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Iraq
Stolen US Cars Used in Iraqi Suicide Blasts
2006-09-01
US troops are finding stolen cars from the United States used in suicide attacks in Iraq, including attacks by the late Abu Musab Al Zarqawi. The FBI's counterterrorism unit has launched a broad investigation of US-based theft rings after discovering that some of the vehicles used in deadly car bombings in Iraq, including attacks that killed US troops and Iraqi civilians, were probably stolen in the United States, according to senior government officials.

Inspector John E. Lewis, deputy assistant director of the FBI for counterterrorism, told the Globe that the investigation hasn't yielded any evidence that the vehicles were stolen specifically for car bombings. But there is evidence, he said, that the cars were smuggled from the United States as part of a widespread criminal network that includes terrorists and insurgents.

Cracking the car theft rings and tracing the cars could help identify the leaders of insurgent forces in Iraq and shut down at least one of the means they use to attack the US-led coalition and the Iraqi government, the officials said.

The inquiry began after coalition troops raided a bomb-making factory in Fallujah last November and found a sport utility vehicle registered in Texas that was being prepared for a bombing mission.

Investigators said they are comparing several other cases where vehicles evidently stolen in the United States wound up in Syria or other Middle East countries and ultimately into the hands of Iraqi insurgent groups -- including Al Qaeda in Iraq, led by Jordanian-born Abu Musab Al Zarqawi.

Investigators believe the cars were stolen by local car thieves in US cities, then smuggled to waiting ships at ports in Los Angeles, Seattle, and Houston, among other cities. From there they are shipped to black-market dealers all over the world, including in places like Syria where foreign militants fighting in Iraq are thought to be transiting from countries across the region and where they gain critical logistical support.
I
n March of this year a Pakistani truck driver was arrested and confessed to transporting stolen cars from Syria into Iraq.

Stolen United Nations cars have also been used in suicide attacks against US troops in Iraq.

A US soldier on Sean Hannity today claimed that that Allied forces are still finding US cars in Iraq.
Posted by:GolfBravoUSMC

#14  How about loading up a favorite model with HE and then blowing the ship out of the water in route ?
Posted by: wxjames   2006-09-01 20:58  

#13  Start inspecting all containers entering Iraq. Sideline all arriving vehicles and secrete transponders coupled with inexpensive vibration detectors (accelerometers) on them. Monitor all of their destinations and pay especially close attention to when vehicles are static but the vibration detector is indicating. This will show when modification work is being performed on the vehicle.

Or simply hand-deliver each arriving vehicle to it's final address and note who it is. Tag the entire vehicle's body with glass micro-spheres or polymer flags and track car bomb remnants back to the delivery addresses.
Posted by: Zenster   2006-09-01 16:04  

#12  Go to France and steal Renaults. Ya won't even have to put bombs in them...
Posted by: tu3031   2006-09-01 15:48  

#11  Well, we could address the problem with better police work and reduction in stolen vehicles. Auto theft is rampant in many American cities, and one of the reasons (speaking as a former cop) is that departments don't make stopping it a priority. Usually the only way a car is recovered is if there's a BOLO and some 16 y/o punk is joyriding in it at 80 mph. Hard to miss. But the good old fashioned grind it out investigation that's required to stop the theft rings is not being emphasized. Why? I suspect because there's not as much revenue generating potential as there is in writing speeding tickets for 40 in a 35 zone.
Posted by: mcsegeek1   2006-09-01 15:34  

#10  The link is bad, but the Globe article dates from a year ago. I blogged the car found with a Texas inspection sticker in November 2004.
Posted by: Chuck Simmins   2006-09-01 14:21  

#9  3dc:while i like the thought, it would only take a short while before the 'big brother' syndrome would kick in and i am not wanting my daily movements tracked. its bad enough that living in a small town everybody already knows what you are up to, but these folks can be (loosely) labeled 'friends.' maybe a gps or rfid tag that can only be activated by the owner would work. other wise i gotta vote no on your proposal.
Posted by: USN, ret.   2006-09-01 14:17  

#8  stinky linky
Posted by: Captain America   2006-09-01 14:16  

#7  Yea, but don't tell anyone what the FBI is doing so we can catch them in the act.


sssshhh
Posted by: Captain America   2006-09-01 14:15  

#6  
BOLO: Ford Pinto.
Posted by: Master of Obvious   2006-09-01 13:10  

#5  Well most local police and DAs think that with insurance, its just low level property crime unworthy of resources. Even when caught and convicted the perp usually gets only a year or two. What was the old saying in Missouri, 'we hang horse thieves'?

It goes along with the degraded treatment of property by government. It's only things. No - actually it took some of my limited lifetime on this planet to accumulate enough resources to procure the 'thing'. The act of theft is stealing part of my life. And time on this planet is one thing that you can not get back.
Posted by: Ulumble Angeck2580   2006-09-01 12:58  

#4  Don't buy the brand new Dodge Nitro then...grmpfff
Posted by: Jaiper Thoting7791   2006-09-01 12:52  

#3  Things brings to mind a trend I've been seeing over the past two years. Nearly everyday on I-40, I see a caravan of 2 or 3 vehicles each towing an additional vehicle. It is rare that any of the vehicles have tags and 99.9% of the drivers are Hispanic. The caravan is heading west in every instance I can think of.
Posted by: psychohillbilly   2006-09-01 12:34  

#2  Time to smack Syria hard.
Posted by: Darrell   2006-09-01 12:11  

#1  Time to put GPS units into every engine computer and rfid tags everywhere on cars.
Posted by: 3dc   2006-09-01 11:39  

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