Mohammed al Hakaymah, unlike Najd Al Rawik, the oblivious author of "The Global Media: A Work Paper for Invading the US Media," (Rawik doesn't know enough American culture to realize US media is already supine) al-Hakaymah" just reads the members of the mainstream media for the tasty bits of intell that turn into much needed field tactical adjustments.
Hakaymah has written "Myth of Delusion," a 151-page manuscript making the rounds on password-protected jihadi Web sites" and includes such such helpful hints as how to buy a cell phone and when to sell the phone to prevent call tracing, as well as care in making calls or risk capture by the CIA. Now where do you suppose he got the heads up alert:
Mr. Hakaymah's book is different from other jihadist tracts on American intelligence. While he makes no mention of the December 2005 New YorkTimes article that first disclosed that the National Security Agency was tapping phone numbers found in cell phones captured from suspected Al Qaeda operatives in Afghanistan, he does devote a chapter to electronic surveillance.
In it, Mr. Hakaymah writes that any electronic communication between operatives can be monitored using key words such as "Mullah Omar," the name of the Taliban leader, or even voice printing.
Two pages are devoted to the Echelon surveillance system, which Britain and America developed in the 1990s. Mr. Hakaymah warns future terrorists not to repeat the mistake of the Kurdish terrorist leader Abdullah Ă–calan, who was captured in Nairobi, Kenya, after making a cell phone call to northern Iraq."
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