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Counter-Terrorism: Deploying The DNA Weapon

ISSUE 250
Front Page
Index
Headlines

Sultan Mohamud Guleed Mire Meets With Islamic Courts’ Leaders In Mogadishu

TFG Parliament Speaker To Visit Mogadishu

BBC Somali Service Accused Of Abetting The Islamic Courts

The Danish Refugee Council Celebrates Its 50 Years Anniversary

Somalia Closer To War, After Failure To Revive Talks

Mandela Says Botha's Death Evokes Past

'We Are Showing That Our Forces Are Ready'

Regional Affairs

'Pirates' Attack Dubai Vessel Off Somalia

Ethiopian PM: Islamic Militia A Threat

Kenya Jails 10 Somali Pirates For Seven Years

Editorial
Special Report

International News

British Believe Bush More Dangerous Than Kim Jong-Il

Dad Convicted For Mutilating Girl's Genitals

Sons Of JI Organizer Held In Yemen

US Says Somalia Must Not Be Proxy War For Others

Somali Voters Crowd In For First Candidates Night

UN Worried Over Troops In Somalia

A Courageous Man Speaks Out - Hugo Chavez at the UN General Assembly

If this onslaught was about Jews, I would be looking for my passport

Counter-Terrorism: Deploying The DNA Weapon

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

Prize Offered To Africa's Leaders

Rwandese Business Leaders are keen to invest in Somaliland

Somalia On Edge Of All-Out War As Talks Collapse

Somalia conflict to spread?

The Arabs And The Great Game In Somalia

Ethiopian Women Reject Genital Cutting (FGM)

Somali Artists Teach Local Students African Culture

'Huge Man' Gives Football Prizes

Food for thought

Opinions

Goth And Gabobe’s Unholy Alliance

Respond To: Goth And Gabobe’s Unholy Alliance

Reply To Hassan Ahmed UK

There Will Be No Anschluss Of Somaliland Into A Greater Somalia Reich

Headscarf: A Choice For Women And A Signal For Modesty

The Threats Of The Islamists Should Not Sidetrack Somaliland


Deploying the DNA Weapon

October 28, 2006: Pakistan confirmed, via DNA tests, that their warplanes killed al Qaeda leader Muhsin Musa Matwalli Atwah, when a compound near the Afghan border was bombed last April. Atwah was believed to be the organizer of the 1998 bombings of U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania. The U.S. has offered a $5 million reward for information leading to Atwah's arrest. Atwah was an Egyptian who operated an al Qaeda cell in Somalia in the early 1990s, and later traveled to Afghanistan, Pakistan and Sudan to receive training on bomb building.  

Pakistan has killed or captured nearly a thousand foreign terrorists, or suspects, in the last five years. Getting confirmation of identities is often difficult, either because the body was blown apart, or there is no way, even with DNA testing, to confirm who they killed. The U.S. has gone to great efforts to obtain DNA data, often from kin, of suspected terrorists, so that suspects can be later identified, dead or alive.  

Since 2001, most of the known al Qaeda leadership has been captured or killed. While data captured in Afghanistan during the 2001 campaign provided a lot of information on who the key al Qaeda people were, subsequent operations have provided a constant flow of new information (from captured data or interrogations.) So no matter how many al Qaeda leaders you get, there will always be more. But the new guys are often less talented, and less experienced. The quality of al Qaeda leadership has obviously suffered from all these losses. The widespread use of DNA testing has made it more difficult for terrorist leaders to use a popular ploy, faking their own deaths, so as to take the heat off them.

Source:   StrategyPage

 


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