actual the device, the fuel from that device, the trigger from that device, or you can look at the metal in the plane itself to see if it s a sudden explosion all at one time or if it was torn and came over time. if the repair that they had done before had failed you would see this propagating over time. and you can tell that through met allergiy. i want to know why you say this is the most significant terror attack since september 11th? i think 9/11 if you exclude the school siege in russia in 2004, another reason is it can benefit isis, turbo charge their standing and supporting the global jihadi movement.
but this would turbo charge isis s popularity in the global jihadi movement, increase their standing. there s so much anger right now in the sunni muslim world against the russians. it s also targeting an aircraft, so it s a spectacular attack, which will hurt the egyptian economy, lead to more unemployment, lead to more fertile environment for terrorists recruitment. all sorts of reasons why this is a significant event. and may lead to geopolitical reverberations. russia may play a bigger role in the syria intervention, may pivot towards striking isis. that could play into isis s hands. you can see even more foreign fighters going to syria. so, bob, the united states and britain say it was likely an isis bomb attack. that s where they re leaning right now. egypt and russia say, no, not so fast. we don t buy it. is this a case of not believing that it was a bomb attack or not
this, this will turbo-charge their popularity in the global jihadi movement. isis is not thought to have the capability to get devices necessarily past security scanners. but what we re hearing from barbara s reporting is u.s. intelligence agencies believe it was either an insider at the airport or somehow lax security at the airport. that brings into play the group on the ground. that is the isis sinai affiliate. and one of the reasons why it s being perhaps so coy in its statement about the attack, saying you re going to need to figure out how we did this, is because they did have an insider somehow at the airport and they don t want to reveal the fact they may have some kind of mole at sharm el-sheikh airport. it may explain why the statements have so little detail in the last couple of days. i have so much more. this is massive. this would be, as you point out, the biggest terrorist attack since 9/11 as isis is now apparently claiming responsibility and u.s. intelligence suggesti
you say what? i think unfortunately the administration and most of the national media is now complicit in just denying the era that we re in. it s an era of digital prop began and online recruit independent the global jihadi movement. of course there s a lot we don t know about chattanooga. but we don t fight just wars against state actors. we have nonstate actors, and isis and al qaeda organizations like that are going to continue to evolve, and the administration pretends if there s not a work order that gives a specific terrorist a specific target at a specific moment, that maybe it s not connected to the globe jihadi movement. your listeners should look at the inspire magazine online and see the way these organizations are shifting toward awareness of soft targets and directing people to self-radicalize and attack. there s a lot we don t know about chattanooga yet but what we do know is that the era we re entering is going to have loot
we re jihadists, and you re ignoring us. you re not doing anything about it. okay. here is a great question. based upon what you re looking there in terms of what bin laden, what sort of stuff he has in his apartment there he seemed to be mainly focused on an almost generational hatred of his parents. that s always what he was against in saudi arabia, against us as his sort of economic superiors. i m going get those bastards. i m going to drive those people to chaos and bedlam and hell. where as the other people were talking about creating a caliphate. is he primarily negative in his purposes? where as some of these other people seem to be more into creating some sort of islamic new future? there seem to be different directions. honestly, i think bin laden recognized what worked. i think he recognized what missions and campaigns and slogans worked. when you re talking about a global jihadi movement made up of factions that have all their own leaders and personality beefs and mini m