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Cartoon by Al Qaeda recruitment film for children is planned


The short movie previews young and dressed in uniforms of war raids, assassinations and participating in terrorist plots show the boys. This latest attempt by the terrorist organization to attract potential recruits is to use multimedia.

Quilliam said an analyst.
British intelligence officials view al Qaeda in the Arabian peninsula - as a major threat - the branch is active in Yemen and neighboring countries. A British man on Wednesday in southern Yemen car bomb placed under the driver's seat blew up, killing one and wounding several others.
Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh's defense nearly 33 years of autocratic rule, mass protests calling for the end of five months has fallen. Gulf States and Yemen's neighbors fear that al Qaeda and other armed groups to move operations to exploit the chaos.
Person for inspection and Marine Consulting Aden-based Arab company to work for.

, Benotman the maximum is approved.
The film clips are in Arabic.
The following speakers have won with a U.S. and British Muslims.
, A 15-year jail in May 2010 after he shot and wounded a British lawmaker student, Roshonara Chowdhury told police that al-Awlaki online lecture was listened to 100 hours. Al-Awlaki has done at Fort Hood, Texas, that left 13 dead in Detroit recently committed U.S. and British aircraft and attempted suicide in the face of 2009 tied to the shooting.

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LONDON (AP) — An al-Qaida affiliate says it plans to roll out what some have called a Disney-like animated cartoon aimed at recruiting children to the terror network.
Scenes from the proposed short film show young boys dressed in battle fatigues and participating in raids, killings and terror plots. It is the latest attempt by the terror organization to use multimedia to draw in potential recruits. Recently, a Yemen-based extremist group released an online women's magazine with makeup and chastity tips.
News of the animated film was announced by a group called Abu al-Laith al-Yemen on the Arabic-language al-Shamouk jihadist website, the London-based Quilliam Foundation reported Wednesday. Quilliam, which was formed by former jihadists and now aims to stamp out extremism, said it appears the group is affiliated with al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula.
"It's a Disney-like film aimed at kids that tells stories of the Prophet, stories of holy wars and anti-Western propaganda," said Noman Benotman, a former jihadist with links to al-Qaida who is now an analyst at Quilliam. "But I think it could backfire. Families will be angry that al-Qaida is directing this at their children."
British intelligence officials view al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula — which is the branch active in Yemen and nearby countries — as a significant threat. A bomb placed under the driver's seat of a British man's car blew up in southern Yemen on Wednesday, killing the man and wounding several others.
Security across Yemen has nearly collapsed after five months of mass protests calling for the end of autocratic President Ali Abdullah Saleh's 33-year rule. The U.S. and Yemen's Gulf neighbors fear al-Qaida and other armed groups could exploit the chaos to step up operations.
The British man, who has not been identified, was killed after a bomb planted in his sport utility vehicle blew up as he drove through the southern port city of Aden, security officials said. The man worked for the Aden-based Arab Company for Inspection and Marine Consulting.
Benotman said the group behind the film said it was in its final stages and planned to distribute it through websites and DVDs.
The movie makers released four takes of the movie through the Arabic-language web site and asked for feedback from forum users. Most approved, Benotman said.
The released film clips are in Arabic.
British intelligence and security officials have also warned of propaganda coming from U.S.-born Yemeni cleric Anwar al-Awlaki, who has won a following with English speakers in the Unites States and Britain with video sermons that talk about foreign policy and poor job prospects for young Muslims.
Roshonara Choudhry, a student jailed for 15 years after she stabbed and wounded a British lawmaker in May 2010, told police she had listened to 100 hours of al-Awlaki's online lectures. Al-Awlaki has also been tied to the 2009 shooting at Fort Hood, Texas, that left 13 dead, the attempted suicide bombing of a Detroit-bound airliner and other recent plots aimed at the U.S. and Britain.