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ISIL Targets Saudi Intelligence Officers

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ISIL Targets Saudi Intelligence Officers
ISIL.jpg


The ultra-violent al Qaeda offshoot group Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL or ISIS) has targeted Saudi Arabian intelligence officers for a campaign of assassination as part of plans by the group to expand activities inside the oil-rich kingdom.

A Twitter campaign by ISIL terrorists was launched Friday that sought information on Saudi intelligence officers. It followed a fatal knife attack against a Saudi police officer last week.

U.S. intelligence agencies monitoring ISIL’s social media communications identified the campaign as a crowd-sourced effort to gather names and other personal information about Saudi intelligence officials for the assassination campaign.

The campaign, according to U.S. officials, appears aimed at destabilizing Saudi Arabia, the location of two of Islam’s holiest cities.

U.S. officials said social media monitoring indicated that thousands of Saudis are supporting ISIL, as indicated by social media use. Twitter users in the kingdom account for 40 percent of all Twitter users in the Arab world.

An Android app used by ISIL for propaganda messages and recruitment was very active in Saudi Arabia between April and June, when Google Play removed it for terms of use violations.

The assassination campaign is also part of a larger effort by ISIL to recruit jihadists in the kingdom and, as it did in other locations in the Middle East, to gain the release of Muslim terrorists held in prison.

In the case of Saudi Arabia, ISIL wants to increase its ranks by winning the release of imprisoned jihadists, including women terrorists.

Evidence of the ISIL recruiting drive in Saudi Arabia first appeared in June when leaflets were distributed in the capital, Riyadh.

The campaign is being carried out under a hashtag in Arabic that translates to “Revealing the identities of the dogs of the Saudi intelligence agencies.”

A pro-ISIL propagandist who is known to U.S. intelligence is said to be leading the campaign.

Saudi National Guard police detective Turki al-Maliki was killed in Riyadh on July 28 and online supporters of ISIL said the murder was part of the new assassination campaign.

However, a U.S. official said the campaign targeting Saudi intelligence officers did not begin until a day after the killing. Analysts believe SIL may be exploiting the murder as a way of launching the anti-intelligence campaign.

Several online jihadists said the killing was the first phase of the campaign against the Saudis.

The crowd sourcing produced nearly 30,000 postings, including data on numerous people who are supposedly linked to the Saudi intelligence, known as the General Intelligence Presidency.

The Tweets included personal information on locations, Twitter names, pictures, and telephone numbers.

ISIL terrorists urged those taking part in the campaign to first verify the information to avoid killing innocents.

The Twitter campaign also prompted a social media political battle with pro-Saudi Tweeters using the assassination hashtag to issue statements of support for Saudi armed forces and security agencies.

Saudi Arabia remains a key target for both ISIL and the mainline al Qaeda group, Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, or AQAP, which has been active in seeking to destabilize and take over Yemen.

AQAP claimed credit for carrying out a bombing attack on a Saudi border post near Sharurah on the Yemen border on July 4.

Two terrorists blew themselves up at the border post, killing five Saudis. Five terrorists also were killed and a sixth was arrested.

An AQAP video of the attack released last week said the attack was linked to winning the release of Saudi jihadists.

The video concluded with a threat to conduct further attacks deep inside Saudi territory and not just on the borders.

Meanwhile, ISIL last week released the second edition of an English-language magazine in a sign the group is seeking to recruit and influence westerners who can be used to conduct attacks.

The 44-page magazine known as “Dabiq” was released Wednesday. Its release has renewed fears among U.S. and western counterterrorism officials about ISIL’s aspirations to recruit Americans and others who can be used in future attacks against the United States and Europe.

ISIL remains in competition with al Qaeda for both supporters and fighters and is attempting to gain greater support among international jihadists after its June incursion into Iraq. The group has taken over a large part of Iraq, including the second largest city Mosul.

U.S. officials said a recent statement by Mullah Omar, leader of Afghanistan’s Taliban insurgency, has given inspiration to ISIL.

In a recent religious message, Omar appears to shy away from supporting central al Qaeda in its political battle with ISIL.

Omar stated that his main focus is on Afghanistan and maintaining peaceful relations with neighboring states.

Ayman al Zawahiri, al Qaeda’s leader and successor to Osama bin Laden, has not directly addressed ISIL’s declaration of a “caliphate,” or prophetic Islamic state in charge of all Muslims.

However, al Qaeda central has launched a propaganda campaign that included renewing ties with Omar’s Taliban.

But the failure of Omar to directly address the split led ISIL backers to claim he had turned down al Qaeda’s appeal for continued allegiance.

ISIL Targets Saudi Intelligence | Washington Free Beacon
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And yet people dare claim that KSA is supporting ISIS??? Are you Insane? Has conspiracy theories played with your head so much that you believe someone is both fighting and supporting people at the same time?? You people are funny.
 
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ISIL Targets Saudi Intelligence Officers
ISIL.jpg


The ultra-violent al Qaeda offshoot group Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL or ISIS) has targeted Saudi Arabian intelligence officers for a campaign of assassination as part of plans by the group to expand activities inside the oil-rich kingdom.

A Twitter campaign by ISIL terrorists was launched Friday that sought information on Saudi intelligence officers. It followed a fatal knife attack against a Saudi police officer last week.

U.S. intelligence agencies monitoring ISIL’s social media communications identified the campaign as a crowd-sourced effort to gather names and other personal information about Saudi intelligence officials for the assassination campaign.

The campaign, according to U.S. officials, appears aimed at destabilizing Saudi Arabia, the location of two of Islam’s holiest cities.

U.S. officials said social media monitoring indicated that thousands of Saudis are supporting ISIL, as indicated by social media use. Twitter users in the kingdom account for 40 percent of all Twitter users in the Arab world.

An Android app used by ISIL for propaganda messages and recruitment was very active in Saudi Arabia between April and June, when Google Play removed it for terms of use violations.

The assassination campaign is also part of a larger effort by ISIL to recruit jihadists in the kingdom and, as it did in other locations in the Middle East, to gain the release of Muslim terrorists held in prison.

In the case of Saudi Arabia, ISIL wants to increase its ranks by winning the release of imprisoned jihadists, including women terrorists.

Evidence of the ISIL recruiting drive in Saudi Arabia first appeared in June when leaflets were distributed in the capital, Riyadh.

The campaign is being carried out under a hashtag in Arabic that translates to “Revealing the identities of the dogs of the Saudi intelligence agencies.”

A pro-ISIL propagandist who is known to U.S. intelligence is said to be leading the campaign.

Saudi National Guard police detective Turki al-Maliki was killed in Riyadh on July 28 and online supporters of ISIL said the murder was part of the new assassination campaign.

However, a U.S. official said the campaign targeting Saudi intelligence officers did not begin until a day after the killing. Analysts believe SIL may be exploiting the murder as a way of launching the anti-intelligence campaign.

Several online jihadists said the killing was the first phase of the campaign against the Saudis.

The crowd sourcing produced nearly 30,000 postings, including data on numerous people who are supposedly linked to the Saudi intelligence, known as the General Intelligence Presidency.

The Tweets included personal information on locations, Twitter names, pictures, and telephone numbers.

ISIL terrorists urged those taking part in the campaign to first verify the information to avoid killing innocents.

The Twitter campaign also prompted a social media political battle with pro-Saudi Tweeters using the assassination hashtag to issue statements of support for Saudi armed forces and security agencies.

Saudi Arabia remains a key target for both ISIL and the mainline al Qaeda group, Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, or AQAP, which has been active in seeking to destabilize and take over Yemen.

AQAP claimed credit for carrying out a bombing attack on a Saudi border post near Sharurah on the Yemen border on July 4.

Two terrorists blew themselves up at the border post, killing five Saudis. Five terrorists also were killed and a sixth was arrested.

An AQAP video of the attack released last week said the attack was linked to winning the release of Saudi jihadists.

The video concluded with a threat to conduct further attacks deep inside Saudi territory and not just on the borders.

Meanwhile, ISIL last week released the second edition of an English-language magazine in a sign the group is seeking to recruit and influence westerners who can be used to conduct attacks.

The 44-page magazine known as “Dabiq” was released Wednesday. Its release has renewed fears among U.S. and western counterterrorism officials about ISIL’s aspirations to recruit Americans and others who can be used in future attacks against the United States and Europe.

ISIL remains in competition with al Qaeda for both supporters and fighters and is attempting to gain greater support among international jihadists after its June incursion into Iraq. The group has taken over a large part of Iraq, including the second largest city Mosul.

U.S. officials said a recent statement by Mullah Omar, leader of Afghanistan’s Taliban insurgency, has given inspiration to ISIL.

In a recent religious message, Omar appears to shy away from supporting central al Qaeda in its political battle with ISIL.

Omar stated that his main focus is on Afghanistan and maintaining peaceful relations with neighboring states.

Ayman al Zawahiri, al Qaeda’s leader and successor to Osama bin Laden, has not directly addressed ISIL’s declaration of a “caliphate,” or prophetic Islamic state in charge of all Muslims.

However, al Qaeda central has launched a propaganda campaign that included renewing ties with Omar’s Taliban.

But the failure of Omar to directly address the split led ISIL backers to claim he had turned down al Qaeda’s appeal for continued allegiance.

ISIL Targets Saudi Intelligence | Washington Free Beacon
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And yet people dare claim that KSA is supporting ISIS??? Are you Insane? Has conspiracy theories played with your head so much that you believe someone is both fighting and supporting people at the same time?? You people are funny.
Than you need to bomb the hell out off these guts other wise they would create trouble
 
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First thing GIP needs to do is to boost internal recon to track and detain symphatizers, put them through a randition program, trace their links and kill them.

They can get much help from ISI's cleanup of Hizb Tahrir from the military.
 
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Than you need to bomb the hell out off these guts other wise they would create trouble

Sir do you want KSA army to step into Iraq or to wait for them ? If KSA Army try to get in then don't you think Iran will engage them in Iraq.
 
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Bombing Shia Hauthis is one thing, try bombing Sunni ISIS and SA will find out they are not exactly universally hated.

Of course, I for one, do not believe for a second that SA will actually bomb ISIS.
 
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First thing GIP needs to do is to boost internal recon to track and detain symphatizers, put them through a randition program, trace their links and kill them.

They can get much help from ISI's cleanup of Hizb Tahrir from the military.

Haha, I don't think for a second KSA needs to boost internal recon, I don't think it can even be boosted at all.

Bombing Shia Hauthis is one thing, try bombing Sunni ISIS and SA will find out they are not exactly universally hated.

Of course, I for one, do not believe for a second that SA will actually bomb ISIS.

ISIS is quite hated in KSA, only ultra religious people support them, and they are a minority. Most people in KSA support the armed forces.
 
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lol , what ? :laughcry:

Yes I know this goes against everything the propaganda outlets have drilled into your head, isn't this amazing? You now have the opportunity to question them for once, I advise taking that opportunity and never letting go.
 
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@nonsuperstitious

There are a few reasona why KSA isn't resorting to airpower.

* Airpower alone achieves nothing
* Bombing ISIS = Helping Maliki

So the Saudis are facing the same dillema as the Americans?
 
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@nonsuperstitious

There are a few reasona why KSA isn't resorting to airpower.

* Airpower alone achieves nothing
* Bombing ISIS = Helping Maliki

So the Saudis are facing the same dillema as the Americans?

True its complicated. The sunni angle being one more facet of it.
 
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True its complicated. The sunni angle being one more facet of it.

As someone who is more close to the Saudi government than the entire PDF community combined 10 times over, I can say with authority that religion pays absolutely no part in the Saudi Government's calculations when it comes to policy what so ever, being either Sunni, Shia or Atheist, does not matter the slightest bit to the government, it is extremely secular in all its dealings, while true that internal policy has a bit of a harsh islamic tone, it is being slowly phased out, as the government awaits a more open generation.

The evidence of this is spread for all with a two bit of mind to see, in all of the Arab uprisings not once did KSA support an Islamist group, as it goes against KSA's policy of Secularizing the middle east, and in effect itself. Religion was deemed an extremely counter-productive force in the 90s after the Gulf War. I will not say more on the subject for now, but as I said, the only reason why KSA still holds on to the religious card now, is to counter Iran's own religious card and keeping it in check, but once the Iranian threat has been dealt with, more aggressive secular policies will be taken. This is why I can never forgive Iran for making us more religious than we plan to be.
 
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