What kind of perks do they offer? Life insurance? A retirement package? Secure employment for life?

DUBAI (Reuters) – Al Qaeda has put job advertisements on the Internet asking for supporters to help put together its Web statements and video montages, an Arabic newspaper reported.

The London-based Asharq al-Awsat said on its Web site this week that al Qaeda had “vacant positions” for video production and editing statements, footage and international media coverage about militants in Iraq, the Palestinian territories, Chechnya and other conflict zones where militants are active.


The paper said the Global Islamic Media Front, an al Qaeda-linked Web-based organization, would “follow up with members interested in joining and contact them via email”.

The paper did not say how applicants should contact the Global Islamic Media Front.

Al Qaeda supporters widely use the Internet to spread the group’s statements through dozens of Islamist sites where anyone can post messages. Al Qaeda-linked groups also set up their own sites, which frequently have to move after being shut by Internet service providers.

The advertisements, however, could not be found on mainstream Islamist Web sites where al Qaeda and other affiliate groups post their statements.

Asharq al-Awsat said the advert did not specify salary amounts, but added: “Every Muslim knows his life is not his, since it belongs to this violated Islamic nation whose blood is being spilled. Nothing should take precedence over this.”

The Front last month launched an Internet news broadcast called Voice of the Caliphate, which it said aimed to combat anti-Qaeda “lies and propaganda” on major international and Arab television channels such as CNN and Al Jazeera.

Al Qaeda and other groups have increasingly turned to the Internet to win young Muslims over to their war against Western-backed governments in Arab and Muslim countries.

Islamist insurgents fighting U.S. forces and the U.S.-backed government in Iraq have often posted slick montages of their military activities, including beheadings of hostages, on the Internet where they spread through dozens of Islamist sites.



  1. A Cole says:

    welll, mebbe their recruiting office is at the University of Oklahoma – and WHY hasn’t THAT story been reported on more in the MSM?

  2. GregAllen says:

    One of the big mysteries, to me, is how the radicals manage to recruit these suicide killers.

    I’ve seen only a couple of articles directly interviewing these guys… )one was in Time, if I remember corrrectly.) I’ve always suspected that it is something like what the US cults were doing in the 70s and 80s (Patty Hearst, for instance) and these articles confirmed that.

    It can’t be too hard, considering that they seem to find plenty of “volunteers.”

  3. John Schumann says:

    I wouldn’t mind collecting the $25 million for finding Osama Bin-Laden, but have been put off by the whole hiking around desolate foreign mountains thing. Maybe a little studio time, maintaining a web site, etc. would be a better way.

  4. Very sad illustrates the power of deception. But the truth is more powerful. I would hate to be the recruiter coming before God at the final judgement.

  5. Mike Voice says:

    A sad reflection on me – I know – but every time I see a picture of adults encouraging kids to dance around like that – with fake explosives around their waist, pushing a fake detonator button – I wish I could make the explosives and detonator real.

    They apparently like the idea of “dishing it out”, I’d like to see what they think of “taking it”.

  6. Wizard of Odds says:

    Were these the jobs they were offering to former dot-com era workers? …


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