terrorist cover identity on the Internet on March 13, 2002, to communicate and interact with these targets. In my first chat room sting, I convinced a Pakistani man that I was an Islamist arms dealer. When he offered to sell me stolen U.S. Stinger missiles to help the jihadists fighting the U.S. and coalition forces in Afghanistan, I used the Persian Gulf dialect of Arabic to ask him to provide me with information that I could use to confirm his claims, such as stock numbers. Within a couple of weeks, the missile identification numbers were in my computer inbox.
Stock numbers and the e-mail correspondence in hand, I intended to drive to the closest field office for the FBI here in Montana but was afraid that the FBI would not take me seriously. What were the chances of a Montana mom showing up at their door with information about an individual in Pakistan who was trying to sell Stinger missiles? Instead, I submitted the information to the FBI's online tips site.
A few days later, I received a telephone call from an FBI agent from New Jersey who proceeded to question me. It felt like an interrogation. Several days later, the same agent called to thank me and say that the stock number information for the Stingers did match some of the information that the government had about the missiles.
Encouraged by this success, I continued to communicate with these jihadis online and proceeded to gather more information. Using various Muslim personalities and theatrics for cover, I began monitoring the jihadist chat rooms into the early hours of the morning while my family slept. Plunging in, I started making headway into the world of counterterrorism.
In 2003, the individuals interacting in known Al-Qaeda affiliated websites and Internet forums began to distribute information about private Internet forums used by Al-Qaeda and its sympathizers. Under one of my terrorist identities, I was able to infiltrate some of these private sites where the communication and interaction was much more radical than what I had earlier encountered. In March 2003, I aligned myself with a few of the more prolific individuals in one of these forums. During this time, many messages were circulated about how the "brothers" had perfected the use of cell phones as remote bomb detonators and how they would share the information. When I received the "perfected" schematics for use of cell phones as remote bomb detonators, the "brothers" at the Internet forum stated that the next big attacks would incorporate the use of cell phone detonators for car bombings in the Arab peninsula. I again forwarded this information to the FBI.
Over the next couple of months, it became clear that Al-Qaeda would next target Western interests in Saudi Arabia. On April 30, 2003, while chatting online in Arabic with terrorist "friends," a jihadi indicated that the selected targets for new attacks would be Western housing complexes or hotels frequented by Westerners in the kingdom. After further conversations over the next few days, I became convinced that the attack would be within a week, in Riyadh. On May 12, 2003, four days after I had tipped off the FBI, Al-Qaeda carried out its attacks. Terrorists drove two cars, a pickup, and an SUV (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sport_utility_vehicle) through Riyadh. Two of the vehicles carried heavily armed assault teams, and three of the four were also packed with explosives (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Explosives). Their targets were three compounds: the Durat al-Jadawil, a compound owned by MBI International and Partners (http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=MBI_International_and_Partners&action=edit); Al-Hamra Oasis Village compound; and a compound owned by the Vinnell Corporation (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vinnell_Corporation), a Virginia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virginia)-based defense contractor that was training the Saudi national guard. The Islamists killed thirty-four people in and around the compounds.[4] (mailbox:///C%7C/Users/Scott%20and%20Jen/AppData/Roaming/Thunderbird/Profiles/bvelto9t.default/Mail/pop.1and1.com/Inbox?number=25767186#_ftn4)
BTW, it's long for those of you with short attention spans, like me...the short version is: After 9/11 Montana judge and mom Shannen Rossmiller decides to learn about Islam...then ventures into Islamic forums...then takes Arabic classes...then starts to pretend to be an Al Qaeda sympathizer...sets up weapons buys and such...calls in FBI when needed and starts busting terrorists and plots. Unfortunately she has been threatened enough that she need armed protection...doesn't seem to bother her...Great American.
My Cyber Counter-jihad
by Shannen Rossmiller
Middle East Quarterly
Summer 2007
http://www.meforum.org/article/1711
On September 3, 2004, a nine-member officer's panel at Fort Lewis, Washington, found Specialist Ryan G. Anderson guilty of five counts of seeking to aid the enemy during a time of war and attempted espionage. The court martial subsequently sentenced him to five concurrent life terms for his crimes. To date, the sentence represents the most severe penalty meted out to a U.S. citizen in President George W. Bush's global war on terror. The case also marked the triumph of the new field of cyber counterterrorism, which I helped develop. Working from my home computer, I enabled Anderson's capture. There have since been more than 200 other cases although many of these were intelligence cases that, for various reasons, did not result in criminal prosecution.
Discovering Jihad Online
Before 9-11, I had no experience with the Middle East or the Arabic language. I was a mother of three and a municipal judge in a small town in Montana. But the terrorist attacks affected me deeply. I wondered how it could happen. What kind of people could carry out such an atrocity and why? I began to read vociferously about Islam, terrorism, extremist groups, and Islamist ideology.[1] (mailbox:///C%7C/Users/Scott%20and%20Jen/AppData/Roaming/Thunderbird/Profiles/bvelto9t.default/Mail/pop.1and1.com/Inbox?number=25767186#_ftn1) Some of the books satisfied; many did not.
In November 2001, I saw a news report about how terrorists and their sympathizers communicated on websites and Internet message boards and how limited government agencies were in their ability to monitor these web communications. This news report showed me how extensively Al-Qaeda used the Internet to orchestrate 9-11 and how out of touch our intelligence agencies were regarding this Internet activity. Apparently, there were not procedures in place for tracking communications and activity on the Al-Qaeda websites and Internet forums at the time.
The Internet address named in the news report was "www.alneda.com (http://www.alneda.com/)." I wrote it down and proceeded to see for myself what all the fuss was about. I entered another world when I logged on to that site for the first time. I did not know Arabic, so I clicked away at random, looking at featured pictures depicting such things as dead bodies lying around in the aftermath of a car bombing and other atrocities.
Early in January 2002, I began taking an Arabic language course online for eight weeks from the Cairo-based Arab Academy,[2] (mailbox:///C%7C/Users/Scott%20and%20Jen/AppData/Roaming/Thunderbird/Profiles/bvelto9t.default/Mail/pop.1and1.com/Inbox?number=25767186#_ftn2) which, that autumn, I supplemented with an intensive Arabic course at the State University of New York at Buffalo. As I learned more Arabic, the jihadi websites opened for me. Certain individuals stood out for either their radicalism or the information that they sent. I followed and tracked these individuals and kept notebooks detailing each website and person of interest.
Gradually, as I put to use the knowledge and skills I was developing of the Arabic language, I started posting messages on Internet forums and message boards. However, it was not until I was able to find an Arabic language translator through an online translation service[3] (mailbox:///C%7C/Users/Scott%20and%20Jen/AppData/Roaming/Thunderbird/Profiles/bvelto9t.default/Mail/pop.1and1.com/Inbox?number=25767186#_ftn3) who was willing to assist me with constructing contextually accurate messages that I began to elicit responses from individuals at these Internet sites. As time went on, and through the process of trial and error, I eventually figured out what to say and how to say it to start the process of passing myself off as a jihadist sympathizer.
I created my first terrorist cover identity on the Internet on March 13, 2002, to communicate and interact with these targets. In my first chat room sting, I convinced a Pakistani man that I was an Islamist arms dealer. When he offered to sell me stolen U.S. Stinger missiles to help the jihadists fighting the U.S. and coalition forces in Afghanistan, I used the Persian Gulf dialect of Arabic to ask him to provide me with information that I could use to confirm his claims, such as stock numbers. Within a couple of weeks, the missile identification numbers were in my computer inbox.
Stock numbers and the e-mail correspondence in hand, I intended to drive to the closest field office for the FBI here in Montana but was afraid that the FBI would not take me seriously. What were the chances of a Montana mom showing up at their door with information about an individual in Pakistan who was trying to sell Stinger missiles? Instead, I submitted the information to the FBI's online tips site.
A few days later, I received a telephone call from an FBI agent from New Jersey who proceeded to question me. It felt like an interrogation. Several days later, the same agent called to thank me and say that the stock number information for the Stingers did match some of the information that the government had about the missiles.
Encouraged by this success, I continued to communicate with these jihadis online and proceeded to gather more information. Using various Muslim personalities and theatrics for cover, I began monitoring the jihadist chat rooms into the early hours of the morning while my family slept. Plunging in, I started making headway into the world of counterterrorism.
In 2003, the individuals interacting in known Al-Qaeda affiliated websites and Internet forums began to distribute information about private Internet forums used by Al-Qaeda and its sympathizers. Under one of my terrorist identities, I was able to infiltrate some of these private sites where the communication and interaction was much more radical than what I had earlier encountered. In March 2003, I aligned myself with a few of the more prolific individuals in one of these forums. During this time, many messages were circulated about how the "brothers" had perfected the use of cell phones as remote bomb detonators and how they would share the information. When I received the "perfected" schematics for use of cell phones as remote bomb detonators, the "brothers" at the Internet forum stated that the next big attacks would incorporate the use of cell phone detonators for car bombings in the Arab peninsula. I again forwarded this information to the FBI.
Over the next couple of months, it became clear that Al-Qaeda would next target Western interests in Saudi Arabia. On April 30, 2003, while chatting online in Arabic with terrorist "friends," a jihadi indicated that the selected targets for new attacks would be Western housing complexes or hotels frequented by Westerners in the kingdom. After further conversations over the next few days, I became convinced that the attack would be within a week, in Riyadh. On May 12, 2003, four days after I had tipped off the FBI, Al-Qaeda carried out its attacks. Terrorists drove two cars, a pickup, and an SUV (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sport_utility_vehicle) through Riyadh. Two of the vehicles carried heavily armed assault teams, and three of the four were also packed with explosives (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Explosives). Their targets were three compounds: the Durat al-Jadawil, a compound owned by MBI International and Partners (http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=MBI_International_and_Partners&action=edit); Al-Hamra Oasis Village compound; and a compound owned by the Vinnell Corporation (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vinnell_Corporation), a Virginia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virginia)-based defense contractor that was training the Saudi national guard. The Islamists killed thirty-four people in and around the compounds.[4] (mailbox:///C%7C/Users/Scott%20and%20Jen/AppData/Roaming/Thunderbird/Profiles/bvelto9t.default/Mail/pop.1and1.com/Inbox?number=25767186#_ftn4)