HAMPARAN PERAK, Indonesia - Though Jemaah Islamiyah has since abandoned their old tactics, saying too many Muslim civilians were among the victims, members of a violent offshoot led by the late bomb-making expert Nordin Top continued to carry out near-annual strikes on embassies, beach-side restaurants and glitzy hotels, killing more than 60.
But the attacks have been far less deadly, in part because hundreds of suspects have been arrested and convicted - making the government and its security forces yet another target.
Source: World AP
- Indeed, the discovery of a new terror cell's jihadi training camp in westernmost Aceh province in February made it clear the game was about to change.
- Several arrested militants said they wanted to punish the state for lending support to the U.S.-led war on terrorism, said Maj. Gen. Ansyaad Mbai, the head of the newly formed National Anti-terrorism Agency.
- Their weapons of choice were guns, not bombs, he said, so they could be more precise.
- Sidney Jones, a leading international expert on Southeast Asian terrorist groups, said the Aceh cell - which brought together militants from different networks - has been influenced in part by the Middle East.
- "They have a long-term strategy of building an Islamic state and Muslim officials who hinder that objective are the enemy and need to be confronted," she said.
- "That doesn't mean attacks on foreigners are a thing of the past. But for now, at least, police appear to be the number one target."
- The attack on the police precinct- financed by a series of deadly armed robberies of banks and money changers that has netted more than $127,000 since April - has been billed by militants as a warning of what is yet to come.
- Militants also have warned of high-profile assassinations, saying President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono topped their list.
- Extremists, better known for targeting Western nightclubs and hotels, are now going after Indonesia's state. And for the first time in more than a decade, the army has waded into the fight.
- "It happened so fast, there was no way to react," said Irsol, the chief detective at the precinct on Sumatra island, who narrowly escaped the midnight assault by turning off the lights and hiding in the bathroom.
- By the time the militants had sped off, one of his friends was sprawled on the floor with a hole in his head and 10 others in his arms and chest. Another friend was slumped over his computer, and a third lay motionless in a pool of blood in front of a holding cell.
- "It was like they were sending a message to police and soldiers everywhere," said Irsol, who like many Indonesians goes by only one name. Still shaken after the Sept. 22 strike, he said the message was simple: "Watch out ... you're next."
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