Skip to Content, Navigation, or Footer.
Saturday, May 4
The Indiana Daily Student

world

Jihad 'manual' details terror steps

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan -- Poison gas. Explosives. Hand-to-hand combat. Knives. And religious exhortations. \nThe 11-volume "Manual of Afghan Jihad," or holy war, makes chilling reading, a how-to guide to what it calls the "basic rules of sabotage and destruction." \nMost of the information can be gleaned from Internet Web sites, experts say, and another manual, written for Muslim operatives abroad and not part of the 11-volume set, was discovered last year during an investigation of Osama bin Laden. \nBut intelligence analysts from two Western countries who read part of the "Manual of Afghan Jihad," and who spoke on condition of anonymity, said its highly technical detail, including diagrams, represents a new level of sophistication in the training apparatus of bin Laden's network. \nThe volumes were obtained by The Associated Press from a former Afghan guerrilla who said he got them from a Libyan fighter. He said the Libyan, who had fallen out with his comrades, stole them in July from the headquarters of bin Laden's organization in Kandahar, also the home base of Afghanistan's Taliban rulers. \nThe preface to Mouswada al Jihad al Afghani, the Arabic name of the manual, says it was compiled by "The Services Office of the Training Camps," and that this "Services Office" was founded by bin Laden. It is meant for use in the battle against "the enemies of our movement, the enemies of Allah, for any Islamic group." \nEach volume begins with dedications to, among others, bin Laden, who "took part in jihad with his life and money in Afghanistan ..."; Abdullah Azzam, an Palestinian killed during the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan; Islamic leaders in Afghanistan; and the people and government of neighboring Pakistan, which has long supported the Taliban regime. \nThe 11 volumes, ranging from 250 to 500 pages each, are written in Arabic, with occasional indexes in English. Excerpts were translated for AP. \nEach has a specific area of expertise. "What's your desire?" the text asks, then takes the reader step by step through the acquiring and mixing various explosive materials. Other sections tell how to blow up a plane, engage an armored vehicle, surround an airport, spy on a military base. \nA volume on hand-to-hand combat has a chapter on "how to threaten with a knife, piercing with a knife." In the Sept. 11 terror attacks in the United States, in which bin Laden is the suspected mastermind, hijackers were believed to have been armed with knives or box-cutters.

Get stories like this in your inbox
Subscribe