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Home Front: WoT
New assessment warns of al-Qaeda attacks in the US
2005-08-05
Confidential government assessments say that Al Qaeda remains intent on attacking targets in the United States, and suicide bombings are clearly "a preferred method of attack among extremists" in the wake of terror attacks last month in London.

The July 7 attacks on the London transit system, as well as others in other countries, have prompted U.S. officials to reassess potential threats to targets in the United States.

Their conclusions, circulated among law enforcement officials by the Department of Homeland Security and the FBI, differ little from many earlier assessments since the Sept. 11 attacks but make clear that officials see Al Qaeda as a continued threat.

Although U.S. intelligence officials "do not believe the London attack necessarily presumes a similar attack against rail or mass transit targets in the United States, there has been consistent threat reporting for some time suggesting that terrorists may have an interest in targeting mass transit systems," according to a July 20 security bulletin.

A second bulletin, also after the London bombings, warned that in addition to bombs on trains and subways, Al Qaeda might seek to derail trains or crash trucks carrying flammable material into trains.

Intelligence officials are also concerned that terrorists linked to Al Qaeda or other terrorist groups may again turn to airplanes as a method of attack by sending operatives to flight training schools or by using "an increased number of operatives" in the aviation industry to evade tightened airport security measures.

Still another target considered vulnerable by intelligence officials are high-rise apartment buildings. The bulletin says Al Qaeda might consider renting rooms in a high-rise building and using natural gas as an explosive to destroy it. But it cautions that the feasibility of such a plot is questionable.

The bulletin suggests that fresh intelligence collected as recently as last spring showed that Al Qaeda "remains interested in striking the homeland to undermine U.S. security and damage the U.S. economy."

Since the London bombings, U.S. officials have tightened security at many mass transit systems and have been combing leads from New York to Oregon in search of possible connections to the attacks.

So far, officials say they have found no hard evidence to suggest any complicity or knowledge by anyone in the United States, nor have they found any evidence to suggest plans under way for an attack here.

"We have no specific credible information to indicate that an attack in the United States is imminent or that Al Qaeda operatives are in the United States to conduct a homeland attack," one of the intelligence bulletins concluded.

With federal officials seeking to provide local law enforcement officers with quicker and more useful information to guard against terror attacks, some local officials have become more aggressive in developing their own policies.
Posted by:Dan Darling

#1  
American citizens better not even think about defending themselves or we'll sue everylast one of them!
Posted by: ACLU   2005-08-05 12:39  

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