A couple of interesting articles that provide some possible good news: the terrorist bandits are splitting amongst themselves…
First, this article at The New Republic claims that OBL’s minions are turning against him.
In January 2007, under a veil of secrecy, he [former jihadist Noman Benotman] flew to Tripoli in a private jet chartered by the Libyan government to try to persuade the imprisoned senior leadership of his former group to enter into peace negotiations with the regime. He was successful. This May, Benotman told us that the two parties could be as little as three months away from an agreement that would see the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group formally end its operations in Libya and denounce Al Qaeda’s global jihad. At that point, the group would also publicly refute recent claims by Al Qaeda that the two organizations had joined forces.
It also mentions (the UK’s) Usama Hassan’s turn against him and his group.
“At the time I was very anti-American. … It was all black and white for us. I used to be impressed with bin Laden. There was no other leadership in the Muslim world standing up for Muslims.” When September 11 happened, Hassan says the view in his circle was that “Al Qaeda had given one back to George Bush.”
Still, as Al Qaeda continued to target civilians for attacks, Hassan began to rethink. His employment by an artificial intelligence consulting firm also integrated him back toward mainstream British life. “It was a slow process and involved a lot of soul-searching. … Over time, I became convinced that bin Laden was dangerous and an extremist.” The July 2005 bombings in London were the clincher. “I was devastated by the attack,” he says. “My feeling was, how dare they attack my city.”
Then this article in the New Yorker:
Now Fadl was announcing a new book, rejecting Al Qaeda’s violence. “We are prohibited from committing aggression, even if the enemies of Islam do that,” Fadl wrote in his fax, which was sent from Tora Prison, in Egypt.
Fadl’s fax confirmed rumors that imprisoned leaders of Al Jihad were part of a trend in which former terrorists renounced violence. His defection posed a terrible threat to the radical Islamists, because he directly challenged their authority. “There is a form of obedience that is greater than the obedience accorded to any leader, namely, obedience to God and His Messenger,” Fadl wrote, claiming that hundreds of Egyptian jihadists from various factions had endorsed his position.
[...]
“Dr. Fadl’s revisions and Zawahiri’s response show that the movement is disintegrating,” Karam Zuhdy, the Islamic Group leader, told me one afternoon, in his modest apartment in Alexandria. He is a striking figure, fifty-six years old, with blond hair and black eyebrows. His daughter, who is four, wrapped herself around his leg as an old black-and-white Egyptian movie played silently on a television. Such movies provide a glimpse of a more tolerant and hopeful time, before Egypt took its dark turn into revolution and Islamist violence. I asked Zuhdy how his country might have been different if he and his colleagues had never chosen the bloody path. “It would have been a lot better now,” he admitted. “Our opting for violence encouraged Al Jihad to emerge.” He even suggested that, had the Islamists not murdered Sadat thirty years ago, there would be peace today between the Palestinians and the Israelis. He quoted the Prophet Muhammad: “Only what benefits people stays on the earth.”
And finally this one from Fareed Zakaria
But the most significant, in the study’s view, is the “extraordinary drop in support for Islamist terror organizations in the Muslim world over the past five years.” These are largely self-inflicted wounds. The more people are exposed to the jihadists’ tactics and world view, the less they support them.
[...]
With every new terrorist attack, public support for jihad falls. “This pattern is repeated in country after country in the Muslim world,” writes Mack. “Its strategic implications are critically important because historical evidence suggests that terrorist campaigns that lose public support will sooner or later be abandoned or defeated.”
Indeed. When a normal human being hears about little girls having their heads severed in the name of this so-called “jihad” they will be sickened and want nothing to do with it or the sub-humans behind it. I hope that soon these people will be so thoroughly discredited (at their on hands) that their pool of recruits will completely dry up. It appears that it is slowly happening.
Filed under: The Culture of Denial and Pretense | Tagged: Jihad, Muslim, Terrorist

May Allah (swt) protect the innocent and spread true Islam! Ameen!
As-Salaamu ‘alaikum,
Usama Hasan turning against OBL is hardly a split in the ranks of the terrorists; he never was associated with him anyway. He is the son of Suhaib Hasan and was associated with the moderate part of the “Salafi” movement, i.e. neither Madkhali nor the Faisal/Abu Hamza mob.
Yusuf, why must you persist in ascribing Salafiyyah to Abdullah Faisal and Abu Hamza when they neither called to it nor use the term to refer to their way and methodology? Come on Yusuf this intellectual inconsistency with you is getting somewhat notorious!
AbdulHaq
Revolt Within Al Qaeda?
Aired: Tuesday, June 03, 2008 10-11AM ET
http://www.onpointradio.org/shows/2008/06/20080603_a_main.asp