Speakers & Organizers   

Executive Council

Dr. Norman A. Bailey
Gen. Thomas McInerney  
Cdr. Richard Marcinko
Gen. Paul E. Vallely

Executive Board

Dr. Robert Katz,
Executive Director

John J. Loftus,
President

Clare Lopez,
Vice President

Advisory Board

Talia Adar
Brent M.P. Beleskey
Ilana Freedman
Dr. Gary Katz
Eugene Lebovitz
Alex Porter

2007 SPEAKERS

Dr. Richard Benkin
Prof. Louis Rene Beres
Col. Bill Cowan

Dr. Andrew M. Colarik
Col. Gordon Cucullu
Nonie Darwish
Drs. Jill Dekker
Dr. Rachel Ehrenfeld
Steve Emerson
Ilana Freedman
Dave Gaubatz
Jerry Gordon
Col. Jonathan Halevi
Joe Kaufman
Aaron Klein
Steven Lutz
Laura Mansfield
Cdr. Richard Marcinko
Ryan Mauro
Gen. Thomas G. McInerney
Richard Miniter
Bob Newman
Dr. William Radasky
Klaus Schmidt
Avi Shachar
Wayne Simmons
Khalsa Hari Singh
Gen. Paul E. Vallely

Secular Islam Summit:
(held concurrently and
in association with The
Intelligence Summit)

Whalid Phares
Shaker al-Nabulsi
Irshad Manji
Amir Taheri
Magdi Allam
Ibn Warraq
Fatemolla
Afshin Ellian
Wajeha Al-Huwaider
Banafsheh Zand-Bonazzi

2006 Speaker list

ADVISORY COUNCIL
Louis Rene Beres
Yossef Bodansky
Brent Budowsky
Col. Gordon Cucullu
Col. Bill Cowan
Nonie Darwish
Drs. Jill Dekker
Dr. Rachel Ehrenfeld
Brigitte Gabriel
Yoram Hessel
Tawfik Hamid
Gen. Thomas G. McInerney
Bahukutumbi Raman
Wayne Simmons
Robert Spencer
Gen. Paul E. Vallely

DIRECTORS
Dr. Robert Katz
Executive Director

John J. Loftus
President

Clare Lopez
Vice President

Lee Mason

MODERATORS
Chris Blackburn
Randall H. Lipson
Don Pitts

For Web Production
issues, please contact
Brent Beleskey
Rebecca Givner-Forbes
Intelligence Analyst, Terrorism Research Center
http://www.terrorism.com/
Biography
Speaker's Photo Rebecca Givner-Forbes is an intelligence analyst at the Terrorism Research Center. She focuses on terrorist groups sourced in the Arab world and Middle Eastern regional security in general. Her work includes translation and analysis of al-Qaeda and other terrorist statements and Arabic media. She graduated cum laude from the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University with a major in International Politics, concentrating in International Security. She studied Arabic at Georgetown and in Cairo, Egypt and Damascus, Syria. Previously, Rebecca worked at the National US-Arab Chamber of Commerce as an Arab-world business and economics analyst.



Session AB1: Session Name
February XX, Time
Online Jihad
Abstract:

In the past year, terrorists have made increasing use of the Internet. Insurgent attacks in Iraq and terrorist attacks in other parts of the world are often followed with postings of claims of responsibility, descriptions of details of operations, and occasionally videos of the attacks or biographies and interviews with the “martyrs” who execute them. Supporters worldwide offer back feedback, praise, and sometimes criticism. Analyses of international politics and radical Islamist strategy are also offered up by terrorist groups, radical Sheikhs, and supporters, allowing an insight into the world view, beliefs, and strategies of this movement. Discussion boards fill with advice and justifications – both religious and strategic – of striking various targets. Most recently, these message boards have also begun to cache considerable instructional materials for terrorist arts from bomb making to assassination, and show signs of providing forums for zealous but inexperienced aspiring Jihadists to receive advice from more practiced, knowledgeable counterparts.

Leaders and visionaries among the international al-Qaeda and Mujahideen movement have seen their traditional, secure communication lines disrupted by the Global War on Terror and will, therefore, turn increasingly to the Internet as a way to disseminate inspiration, ideology, and possibly even instruction to entrepreneurial cells with terrorist ambitions. Online comments from supporters and statements from visionaries reveal that al-Qaeda and its followers have elevated what is called the “Online Jihad” to almost an equal level of importance with physical world activities in support of terrorism.

This presentation will serve as a progress report for the online Jihad, evaluating al-Qaeda’s success in using the Internet to further global strategy and the operational objectives of ideological propagation, recruitment, indoctrination, training, and the execution of attacks. The shortcomings of al-Qaeda’s online Jihad will be discussed equally with its achievements, as well as the potential for future advancement of online Jihadist activities. Frank discussion of possible methods to thwart al-Qaeda’s presence online will be welcomed at the end of the presentation.