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Events and Issues Shaping our World
How to Tell if Your
Neighbor is a Bombmaker Reposted with permission from Stratfor.com - August 7,
2011 Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) released the fifth
edition of its English-language jihadist magazine Inspire on March 30. AQAP publishes
this magazine with the stated intent of radicalizing English-speaking Muslims
and encouraging them to engage in jihadist militant activity. Since its
inception, Inspire magazine has also advocated the concept that jihadists
living in the West should conduct attacks there, rather than traveling to
places like Pakistan or Yemen, since such travel can bring them to the
attention of the authorities before they can conduct attacks, and AQAP views
attacking in the West as striking at the heart of the unbelievers. To further promote this concept, each edition of Inspire
magazine has a section called Open Source Jihad which is intended to
equip aspiring jihadist attackers with the tools they need to conduct attacks
without traveling to jihadist training camps. The Open Source Jihad sections in
past editions have contained articles such as the pictorial guide with
instructions titled Make a Bomb in the Kitchen of Your Mom
that appeared in the first edition. In this latest edition of Inspire there are at least
three places where AQAP encourages jihadists to conduct lone wolf attacks
rather than coordinate with others due to the security risks inherent in such
collaboration (several jihadist plots have been thwarted when would-be
attackers have approached government informants looking for assistance). In
recent years there have been a number of lone wolf attacks inside the United
States, such as the June 2009 shooting at an armed forces recruiting center in
Little Rock, Ark.; the November 2009 Fort Hood shooting; and the failed bombing attack in New York’s Times Square
in May 2010. Of course, the lone wolf phenomena is not just confined to the
United States, as evidenced by such incidents as the March 2 shooting attack against U.S. military
personnel in Frankfurt, Germany. In the past, STRATFOR has examined the challenges that lone wolf assailants and small, insulated cells
— what we call grassroots jihadists — present to law enforcement and
intelligence agencies. We have also discussed the fact that, in many cases, grassroots defenders such as local police officers
can be a more effective defense against grassroots attackers than centralized
federal agencies. But local federal agents and local police officers are
not the only grassroots defenders who can be effective in detecting lone wolves
and small cells before they are able to launch an attack. Many of the steps required to conduct a terrorist attack
are undertaken in a manner that makes the actions visible to any outside
observer. It is at these junctures in the terrorist attack cycle that people
practicing good situational awareness can detect these
attack steps — not only to avoid the danger themselves, but also to alert the
authorities to the suspicious activity. Detecting grassroots operatives can be difficult, but it
is possible if observers focus not only on the “who” aspect of a terrorist attack but
also the “how” — that is, those activities that indicate an attack
is in the works. In the past we’ve talked in some detail about detecting preoperational surveillance as
part of this focus on the “how.” Now, we would like to focus on detecting
another element of the “how” of terrorism and discuss the ways one can detect
signs of improvised-explosives preparation — in other words, how to tell if
your neighbor is a bombmaker. IEDs and Explosive Mixtures In the 11th edition of “Sada al-Malahim,” AQAP’s
Arabic-language online jihadist magazine, Nasir al-Wahayshi noted that
jihadists “don’t need to conduct a big effort or spend a lot of money to
manufacture 10 grams of explosive material” and that they should not “waste a
long time finding the materials, because you can find all these in your mother’s
kitchen, or readily at hand or in any city you are in.” Al-Wahayshi is right.
It truly is not difficult for a knowledgeable individual to construct
improvised explosives from a wide range of household chemicals like peroxide
and acetone or chlorine and brake fluid. It is important to recognize that when we say an
explosive mixture or an explosive device is “improvised,” the improvised nature
of that mixture or device does not automatically mean that the end product is
going to be ineffective or amateurish. Like an improvised John Coltrane
saxophone solo, some improvised explosive devices can be highly-crafted and
very deadly works of art. Now, that said, even proficient bombmakers are going
to conduct certain activities that will allow their intent to be discerned by
an outside observer — and amateurish bombmakers are even easier to spot if one
knows what to look for. In an effort to make bombmaking activity clandestine,
explosive mixtures and device components are often manufactured in rented
houses, apartments or hotel rooms. We have seen this behavior in past cases,
like the December 1999 incident in which the so-called “Millennium Bomber” Ahmed Ressam and an
accomplice set up a crude bombmaking factory in a hotel room in Vancouver,
British Colombia. More recently, Najibullah Zazi, who was arrested in
September 2009, was charged with attempting to manufacture the improvised
explosive mixture tri-acetone tri-peroxide (TATP) in a Denver hotel room. In
September 2010, a suspected lone wolf assailant in Copenhagen,
accidentally detonated an explosive device he was constructing in a hotel.
Danish authorities believe the device was intended for an attack on the
Jyllands-Posten newspaper, which was targeted because of its involvement in
publishing the controversial cartoons featuring the Prophet Mohammed.
Similar to clandestine methamphetamine labs (which are
also frequently set up in rental properties or hotel rooms), makeshift
bombmaking operations frequently utilize volatile substances that are used in
everyday life. Chemicals such as acetone, a common nail polish remover, and
peroxide, commonly used in bleaching hair, can be found in most grocery, beauty,
drug and convenience stores. Fertilizers, the main component of the bombs used
in the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing and the 1993 World Trade Center attack, can
be found in large volumes on farms or in farm supply stores in rural
communities. However, the quantities of these chemicals required to
manufacture explosives is far in excess of that required to remove nail polish
or bleach hair. Because of this, hotel staff, landlords and neighbors can
fairly easily notice signs that someone in their midst is operating a makeshift
bombmaking laboratory. They should be suspicious, for example, if a new tenant
moves several bags of fertilizer into an apartment in the middle of a city, or
if a person brings in gallons of acetone, peroxide or sulfuric or nitric acid.
Furthermore, in addition to chemicals, bombmakers also utilize laboratory
implements such as beakers, scales, protective gloves and masks — things not
normally found in a hotel room or residence. Additionally, although electronic devices such as cell
phones or wristwatches may not seem unusual in the context of a hotel room or
apartment, signs that such devices have been disassembled or modified should
raise a red flag, as these devices are commonly used as initiators for
improvised explosive devices. There are also certain items that are less
commonly used in household applications but that are frequently used in
bombmaking, things like nitric or sulfuric acid, metal powders such as
aluminum, magnesium and ferric oxide, and large quantities of sodium carbonate
— commonly purchased in 25-pound bags. Large containers of methyl alcohol, used
to stabilize nitroglycerine, is another item that is unusual in a residential
or hotel setting and that is a likely signal that a bombmaker is present. Fumes from the chemical reactions are another telltale
sign of bombmaking activity. Depending on the size of the batch being
concocted, the noxious fumes from an improvised explosive mixture can bleach
walls and curtains and, as was the case for the July 2005 London attackers,
even the bombmakers’ hair. The fumes can even waft outside of the lab and be
detected by neighbors in the vicinity. Spatter from the mixing of ingredients
like nitric acid leaves distinctive marks, which are another way for hotel
staff or landlords to recognize that something is amiss. Additionally, rented
properties used for such activity rarely look as if they are lived in. They
frequently lack furniture and have makeshift window coverings instead of
drapes. Properties where bomb laboratories are found also usually have no mail
delivery, sit for long periods without being occupied and are occupied by
people who come and go erratically at odd hours and are often seen carrying
strange things such as containers of chemicals. The perpetrators of the 1993 World Trade Center bombing
manufactured the components for the truck bomb used in that attack in a rented
apartment in Jersey City, N.J. The process of cooking the nitroglycerine used
in the booster charges and the urea nitrate used in the main explosive charge
created such strong chemical fumes that some of the paint on the walls was
changed from white to blue and metal doorknobs and hinges inside of the
apartment were visibly corroded. The bombmakers also flushed some of the excess
chemicals down the toilet, spilling some of them on the bathroom floor and
leaving acidic burn marks. The conspirators also spilled chemicals on the floor
in other places, on the walls of the apartment, on their clothing and on other
items, leaving plenty of trace evidence for investigators to find after the
attack. Given the caustic nature of the ingredients used to make
homemade explosive mixtures — chemicals that can burn floors and corrode metal
— and the very touchy chemical reactions required to make things like
nitroglycerin and TATP, making homemade explosives can be one of the most
dangerous aspects of planning an attack. Indeed, Hamas militants refer to TATP
as “the Mother of Satan” because of its volatility and propensity to either
severely burn or kill bombmakers if they lose control of the chemical reaction
required to manufacture it. In January 1995, an apartment in Manila, Philippines,
caught fire when the bombmaker in the 1993 World Trade Center attack, Abdel
Basit (aka Ramzi Yousef), lost control of the reaction in a batch of TATP he
was brewing for his planned attack against a number of U.S. airliners flying
over the Pacific Ocean — an operation he had nicknamed Bojinka. Because of the fire, authorities
were able to arrest two of Basit’s co-conspirators and unravel Bojinka and
several other attack plots against targets like Pope John Paul II and U.S.
President Bill Clinton. Basit himself fled to Pakistan, where he was apprehended
a short time later. This case serves to highlight the dangers presented by
these labs to people in the vicinity — especially in a hotel or apartment
building. Another form of behavior that provides an opportunity to
spot a bombmaker is testing. A professional bombmaker will try out his
improvised mixtures and components, like improvised blasting caps, to ensure
that they are functioning properly and that the completed device will therefore
be viable. Such testing will involve burning or detonating small quantities of
the explosive mixture, or actually exploding the blasting cap. The testing of
small components may happen in a backyard, but the testing of larger quantities
will often be done at a more remote place. Therefore, any signs of explosions
in remote places like parks and national forests should be immediately reported
to authorities. Obviously, not every container of nitric acid spotted or
small explosion heard will be absolute confirmation of bombmaking activity, but
reporting such incidents to the authorities will give them an opportunity to
investigate and determine whether the incidents are indeed innocuous. In an era
when the threat of attack comes from increasingly diffuse sources, a good
defense requires more eyes and ears than the authorities possess. As the New
York Police Department has so aptly said, if you see something, say something. Reprinted with permission by www.stratfor.com*