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Officials Vexed By Homegrown Terrorist...
Jun 19, 2016 17:44:41   #
Don G. Dinsdale Loc: El Cajon, CA (San Diego County)
 
Mr. Trump's Idea of "Profiling" For D******c T*******t Is An Excellent Thought!!! And If There Is No Profile YET, Build One, Wake The F@@k Up FBI & America... This Nation Was Not Built By "I Don't Know How", It Was Built By Rolling One Sleeves Up And 'Gettin At It'!!! Don D.

Officials Vexed By Homegrown Terror Threat

By Julian Hattem ~ June 19, 2016 ~ The Hill


The United States is struggling to confront the stubborn persistence of homegrown terrorists, even as it has repeatedly proven able to disrupt broader, organized plots from overseas.

A week after the deadly massacre in Orlando, Fla., there are few signs of a major intelligence failure, even though gunman Omar Mateen had been interviewed three times in the last three years.

But the episode illustrates the near-impossibility of detecting “lone wolves” before their diet of online propaganda and internal hatred turns into violence.
“It is an exceptionally challenging issue for the intelligence community, security and law enforcement to deal with,” CIA Director John Brennan told the Senate Intelligence Committee this week.

K**lers like Mateen can be inspired by extremists on the internet and make their plans “without triggering any of those traditional signatures that we might see as a foreign terrorist organization tries to deploy operatives here,” he added.

The obstacles have only increased as the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) has evolved from a centralized Middle East extremist group to a digital multimedia behemoth, eager to claim anyone acting in its name.

On Monday, the Senate this will take up four separate gun control proposals, including measures to prevent suspected terrorists from buying arms, though all appear doomed due to deep partisan divides.

But officials say there are precious few legal avenues to prevent the next massacre, especially as ISIS’s external propaganda machine keeps spinning.

“Access to weapons makes sense for our leaders to focus on, because they don’t understand the motivations,” said Robert Pape, the founding director of the Chicago Project on Security and Terrorism. “If you don’t have a clue as to what’s really motivating, because this is new, then you have no choice but to focus on access to weapons.

“And it makes perfect sense.”

The image of Mateen remains clouded.

Officials said that he watched online videos from ISIS and similar extremists, which helped inspire him to gun down 49 people at a gay nightclub last weekend, in the deadliest mass shooting in modern American history.

He also pledged allegiance to ISIS in the hours before he was k**led by police, fulfilling a key requirement for the group to grant recognition.

However, he appeared to have no direct communication with ISIS leaders in their self-proclaimed caliph**e in Syria. And while the group was quick to embrace him, other motivations also appear to have been at play, including a history of domestic violence and struggles with his own sexuality.

“Ideology played a role, but it was not a major role,” said Matthew Levitt, a former FBI analyst and director of the Washington Institute for Near East Peace’s counterterrorism and intelligence program. “What appears to have been important to him is the empowering message of strong, militant Muslim groups.”

That makes Mateen and those like him particularly hard to catch.

“I anticipate we’re going to have many more cases like Mateen’s where ideology is not the main issue,” Levitt said. “We’ll have many where ideology is the main issue.

“But the thing to keep in mind here is there’s no profile.”

Without records of communication, travel or financing from someone else, it’s difficult for the government to have detected that Mateen had larger plans.

During the FBI’s investigation into him in 2013 and 2014, officials placed Mateen under surveillance, introduced him to confidential informants and interviewed him twice. But at some point they had to drop the case, since there was no evidence to keep going.

Months later, he was interviewed as part of another FBI investigation, but apparently did not raise enough of a red f**g to prompt a new federal probe.

In the meantime, he was able to go on watching videos and accessing websites that encouraged him to act out.

“What ISIS has done is created a middle ground idea here between inspired [attacks] and command-directed [attacks],” said Pape. “What ISIS has is a set of inter-related materials that help produce their attacks much the way a movie producer produces a movie.”

That technical knowledge helps their adherents carry out the deadliest attacks possible.

“Because they’re the executive producer, they’re able to get highly lethal results that used to take command-direction to get.”

The way security officials respond to ISIS's growing connection with supporters around the world is also continuing to evolve.

Before the Senate Intelligence Committee this week, Brennan said that his agency is looking at both the “upstream” creators of the content and the “downstream propagation.”

But intelligence agencies' abilities are limited. The CIA does not have ultimate control of the internet, Brennan noted, and can run into both legal and technical problems when it tries to have content taken down.

In cases like Mateen’s, where the government appears to have no reason to continue pursuing an investigation, responsibilities might fall to social workers or local communities to step in, analysts said.

Some Senate lawmakers have poshed for more funding at the FBI to keep up with the roughly 1,000 cases of homegrown extremism it is investigating. But FBI Director James Comey has said that he has all the resources he needs.

There are ways to try and reduce the threat of homegrown radicals, said Lorenzo Vidino, the director of George Washington University’s program on extremism, but none to eliminate it.

“Nothing is perfect. Nothing is bulletproof,” Vidino told The Hill.

“There’s no silver bullet here.”

http://thehill.com/policy/national-security/283986-officials-vexed-by-homegrown-terror-threat

Reply
Jun 19, 2016 18:11:58   #
robmull Loc: florida
 
Don G. Dinsdale wrote:
Mr. Trump's Idea of "Profiling" For D******c T*******t Is An Excellent Thought!!! And If There Is No Profile YET, Build One, Wake The F@@k Up FBI & America... This Nation Was Not Built By "I Don't Know How", It Was Built By Rolling One Sleeves Up And 'Gettin At It'!!! Don D.

Officials Vexed By Homegrown Terror Threat

By Julian Hattem ~ June 19, 2016 ~ The Hill


The United States is struggling to confront the stubborn persistence of homegrown terrorists, even as it has repeatedly proven able to disrupt broader, organized plots from overseas.

A week after the deadly massacre in Orlando, Fla., there are few signs of a major intelligence failure, even though gunman Omar Mateen had been interviewed three times in the last three years.

But the episode illustrates the near-impossibility of detecting “lone wolves” before their diet of online propaganda and internal hatred turns into violence.
“It is an exceptionally challenging issue for the intelligence community, security and law enforcement to deal with,” CIA Director John Brennan told the Senate Intelligence Committee this week.

K**lers like Mateen can be inspired by extremists on the internet and make their plans “without triggering any of those traditional signatures that we might see as a foreign terrorist organization tries to deploy operatives here,” he added.

The obstacles have only increased as the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) has evolved from a centralized Middle East extremist group to a digital multimedia behemoth, eager to claim anyone acting in its name.

On Monday, the Senate this will take up four separate gun control proposals, including measures to prevent suspected terrorists from buying arms, though all appear doomed due to deep partisan divides.

But officials say there are precious few legal avenues to prevent the next massacre, especially as ISIS’s external propaganda machine keeps spinning.

“Access to weapons makes sense for our leaders to focus on, because they don’t understand the motivations,” said Robert Pape, the founding director of the Chicago Project on Security and Terrorism. “If you don’t have a clue as to what’s really motivating, because this is new, then you have no choice but to focus on access to weapons.

“And it makes perfect sense.”

The image of Mateen remains clouded.

Officials said that he watched online videos from ISIS and similar extremists, which helped inspire him to gun down 49 people at a gay nightclub last weekend, in the deadliest mass shooting in modern American history.

He also pledged allegiance to ISIS in the hours before he was k**led by police, fulfilling a key requirement for the group to grant recognition.

However, he appeared to have no direct communication with ISIS leaders in their self-proclaimed caliph**e in Syria. And while the group was quick to embrace him, other motivations also appear to have been at play, including a history of domestic violence and struggles with his own sexuality.

“Ideology played a role, but it was not a major role,” said Matthew Levitt, a former FBI analyst and director of the Washington Institute for Near East Peace’s counterterrorism and intelligence program. “What appears to have been important to him is the empowering message of strong, militant Muslim groups.”

That makes Mateen and those like him particularly hard to catch.

“I anticipate we’re going to have many more cases like Mateen’s where ideology is not the main issue,” Levitt said. “We’ll have many where ideology is the main issue.

“But the thing to keep in mind here is there’s no profile.”

Without records of communication, travel or financing from someone else, it’s difficult for the government to have detected that Mateen had larger plans.

During the FBI’s investigation into him in 2013 and 2014, officials placed Mateen under surveillance, introduced him to confidential informants and interviewed him twice. But at some point they had to drop the case, since there was no evidence to keep going.

Months later, he was interviewed as part of another FBI investigation, but apparently did not raise enough of a red f**g to prompt a new federal probe.

In the meantime, he was able to go on watching videos and accessing websites that encouraged him to act out.

“What ISIS has done is created a middle ground idea here between inspired [attacks] and command-directed [attacks],” said Pape. “What ISIS has is a set of inter-related materials that help produce their attacks much the way a movie producer produces a movie.”

That technical knowledge helps their adherents carry out the deadliest attacks possible.

“Because they’re the executive producer, they’re able to get highly lethal results that used to take command-direction to get.”

The way security officials respond to ISIS's growing connection with supporters around the world is also continuing to evolve.

Before the Senate Intelligence Committee this week, Brennan said that his agency is looking at both the “upstream” creators of the content and the “downstream propagation.”

But intelligence agencies' abilities are limited. The CIA does not have ultimate control of the internet, Brennan noted, and can run into both legal and technical problems when it tries to have content taken down.

In cases like Mateen’s, where the government appears to have no reason to continue pursuing an investigation, responsibilities might fall to social workers or local communities to step in, analysts said.

Some Senate lawmakers have poshed for more funding at the FBI to keep up with the roughly 1,000 cases of homegrown extremism it is investigating. But FBI Director James Comey has said that he has all the resources he needs.

There are ways to try and reduce the threat of homegrown radicals, said Lorenzo Vidino, the director of George Washington University’s program on extremism, but none to eliminate it.

“Nothing is perfect. Nothing is bulletproof,” Vidino told The Hill.

“There’s no silver bullet here.”

http://thehill.com/policy/national-security/283986-officials-vexed-by-homegrown-terror-threat
Mr. Trump's Idea of "Profiling" For D***... (show quote)








It's an old Indian saying, Don; "you can't wake a man only pretending to be sleeping." Currently the many tentacles of our government have been "appointed," pro-Sharia law advocates, "devout" Muslims. Our FBI may be as infiltrated with the 7th century un-vetted ideology as our HLS, TSA, SPA, DOJ, AG and CIA, ATFE? EPA? HUD? and even our NRA Board has been quietly c*********d by deceptive forces that were trying to "tip" the balance of the East and West. It's been quite an interesting few years of watching an obsolete and incompetent, archaic agenda try to "dominate" our 21st century, competitive civilization by a stealth that has been under our American microscope for actually centuries; "From the Halls of Montezuma to the shores of Tripoli." Damn it's good to be underestimated by totally hostile forces of our enemies; foreign AND domestic. They think "WE" are REALLY stupid. Hummmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm. "Surprise, surprise," was my favorite expression by my favorite Marine. Well, "SURPRISE, SURPRISE!!!" The secular [radical, f*****t] liberal progressive "Party," is going absolutely bonkers. Their candidate for the FIRST spot on their POTUS "Ticket," has been being chased around the country by about 124 FBI Agents, for years; and the second spot is a damn self-admitted "socialist;" and "What's the difference between a socialist and a c*******t? About a year and a half. Hummmmmmmmmmm. GOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO TRUMP!!!! God [sure] works in mysterious ways!!!

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