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Hoffman adds that in these harder-to-find camps, "they're not training insurgents, they're training terrorists for deployment to the west ... Some of them may be deployed in the insurgency, but I think its obvious that their value to these groups is not fighting on the battlefield in South Asia but in being deployed back to their home or adopted countries as sleepers." In a recently released al-Qaida Internet video filmed inside one nameless camp, a camera pans across open laptop computers and lingers on a sleeping bag covered with explosives and electronic equipment. Shelves are filled with canisters holding unknown material, as well as electronic scales, often used to measure explosives. Hanging from the walls are a panoply of automatic weapons and other guns, and outside, spread across a blanket, lay rocket propelled grenade launchers and an ammunition display. According to the Washington-based Site Intelligence Group, which monitors militant Web sites and made the video available, the footage
-- posted on jihadist forums about a month ago -- supposedly shows a training camp in Pakistan's Waziristan region. The anonymous Web poster, according to Site, suggested the video showed a camp where slain al-Qaida chemical weapons expert Abu Khabab al-Masri trained militants. Al-Masri was killed in a drone strike in July 2008 -- one of as many as 50 such attacks in the last year conducted by the U.S. Most of the strikes have been coordinated by the CIA, but U.S. officials will not discuss or acknowledge details of the drone program. Between 100 and 200 hard-core al-Qaida leaders and operatives filter in and out of these small bases near the border, U.S. intelligence officials have said. But for westerners such as Zazi, the path to the training camps often begins with a religious pilgrimage of sorts, linked inside Pakistan to a charitable organization, missionary or school known as a madrassa. According to Brown, the madrassas, which are historically nonviolent organizations, have also had long-standing ties with jihadi groups. "They can be used as a revolving door by folks from the west who want to make it to training camps," said Brown. People within those nonviolent organizations, he said, will say, "if you want to be violent, you have to leave us, but here's an address and a letter of introduction" for a recruiter from one of the militant groups.
Officials stress that even though the terror training is now far more mobile than it once was, it remains no less sophisticated or deadly. "Certainly their ambition is to mount headline-grabbing attacks, visual spectaculars," said Richard Barrett, coordinator of the monitoring team for the U.N.'s Al-Qaida and Taliban Sanctions Committee. "They are extremely suspicious of anyone coming in and are very careful of security, so it's quite difficult to make these contacts and to develop them." The militants, he said, "are patient people. They will wait for the tide to turn or a lucky break." ___ On the Net: Combating Terrorism Center at West Point: http://www.ctc.usma.edu/
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