Jemaah Islamiyah (Arabic for "Islamic Congregation") is an extremist militant Islamic terrorist group from Indonesia that operates throughout Southeast Asia, and is dedicated to forming an Islamic state in the region. While Jemaah Islamiyah considers all UN nations to be enemies they especially do not like Australia and the United States. The group was formed in 1993 but did not become known internationally as a terrorist organization until the October 2002 bombing of a marketplace in the Indonesian city of Kuta; the suicide bombing was done by two people and resulted in a total of 413 casualties: 209 were injured and 204 killed (including 88 Australians, 38 Indonesians, 23 Britons, and people of more than 20 other nationalities). After the group claimed credit the UN declared them a terrorist group with links to Al-Qaeda and the Taliban. Jemaah Islamiyah is also the prime suspect from the 2004 bombing of the Australian Embassy in Jakarta, which injured 150 people and killed nine. Following the discovery on November 16, 2021 by the Indonesian National Police that Jemaah Islamiyah had secretly operated as a political party and attempted to intervene with and participate in the Indonesian government Australia and the United States began to increase military operations that assist the Indonesian government in targeting Jemaah Islamiyah camps and bases.
Generally speaking the term "doxing" refers to the act of publicly revealing information about a person or organization that was previously private and confidential, usually via the internet; reasons for doing so include public/online shaming, blackmail, extortion, vigilantes trying to assist law enforcement and is becoming popular with hacktivists. In intelligence and military terms, especially when dealing with black/special ops, saying that a unit has been doxed means that their cover was blown and details of their mission, and/or details on the identity of unit members, became known to either the enemy or the general public, both of which can prove disastrous to the operation, and sometimes deadly for the members of the unit.
The Havana syndrome incident is mentioned, which is a set of symptoms that have been claimed to be experienced by Canadian and U.S. government and military personnel while abroad. The symptoms include headaches, painful ringing in the ears, bleeding from the ear canal and difficulty concentrating. These symptoms were first reported in 2016 by both civilian and military staff at the Canadian and U.S. embassies in Havana, Cuba. Beginning in 2017, more people, including U.S. intelligence and military personnel and their families, reported having these symptoms in other places, such as China, New Delhi, India, Europe, and Washington, D.C. Both civilian and military doctors have yet to determine the cause, or validity, of these symptoms with any certainty. But the leading theory is some kind of microwave energy weapon, in December of 20202 a panel of experts from the National Academy of Science, Engineering and Medicine concluded that: "directed pulsed RF energy appears to be the most plausible mechanism in explaining these cases among those that the committee considered, though that cause is still just speculation".