Welcome! Our goal at Winds of Change.NET is to give you one power-packed briefing of insights, news and trends from the global War on Terror that leaves you stimulated, informed, and occasionally amused every Monday & Thursday.
Round 2 of our auditions is in progress, and today's Winds of War briefing is brought to you by Colt of Eurabian Times.
TOP TOPICS
- British police are holding several men on terrorism charges. Babar Ahmad was in possession of strategic plans about a U.S. Navy battle group, but was charged with aiding Muslim joining the Taliban and Chechen groups. More in the Domestic Briefing.
- Diplomacy has failed to slow down Iran and North Korea in their development of nuclear weapons programs [NYT article permalink]. "Senior administration and intelligence officials" say covert operations are the next American move. Will that work?
- The Weekly Standard takes a look Inside the Zarqawi Network. Based on the interrogation of one of Zarqawi's deputies, it details ties between the Tawhid and Jihad network, Ansar al-Islam, Iran and Syria. The most interesting details is about the Iraqi town of al-Qaim on the Iraq-Syria border, which serves as a depot for the group. This intelligence might have prompted Operation Phantom Linebacker. Al-Qaim, by the way, was a source of yellow cake for the Iraqi nuclear weapons program.
Other Topics Today Include: Iran Reports; Domestic Security Briefing; Dubai nets al-Qaeda big fish; Jordan tries to silence radical imams; the Mindanao hudna is over; Dahlan's deadline for Arafat is tomorrow; al-Qaeda in P.A. territories; Abu Sayyaf update; Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan primer; top Saudi terrorist captured; suicide bombers psychologically "normal"; Australia fights Pacific terror; U.S. special forces hunt al-Qaeda in Sudan; Israel hands out radiation antidote; What, me worry?
IRAN REPORTS
- Iran will soon test an advanced version of the Shihab-3. To protect itself against Israel, of course. Iranian Defence Minister Shamkhani: "[W]e have to invest on nuclear defense preparation".
- Jane's Defence Weekly alleges that Iran is testing ballistic missiles for the North Koreans, which Iran denies. Jane's describes the two new systems as "appreciably expanded the ballistic-missile threat".
- The Monkerat, the Iranian religious police, are stepping up their oppression.
- Reformist parties are backing a Mir Hossein Mousavi as the next president of Iran. Hopefully he'll work out better than the last guy.
- Speaking of whom... 'Moderate'
sell-outPresident Khatami says Iran cannot tolerate U.S. attacks on Najaf.
DOMESTIC SECURITY BRIEFINGS
- Of the original 13 al-Qaeda suspects arrested in the U.K, two have been released without charge and another two charged with having forged documents. Another two of them were trained by Hamas. A summary of the arrests can be found here.
- Time Magazine has been informed by "unnamed U.S. intelligence and law enforcement officials" that al-Qaeda discussed using petrol tankers and limousines to attack financial targets in the United States. Given the barricades around the Capitol, this will come as no surprise: Officials: Capitol among new U.S. terror targets Drudge has more...
- Australian intelligence finds that 10 more of their citizens trained with al-Qaeda and Lashkar-e-Taiba. However, they cannot be prosecuted, as they trained before the groups were outlawed in September 20
- An FBI sting operation in New York has led to the arrests of two men - one a mosque-founder, the other an imam at said mosque. The Deputy Attorney General suspects they are linked to Ansar al-Islam. The bogus plot concerned a SAM attack on a Pakistani diplomat.
- The Abu Hafs al-Masri's "truce" offer with Italy ends on August 15. This comes during a time of unusual 'chatter' on al-Qaeda linked message boards.
THE WIDER WAR
- Authorities in Dubai have captured Qari Saifullah Akhtar, wanted for involvement in two attempts of Musharraf's life. He has already been flown to Pakistan.
- Jordan is trying to prevent radical preachers from inciting hatred of the United States.
- Wretchard at the Belmont Club looks at the end of the Hudna in Mindanao.
- Mohammed Dahlan's deadline for Arafat to hand over control of the
terrorist militiasP.A. security forces is tomorrow.
- An al-Aksa Martyrs Brigade leader says the P.A. territories may be infiltrated by al-Qaeda. I took a look at this here.
- In the Phillipines, an Abu Sayyaf kidnapper of an American is captured. Meanwhile, the military is hunting Abu Sayyaf leader Kaddafy Janjalani in the province of Tawi-Tawi.
- A primer on the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan.
- Of the 26 names on Saudi Arabia's most wanted list, only 11 remain alive and at large. Faris Ahmed Jamaan Al-Zahrani, who was #11, surrendered to police after a chase by police.
- According to a psychiatrist who works for the C.I.A., suicide bombers and terrorists are sane and normal, not mentally disturbed.
- The Aussies pledge to fight terrorism in what PM John Howard called "our patch".
- The legendary Delta Force are in Sudan hunting al-Qaeda.
- Israelis near the nuclear research centre at Dimona are being given radiation antidote. Perhaps the Israelis are preparing to bomb something? Maybe something Iranian...?
- Finally, for someone predicted to lose in November, Dubya seems pretty relaxed...
Thanks for reading! If you found something here you want to blog about yourself (and we hope you do), all we ask is that you do as we do and offer a Hat Tip hyperlink to today's "Winds of War". If you think we missed something important, use the Comments section to let us know.








Hi Colt: This is an amazing amount of information-- I shall have to read all day before I can make an informed comment! Impressive, dude!
Thanks, jinnderella.
A quick addition to the Domestic Brief, via LGF: Terror plan to flood London tube.
Another addition, again via LGF: the arrest warrant of Babar Ahmad, the British-held Muslim accused of dispatching other jihadis to fight for the Taliban and Chechen groups: PDF.