AirAsia's QZ8501 from Surabaya to Singapore, taking the same code as the missing plane which took off 24 hours earlier, taxis at Changi Airport in Singapore December 29, 2014. Indonesia was set to resume at first light the search for an AirAsia plane
IN PHOTO: AirAsia's QZ8501 from Surabaya to Singapore, taking the same code as the missing plane which took off 24 hours earlier, taxis at Changi Airport in Singapore December 29, 2014. Indonesia was set to resume at first light the search for an AirAsia plane carrying 162 people from the Indonesian city of Surabaya to Singapore, which went missing on Sunday just after the pilot requested a change in course to avoid bad weather. Singapore said it had sent two naval vessels to help the Indonesian military look for the Airbus A320-200 operated by Indonesia AirAsia, adding a C-130 air force plane took part in the search on Sunday. Reuters/Edgar Su

Terror group Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) released a magazine right smack on Christmas, but it didn't bear any well-filled greeting of peace. Instead, the magazine, ironically named 'Inspire,' laid down 37 pages on how to make a powerful bomb enough to bring down commercial passenger planes.

The online publication's cover story was titled "Destination airport, and Guess What's on the Menu?" Explicitly mentioned as targets were Delta, United, Continental, American Airlines, British Airways, easyJet and AirFrance. SITE Intelligence Group said the document was likewise posted on AQAP's Twitter account on Dec 24, 2014, and was provided in PDF, video, and images formats. It was also uploaded on YouTube.

The recipe for "The Hidden Bomb," the magazine said, is a revised version of the underwear bomb that Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab attempted to ignite on Christmas Day in 2009. The revised had been designed to elude metal detectors, dogs' and chemical sniffers at airports. The manual was accompanied by a three-minute, 12-second promotional video for its bomb-making and security-bypassing manuals. The writer strongly suggested hiding the bomb where TSA "do not reach and have no right to touch or pat." This time, the real goal of the copycat bomb, according to breitbart.com, is not just simply to elicit massive deaths but to "crush the enemy's economy, presumably by making people afraid to fly."

Apart from pursuing global aviation disasters, the magazine promoted more lone wolf jihad attacks, specifically targeting "high-profile economic personalities" and "wealthy entrepreneurs." Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke and Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates were mentioned. The World Trade Center, banks and forex were also listed.

A spokesman from the UK Home Office told The Mirror the agency is aware of the publication, and that police and security agencies are now making the appropriate actions. "National security and protecting the public is our priority. Our comprehensive counter-terrorism strategy includes measures to remove terrorist material hosted online, prevent radicalisation and protect the UK from acts of terrorism."