On Monday, 1 July 2019 Kenyan national Cholo Abdi Abdullah was in his room in the Rasaca Hotel in the city of Iba, northwest of Manila, when he was arrested. In his possession, police found a pistol, a homemade bomb and a hand grenade. Yet Abdullah's primary aim involved a plane ImageImage
Reminiscent of 9/11, Abdullah's plan was to hijack an airplane and crash it into a skyscraper, prosecutors speculate. In preparation he had been training for years in the Philippines and already obtained his pilot license. The attack was to be carried out on behalf of.. Al-Shabab
Abdullah's trajectory to become a terrorist started already back in 2012 when he pledged allegiance to the Somali group al-Shabab. At the time, the group had just been accepted into the fold of al-Qaida.
Abdullah's training started around 2016. In the Phillippines, he started flight training in Dec 2016 at the All Asia Aviation Academy and he was researching methods on how to enter the US illegally with allegedly one objective: to hijack an airplane.
Acc. to prosecutors Abdullah was part of an al-Shabab external attack unit and was acting under direct order from a commander also in charge of last year's attack against the DusitD2 hotel in Nairobi's Westlands. Just a few days ago, Al-Shabab issued a video on the Dusit attack.
Al-Shabab is not known for its dedication to target 'the far enemy' referring to the West except in #Somalia and neighboring countries. But perhaps that's changing.
nytimes.com/2020/03/21/wor…
In January 19, five members attacked the upscale hotel/office complex in Nairobi and one year later, the group targeted the Manda Bay airfield in Kenya killing 3 Americans. Acc. to Stephen J. Townsend, the head of AFRICOM, Al-Shabab is even a threat to the US homeland.
This threat has aggravated since Trump's decision to move the US embassy to Jerusalen which led to the initiation of a global al-Qaida campaign dubbed "Jerusalem Will Never Be Judaized". Abdullah's case could indicate that Al-Shabab now prioritizes targeting US on its own soil.
Now Abdullah stands trial in a New York federal court and today he pleaded not guilty.
justice.gov/opa/pr/kenyan-…

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More from @ToreRHamming

1 Nov
After 5 years and 3 months of work I finally defended my PhD thesis earlier this week. It was an extremely emotional experience and I am overly happy and proud with the result.

The thesis tells the much neglected story of Jihadis' internal conflict and here's what it is about.
First about the defence. Defending in front of a committee comprised of all my academic idols Olivier Roy, Stéphane Lacroix, Thomas @Hegghammer and Virginie Collombier was in itself rather frightening but also the most incredible way to conclude the research. Thank you!
During these 5 years I have learned a lot and I got to know a great group of people and I am truly grateful for all the help I received along the way. Not least from all the Jihadis that were willing to speak to me and with some I established a relationship.
Read 25 tweets
13 Sep
The idea that led to 9/11 as narrated by al-Qaida: The original idea came from an Egyptian pilot who migrated to Peshawar and stayed at one of the Jihadi guest houses. In an informal sitting, he would first air his idea to hijack airplanes to strike iconic building in the US
This idea was shared with AQ's military leader at the time Abu Ubaydah al-Banshiri (also Egyptian) and later recounted by senior AQ figures Abu Hafs al-Masri and Abu al-Khayr. When in Sudan, UBL arranged for two AQ members to attend flight training.
However, plans speeded up after Khalid Sheikh Muhammed approached AQ to air his own idea of hijacking airplanes. AQ was located in Sudan at the time and the country was not considered an appropriated launching pad for such a major attack.
Read 5 tweets
11 Dec 19
On 21 Nov, @Europol strongly assisted by @telegram initiated a campaign to ban and delete Jihadis and their material on the platform in the hitherto most successful online counter-offensive. But, as described by several of my colleagues, it also kickstarted several new dynamics!
At first, the crackdown was mainly focused on Telegram and targeted both AQ and IS elements - official and supporter accounts.
This led Jihadis to experiment with and migrate to new platforms: @tamtamchat, Hoop, Rocket.chat etc..
None of these migrations were particularly successful, however, but for various reasons. @tamtamchat was extraordinarily effective beginning its own crackdown on IS accounts, while the other two platforms appear rather inappropriate for mass consumption.
Read 7 tweets
10 Dec 19
Ét spørgsmål disse dage er, hvorvidt vestlige foreign fighters skal hjemtages til retsforfølgelse. Et andet spørgsmål er forholdene for terrordømte, som blomstrede op efter det seneste angreb i London. Denne tråd omhandler sidstnævnte.
I den seneste måneds tid er der kommet to forskellige svar fra forskningsverdenen: John Horgan diskuterer vigtigheden af re-integration og de-radikalisering af terrordømte. Se disse:
economist.com/britain/2019/1…
theconversation.com/amp/what-makes…
foreignpolicy.com/2019/02/28/tee…
Et andet perspektiv som kommer fra Simon Cottee, som plæderer for mindre overbærenhed over for terrordømte. Argumentet er, at terrorister er en form for unikke forbrydere, som skal opfattes anderledes.
Se her: foreignpolicy.com/2019/12/04/lon…
Read 7 tweets
13 Aug 19
I'm tremendously thrilled to see the publication of my report "Polemical and Fratricidal Jihadists: A Historical Examination of Debates, Contestation and Infighting Within the Sunni Jihadi Movement" by the @ICSR_Centre
icsr.info/wp-content/upl…
@ICSR_Centre Some of the findings/conclusions of the report are summarised in this infograph
In 2013-14, conflict erupted between al-Qaida and the Islamic State. Since then the two groups have been engaged in a military and discursive campaign to kill and delegitimise one another.

Internal conflict is no stranger to the Jihadi movement, however.
Read 6 tweets
5 Jul 19
Quickly browsing through the Azan magazine published by the Pakistani Taliban (TTP) between March 2013 and Summer 2014. Lots of great stuff in their and need to study it closer at some point. Here's a few initial interesting observations though:
Some of the stuff really shows the difference between the AFGHAN Taliban and the PAKISTANI Taliban. These two posters for instance
It also includes an article directed towards Jihadis in the West and all the 'bad excuses' they may have for not committing to Jihad
Read 6 tweets

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