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Hello Friends:
What follows is probably the scariest thing you will ever
read. I think I was close to tears by the time I finished it.
What makes it so scary is the fact that, although it reads
like fiction, it is entirely plausable, and entirely a
function of George F. Bush's misguided policy in his two
stolen presidencies. It's written by someone who knows
him.
All too well.
It's a picture of the future.
We're not in it.
Tim
Ten Years Later
"Then the second wave of al-Qaeda attacks hit America."
A leading expert on counterterrorism imagines the future
history of the war on terror. A frightening picture of a
country still at war in 2011 by Richard A. Clarke
.....
This is a transcript of the Tenth Anniversary 9/11
Lecture Sunday, September 11, 2011 John F. Kennedy
School of Government Cambridge, Massachusetts Professor
Roger McBride
Dean, Honored Guests,
It is a great honor to be chosen to give this
tenth-anniversary lecture. This year, more than at any other
time since the beginning of the war on terror, I think we can
see clearly how that war has changed our country. Now that the
terror seems finally to have receded somewhat, perhaps we can
begin to consider the steps necessary to return the United
States to what it was before 9/11. To do so, however, we must
be clear about what has happened over the past ten years. Thus
tonight I will dwell on the history of the war on terror.
2001-2004: The Response to 9/11
aving ignored al-Qaeda until September 11, 2001, President
George W. Bush responded to the attack in three ways. First,
he ordered an end to the terrorist sanctuary in Afghanistan.
For five years thereafter a token U.S. military force assisted
the Kabul government in its attempts to rule the warlords and
suppress the Taliban and al-Qaeda. Second, he moved to
strengthen U.S. domestic law enforcement with the first
Patriot Act (a law that civil libertarians would find benign
from today's perspective) and the Department of Homeland
Security, which in those early years of the war on terror was
largely ineffectual.1 Third, Bush ordered the ill-fated
invasion and occupation of Iraq, which effectively turned his
administration into an active recruiting office for al-Qaeda
and other jihadi groups around the world.
The move against Afghanistan did set al-Qaeda and the
jihadi movement back. Although regional affiliates were able
to stage spectacular attacks in Riyadh, Istanbul, Bali,
Madrid, Baghdad, and elsewhere, and although there were twice
as many attacks worldwide in the three years after 9/11 as
there had been in the five years before that day, no
al-Qaeda-related attacks took place in the United States in
the years immediately following 9/11.
The several years without an attack on U.S. soil lulled
some Americans into thinking that the war on terror was taking
place only overseas. Few corporations increased security
spending. Americans increasingly questioned President Bush's
security policies, the Patriot Act, and Secretary of Homeland
Security Tom Ridge's ridiculed color codes. In the 2004
presidential election George W. Bush won a second term in part
by dismissing such issues as whether the mishandling of the
Iraq War had made us less secure, whether we had paid enough
attention to al-Qaeda, and whether we were adequately
addressing our vulnerabilities at home.
Then the second wave of al-Qaeda attacks hit America. Since
then we have spiraled downward in terms of economic strength,
national security, and civil liberties. No one could stand
here today, in 2011, and say that America has won the war on
terror. To understand how we failed to win, and exactly what
has been lost along the way, I want to look at the past seven
years in some detail.
2005: Return to the Homeland Battlefields
he U.S. government had predicted that future attacks, if
they came, would likely be on financial institutions, noting
that Osama bin Laden had issued instructions to destroy the
U.S. economy. Thus when the casinos were attacked, it was a
surprise. It shouldn't have been; we knew that Las Vegas had
been under surveillance by al-Qaeda since at least 2001.
Despite that knowledge casino owners had done little to
increase security, not wanting to slow people down on their
way into the city's pleasure palaces.2 Theme-park owners were
also locked into a pre-9/11, "it can't happen here" mindset,
and consequently were caught off guard, as New Yorkers and
Washingtonians had been in 2001. The first post-9/11 attacks
on U.S. soil came not from airplanes but from backpacks and
Winnebagos. They were aimed at places where we used to have
fun, what we then called "vacation destinations." These places
were particularly hard to defend.
Peter and Margaret Rataczak, of Wichita, Kansas, were the
first to die on June 29, 2005, in a new wave of suicide
attacks launched against the United States in retaliation for
the killing of Osama bin Laden that spring, and for the
continuing presence of U.S. troops in Iraq. These attacks were
every bit as well planned as those of 9/11 and, in typical
al-Qaeda fashion, used low-technology means to achieve maximum
public impact. What we know about the attacks' planning and
execution comes in large part from tourists who provided
photos and video from their travels. Without these images we
might never have known that the Rataczaks' killers were
non-Arab. It would also have been harder to discover that they
seem to have entered the United States by driving across the
border from Canada.3
In order to save money for the poker tables that night,
Peter chose to stay at an RV campground, parking his Winnebago
at around 4:00 p.m. Shortly thereafter a casually dressed
Asian couple approached the Rataczaks' secluded campsite with
a map unfolded in front of them. Only the birds heard the
silenced shots. The first murders by the group calling itself
al-Qaeda of North America had been carried out.
With the bodies in the back of the darkened camper, the
Asian couple drove back toward a safe house they had quietly
rented in the hills. (The landlord had no reason to suspect
they were fundamentalist Muslims; their religion was of no
concern to him. Nor, certainly, would his standard background
credit check have turned up their association with an
Indonesian al-Qaeda affiliate.) The man quickly backed into
the garage and loaded an ammonium nitrate device into the van.
His leader had said the device would force the unbelievers in
"Sin City" to realize that even in their ignorance they were
guilty of conspiring with the Zionists to destroy Islam. After
a good night's sleep and his morning prayers, the man
carefully helped the woman into her vest and belt before
leaving her to finish dressing and praying.
It was only an hour's drive to the city limits, and the man
was careful never to exceed the speed limit. State troopers at
the exit ramp to the city ignored the van. At 3:00 p.m. the
streets were packed as crowds wandered the Strip. On Tropicana
Avenue the man stopped briefly to let his partner out with an
exchange of nods and a whispered statement: "God is great."
The woman blended seamlessly into the flow of people walking
into the Florentine casino, looking like one of the millions
of annual visitors to Las Vegas from the Pacific Rim. She
seemed a little heavy for her frame, and the jacket she wore
seemed a little out of place in the heat, but the doormen, as
security videos later showed, didn't even give her a second
look. She had been there many times before.
The woman never hesitated. She walked to the roulette
table, fifty feet from the front door, and pushed a detonator,
blowing herself up. The explosion instantly killed
thirty-eight people who were standing and sitting at nearby
tables. The nails and ball bearings that flew out of the
woman's vest and belt wounded more than a hundred others, even
though slot machines absorbed many of the miniature missiles.4
Eighteen of the hundreds of elderly gamblers in the casino
suffered heart attacks that proved fatal when they could not
be treated fast enough amid the rubble.
Just seconds later the man drove his van into the lobby of
the Lion's Grand and detonated his cargo. This bomb was
designed to wreak tremendous damage that would remain in the
consciousness of the American people for years to come.
Whereas the damage done to the Florentine casino was repaired
in just under a month, the billion-dollar Lion's Grand was
closed for more than a year while security enhancements and
structural improvements were made. Losing the use of 5,034
rooms, plus casino gaming and concerts and other special
events, cost the Lion's Grand a million dollars a day, and
damaged its bond rating.
The long-term economic effects continue today: tourism in
Las Vegas has never returned to its pre-2005 level, and
unemployment in the city is at 28 percent.5
he attacks in Nevada occurred at almost the same time as
the ones in Florida, California, Texas, and New Jersey. Two
women strolling separately through Mouseworld's Showcase of
the Future detonated their exploding belts in the vicinity of
tour groups in the "Mexican Holiday" and "Austrian Biergarten"
exhibits. Similar attacks took place at WaterWorld, in
California; Seven Pennants, near Dallas; and the Rosebud
Casino, in Atlantic City. By the end of the day 1,032 people
were dead and more than 4,000 wounded. The victims included
many children and elderly citizens. Among the dead were only
eight terrorists, two each from Iraq, Indonesia, Pakistan, and
the Philippines.
The next morning CNN's Los Angeles bureau received a video
purporting to be from al-Qaeda of North America. On the tape
the group claimed responsibility for the incidents and pledged
that attacks would continue until America left the Middle
East. We can all recall the soft, steely voice in which the
chilling words were delivered: "We are not terrorists. We are
patriots trying to throw off the mantle of an oppressive
society. We do not look like you think we do. And we will kill
you until you leave our holy lands."
Eyewitnesses supported the recording's assertions, telling
investigators that some of the terrorists who had committed
these atrocities did not look like Arabs. Three of the
terrorists were women. The FBI, the Department of Homeland
Security, and the local authorities were momentarily stunned,
and began frantically trying to prepare for what they feared
were further imminent attacks. The DHS raised the nationwide
terror-alert level to red.
The social effect of the attacks was widespread. In
Detroit, northern New Jersey, northern Virginia, and southern
California armed gangs of local youths attacked mosques and
Islamic centers. At the request of local clerics, the governor
of Michigan ordered National Guard units into the city of
Dearborn and parts of Detroit to stop the vigilante violence
against Islamic residents.
The reaction from the White House and Congress was swift.
Patriot Act II, which had been languishing on Capitol Hill,
passed in July. As more evidence was made public, it became
increasingly clear that the attacks had been perpetrated by
terrorists who were in the United States illegally, either on
false passports or having overstayed their visas.6 Two were
Iraqis pretending to be South Africans, using passports that
had been stolen in Cape Town the year before.7 Others had
actually been picked up before the attacks for being "out of
visa status," but had been released because immigration
detention facilities were full.8
The attorney general sought broad emergency powers to
impose extended pre-arraignment detention, investigative
confinement, broader material-witness authority, and expanded
deportation authority. After the passage of Patriot Act II,
federal agents conducted large-scale roundups of illegal
immigrants and members of ethnic groups that were suspected of
hiding terrorists in their midst. Many citizens who had been
forcibly detained were held "with probable cause" for
allegedly "planning, assisting, or executing an act of
terrorism"; they were denied access to an attorney for up to
seven days, "by order of the judicial officer on a showing
that the individual arrested has information which may prevent
a terrorist attack."9 Many detainees, if they failed to
produce proof of citizenship or immigrant status, were moved
to new DHS illegal-immigration detention facilities for
further investigation and possible deportation. The camps were
in remote areas, including one in Arizona that ended up
holding 42,000 suspected illegals.10
Although the American Civil Liberties Union vigorously
condemned these roundups, most of the public accepted them as
not only a suitable precaution against possible future attacks
but also a brake on further vigilante violence.11 The fear
that follow-on attacks were likely was enough to satisfy the
judiciary that state and federal law enforcement should be
allowed to begin broad sweeps of communities suspected of
harboring sympathizers.
Roundups based on ethnicity succeeded only in enraging
local ethnic communities. This made it more difficult for the
authorities to enlist cooperation in either investigating hate
crimes or preventing future attacks from within these
communities. Despite earlier warnings from sympathetic foreign
officials, the U.S. government, with the support of federal
judges and the American people, deemed these detentions the
only way to hold those who had collaborated with the suicide
bombers and to capture those who might carry out the next
attack.12 In short, "the gravest imminent danger to the public
safety," which had justified the internment of
Japanese-American citizens during World War II, was invoked
again to support the widespread use of pre-trial detentions
and material-witness warrants.13
Over the objections of the Pentagon, Congress had in 2004
created a cabinet-level director of national intelligence and
given the position budgetary control of all intelligence
agencies and operational control over all agencies except the
Defense Intelligence Agency and the armed services' individual
intelligence branches. By this point most Americans were well
aware of the lapses in U.S. intelligence produced by a lack of
spies in the Middle East.14 Not long after 9/11 George Tenet,
then the director of the CIA, had suggested that it would take
at least five years to raise the CIA's human-intelligence
capacity to where it needed to be. Although the new law gave
the national intelligence director the muscle to manage all
U.S. intelligence, Tenet turned out to have been right: it
took more than five years to train even a fraction of the new
field agents needed for a global war on terror.
One price the United States has paid for security is a
significant decrease in foreign students at our colleges and
universities, effectively preventing young people from all
over the world from meeting one another and building bridges
between warring ideologies. Foreign attendance is now down by
more than a third from what it was in 2001, resulting in the
closing or consolidation of some graduate programs in science
and engineering, and producing severe budget cuts in others.15
At the same time, research institutions in France, England,
India, China, and Singapore have all grown. Many of us are now
using the Asiapac operating system on our laptops and taking
drugs imported from such foreign companies as Stemlabs and
EuroPharmatica.
he summer and autumn of 2005 passed without further
attacks. By Thanksgiving many Americans believed what
government spokesmen were telling them: that the attacks had
been the work of eight isolated terrorists, the last of Khalid
Sheikh Muhammad's al-Qaeda cells in America.
The government spokesmen were wrong.
On December 2, 2005, the Mall of the States became a victim
of a low-tech terrorist attack. In the preceding years malls
in Israel, Finland, and the Philippines had been attacked; so
far, American malls had been spared. As security professionals
knew, this was partly luck; such targets are difficult to
protect.16 In June of 2004, after learning of intelligence
reports indicating that the Madrid train bombers had
originally planned to strike a suburban shopping area, Charles
Schumer, a Democratic senator from New York, called for
increased funding to secure U.S. shopping centers and malls.17
Congress chose instead to focus on defending other targets
against more-sophisticated terrorist acts.
The 4.2-million-square-foot mall, located in Minnesota, was
globally recognized as the largest entertainment and retail
complex in America, welcoming more than 42 million visitors
each year, or 117,000 a day. On this day neither the 160
security cameras surveying the mall nor the 150 safety
officers guarding it were able to detect, deter, or defend
against the terrorists.18 Four men, disguised as private
mall-security officers and armed with TEC-9 submachine guns,
street-sweeper 12-gauge shotguns, and dynamite, entered the
mall at two points and began executing shoppers at will.
It had not been hard for the terrorists to buy all their
guns legally, in six different states across the Midwest. A
year earlier Congress had failed to reauthorize the
assault-weapons ban. Attorney General John Ashcroft had
announced a proposal, on July 6, 2001, to have the FBI destroy
records of weapons sales and background checks the day after
the gun dealer had the sale approved. This meant that if a gun
buyer subsequently turned up on the new Integrated Watch List,
or was discovered by law-enforcement officials to be a felon
or a suspected terrorist, when government authorities tried to
investigate the sale, the record of the purchase would already
be on the way to the shredder.19
The panic and confusion brought on by the terrorists'
opening volleys led many shoppers to run away from one pair of
murderers and into the path of the other, leading to more
carnage. Two off-duty police officers were cited for bravery
after they took down one pair of terrorists with their
personal weapons, before the local SWAT team could get to the
scene. Meanwhile, one of the other terrorists used his cell
phone to remotely detonate the rental van he had driven to the
mall; this resulted in even more chaos in the parking garages.
Once the SWAT team arrived, it made short work of the two
remaining terrorists. By the time the smoke had cleared, more
than 300 people were dead and 400 lay wounded. In the
confusion of the firefight the SWAT team had killed six mall
guards and wounded two police officers.20
At the same moment, at the Tower Place, in Chicago; the
Crystal Place, in Dallas; the Rappamassis Mall, in Virginia;
and the Beverly Forest Mall, in Los Angeles, the scene was
much the same: four shooters and hundreds of dead shoppers.
America's holiday mall shopping effectively ended that day, as
customers retreated to the safety of online retail.
The December attacks were achieved with a relatively small
amount of ammonium nitrate, some Semtex plastic explosive, and
a few assault weapons in the hands of twenty people who were
willing to die. Some of the terrorists were Iraqis, members of
the fedayeen militias, who had been radicalized by the
American presence in Baghdad. Others were Saudis. Only one was
captured alive, at the Rappamassis Mall. Through continued
questioning of him, said to involve CIA-trained interrogators,
it was discovered that more shootings were planned for the New
Year. Acting on this information, FBI agents, in concert with
the Texas Rangers and the Seattle police, thwarted two
follow-up attacks, aimed at New Year's Eve festivities on
Sixth Street in Austin and in the Pike Place Market area of
Seattle.
As the bloody year ended, the president pointed to our
having prevented those two attacks as evidence that we had
turned a corner, and that the United States would be safer in
2006.21
2006: Mobilizing the Home Front
ell before the end of the first quarter of 2006 the
economic effects of the previous year's attacks were clear.
The closing of casinos and theme parks around the country had
increased only regional unemployment, but the national effect
on the already ailing airline industry was significant. The
pre-Christmas attacks on shopping centers had been the most
damaging of all. Economic indicators in the first quarter of
2006 showed the dramatic ripple effect of the collapse of
retail shopping on top of the earlier economic devastation of
recreational travel: GDP growth was negative, and national
unemployment hit 9.5 percent in January.22
There were rumors that in his State of the Union speech the
president would call for the military to take on more security
missions at home and would federalize all National Guard
units. Acting to pre-empt him, eighteen governors met and
announced that they were abolishing their National Guard
forces and creating state militias, which could not be put
under Washington's control and could not be sent overseas.23
Speaking for the rebellious governors, Rhode Island's chief
executive said, "The promises of more security at home have
yet to be backed by concrete action. Our modern-day Minutemen
are needed in Woonsocket, not Fallujah. My problem is empty
shopping malls, not whether Shiites or Sunnis or Kurds or
Turkmen run this or that part of Iraq." She then ordered the
first units of the Ocean State Militia to begin screening cars
and shoppers at three shopping centers. Rhode Islanders
emerged from their homes in response.
In January, when the president actually delivered the
speech, he called for immediate passage of Patriot Act III.
"We are a nation at war," he said. "We need to start acting
that way. We can no longer be in denial. We must mobilize the
home front." To that end he proposed four things: adding
200,000 members of the Army, to compensate for National Guard
shortfalls; deploying three squadrons of new unmanned aerial
vehicles (UAVs) to conduct reconnaissance in the United
States; suspending the 1878 Posse Comitatus Act (which had
prevented the military from conducting arrests in the United
States); and modifying the charter of the National Security
Agency to permit "unfettered use of its capabilities" in
support of the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security.24
Several senators immediately denounced the plan as the
militarization of America, and promised to filibuster to stop
the law's passage. Polls showed that 62 percent of Americans
believed the president knew best what was necessary to defend
America.
Skeptical civil libertarians were concerned that the new
UAVs, which included Predators and Global Hawks, would be
deployed not only to kill or intercept terrorists but also to
monitor Americans. Girded by the polls, the president pressed
forward with his plan. The secretary of homeland security
welcomed the additional monitors, saying, "The more eyes we
have looking at our coastline and borders, the more likely we
are to interdict future terrorists and deter their attacks."
The Air Force announced that deploying these UAV patrols
domestically would finally provide large municipalities with
the air security they demanded. The governors and mayors did
not complain.
hen came Subway Day. Public-transit systems in Atlanta,
Boston, Baltimore, and Philadelphia were all struck at 8:15
A.M. eastern time, on a Monday in April. Unlike the previous
year's attacks, these strikes did not appear to involve
suicides. The bombs were apparently hidden on trains while
they sat in rail yards, or were placed in newspaper racks and
ticket machines. "We knew something was up," the
homeland-security secretary said, in a remark that many
believe led to his resignation a week later. "We hesitated to
raise the alert level to red again because we lacked
actionable intelligence and we didn't want an increase in the
terror alert to tip off the terrorists." More than 200 people
died and more than 3,000 were injured.25
Subways and commuter rail lines in New York, Washington,
and Chicago moved quickly to halt trains and clear stations,
causing chaos even in those cities that were not under attack.
San Francisco closed its system for the day at 5:45 A.M.
Pacific time, a half hour after the attacks in the east and
before most commuters had left home, forcing workers onto the
highways. Most cities kept their transport systems closed for
the next day or two, leading to enormous traffic problems and
numerous car accidents, as local officials struggled
desperately to put passenger-screening systems in place.
The mayor of Chicago, whose security investments and
preparations had often been lauded by the homeland-security
secretary, was defiant as he pledged to ride the storied "El"
to city hall each day. He also promised to speed up the
installation of his once controversial "smart" surveillance
cameras throughout public areas in the city. The system linked
all video monitoring to a central emergency-management site,
where police officers and sophisticated software programs
could track suspicious activity on public thoroughfares. The
mayor's actions received unanimous support from the city
council. Chicagoans responded by continuing to use the
trains.
Thursday was Railroad Day. Improvised explosive devicesor
IEDs, popularized by Iraqi insurgents after the American
invasionexploded as interstate trains passed by or over them
in Virginia, Colorado, Missouri, Connecticut, and Illinois.26
The five charges resulted in almost a hundred deaths. Among
the fatalities was the national rail service itself, as
terrorists finally broke congressional will to fund the
money-losing venture any further: fifty pounds of explosives
had accomplished what no appropriations committee could. It
suspended operations that day and went into closure and
liquidation the next month.
The "Patriot" line, from Boston to Washington, reopened
later, after the Federal Railroad Police were created. The
Ferpys, as they quickly became known, eventually took over
security for all subway and commuter rail lines except the New
York subway (which stubbornly resisted federal protection).
The numerous agents on trains, along with the Ferpys'
bright-yellow surveillance helicopters, are now a reassuring
everyday sight in most large metropolitan areassupplemented,
of course, by the many UAVs, which are much harder to see.
lthough Congress acted quickly on the president's proposal,
creating the Ferpys took time. It was 2007 before all 155,000
officers had been hired, trained, and deployed. That delay was
the major reason the Army went into the cities.
Most analysts now agree that Subway Day and Railroad Day
not only caused the Senate filibuster to end, permitting the
passage of Patriot Act III, but also finally triggered the
withdrawal of some 40,000 troops from Iraq. The Army was
needed in the subways.
In announcing the Reaction Enclave Strategy, the CENTCOM
commander acknowledged, "Our goal now is just to prevent Iraq
from becoming a series of terrorist training camps. If the new
Iraqi army can't keep the peace among the factions, that's its
problem." The strategy, which was also adopted in Afghanistan,
has reduced the U.S. force deployment to those troops
necessary to sanitize the area around the U.S.
Counter-Terrorism Reaction Force (CTRF) camps. Iraq, with its
three bases, and Afghanistan, with its two, require only
20,000 and 7,500 members of the U.S. armed forces
respectively. Although some have criticized military and
political leaders for allowing both countries to become
"failed states" again, our CTRFs do at least retain the
ability to strike terrorist facilities whenever they are
detected. Improved intelligence collection and analysis have
increased the success rate of the CTRFs and limited collateral
damage.
The attacks in April of 2006 finally made possible the
creation of the National Transportation Security Identity
Card, or SID, as we now call it.27 Recall that before 2006
each of the fifty states actually issued its own card, in the
form of a driver's license. The SID is a biometric smart card
with the owner's photo, retinal signature, fingerprints,
Social Security number, birthday, and address encoded in it.
It has (so far, anyway) proved foolproof. Today a SID is
required for passage through card-reader turnstiles at train
stations, subway stations, and airports. Soon all automobiles
will be equipped with SID readers connected to their ignition
systems.
Even the Harvard Law School professor Alan Dershowitz,
whose wariness of unnecessary government intrusion is well
known, had acknowledged several years earlier that a national
ID card would offer some benefits. Just a few weeks after 9/11
Dershowitz wrote,
Anyone who had the card could be allowed to pass through
airports or building security more expeditiously, and anyone
who opted out could be examined much more closely. As a civil
libertarian, I am instinctively skeptical of such tradeoffs.
But I support a national identity card with a chip that can
match the holder's fingerprint. It could be an effective tool
for preventing terrorism, reducing the need for other
law-enforcement mechanismsespecially racial and ethnic
profilingthat pose even greater dangers to civil liberties
& A national ID card would not prevent all threats of
terrorism, but it would make it more difficult for potential
terrorists to hide in open view, as many of the Sept. 11
hijackers apparently managed to do.
The American Civil Liberties Union had disagreed, arguing
not only that the government would misuse ID cards but also
that corporations would be allowed to learn more about our
private habits, and that foreign-looking people would still
suffer more discrimination. The National Rifle Association
made common cause with the ACLU, noting that requiring gun
buyers to use the card would create a de facto gun registry.
For several years the ACLU, the NRA, and their supporters
helped prevent the introduction of a national ID card. After
the mall massacres, perpetrated with assault rifles, Congress
finally broke ranks with its NRA donors.
Not only has the SID increased identity security, but it
could ultimately yield billions of dollars in savings by
reducing bureaucracy. Local governments are using it to
improve the delivery of state services and to cut down on
waste and fraud by adding other information (gun and fishing
licenses; welfare, unemployment, and insurance information) to
the card.
The SID uses the same technology that has also been put in
place on all shipping containers, which now incorporate tags
that can provide location data when swept by a radar beam.
Radar beams from towers, UAVs, and even satellites cause a sid
to emit a signal that rides back to the transceiver on the
return beam. That signal provides the card's number, and the
processor computes its location. The signal is no stronger
than that used for years at airports and in police speed
traps. It is almost certainly safe, according to studies by
the National Institutes of Health.28
There were those who thought that the radar signals would
be used to track Americans carrying the SID. The
homeland-security secretary declared, "Our computers do not
have the processing capability to track that many signals. We
are focused on maintaining the integrity of our immigration
system by keeping illegals out and expelling those individuals
staying beyond their visas. We use the US-VISIT cards to do
that." Still, some Americans refused to sign up for a SID.
They are the people you now see waiting in lines at airports
for the special interrogation and search procedures.
The suspension of rail transport for parts of 2006, along
with the collapse of the national rail service and some of the
airlines, exacerbated the economic problems that had emerged
in 2005 and caused national unemployment to reach double
digits by December. The GDP declined again, as both the
manufacturing and retail sectors suffered. The federal deficit
as a percentage of GDP reached a new high, because the
government needed to pay for additional security measures but,
with the economy in such poor shape, didn't dare to raise
taxes.
2007: Iran and Saudi Arabia
t the beginning of the year three decisions demon- strated
the differences between America and Europe yet again.
First, Chuck Hagel, a Republican senator from Nebraska,
sponsored a resolution calling on the administration to reach
out to the Islamic world with a number of specific proposals
and to join the proposed EU Tolerance and Reconciliation
Initiative. For several years Hagel had been articulating a
foreign-policy strategy based on the "humble" approach
promised by President Bush before 9/11.29 Early in 2007 the
administration rejected the Hagel resolution as "buckling
under to terrorists." The plan went down to defeat in the
Senate.
Second, the European Union reached a compromise on the
issue of admitting Turkey. The EU president claimed that
Turkey's membership would destabilize the "Christian EU" and
flood Europe with Muslim immigrants.30 Turkey agreed to a
limit on immigration and was admitted. The EU passed the
Tolerance and Reconciliation Initiative and opened talks with
the nations of the Islamic Conference.
Third, the United States and Europe parted ways over what
to do about "definitive intelligence" showing that Iran had
six nuclear devices ready to be mounted on mobile long-range
missiles. The war on terror had, admittedly, distracted U.S.
national-security officials from dealing with Iran and nuclear
proliferation generally.31
We had suspected that Iran had assembled some nuclear
weapons, but only owing to the good work of the British Secret
Intelligence Service did we learn that all the weapons would
be in one place at one time. The president decided to launch a
pre-emptive attack; given the circumstances, he could hardly
have done otherwise. The B-2 strike in May did indisputably
destroy all the mobile missiles and their launchers.
(Regrettably, it also killed some Chinese defense
contractors.) To the president's dismay, the attack apparently
did not destroy any of the nuclear warheads, because they had
not yet arrived at the base. Intelligence is still not good
enough to provide precision. The good news was that without
their missiles, the Iranians had very few ways of using their
nuclear warheads. The bad news was that this revived fears
that the warheads would fall into terrorist hands.
The Iranians responded to the attack by launching their
older SCUD missiles, armed with conventional warheads, at the
Saudi oil facilities at Ras Tanura. Iranian navy units
attacked Saudi tankers. The result of all this was quite
unsettling, both to regional stability and to the U.S.
economy. World oil prices spiked to $81 a barrel, before
falling back to $72 a month later.
Then, on the day before Thanksgiving, Hizbollah, the Iraqi
Shia militia, and special operatives of Iran's elite Qods
("Jerusalem") Force acted.32 (They no doubt chose that day
because it was then still a relatively heavy travel day in
America.) "Stinger Day," as it came to be known, did not
actually involve Stinger missiles, as originally thought.
Rather, the missiles were SA-14s and SA-16s stolen from Iraqi
army stockpiles way back in 2003, after the U.S. invasion. The
United States had failed to secure the Iraqi weapons depots,
giving terrorists an opportunity to help themselves to Saddam
Hussein's guns, explosives, and missiles. The missiles were
later smuggled across the Canadian border into Minnesota,
Washington, and Montana.33
SA-14s and SA-16s are much like Stingers, heat-seeking and
easily portable. The four missile strikes that succeeded that
day (in Atlanta, Chicago, Miami, and Los Angeles) were all
aimed at 767s. The death toll was nearly 1,200, including
those who died on the ground where the aircraft crashed. There
is some dispute about whether three or four additional
attempts failed in other cities. The most widely reported
incident involved the killing by New Jersey state police
officers of two Lebanese Hizbollah members who had been
discovered sitting in a car with an SA-14 on a police ramp
over I-95 next to Newark International.
Scarcely six years after 9/11 had briefly shut down
commercial aviation and driven several major airlines into
bankruptcy, the same thing occurred again. Hundreds of
thousands of Americans were stranded for days that weekend.
The Air Line Pilots Association refused to allow its members
to return to the skies until all U.S. aircraft had been
equipped with defenses against surface-to-air missiles, such
as the ones used by Israel's air fleet.34 Airline executives
halted flights until troops had been deployed along all the
takeoff and landing corridors at airports. Even then few
people flew. In truth, the "legacy carriers," those airlines
left over from the days when the industry was federally
regulated, such as Delta, US Airways, and United, would
probably have failed anyway. They already had crushing debt,
and had been in and out of bankruptcy since 9/11. Their basic
economic model (relying on outdated "hub and spoke" systems)
was flawed, and they lacked the versatility of the regional
carriers. In any event, having exhausted all federal loan
guarantees and direct bailout packages, the remaining legacy
airlines were closed down and broken up.
The emergency program to develop infrared countermeasures
for civilian passenger aircraft is one of the best examples of
America's using its high-tech advantage to battle the
terrorists.35 The IRCMs were produced at a cost of less than
$2 million per aircraft, and 2,000 were installed (at taxpayer
expense) before the next Thanksgiving rolled around. Today we
have almost 4,000 in place on the two new major U.S. airlines
that have supplanted the old carriers. It has taken four
years, but travelers are slowly returning to the air.
he U.S. bombers that struck Iran had been refueled from and
then landed in Saudi Arabia. This gave fundamentalist forces
in that country the spark and the distraction they needed to
finally stage a coup against the regime, which they did in
August. The coup succeeded, and the House of Saud was driven
out, at which point the price of oil reached the vicinity of
$85 a barrel and stayed there.
The Saudi coup marked one of the worst U.S. intelligence
failures in years. We were caught off guard because we had not
been able to effectively collect intelligence inside "the
kingdom," as it was then called. We relied on the Saudi
Ministry of the Interior to tell us how strong the jihadis
were, and whether there was serious opposition to the king. As
it turned out, opposition was widespread, even among the royal
family and the Saudi National Guard that had been created to
protect it.36
The main stimulus for the coup probably came from the many
Saudis who had returned from neighboring Iraq, where they had
been radicalized by their experiences fighting the U.S.
occupation. Osama bin Laden's final, pre-death request,
captured on video and broadcast worldwide on al-Jazeera and
other media networks, was that the royal family be deposed. It
unexpectedly unified a variety of Saudi dissident groups.
By dawn on the third day of the coup the surviving members
of the House of Saud had fled or were in prison, the oil
fields were in the hands of troops loyal to the ruling
clerics, and all foreigners were being rounded up and escorted
to the airports or the borders. Iraq was the first country to
acknowledge the new government. Other Gulf states soon
followed.
Had the United States welcomed the new government, which we
now know as Islamiyah, the effect on the world oil market
might have been different. Instead we cut off the flow of
spare parts needed to maintain the billions of dollars' worth
of high-tech arms we had sold to the Saudis throughout the
1980s and 1990s; we also withdrew the U.S. contractors who
knew how to make the systems work. Naturally, the new regime
responded by canceling all oil contracts between U.S. firms
and Saudi Arabia's national oil company. The company made up
much of what it had lost in dumping the U.S. contracts by
signing new long-term deals with China; recent economic growth
had raised China's demand for overseas oil to about the level
of America's, which had been depressed by economic
stagnation.37 The dislocation in the world oil supply was
short-lived, but it was a cold winter in the northern United
States that year.
The real economic effect of the oil-price increase didn't
hit until the last quarter of the year. Still, 2007 ended with
U.S. unemployment at 15 percent and GDP down again. The "good
news," as the president pointed out in his Christmas message,
was that because rail and air travel had been so heavily
curtailed, and because fewer people were hanging out at
shopping malls, and because many "destination venues" remained
closed, Americans were spending more time together as
families.
2008: Election Year and Virtual War
ran's hostile reaction to the U.S. bombing continued into
2008 and made use of Hizbollah allies. (Hizbollah, although
composed largely of Palestinians and Lebanese, was created in
the 1980s by Iran, which closely controlled it for more than
twenty years.) Iran also employed its Qods Force, the covert
arm of its Revolutionary Guards. American counterterrorism
specialists had always feared Hizbollah and the Qods Force,
because their "tradescraft" was so superior to that of other
terrorist groups, including al-Qaeda and its many progeny.
Diplomats and military leaders had for years used numerous
back channels to keep both groups on the sidelines while we
engaged in counterterrorist warfare. Our overt attack on Iran
brought their full power to bear on our citizenry, with tragic
results.
Working with the remnants of al-Qaeda, the Iranians staged
a significant cyberattack in the United States during the 2008
election year. Reliance on cyberspace for retail had, of
course, increased significantly after the many mall closings.
More important, America had been using cyberspace to control
its critical infrastructure since the late 1990s.
Electrical-power grids, gas pipelines, train networks, and
banking and financial markets all depended on
computer-controlled systems connected to the Internet.
President Bill Clinton had acknowledged this dependence and
vulnerability in a 1998 presidential directive. President Bush
had articulated the National Strategy to Secure Cyberspace in
2003, but he had done little to implement it.38 Meanwhile,
many nations created information-warfare units and did
surveillance on U.S. networks.39 Iran was one of those
nations.
The cyberattack began with a "Zero Day worm," a piece of
self-propagating software that exploited a hitherto unknown
vulnerability in a widely used computer operating system.40
The worm bypassed computer firewalls and placed applets on
companies' networks. The applets sent back covert messages
describing what kind of network they had penetrated. Then, all
at once, the worms erased the operating systems on key
computers throughout the United States, and in their place
installed a program that caused the computers to repeatedly
reboot whenever they were turned on. Freight trains stopped.
Nuclear-power plants shut down. Banks and brokerage houses
froze. In some cities the emergency-call systems crashed; in
others traffic lights shut off.41
Then, as cybersecurity teams were attempting to figure out
what had happened, a second worm penetrated the operating
system of the most widely used routers on U.S. computer
networks. Once inside, the worm found the routing tables,
called border gateway protocols, that told Internet traffic
where to go. It scrambled the tables so that packets were lost
in cyberspace. Confused by the traffic errors, many of the
routers exceeded their processing capabilities and
collapsed.
The stock market closed, as did the commodities markets.
Major hospitals canceled all but emergency surgeries and
procedures. Three major power grids experienced brownouts.
Police and state militia units were ordered into the cities to
maintain order and minimize looting. Millions of Americans,
now staring at blank computer screens, were sent home from
work.
The already reeling economy took another hit. The U.S.
software industry was hurt the most. As a result open-source
software, which had already spread widely in Europe and Asia,
now dominates U.S. servers, routers, and desktops. The "free"
software movement badly hurt revenues at several U.S. firms.
Intervention by the new Federal Cyber Security Service,
through its monitoring of all Internet traffic, has since
somewhat reduced the prevalence of worms and viruses. Although
some Americans complained about loss of privacy, others noted
the benefits, such as a significant reduction in the volume of
spam e-mail.
State and local police forces, state militias, Homeland
Security Department personnel, and private guards now
protected airports, the neighborhoods around them, train
stations, the tracks connecting them, shopping malls, and U.S.
borders. By the middle of 2008 there were 220,000 more such
security officers than there had been in 2000. The armed
forces had grown by 215,000 during the same period. Yet these
new jobs hardly put a dent in unemployment, which hovered at
16 percent as the election approached.
During the campaign the two major parties had attempted to
outdo each other in their anti-terror fervor. The similarity
of their hawkish strategies helped give rise to an influential
third party, the American Liberty Party, which challenged the
Patriot Acts. San Francisco's mayor, a Chinese-American woman,
surprised the experts by garnering 12 percent of the popular
vote for the presidency on a platform built almost exclusively
on shoring up civil liberties. Two new governors were elected
on the American Liberty ticket, as were fourteen congressmen,
who became a vocal minority in the new Congress.
2009: "Nuke Squads" and the New Draft
he Homeland Protection and Service Act of 2009 could not
have been introduced in an election year. It was controversial
when the president proposed it, in his 2009 State of the Union
address, and, frankly, remains so today. Had he proposed it in
2008, it is likely that the American Liberty Party would have
roused even more support than it did. The "new draft," as its
opponents have labeled it, is different in important respects
from earlier conscriptions in U.S. history. Conscripts are
randomly selected and may serve any two consecutive years, as
long as their service begins before age twenty-two. Most
draftees are given monitoring or first-responder jobs here at
home; few are required to go through weapons training. Despite
these differences from Vietnam-era conscription, draft dodging
and AWOLs have already become such a large problem that the
U.S. Marshals have created special squads to hunt down
recalcitrants and force them back into service.
The act also included funding for special federal courts
(which would operate in secret, to protect the judges and
lawyers involved) to determine whether U.S. citizens, resident
aliens, and illegal aliens detained on suspicion of terrorist
activity should be treated as POWs or as enemy combatants.
Recognizing how long it would take for the government to
process the increasing number of detainees, Congress
authorized the detention of suspected terrorists for up to
three years without a hearing, subject to review every six
months by the attorney general.
Meanwhile, the attorney general worried openly about the
threat from those terrorists who were not yet known to the
government and did not appear on any watch lists:freshly
arrived illegal immigrants, members of sleeper cells, and new
religious converts. He conceded that capturing these people
before they committed acts of terror was next to impossible.
Announcing that the Department of Justice would crack down on
Islamic prayer in prisons, he instructed the authorities to
track released prisoners thought to have converted to Islamic
fundamentalism. Al-Qaeda and its imitators did not have to
work hard to make converts within the U.S. prison system. A
disproportionate majority of the prison population was
nonwhite. Radical Islamists preached to these prisoners that
the society that had imprisoned them should be made to
pay.42
Shortly after his inauguration the president announced that
U.S. intelligence had detected plans by Iran and Hizbollah to
bring nuclear weapons into the United States in retaliation
for the U.S. bombing of Iran.43 He announced the Safe Sea
Approaches Program, which required all ships within 200
nautical miles of the U.S. coast to broadcast on a satellite
frequency, squawking their location, name, departure and
destination ports, and cargo. Ships not complying would be
intercepted and might be sunk. In the first months of the
program only one ship, a small Yemeni-flagged oil tanker bound
for a refinery in Trinidad, was sunk, by a U.S. attack
submarine 120 miles off Puerto Rico, causing limited
environmental damage.
The Safe Sea effort also aimed to replace the entire global
inventory of shipping containers with smart shipping units.44
SSUs contain sensors that automatically and continuously
transmit information about the contents of the containers from
the moment they are sealed until they are opened. The
Department of Homeland Security deployed 12,000 U.S. customs
inspectors in overseas ports to ensure that the SSUs were not
tampered with and to keep any non-SSU containers off
U.S.-bound ships. Radiation portals and imaging equipment were
also installed in foreign ports and shipping depots, providing
real-time images of every container's contents as the
container was loaded into a ship or a truck bound for
America.
Concerned that Iran had already slipped nuclear weapons
into the country, the Department of Homeland Security greatly
expanded its nuclear search-and-disarmament teams, or "nuke
squads," as they became known. Under an amendment to Patriot
Act III the nuke squads were empowered to search "anywhere,
anytime," with Geiger counters and other devices that could
detect gamma rays and neutron flux. The squads regularly
raided self-storage facilities and set up checkpoints at weigh
stations on interstate highways. Initially, federal courts
differed on whether other illegal materials found in these
searches could be used as a basis for arrests; the Supreme
Court ultimately ruled that searches for nuclear weapons did
not require a warrant, and that any incriminating material
found in the course of such a search could be used as evidence
in court.
When Canada refused to allow U.S. nuke squads to conduct
warrantless searches at customs stations on the Canadian side
of the border, we built the Northern Wall, which channeled
trucks and freight trains to a limited number of monitored
border crossings. Barbed wire, radar installations, and
thousands of security workers made our border with Canada
resemble our border with Mexico.45
The quick and thorough response to the threat of smuggled
Iranian nuclear weapons was successful. Iran was evidently
deterred, and no terrorist nuclear weapons have ever been
found in the United States or en route to it.46
2010: Using Our Own Chemicals Against Us
t had been three years since a terrorist bomb had been
detonated on U.S. soil when executive jets packed with
explosives slammed into chlorine-gas facilities in New Jersey
and Delaware. Fortunately, in New Jersey much of the potential
gas cloud was consumed by the flames of the initial explosion,
and winds sent what remained of the plume over a largely
uninhabited area. Delaware, however, was less fortunate: the
poisonous cloud produced by the explosion left 1,500 dead and
4,000 injured, some as a result of panic during the evacuation
of the Wilmington area.47
Both al-Qaeda and Hizbollah claimed responsibility for the
attacks on the chemical plants, although Iran condemned them
and offered assistance to the affected communities.
Investigation into the attacks is still officially ongoing.
The United States has not yet retaliated, and the Pentagon is
reported to have recommended against a retaliatory bombing of
a nuclear-armed Iran. (The president has publicly denied that
the Pentagon made any such recommendation, and points out that
we bombed Iran as recently as 2007.)
Although the deaths in Delaware did not result from
terrorist use of a chemical weapon, they nonetheless
highlighted the dangers of a chemical attack and led directly
to the issuing of gas masks to all citizens in metropolitan
areas and rural counties with chemical plants or refineries.
The masks were sound despite their mass production, but
improper training caused some deaths from suffocation or
coronary arrest during practice exercises.
Heavy lobbying by the chemical industry in the years
following 9/11 had prevented any congressional regulation that
would have imposed terrorism-specific security requirements or
standards on chemical plants near large municipalities. Some
reports claimed that the Bush administration had tried to
undermine the Environmental Protection Agency by relaxing the
system for evaluating plant security, in order to reduce the
number of facilities deemed high-risk.48 Indeed, both the
facilities that were attacked had at one point been on the
EPA's high-risk list but were not on the Bush
administration's. Therefore they never underwent the security
upgrades that a more severe risk assessment might possibly
have induced. Outrage at this realization led to substantial
new regulations and security requirements for private chemical
and nuclear plants. Whereas the federal government might once
have helped fund and carry out these improvements, the
economic situation now placed the burden on companies and
state militias. Money was drying up.
2011: What We Might Have Done Differently
ine months into this year we have so far been spared any
new terrorist attacks on our soil. Of course there have been
incidents at our embassies and some U.S.-owned hotels
overseas, as there have been nearly every year for more than a
decade, but they have produced few U.S. casualties.
Some believe that the jihadi movement has lost its fervor.
Others believe that with jihadi governments holding power in
the former Saudi Arabia and in Pakistan, as well as in large
parts of Iraq and Afghanistan, the terrorists are now too busy
governing to be planning further assaults. I think the real
reason for the diminished number of attacks is that the United
States has hardened itself. We have greatly reduced our
overseas profile, generally limiting our presence to highly
secure embassies. It has become extremely difficult for people
or cargo to get into or out of the United States without
extensive inspection. The number of security workers per
capita within America's borders is now higher than in any
other country, including long-embattled Israel. A would-be
terrorist knows that his communications can easily be
monitored and his vehicles and facilities searched with little
provocation. If suspicious materials are found, or if an
informant provides a potential lead, suspected terrorists can
be held for an extensive period of time pending investigation.
All this has made it more difficult to carry out attacks on
U.S. soil. Of course, it has also hurt us in world trade,
swelled our national debt, and depressed our GDP.
As we mark the tenth anniversary of 9/11 and the launch of
our global war on terror, it is hard for many Americans to
remember when the sight of police officers with automatic
weapons and body armor was rare. Yet it wasn't so long ago
that we could enter a shopping mall, a train station, an
airport, or a public building without "see-through scanners"
and explosive-sniffers. The use of sids is now so routine that
we can hardly believe we ever did without them. For all the
additional security these developments have afforded us,
however, they have also produced a powerful political
backlash. Polls show that the American Liberty Party may draw
up to a third of the popular vote in the campaign next
year.
Could the global war on terror have played out
differently?
If the war had been restricted to eliminating al-Qaeda in
the two years following 9/11, it is possible that the first
generation might have been suppressed before al-Qaeda
metastasized into a multi-group jihadi movement. In 2002
especially, we squandered opportunities to unite the global
community in a successful counterterrorism effort. If we had
initially sent a more substantial U.S. force to Afghanistan,
bin Laden might have been killed in the first few weeks of the
war, perhaps preventing many of the attacks that took place
around the world in the following three years.
Had we not invaded Iraq, many of the jihadis we know today
would never have been recruited to the terrorists' cause. Not
invading Iraq would also have freed up money for earlier
investments in domestic security: for instance, upgrades for
chemical plants, trains, container shipping, and computer
networks. Because we developed most such protective measures
too late, panicking under political pressure, we too often
used brute-force methods that were costly, intrusive, and less
effective than we hoped. With more time, money, and careful
consideration, the body politic might have persuaded the
private sector to join the federal government in a real
partnership to enhance the security of critical
infrastructure. More important, we would have been better able
to carry on an open national dialogue about the tradeoffs
between security and civil liberties, and about the ways in
which strong civil liberties and strong domestic security can
be mutually reinforcing.
Perhaps, too, we could have followed the proposal of the
9/11 Commission and engaged the Islamic world in a true battle
of ideas. Indeed, if we had not from the start adopted tactics
and rhetoric that cast the war on terror as a new "Crusade,"
as a struggle of good versus evil, we might have been able to
achieve more popular support in the Islamic world. Our
attempts to change Islamic opinion with an Arabic-language
satellite-television news station and an Arabic radio station
carrying rock music were simply not enough. We talked about
replacing the hate-fostering madrassahs with modern
educational programs, but we never succeeded in making that
happen. Nor did we successfully work behind the scenes with
our Muslim friends to create an ideological counterweight to
the jihadis. Although we talked hopefully about negotiated
outcomes to the Palestinian conflict and the struggle in
Chechnya, neither actually came to pass. Because we were
afraid to "reward bad behavior," we let Iranian
nuclear-weapons development get too far along, to the point
where our only option was to attack Iran. This set back the
Iranian democratic reform movement and added Hizbollah to our
list of active enemies.
Although we occasionally lectured Arab states about the
need for democracy and reform, we never developed a
country-by-country program, or provided practical steps for
moving theocracies and autocracies in that direction.
Moreover, our haranguing Arab governments to be nicer to their
citizens ended up producing a backlash against us, because our
exhortations were seen as hypocritical in view of our bombing,
torture, and occupation tactics in Iraq.
It can still be debated whether we accelerated the fall of
the House of Saud with our arrogant tactics. The almost total
lack of intelligence about what was going on in Saudi Arabia
before the revolution did, however, make it hard for U.S.
policymakers to develop sound strategies.
Despite years of earnest-sounding talk about "energy
independence" and weaning ourselves from our addiction to
foreign oil, no president since Jimmy Carter in the 1970s has
ever seemed serious about these goals. We never developed
truly fuel-efficient vehicles, so our foreign energy imports
drastically harm the economy when oil prices soar.
As early as 2004 our nation's leaders were admitting that
the war on terror would probably last a generation or more,
even as they continued to argue among themselves about whether
it could ever truly be won. If they had acted
differentlysooner, smarterwe might have been able to contain
what were at one time just a few radical jihadis, and to raise
our defenses more effectively. Instead our leaders made the
clash of cultures a self-fulfilling prophecy, turning the
first part of the twenty-first century into an ongoing
low-grade war between religions that made America less
wealthy, less confident, and certainly less free.49
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. As of June 28, 2004, about a year after the Department
of Homeland Security's operational startup, only forty of 104
key changes recommended by the Government Accountability
Office (GAO) had been implemented. "Status of Key
Recommendations," GAO-04-865R, July 2, 2004.
2. Surveillance tapes obtained in 2002 by Justice
Department officials in Detroit and Spanish authorities in
Madrid included footage of the MGM Grand, Excalibur, and New
York, New York casinos on the Las Vegas Strip, along with the
World Trade Center in New York and Disneyland, in California.
Las Vegas authorities and casino representatives declined to
alert the public, possibly fearing a decline in tourism or an
increase in the casinos' legal liability. "Despite Two Terror
Tapes, Public Not Alerted to Vegas Threat, Memos Show,"
Associated Press, August 10, 2004. Also "Las Vegas, California
Authorities Reacted Differently to Same al-Qaida Footage,"
Associated Press, August 11, 2004.
3. Canada's ethnically diverse population, liberal
immigration and refugee policies, and long border with the
United States make it a good place for terrorists to raise
funds, procure supplies and fake documents, and plan attacks.
The Canadian Security and Intelligence Service acknowledged in
2003 that it considered more than 300 people in Canada to be
members of various terrorist organizations, including
al-Qaeda.
The Mexican border is even more porous than the Canadian.
More than 4,000 illegal immigrants cross into Arizona alone
each day. Most are Mexican, but a large number hail from other
countries. The Border Patrol, less than 10,000 strong, is no
match for this enormous wave. For every person it picks up, at
least three elude capture. "The Challenge of Terror," Time
International, January 27, 2003. Also "Who Left the Door
Open?" Time, September 20, 2004.
4. According to notebooks kept by jihadi students in
Uzbekistan in the mid-1990s, instruction in explosive
devicesfrom antipersonnel mines to bombs capable of
destroying buildingswas a standard part of the curriculum at
terrorist training camps. "The Terrorist Notebooks," Foreign
Policy, March/April 2003.
5. After 9/11 the casino operator MGM Miragewhich owns the
Mirage, the MGM Grand, and the Bellagio, among othersreported
that its fourth-quarter earnings for 2001 were about a third
of what they had been the year before
(www.bizjournals.com/pacific/stories/2002/01/28/daily54.html).
6. The 9/11 Commission's investigation into the attacks of
2001 found that lax screening by immigration officials and
poor communication between security agencies allowed the
hijackers to enter the United States even though they used
fraudulent passports, provided incomplete and false statements
on visa applications, and were listed as suspect in
intelligence-community information systems. As many as fifteen
of the nineteen hijacke |
Blog Comments
More scarey stuff...
John Titor, Time Traveller
It's not as whacky as it sounds. I got wrapped up for hours reading this stuff. Sure, could be relatively easy to fake, but it's not relatively easy to shake when you read it.
No Comment Title
hey russ:
something that dawned on me after reading/posting this is this....
Is this a work of fiction....or a blueprint for people to use.
even scarier
ts
the rest......
howdy all:
Just a quick note to rectify something my brother brought to my attention.....this article sort of cuts off at the end....which I had not noticed.
all that is actually left are he meaining footnotes....which provide actual boo-scary documentation for all the scenarios Richard Clarke mentioned in his piece.
You can read them, as well as have a handy dandy printout of the whole piece by following this link....
www.theatlantic.com/doc/print/200501/clarke
ts
Thanks and....
Could you perhaps grab the rest of the footnotes? I don't have a subscription.