Story highlights
- Al-Shabaab propaganda video tries to lure fighters with scenes of African hunting safari
- Driven from Somalia’s urban areas, terror group still manages to strike civilian, military targets
- Expert: Militants need “better propaganda outreach precisely when they’re suffering from manpower problems”
November 5, 2015 | (CNN)The hunter slips through tall grass in a green forest, closing in on a herd of giraffes. Shots ring out, and he machine-guns down one of the majestic animals.
But he’s no regular big game hunter in Africa.
He’s a jihadi militant — on safari.
The shooting is just one of the surreal scenes in the latest of a series of high-definition videos called “Front Lines” that al Qaeda-linked Somali insurgent group Al-Shabaab uses to recruit members. The U.S. government designated the militant group a terrorist organization in 2008.
But this video is different from earlier ones. It features young men — with their faces blurred — diving off fallen trees into rivers and laughing and joking in Arabic and Somali. Several clips show the richness and beauty from the location where they say they are operating. The narration says it is inside Kenya, Somalia’s neighbor.
“Don’t be deceived into believing that when people fight jihad they are accompanied by hunger,” one man says in Swahili. He wears a camouflaged balaclava, with ammunition wrapped around his waist like a belt. He gestures at the bloodied buffalo at his feet. “Just look at the meat here,” he bellows. “What are you waiting for?”
The video also quotes Osama Bin Laden’s supposed mentor, Abdullah Azzam, with a slick graphic: “You eat, drink and hunt for free. Not in Bangkok or Los Angeles, or paying $500 a night at a London hotel. It is an entertaining journey of tourism and hunting. Indeed, the tourism of my nation is jihad.”
Terror expert Matt Bryden told CNN that the video was “one of their less sophisticated pieces of propaganda.”
“Every scripted speech by a fighter on screen seems to be shot next to the carcass of a game animal that they are about to eat. It would surprise me if this ‘come and eat all this meat’ sort of the ‘paradise of nyama choma’ (Swahili for “roasted meat”) pitch will actually appeal to an East African audience,” Bryden said from Kenya’s capital, Nairobi
He said the nearly 17-minute video is targeting two population groups because some shots focus on two light-skinned fighters and many of the Al-Shabaab members speak on camera in Swahili, a national language in both Kenya and Tanzania.
“It seems there are two audiences: There’s the game-meat eating audience, possibly aiming for here in East Africa, and then there’s the adventure tourism audience of elsewhere, likely the West,” Bryden said. “I would be surprised if this was successful. I don’t think this footage is any more compelling than those images of combat, of scarf-wearing fighters in Somalia or Syria. By linking fighting the jihad with dark safari imagery — I think there is probably only a very small audience for that.”
Fighting for Al-Shabaab may have lost some appeal
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