http://digbig.com/4mftt
"AS INDONESIA enters the bombing season — the time of year when for the past four years extremists have launched major terrorist attacks — experts are warning of the risk of another atrocity. But amid the alarm, there is a glimmer of good news from the front line on the war on terrorism. Jemaah Islamiah, the group blamed for the attacks carried out each year since the 2002 Bali bombings, has been weakened by intense police pressure and internal divisions.
The bad news is that Indonesia's most wanted man, the leader of JI's pro-bombing faction, Noordin Mohammed Top, remains on the loose and has forged new alliances with networks of extremists across the Indonesian archipelago. And according to experts, the setbacks he has faced and the diverse networks he's now using have complicated the counter-terrorism fight and possibly given him extra motivation to strike again this year."