Late Saturday, the ISIS Terrorist group put up a list of U.S. Officials that they wanted killed. A group of self-identified ISIS-affiliated hackers posted the “wanted to be killed” list included the names of current and former U.S. government officials.
The group, calling themselves the “Islamic State Cyber Army,” published what they claimed are names and addresses of people who have worked for the U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency, the FBI, the CIA, the National Counterterrorism Center, the National Guard and other American organizations and agencies. In addition, they also posted what they said are names, addresses and pictures of U.S military personnel who have served in Kuwait, Qatar, Iraq and Afghanistan.
In August, the same group allegedly posted information about U.S soldiers and officials on social media accounts affiliated with the terrorist group. At that time, ISIS called on supporters to carry out lone wolf attacks against American soldiers. A review of the names and addresses showed that at least some of them were previously posted online. This would suggest that the hackers simply recompiled already-available information to create the “new” list.
In their diatribe, the hackers said the lists were posted in retaliation for a recent Anonymous attack that targeted ISIS-affiliated Twitter accounts and appeared to shut down one of the group’s online forums for several hours.
The names on Sunday’s list were placed alongside other threats. “Expect us tomorrow at 7 p.m Mecca time,” a post on an ISIS-affiliated Twitter account said on Saturday. A video on another account that was allegedly produced by “hackers of the Islamic State” declared that any country fighting the group is a legitimate target. “We will spy on you and leak your (information) and take your money,” the video, posted to a now-suspended Twitter account, said. “Yours and your families’ information and secrets are not secure anymore.”
Over the weekend, Anonymous said ISIS was planning attacks in Paris and at a WWE Survivor Series event in Atlanta, Georgia on Sunday, but then said in a later tweet it didn’t know where rumors of the possible attacks came from. It was unclear if the lists were connected to reports about the allegedly planned assaults.
Read more at http://universalfreepress.com/isis-posts-kill-list-of-u-s-officials/