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  • 26
    Mar
    2012
    12:56pm, EDT

    Expert: Al-Qaida web forums crippled in suspected cyber-attack

    By Alastair Jamieson, msnbc.com

    Al-Qaida’s Internet message forums, which it uses to communicate its messages to the world, have been crippled in a suspected organized cyber-attack, according to a terrorism expert.

    Three of the terror network’s main forums – Al-Shamukh, Al-Fidaa, and Ansar al-Mujahideen – have gone offline, said Evan Kohlmann, a terrorism analyst for NBC News. The most important, Al-Shamukh, has been inaccessible for almost five days, he told msnbc.com in an email.


    “An event of this scale very rarely occurs -- less than five times in the last five years -- and is usually the result of deliberate actions taken by a major international government,” Kohlmann said.

    “The last time there was an outage of this duration, it was later revealed to be the work of British government hackers intent on delaying the distribution of the English-language Inspire Magazine produced by Al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula in June 2010,” he added.

    Hacker attack cripples al-Qaida web communications

    Kohlmann speculated that the outage could be an attempt to prevent the circulation of a footage taken by Mohamed Merah, the Islamist extremist who recorded his gun attacks in France that killed seven people, including three children shot dead at close range.

    Before Merah was killed in a gunfight with police at his Toulouse apartment on Thursday, he told investigators he had posted his footage on the web. However, the video has not yet surfaced.

    "It is impossible to say for certain, but these sorts of outages seem to be most often tied to the release of high-profile terrorist media," Kohlmann said. "There is nothing more hotly-anticipated right now among hardcore jihadists than a video recording of the reprehensible acts allegedly carried out in France."

    The Department of Defense did not immediately comment on the outages.

    14 comments

    It feels good that someone is striking back at the evil represented by al-Qaida.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: france, al-qaida, shootings, featured, forums, cyber-attack
  • 9
    Jan
    2012
    3:49am, EST

    US expels Venezuela diplomat after cyber-attack allegations

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    Venezuela's consul general in Miami was ordered Sunday to leave the United States after allegations surfaced that she discussed possible cyber-attacks on U.S. soil.

    The State Department said it had declared the diplomat, Livia Acosta Noguera, persona non grata and given her until Tuesday to leave the country.

    Javier Caceres / AP, file

    Venezuela diplomat Livia Acosta Noguera, pictured earlier.


    State Department spokesman Mark Toner said the Venezuelan government was notified of the decision on Friday, giving her 72 hours to depart under standard diplomatic procedure. There was no immediate reaction from the Venezuelan government.

    Toner would not discuss the reason for the expulsion, but said it was done in accordance with Article 23 of the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations. That article does not require the expelling state to explain its decision.

    The move follows an FBI investigation into allegations contained in a documentary aired by the Spanish-language broadcaster Univision last month.

    According to the documentary, "The Iranian threat," Acosta discussed a possible cyber-attack against the U.S. government when she was previously assigned as a diplomat in the Venezuelan Embassy in Mexico.

    • STORY: Chavez's "Alo Presidente" returns to Venezuelan TV

    The documentary was based on recordings of conversations with her and other officials, and also alleged that Cuban and Iranian diplomatic missions were involved.

    Citing audio and video obtained by the students at the National Autonomous University of Mexico, Univision said Acosta was seeking information about the servers of nuclear power plants in the U.S.

    After the documentary aired, the State Department said the allegations were "very disturbing" and officials said the FBI had opened an investigation into the matter.

    The New York Times reported that there was no indication American officials had been able to substantiate the allegations aired by Univision.

    However, it said, the decision to expel the diplomat coincided with the Obama administration's expression of disapproval for Venezuela's willingness to maintain friendly relations with Iran.

    • STORY: Venezuela's Chavez: Did US give Latin American leaders cancer?

    Venezuela's leader, Hugo Chavez, expelled the American ambassador to Venezuela, Patrick D. Duddy, in September 2008, charging that the United States was backing a group of military officers plotting a coup against him.

    In response, the United States expelled the Venezuelan ambassador.

    Despite the breakdown in diplomatic relations, the two countries continue to have deep economic ties. Venezuela is the fourth-largest supplier of crude oil to the United States, the NYT said.

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Chinese try to put lid on Western-style TV
    • Fitness club's Auschwitz ad sparks outrage
    • In Poland, unburying a nation’s Jewish past
    • Avalanche traps skiers at Swiss resort

    The Associated Press and msnbc.com staff contributed to this report.

    67 comments

    "Univision said Acosta was seeking information about the servers of nuclear power plants in the U.S." If true, disturbing indeed and her expulsion would be entirely justified.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: venezuela, terrorism, chavez, diplomat, latin-america, featured, cyber-attack

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