CIA Director Porter Goss' warning that al Qaeda might try to use "chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear weapons" in his Feb. 17 testimony to the Senate Intelligence Committee overshadowed a more urgent intelligence warning. At the same hearing, Vice Admiral James Loy, deputy secretary of Homeland Security, testified that al Qaeda has changed tactics for inserting terrorist teams into the United States.
According to Adm. Loy, al Qaeda plans to use Mexico's professional people smugglers known as coyotes to infiltrate terrorists across our southern border. Adm. Loy's information is based on recent interrogations and has been confirmed by ongoing counterterrorist operations.
This story ought to have led the news on every network. But Adm. Loy's Mexican bombshell didn't generate widespread media coverage because it was buried in written testimony instead of being delivered in telegenic soundbites. Al Qaeda's departure from its previous modus operandi of using terrorists with valid documents (the majority of September 11 hijackers fit into this category) means the organization intends to attack us using new methods for which we are unprepared.
Continued on Page 49
Posted by: Dan Darling ||
03/01/2005 1:00:59 AM ||
Comments ||
Link ||
[11133 views]
Top|| File under:
#1
Such a no-brainer. The fact that this is even under discussion shows how close we are to losing the WOT.
Posted by: Rex Mundi ||
03/01/2005 1:19 Comments ||
Top||
#2
And that happens it'll be all due to PC, and the desire for cheap labor.
#7
Oh, it is so aggravating when they try to tie the illegal immigrant problem, which has been argued continuously since the 1920s, with the "terrorists crossing our border" problem, which is "today, and right now". Putting the two together *guarantees* that our border will remain porous to terrorists! This is idiotic! Instead, we should pay a tiny amount of money to Mexicans citizens to inform on non-Mexicans trying to sneak across. America can then continue with its never-ending arguments about Mexican illegals. And no, I will tell you right now that you CANNOT close that border with anything short of 3 DIVISIONS of soldiers, at an obscene cost, perhaps $3 Billion dollars a MONTH. So, as emotionally gratifying as it might be to scream and wail, you must use some other means to solve a whole bunch of problems, not one big, ugly simple solution that won't work.
#8
looking at the bright side, Al-Q may be the catalyst that helps us to finally get a realistic grip on the 10,000 that daily cross our borders.
Not likely. As long as GWB has the idea in his head that Mexico is spme sort of partner and not a parasite, little will change on his watch. That is, until the next attack is traced back to an infiltration from Mexico, in which case he will be in really deep shit if it happens while he's still in office.
#9
I respectfully disgree, Moose. Strategy: Fences at the major points of entry, shift to the wide open desert where sensors can track and your numbers are bogus. Close the friggin border and tell Mexico to clean up at home, not shuffle herds here to send dollars home. Defeatist crap like yours we don't need. Resolve and a iron fist with our "ally" Mexico? We do need
Posted by: Frank G ||
03/01/2005 10:51 Comments ||
Top||
#10
Even then, 2b, that's so damn sad ... when you put it that way, yeah..you are right. That is really sad.
Anymoose there is no reason it has to be all or nothing. We can do both - short term solutions that work for catching terrorists today while continuing to work toward a long term solution for the overall program. I don't think Bush doesn't get it - I just think he's smart enough not to bite off something he knows he'd choke on.
#11
Fences at the major points of entry, shift to the wide open desert where sensors can track and your numbers are bogus.
I would support this sort of action, provided that enough BP officers are stationed in strategic areas to allow them to respond quickly to any detections with little possibility of overstretching, and most importantly, that relief stations (water and whatnot) are dismantled and subsequently PROHIBITED from being set up anywhere within a thirty mile area of the border.
#12
Agreed, BAR and Mexico has to pay for encouraging the illegals
Posted by: Frank G ||
03/01/2005 16:54 Comments ||
Top||
#13
When we deport people we should send them to Cancun.
Posted by: Mrs. Davis ||
03/01/2005 16:56 Comments ||
Top||
#14
..and Mexico has to pay for encouraging the illegals
Maybe the feds should slap a surcharge on all those wire transfers to Mexico, seeing as how a lot of the major banks are trying to make the procedure easier...
#15
We can not close the border just from our side alone.There needs to be an effort from the Mexican side.But that won't happen,because the Mexican government is tied up trying to put down the drug cartels.Simple enough to understand that much,in my mind.
(2005-02-28) -- As the Prime Minister of Lebanon announced the resignation of his government, the United Nations warned that crowds of protestors in Beirut have generated "dangerously high levels of carbon dioxide -- a deadly greenhouse gas."
"All of this mob chanting, shouting and incessant breathing in and out poses a threat to the environment in the region," said U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan. "Of course, we must blame George Bush's foreign policy, which has increased the aspirations of millions of people in the Arab world."
Mr. Annan said the fall of the Syrian-backed Lebanese government serves as a "painful reminder of the Bush administration's failure to cooperate with the global community and sign the Kyoto treaty on greenhouse gases."
Posted by: Steve from Relto ||
03/01/2005 9:51:45 AM ||
Comments ||
Link ||
[11129 views]
Top|| File under:
#1
"When will they ever learn that more greenhouse gases come from this than anywhere else"
Posted by: Boss E. deCow ||
03/01/2005 12:05 Comments ||
Top||
#2
Not to mention that you're average Krakatoa, or Pinatubo, or Mount St. Helens spews up 20,000 times more Pollutants than all of the output of 200 years of industry combined.
Posted by: Annie War ||
03/01/2005 14:51 Comments ||
Top||
A multi-volume chronology and reference guide set detailing three years of the Mexican Drug War between 2010 and 2012.
Rantburg.com and borderlandbeat.com correspondent and author Chris Covert presents his first non-fiction work detailing
the drug and gang related violence in Mexico.
Chris gives us Mexican press dispatches of drug and gang war violence
over three years, presented in a multi volume set intended to chronicle the death, violence and mayhem which has
dominated Mexico for six years.
Rantburg was assembled from recycled algorithms in the United States of America. No
trees were destroyed in the production of this weblog. We did hurt some, though. Sorry.