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Al Qaeda terror mag Inspire celebrates Boston Marathon bombings

The aftermath of a bomb blast near the finish line on Boylston Street.

The aftermath of a bomb blast near the finish line on Boylston Street. (EPA)

The latest issue of al Qaeda's online terror mag Inspire features the Boston Marathon bombings.

The latest issue of al Qaeda’s online terror mag Inspire features the Boston Marathon bombings. (
)

A radical Islamic magazine celebrated the Boston Marathon bombings and warned Americans that more deadly attacks are inevitable.

Inspire, known as the Vanity Fair of terrorism, also tried to parlay recent ricin-laced letters sent Congress into amping up American fear.

Those recent terrorist acts “prove that your security has lapsed and that the attacks against you are taking a course that nobody can control… [So] save yourselves if you care for your own skin,” according to the publication.

The terrorist mag also mocks US security, presumably local police and FBI agents, for failing to stop these evil acts.

“O American people, your security will not be attained by denying security to other peoples, attacking them or oppressing them,” according to Inspire.

“Your security is in the hands of the fools among you who rule you with oppression and aggression. Know that oppression and aggression come back upon the heads of those who use them.”

The magazine gained notoriety last month when surviving Boston bombing suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev told investigators that he and his brother Tamerlan learned how to make pressure-cooker explosives by reading Inspire.

Tamerlan Tsarnaev was killed in a police shootout, four days after the marathon attack.

Dzhokhar Tsarnaev was wounded and captured later that night. He’s been charged with using weapons of mass destruction.

Three people were killed at the Boston Marathon, in two blasts near the finish line. One of the brothers murdered an MIT police officer just before the final shootout with police in Watertown, Mass.