New York Post

Crude recipe for a dirty dud

- By LARRY CELONA, SHAWN COHEN and RUTH BROWN

The Port Authority bomber fashioned his crude explosive device out of pipe, a battery, sugar and Christmas-tree lights, following instructio­ns in an online Islamist propaganda publicatio­n, law-enforcemen­t sources said.

The homemade weapon, allegedly strapped to Akayed Ullah with Velcro and plastic ties and hidden under his jacket, went off undergroun­d near the Port Authority Bus Terminal at around 7:20 a.m. Monday.

But the bomb was apparently a bust — and did not properly detonate because it was poorly constructe­d, sources said.

If it had worked, it could have caused serious destructio­n.

“Fortunatel­y, the device he had didn’t function as he intended,” a senior lawenforce­ment official said.

Instead, the blast seriously injured just Ullah himsef, and left three others with only minor wounds.

The bomber, sources said, got the explosive recipe from reading Inspire magazine — al Qaeda’s Web-based English-language publicatio­n, founded by the late American Islamist Anwar al-Awlaki and called “the Vanity Fair of terrorism.”

The Internet has proven to be a powerful tool for terror organizati­ons seeking to radicalize and recruit young men in the United States. A New America study of 129 US militants found that 101 frequently download and share extremist propaganda.

“Militants in the United States today become radicalize­d after reading and interactin­g with propaganda online, and generally have little or no physical interactio­n with other extremists,” the group wrote in a September report.

Many other attackers also got their bomb-building instructio­ns from the slickly-produced Inspire, which features an “open-source jihad” section.

Manhattan resident José Pimentel was busted in 2011 after constructi­ng a pipe bomb per Inspire’s instructio­ns, which featured a detailed how-to across eight pages in one edition.

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