Thursday, June 30, 2011

US refocuses on home-grown terror threat (AFP)

WASHINGTON (AFP) – The United States vowed Wednesday to pursue the "utter destruction" of Al-Qaeda, while refocusing its counter-terrorism strategy to combat the threat of home-grown terror.

The new strategy comes on the 10th year of the US-led "war on terror," launched by former president George W. Bush after the deadly September 11 attacks on the United States.

It is a "pragmatic, not ideological" approach to counterterrorism that "formalizes" the administration's approach since January 2009, said John Brennan, President Barack Obama's top counterterrorism advisor.

The new strategy, developed after US commandos killed Osama bin Laden on May 2 in Pakistan, also reflects "the extraordinary political changes" sweeping the Middle East and North Africa, Brennan said.

"This is the first counterterrorism strategy that designates the homeland as a primary area of emphasis in our counterterrorism efforts," said Brennan, who is also deputy national security adviser for homeland security.

-- Al-Qaeda still in the US crosshairs --

------------------------------------------

The principal focus is "Al-Qaeda, its affiliates and its adherents," said Brennan, speaking at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies in Washington.

"We aim to render the heart of Al-Qaeda incapable of launching attacks against our homeland, our citizens, or our allies, as well as preventing the group from inspiring its affiliates and adherents to do so," he said.

"This is a war -- a broad, sustained, integrated and relentless campaign that harnesses every element of American power," he said.

"And we seek nothing less than the utter destruction of this evil that calls itself Al-Qaeda."

With US forces pulling out of Iraq and preparing for a draw-down in Afghanistan, Brennan all but ruled out foreign adventures.

"If our nation is threatened, our best offense won't always be deploying large armies abroad but delivering targeted, surgical pressure to the groups that threaten us," he said.

President Obama, speaking at a press conference Wednesday, said that US military operations in Afghanistan and Pakistan have served to "severely cripple Al-Qaeda's capacities" and have "decimated some of the upper ranks of Al-Qaeda."

The terror network is "having a great deal of difficulty operating and financing themselves. We'll keep the pressure on," Obama said.

Brennan dismissed the new Al-Qaeda leader, Egyptian-born Ayman al-Zawahiri, as "an aging doctor who lacks bin Laden's charisma and perhaps the loyalty and respect of many in Al-Qaeda."

-- The "lone wolf" threat --

-----------------------------

The US strategy also takes into account the growing threat of domestic "lone wolf" attackers radicalized by online preachers.

This is "the first counter-terrorism strategy that focuses on the ability of Al-Qaeda and its network to inspire people in the United States to attack us from within," Brennan stressed.

The best known of these attackers is Major Nidal Hasan, the US Army psychiatrist charged with killing 13 people and wounding 32 more in a November 5, 2009 shooting rampage at the Fort Hood army base.

On Wednesday, three men arrested in a sting operation for planning to attack two New York synagogues and to shoot down US military planes were each sentenced to 25 years in prison.

On June 23, two US men were charged with plotting to attack a military center in the northwestern US city of Seattle with machine guns and grenades, allegedly hoping to kill more people than Hasan did at Fort Hood.

The new counter-terrorist strategy also focuses on threat from Al-Qaeda affiliates in places like Yemen, Somalia, Iraq, and north Africa.

"As the Al-Qaeda core has weakened under our unyielding pressure," said Brennan, "it has looked increasingly to these other groups and individuals to take up its cause, including its goal of striking the United States."

Separately, Brennan said that Iran and Syria "remain leading state sponsors of terrorism."

"Hezbollah and Hamas are terrorist organizations that threaten Israel and our interests in the Middle East. We will therefore continue to use the full range of our foreign policy tools to prevent these regimes and terrorist organizations from endangering our national security," he said.

Regarding Pakistan, Brennan acknowledged that the relationship "is not without tension or frustration," but said that both sides were working to overcome differences.

"I am confident that Pakistan will remain one of our most important counterterrorism partners," he said.


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How will the Kabul raid affect a peace deal? [VIDEO] (The Christian Science Monitor)

New Delhi – For all the talk about peace negotiations with the Taliban, one word rarely comes up: cease-fire. Instead, the US and the Taliban talk while shooting, a fact brought home again with the major terrorist attack overnight on a landmark hotel in Kabul.

The siege left seven civilians dead, including one Spaniard. Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid says one reason his group struck the InterContinental Hotel was the presence of foreigners.

Such provocative targeting of civilians by the insurgents, as well as the civilian deaths that result from US-led operations, erode trust around the negotiating table. However, since both sides clearly intend to try to show a stronger hand on the battlefield, neither Afghan nor American observers expect the attack to shut down the peace process.

“When you see this kind of incident, especially in Kabul, it brings mistrust among the people over the peace process, but it does not means we will sit quiet and stop the peace efforts,” says Attaullah Lodin, a member of Afghanistan’s High Peace Council.

RELATED Kabul raid shows Taliban's strength, tests Afghan security coordination

He says at this point the peace talks have to involve those who deepen insecurity, including a€?foreign forces killing innocent and weak Afghans in the villages in their raids and bombings, or those [insurgents] who carry out attacks on the mosques and crowded areas.a€

For many Westerners there is not the same equivalency between so-called collateral damage from military missions that target insurgents and a group that goes door-to-door in a hotel to hunt guests.

'Diplomacy would be easy if we only had to talk to friends'But in a speech earlier this year making the case for peace talks, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton argued against letting the Taliban’s brutality derail efforts to end the war.

"Now, I know that reconciling with an adversary that can be as brutal as the Taliban sounds distasteful, even unimaginable. And diplomacy would be easy if we only had to talk to our friends," said Secretary Clinton. "But that is not how one makes peace.”

Still, the attack could have minor impacts on the calculations surrounding the talks.

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It has not been clear whether the Taliban are using talks as a tactic to encourage international withdrawal, or if they are genuinely interested in finding a negotiated settlement. The continuation of major terrorist assaults only deepen this uncertainty. On the other hand, the attack is a reminder that despite 130,000 foreign troops in Afghanistan, the Taliban remain capable of striking inside the capital.

“I hope politicians are not too influenced by this [attack] and [do not] drop the political approach,” says Thomas Ruttig with the Afghanistan Analysts Network in Kabul. “The attack yesterday showed that the Taliban cannot be gotten rid of through a military-only approach.”

What about a cease-fire?In order to avoid the danger of each side outraging the other with stepped-up attacks, one solution is to seek some form of cease-fire to give space for talks.

A cease-fire would also help stop further fragmentation of the insurgency, which adds uncertainty to whether a peace deal could be enforced by Taliban leaders. As the US steps up attacks on mid-level commanders, fresh leaders are elevated who are not as bonded to the top-level leaders.

“When you continue to hammer the organization, that means you have more factionalization,” says Christine Fair, a regional expert at Georgetown University in Washington. “It does mean you are increasing your odds of having significant spoilers [to any settlement].”

Western analysts who follow the region, including Dr. Fair, Mr. Ruttig, and Seth Jones at the RAND Corporation, say they have never heard serious discussion about pursuing a cease-fire deal.

Mr. Lodin says everyone on the High Peace Council is suggesting a cease-fire, but he does not expect it to happen soon. The Taliban, meanwhile, have demanded that foreign soldiers depart Afghanistan – which is a lopsided form of cease-fire – but the US has made it clear that withdrawal would be an outcome not a precondition or intermediate step.

The Taliban spokesman Mr. Mujahid declined to say much about the attack’s impact on peace talks.

“I do not want to comment on this since I did not get the official statement from the leadership, but I would say that the fight is going on on a daily basis, the enemy attacks us everywhere and the goal of freedom that we have, we can not forget that goal,” says Mujahid by phone.

Fair argues that the InterContinental was not really meant as a Western target since mostly Afghans these days actually stay overnight in the past-its-prime hotel. She sees this as a message to Afghans that while the internationals are starting to leave, the Afghan conflict remains.

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Related video:

newslook


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3 men convicted in NYC temple plot get 25 years (AP)

NEW YORK – Three down-and-out drug offenders caught in an elaborate FBI sting involving a phony plot to blow up New York City synagogues and shoot down military planes were sentenced Wednesday to 25 years in prison by a judge who singled out one as a hateful buffoon who never could have pulled off a terrorist attack on his own.

The government had sought life in prison for James Cromitie, David Williams and Onta Williams for convictions last year on conspiracy to use weapons of mass destruction and other charges — the term called for under non-binding sentencing guidelines.

U.S. District Judge Colleen McMahon instead imposed the lesser sentences after repeatedly pointing out that the plot was scripted by the FBI from the start and never put anyone in real danger.

Rather than foil an actual plot, the government "created acts of terrorism out of (Cromitie's) fantasies of bravado and bigotry and then made those fantasies come true," the judge said.

Later, she added, "Only the government could make a terrorist out of Mr. Cromitie, whose buffoonery is positively Shakespearean in its scope."

But the judge also condemned the defendants for spewing hated toward Jews, and for being "willing to kill, maim and destroy for money. ... You were thugs for hire, pure and simple."

Defense lawyers had sought even less time for their clients, arguing they were entrapped by a paid FBI informant posing as an Islamic extremist. They also accused prosecutors of purposely introducing a Stinger missile into the plot because the charge that went with it carried a minimum 25 years in prison, and said Wednesday they would appeal the sentence on that basis.

The men's trial in federal court in Manhattan had featured two weeks of testimony by undercover informant Shahed Hussain, a Pakistani immigrant the FBI assigned in 2008 to infiltrate a mosque in Newburgh, about 70 miles north of New York.

After meeting Cromitie at the mosque, Hussain told him he was a representative of a Pakistani terrorist organization that was eager to finance a holy war on U.S. soil.

Prosecutors alleged that in meetings with Hussain, Cromitie hatched the scheme to blow up the synagogues in the Bronx with remote-controlled bombs and shoot down cargo planes at the Air National Guard base in Newburgh with heat-seeking missiles.

They said he also recruited the other men to be lookouts with promises of money. Onta and David Williams are not related.

Agents arrested the men in 2009 after they planted the devices — fakes supplied by the FBI — in the Riverdale section of the Bronx while under heavy surveillance.

In one of several videos played at trial, the men were seen inspecting a shoulder missile launcher in a bugged warehouse in Connecticut two weeks before the planned attack. At the end of the tape, Cromitie, two of his cohorts and the informant bow their heads in prayer.

Jurors also heard tapes of Cromitie ranting against Jews and U.S. military aggression in the Middle East.

"I'm ready to do this damn thing," Cromitie said on one tape. "Anything for the cause."

Defense attorneys argued the FBI overreached by targeting desperate dupes who were in it only for the petty cash and meals the informant gave them.

Cromitie, they said, constantly wavered and even purposely disappeared for six weeks before finally agreeing to go forward with the plan.

But prosecutors said that in the end, Cromitie "showed up again with renewed vigor" to carry out the plot.

Before sentencing, Cromitie said: "I've never been a terrorist and I never will be a terrorist. ... The government made me out to be something I'm not."

But Assistant U.S. Attorney David Raskin argued that the evidence made clear the evil intent of Cromitie and the other men.

"This would have been a colossal terrorist attack and the fact that it was all fantasy really doesn't matter because in their minds, they thought it was real," he said.

The sentencing of a fourth man convicted in the case, Laguerre Payen, has been put off pending the results of a psychiatric evaluation.

___

Associated Press Writer Larry Neumeister contributed to this report.


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White House unveils retooled plan to hunt al-Qaida (AP)

By KIMBERLY DOZIER, AP Intelligence Writer Kimberly Dozier, Ap Intelligence Writer – Wed Jun 29, 7:08 pm ET

WASHINGTON – The United States will push ahead with more targeted drone strikes and special operations raids and fewer costly land battles like Iraq and Afghanistan in the continuing war against al-Qaida, according to a new national counterterrorism strategy unveiled Wednesday.

The doctrine, two years in the making, comes in the wake of the successful special operations raid that killed al-Qaida chief Osama bin Laden in May, and a week after President Barack Obama's announcement that U.S. troops will begin leaving Afghanistan this summer.

The document is a purposeful departure from the Bush administration's global war on terror. The worldwide hunt for terrorists that began after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks focused first on Afghanistan, and small numbers of al-Qaida are still active there.

White House counterterrorism chief John Brennan said the reworked doctrine acknowledges the growing threat of terrorism at home, including al-Qaida attempts to recruit and attack inside the United States.

Brennan told a Washington audience Wednesday that more resources would be spent on the fight at home to spot would-be militants and their recruiters.

"Our best offense won't always be deploying large armies abroad, but delivering targeted, surgical pressure to the groups that threaten us," Brennan said at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies.

The operations Brennan describes are almost solely the province of the intelligence and military special operations agencies, especially the CIA and elite forces of the Joint Special Operations Command that worked together to carry out the bin Laden raid, but also including the special operations trainers that work with host nations' militaries.

As for threats from abroad, Brennan said the strategy relies on "surgical" action against specific groups to decapitate their leadership and deny them safe havens, and rejects costly wars like Iraq and Afghanistan that bleed the U.S. economically and feed al-Qaida's narrative that America is out to occupy the Muslim world. He said the U.S. would work whenever possible to help host countries fight al-Qaida so the U.S. didn't have to, just as it was currently trying to hand over responsibility to the Afghans.

Brennan, who is a former CIA officer, did not make specific mention of the covert armed drone program that targets militants in Pakistan and, on rare occasions, in countries like Yemen. But he referred to the administration's work to rush what he called "unique capabilities" to the field, an oblique reference to classified programs like the stepped-up construction of a CIA drone-launching base in the Persian Gulf region to use the unmanned aircraft to hunt militants in Yemen.

Bush White House veteran Juan Zarate questioned the wisdom of singling out al-Qaida as the main American enemy, "inadvertently aggrandizing them when they are in decline, by making them the focus of the strategy."

He also questioned the decision to "focus very mechanically on al-Qaida," with less emphasis on the violent Islamic ideology that drives the group. "You might miss a movement that is developing or ... evolving into a global platform" like al-Qaida, said Zarate, former White House deputy national security adviser for combating terrorism.

Zarate also said out that although the Obama administration may be dropping the world "global" from the war on terror, it still seems to be targeting terror cells on almost every continent.

Retired Brig. Gen. Russ Howard, who was credited with helping inspire the Bush administration's pre-emptive strike doctrine, said the message the strategy sends to allies is that the U.S. does not want to be involved if the going gets too expensive, as in Iraq or Afghanistan.

"Nations will question whether U.S. will be a reliable ally because we've just said we won't get involved with anything new, and we won't stay" where we already are, said Howard, founding director of the Combating Terrorism Center at the U.S. Military Academy.

In another apparent swipe at the Bush administration, Brennan said his White House was using every "lawful tool and authority available" in the fight against terrorists, describing Obama's rejection of the Bush White House's interrogation of terror suspects by methods such as waterboarding.

"The United States of America does not torture," Brennan said, "and it's why he (Obama) banned the use of enhanced interrogation techniques, which did not work. "

Brennan repeated the administration's mantra that it wants to "safely" close the U.S. detention facility at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, after either prosecuting terror suspects in the U.S. or by military commissions, or by releasing them to their home nations.


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US synagogue bomb plotters get 25 years prison (AFP)

NEW YORK (AFP) – A US federal judge Wednesday sentenced three men to 25 years each in prison on terrorism charges, but rebuked both prosecutors and the FBI for "questionable" behavior stemming from a sting operation.

The three men -- James Cromitie, 45, David Williams, 30, and Onta Williams, 35 -- were accused of planning to attack two synagogues and to shoot down US military planes.

"There was no pre-existing plot," said Judge Colleen McMahon after a three-hour hearing in federal court in Manhattan.

"The government came upon a man incapable of committing an act of terrorism on his own," she said. "I have never heard anything like the facts of this case."

Lawyers for the three men said they would appeal.

The three, along with Laguerre Payen, who has not yet been sentenced, were arrested on May 20, 2009 after a year-long sting operation led by the FBI and an informant who provided the men with three IEDs (improvised explosive devices), each with 30 pounds (14 kilos) of inert C-4 plastic explosives.

The men were arrested while they were preparing to plant the IEDs near two synagogues in the Riverdale section of the Bronx.

They were also accused of planning to shoot down military aircraft stationed at the Air National Guard Base in Newburgh, New York, using Stinger surface-to-air missiles.

The men never bought the missiles, but according to a statement released by the US attorneys office, were provided with one inert Stinger missile by the informant.

Lead prosecutor David Raskin, who had asked for life sentences for the three men, acknowledged that Cromitie had never used the term "Stinger missile."

But, he said, "the fact that it is all fake really does not matter.

"The fact is, it was a sting operation, but they still had a choice to pull out", said Raskin. "Those bombs were fake, but would they have been real, they would have killed lots of people," he said.

Last October, a jury found Onta Williams guilty on seven counts and Cromitie and David Williams guilty on eight counts.

The most serious -- conspiracy to use weapons of mass destruction, attempting to acquire and use anti-aircraft missiles and attempting to kill officers and employees of the United States -- all had a minimum sentence of 25 years and a maximum of life.

"I have no discretion to sentence the defendants to less than statutory mandatory minimum," said McMahon. "So 25 years is the floor, life is the ceiling.

"That sentence will be 25 years," she added. "This case is sui generis. The government behavior here is questionable. It seems to me it has to change."

Cromitie defense attorney Susanne Brody argued that it took a long time for the FBI informant to convince Cromitie to go ahead with the operation.

Cromitie only agreed after he lost his job at a Wal-Mart and fell deeper and deeper into debt. The informant, said Brody, promised him money, cars and vacations.

He also had trouble finding accomplices, who were described by Brody and the judge as "low level drug dealers."

The three men, said Brody, "don't even know one another."

"The government evidently manufactured the crime," said Brody. "The government selected the charges. They provided everything. If this is not enough to dismiss the case, what would be?" asked Brody.

Cromitie, talking softly, told the court that he had "never been a terrorist, and I will never be a terrorist.

"I have put myself in a stupid mess. This is crazy," added Cromitie, who was allowed to wear civilian clothes for his sentencing.

"I am very sorry for letting myself get caught up in a sting operation like this, made up by the government," he said.

"I am a US citizen. I have never been outside the US," Cromitie said.


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Ethiopia arrests 9 on terrorism charges (AP)

ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia – An Ethiopian official says nine people were arrested last week on suspicions of organizing a terrorist network and planning attacks.

Government spokesman Shimeles Kemal said Wednesday that two journalists were among those arrested. He says they were involved in planning attacks on infrastructure, telecommunications and power lines. Shimeles says two other suspects are members of an opposition party.

Shimeles says the suspects were supported by Ethiopia's archenemy Eritrea and by an international terrorist group, which he did not name.

International media rights groups have been calling for the release of Reeyot Alemu, a columnist for the independent weekly Feteh, and Woubshet Taye, deputy editor-in-chief of the weekly Awramba Times newspaper.


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Woman: I saw body in serial killing suspect's home (AP)

CLEVELAND – A woman recounted a night of terror Wednesday in the trial of a man charged with killing 11 women, telling jurors that she was brutally raped for several hours and that she saw a decapitated body in his home.

Struggling to speak between sobs, the 37-year-old woman said she was attacked by Anthony Sowell in September 2008 after she met him on the street while she was out looking for drugs. She said he invited her back to his home on Imperial Avenue, where police later unearthed the remains of 11 women in late 2009.

The woman said Sowell, 51, suddenly attacked her after he took a hit from a crack cocaine pipe.

"He turned around and punched me in my face," she said, sobbing. "And told me to take my clothes off."

The woman said Sowell raped her for several hours and threatened to lock her in a closet if she didn't do what he wanted. Throughout the alleged attack, she said he kept ranting about his ex-girlfriend and women who smoked crack who "did him wrong."

"He told me nobody could hear me, nobody would hear me scream," she said. "He would tell me, `you weren't like the others.'"

Sowell watched the woman's testimony impassively, sitting with his chin propped on his hand.

The woman dissolved into hysterics when Prosecutor Richard Bombik asked her to describe what she saw when Sowell allowed her to use the bathroom at one point during the alleged attack. She told the court that she was walking down the hall when she passed a room that had plastic hanging from the ceiling to the floor.

"The plastic was pulled up. And I saw something on the floor," she said. "It looked like it was a body. And it had no head on it."

The woman struggled to speak as she recalled that the body was "propped up sitting on the floor and it was taped up."

"I kept thinking to myself, I couldn't have seen what I saw," she said. "This is not possible, this is not real."

She told jurors that at various times during the attack, Sowell would "pop out of it" and go back to talking normally. At one point, she said, he told her that he had an "insatiable sexual appetite."

"All I could do was pray," she said. "And try and keep calm and agree with what he said."

The Associated Press generally does not identify sexual assault victims. The woman said she struggled with drug addiction for years but recently sobered up.

The woman said Sowell raped her many times throughout the night. At some point in the morning, she said, he called his sister and talked about plans to get together for dinner and make macaroni and cheese.

The woman said the attack occurred on the third floor of the home, which she described as "stale, just musty, stinky, dirty."

"It was just like dark and gloomy," she testified. "You could feel the gloom."

Sowell has pleaded not guilty to killing the women and faces the death penalty if convicted. Prosecutors say he lured the women into his home with the promise of drugs and alcohol. The bodies were found in late 2009 after a SWAT team showed up to arrest Sowell on a separate rape and felonious assault warrant.

The woman said Sowell allowed her to leave the morning after the attack. She said she called police and tried to file a report and was told that she needed to come down to the station in person, but she refused. She didn't officially report the attack until after the bodies were found in Sowell's home.

The woman broke down again when Bombik produced a photograph of Leshanda Long, one of the victims, whose skull was found in a bucket in Sowell's basement. When Bombik asked if she knew Long, the woman nodded and began to cry again.

"That was my girl Thick," she said, using Long's nickname. The woman said she and Long used to roam the streets on drugs together.

Long, 25, disappeared in August 2008. The rest of her body was never recovered.

Bombik also showed the woman a photograph of Kim Yvette Smith, whose body was unearthed in Sowell's backyard. The woman testified that she also knew Smith, whom she referred to as "Candy."

"We used in a common place," the woman said. "And she was always there. She was always there."

Testimony is expected to resume on Thursday.


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Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Pakistan indicts seven suspects over park killing (AFP)

KARACHI (AFP) – A Pakistani court on Wednesday indicted six paramilitary soldiers and a civilian on murder and terrorism charges after an unarmed man was shot dead on camera in a public park, lawyers said.

If convicted, the seven accused could be sentenced to death.

Members of Pakistan's Rangers paramilitary force were caught on film killing Sarfaraz Shah, 22, after a civilian dragged him over to the troops, accusing him of robbery in Karachi on June 8.

The daylight murder was filmed by a cameraman and broadcast round the clock on television, shocking the country with the apparent brutality of trained officers in a country awash with violence blamed on the Taliban and Al-Qaeda.

"The court has formally framed charges of murder and terrorism against all the accused," public prosecutor Mohammad Khan Buriro told reporters.

The accused pleaded not guilty and will contest the charges after appearing before judge Bashir Ahmed Khoso on Wednesday, lawyers said.

Buriro said the trial would begin on Thursday and that a total of 46 witnesses would be called to the stand.

"They are innocent and will contest the charges," said M R Sayed, one of the lawyers for the defence.

"We have asked the court to provide the investigation report compiled by the government joint investigation team," he added.

The formal indictment had been repeatedly delayed to allow the accused time to hire lawyers.

Facing down a media tirade, the government has already taken the rare step of removing the provincial chiefs of police and Rangers in Karachi.

The widely aired footage of the killing showed a clean-shaven and unarmed Shah, wearing black trousers and a navy shirt, pleading for his life before he was shot twice.

He then begged for help while the soldiers appeared to do nothing but watch him fall slowly and lapse into unconsciousness.

Despite no evidence in the video that Shah had a weapon, Pakistani Interior Minister Rehman Malik, whose ministry is responsible for the Rangers, claimed last week that the victim had been carrying an unlicensed weapon.

The killings last month by security forces of five unarmed Chechens, one of them a pregnant woman, in the city of Quetta are also under investigation.

Answerable to the interior ministry, more than 10,000 paramilitary troops patrol Karachi, Pakistan's financial capital, and its surroundings to combat routine ethnic, political and Islamist violence in the city of 16 million.

Human rights activists condemned Shah's killing and complain that the Rangers, established for combat and border duty, are neither equipped nor trained for civilian areas.


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NY park to get 3,000 flags for 9/11 anniversary (AP)

NEW YORK – Nearly 3,000 flags bearing the names of 9/11 victims will go up in a park near ground zero for the 10th anniversary of the terrorist attacks.

John Michelotti, a former engineer from Greenwich, Conn., came up with the idea. He says NYC Memorial Field will be open Sept. 8-12.

Only victims' families will have access to the new 9/11 memorial on Sept. 11.

Michelotti wants others to have a place to reflect on the tragic events. The flags will be mounted on 7 1/2-foot poles, low enough for visitors to hold and read the names.

Michelotti has previously displayed several hundred flags in Battery Park.

He says the city parks department has granted a permit for the flags. A message for the agency wasn't immediately returned.


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AP IMPACT: FBI terror profile merges identities (AP)

LONDON – The FBI's most-wanted list features a dated black-and-white photograph for the man wanted in connection with the 1998 U.S. embassy bombings in Tanzania and Kenya. Saif al-Adel, reads the glaring red banner, alias Muhammad Ibrahim Makkawi.

There's only one problem: Intelligence officials and people who say they know al-Adel and Makkawi tell The Associated Press that they are two different men.

In the wake of Osama bin Laden's death, AP reporters around the globe began hunting for fresh details on al-Adel — al-Qaida's so-called third man because of his strategic military experience. Traversing a reporting trail that spanned from Europe to Egypt and from Afghanistan, Pakistan and Iran, a different picture started to emerge about al-Adel: that the FBI might have been working off a flawed profile of him that merged his identity with another person.

Intelligence officials from five countries and a handful of sources who say they knew the men personally over the years confirmed to the AP that al-Adel and Makkawi were two distinct people. Some of those sources came forward with two photographs that show two different men.

"That is certainly not Makkawi," Montasser el-Zayat, a lawyer who represented Makkawi in Egypt, told the AP after looking at the FBI's photo of al-Adel.

In response to several questions, the FBI declined comment on whether al-Adel and Makkawi could be two different people or whether it was possible the information they had been using was bad or dated. It simply said al-Adel, like others on the list, had been indicted by a U.S. grand jury. However, the original documents in al-Adel's case remain sealed, making it all but impossible for the public to see where the FBI obtained its original evidence or the basic details about al-Adel's identity.

"The FBI will not disclose investigative steps, relevant intelligence, nor case details during an active investigation," said FBI spokeswoman Kathleen R. Wright. "This policy preserves the integrity of the investigation and the privacy of individuals involved in the investigation. Investigators and prosecutors routinely review information and intelligence involved in each case."

The apparent error describing the man believed to be a top al-Qaida military strategist and bin Laden insider highlights the patchy or false intelligence that often goes into profiles of top suspects by the world's intelligence services.

Many of the profiles are based on information obtained from captives under duress or worse. Some bits come from unreliable sources. Other tips are never verified.

On the surface, some may ask why the world should care — one man is a jihadist with a $5 million bounty on his head; the other a former jihadist turned al-Qaida critic. But the case raises a number of important questions about the accuracy of FBI profiles and how stale or misleading intelligence could hamper searches.

Al-Adel's profile, for example, was posted in October 2001 when the FBI "Most Wanted Terrorist" list was created — just a month after the Sept. 11 terror attacks. Although some of the descriptive details may be old, the FBI says the details are still accurate and relevant.

"We have no information there have been any significant errors regarding the individuals in which we are seeking the public's assistance in locating," the FBI said.

Yet since 9/11, dozens of people have been wrongly mistaken for suspected terrorists because of faulty or spotty intelligence.

A German man snatched by the CIA in Macedonia and tortured at a secret prison in Afghanistan is suing Macedonia for his ordeal after U.S. courts rejected his case on the grounds that it could reveal government secrets. The man says he was kidnapped from Macedonia in 2003, apparently mistaken for a terror suspect.

A Canadian engineer who was also caught up in the U.S. government's secret transfer of terror suspects to ghost sites was deported to Syria when he was mistaken for a terrorist as he changed planes in New York on his way home. The Supreme Court refused to hear his case against top Bush administration officials.

"You are going to have good intelligence and bad intelligence, but the problem is when that bad intelligence is used to charge and detain people or to build cases against others," said Ben Wizner, the attorney for Khaled el-Masri, the German who was sent to a secret prison and, according to Wizer, has suffered because of the trauma. "This faulty intelligence and disregard for the legal process has damaged and disrupted the lives of innocent people."

It is unclear exactly how Makkawi's life has been affected. The former Egyptian army officer who worked in a counterterrorism unit has yet to come forward and did not respond to several emails sent by the AP.

Still, in May a man who identified himself as Makkawi sent a handful of emails to journalists and commentators, saying he had been mistaken for al-Adel. In one email to the pan-Arab newspaper Asharq Al-Awsat, which publishes an English edition in London, he claimed he was a colonel in the Egyptian army, has long been an opponent of al-Qaida and other jihadist groups and has been mistaken for al-Adel ever since settling down in Pakistan.

He says he and his family have been branded enemies of both the United States and al-Qaida — an unenviable position.

In an earlier message to the newspaper in July 2010, the same man criticized al-Qaida and Pakistan: "There is an immoral extortion campaign against the U.S. and its allies and the Islamic movement being led by Pakistan, for its own motives. Pakistan has all of these international terrorists in its hands."

Pakistani authorities have said they have no knowledge of Makkawi's whereabouts.

It is easy enough to understand how the FBI might have originally mistaken Makkawi for al-Adel.

A tip may have come from a detainee at the U.S. prison camp in Guantanamo Bay, who told investigators he met with a "Muhammad Ibrahim Makkawi, aka (al-Adel)," according to secret documents released by WikiLeaks. Others who say they know both men say al-Adel might intentionally be using Makkawi's name as revenge for Makkawi's pointed criticism of al-Qaida and other jihadist groups.

But photographs provided to the AP by people who say they knew both al-Adel and Makkawi show two different men. The FBI's photo of al-Adel shows a slender man with thin hair, full lips and delicate features; a picture of Makkawi shows a stout man with a round face, bulbous nose and thick, curly hair.

Noman Benotman, a former jihadist with links to al-Qaida and now an analyst at the London-based Quilliam Foundation, says he has met both al-Adel and Makkawi.

Describing Makkawi as "well-educated, short-fused and unpredictable," Benotman said the last time he saw Makkawi was in Jalalabad, Afghanistan, around 1994.

Benotman said the last time he saw al-Adel was in 2000 in Kandahar, Afghanistan. He said he was impressed with his knowledge of military strategy and country profiles.

"The big difference between them is that Makkawi hates al-Qaida, hates these jihadist groups, and in particular hates the Egyptian jihadist groups where Zawahiri came from," said Benotman, referring to the Egyptian eye doctor who has succeeded bin Laden as head of the terror network.

Both al-Adel and Makkawi are Egyptian, reportedly served in the Egyptian army and were accused of links to jihadist groups.

But Makkawi reportedly severed all ties with extremist groups after growing disillusioned with their goals and strategies.

Specializing in counterterrorism operations, Makkawi was one of several army officers accused in 1987 of forming a jihadist group. Although he was released without charge after six months in jail, he was sacked from his army job and struggled to find consistent work afterward. In 1988, he reportedly sued the Egyptian interior ministry and demanded compensation. When the suit failed, he went to see family in Saudi Arabia, then went to Afghanistan, and eventually settled in Pakistan.

Two British officials, who spoke to AP on condition of anonymity because they aren't authorized to discuss intelligence matters, confirmed that Makkawi is a different man from al-Adel and said he is not wanted as a terror suspect by the British government. Britain has no such public "most wanted" terrorist list.

"Makkawi is a different man to el-Adel," one of the officials said.

El-Zayat, Makkawi's lawyer in the 1987 case, also told the AP the men were two different people and that al-Adel's real name is Mohammed Salah Zidan.

There is no mention of the name "Mohammed Salah Zidan" on al-Adel's profile.

Yasser el-Siri, founder of the Islamic Marsad Center in London — a research center for Islamic and jihadist affairs — said he met Makkawi in the Saudi Arabian city of Mecca between 1989 and 1990.

He also offered some key differences in the men's lives.

Al-Adel was born in the 1960s, is tall, comes from the Nile Delta and married the daughter of a well-known Egyptian journalist-turned-jihadist, Abouel Walid, who was editor-in-chief of The Islamic Emirate magazine, an extremist publication, el-Siri said. The editor was one of an early generation of jihadists who fought against the Soviets in Afghanistan. Western intelligence officials believe al-Adel is living in Iran but travels frequently to Pakistan and Afghanistan. He was a reservist in the Egyptian army.

Makkawi, who was born in the 1950s, also comes from the Nile Delta but had a Saudi father and Egyptian mother. He graduated from military college in 1972, became a lieutenant and then joined the special forces. He is reportedly short compared al-Adel.

Makkawi joined jihadist groups in Afghanistan but then criticized them for their poor tactics and planning, describing their battles as "the war of the goats."

It is unclear when al-Adel formally joined al-Qaida or an affiliate, but he is thought to be one of the group's most experienced military strategists. Prior to the U.S. Embassy bombings, he allegedly had a hand in operations against U.S. forces who entered Somalia in 1993 in an attempt to capture Somali warlord Mohamed Farrah Aidid and some of his top lieutenants. In the end, 18 U.S. troops died in the operation.

On the surface, the truth is still unclear.

The shadowy world of intelligence has long been built on knowns and unknowns, truths and half-truths and spider webs of good, bad and old information that can take years before it is investigated, if at all. New leads often eclipse old information even as that old data lives on.

"Intelligence is a business like anything else," Bob Ayers, a former U.S. intelligence officer, told the AP.

"When the Sept. 11 terror attacks hit, the intelligence community wasn't prepared. It scurried around and it tried to make do. Old leads should and could be followed up if there were enough resources, but it's unlikely you're going to shut your best analysts in a dark room for months just so they can investigate information that is sometimes 10 years old."

Richard Barrett, a U.N. representative responsible for monitoring al-Qaida and the Taliban, also confirmed to the AP that the FBI mistakenly identified al-Adel as Makkawi and — importantly — neglected to say on his profile that al-Adel's real name, according to people in the intelligence community, is thought to be Mohammed Salah Zidan.

"We have no information that Makkawi is one of the aliases that Saif is using, so it's a question-mark why that name is on the FBI list," said another European security official speaking on condition of anonymity because he wasn't authorized to talk publicly about the issue.

Officials at Egypt's newly established National Security apparatus, which is now the gatekeeper of all documents and records related to the Islamic jihadists, declined to provide any details or information about al-Adel or Makkawi.

The new body is replacing Egypt's State Security apparatus, which was dissolved after the toppling of Hosni Mubarak.

Should Makkawi ever come forward and try to get his name off the most-wanted terrorist list, it won't be easy.

But there are a few possibilities. Those include being tried, having the charges dropped — or dying.

"The individuals listed on the FBI Most Wanted Terrorist page will remain wanted in connection with their alleged crimes until such time as they have been arrested, charges are dropped or when credible physical evidence is obtained, which proves with 100 percent accuracy, that they are deceased," the FBI said.

___

Contributing to this report were Maggie Michael from Cairo, Kathy Gannon from Islamabad and Karl Ritter from Stockholm.


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NYPD beefs up hotel security after Afghan bombing (AP)

NEW YORK – The New York Police Department is stepping up counter-terrorism measures at hotels in the wake of a terrorist attack in Afghanistan.

Police spokesman Paul Browne says the move wasn't prompted by a specific threat in the city. But the nation's biggest police department is taking no chances as it learns more about the attack on Kabul's Inter-Continental Hotel, which is frequented by foreigners.

Insurgents attacked the hotel with suicide bombers, machine guns and rocket-propelled grenades late Tuesday Kabul time.

Two NATO helicopters later fired rockets that killed gunmen on the rooftop of the hotel.

The Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack, which comes nearly a week after President Barack Obama announced he would end the American combat role in Afghanistan by the end of 2014.


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Hearing for 2 man accused of Seattle terror plot (AP)

SEATTLE – Two men accused of plotting to attack a Seattle military recruiting station are scheduled for detention hearings Wednesday.

Abu Khalid Abdul-Latif, also known as Joseph Anthony Davis, and Walli Mujahidh, also known as Frederick Domingue Jr., each face up to life in prison.

The two were arrested June 22 after an anti-terror investigation with the help of an informant. They're accused of planning to use machine guns and grenades in an attempt to kill as many military people as possible at a center that processes military recruits.

The 33-year-old Abdul-Latif is a Seattle-area resident. The 32-year-old Mujahidh is a former Seattle resident who traveled from Los Angeles.


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A decade, and counting, of publicly mourning 9/11 (AP)

HILLIARD, Ohio – Carla Gilkerson, a 54-year-old school bus driver, sits at a table with friends at Abner's diner on Main Street in this small Ohio town. She's never been to New York City and doesn't know a soul who died on Sept. 11 — but talk of the terror attacks a decade ago immediately moves her to tears.

Step outside of Abner's and there, across the road at Main and Center Streets, is one of the largest Sept. 11 memorials outside the attack sites; a granite monument etched with all the victims' names, surrounded by four giant pieces of World Trade Center steel.

Gilkerson often walks and bikes past the memorial, stopping to run her finger over the names. "I feel like I knew them," she said. "And that I can keep their memory alive."

A decade of public mourning for the nearly 3,000 people killed in the nation's worst terror attack hasn't abated; in fact, it thrives in this country, from the steel memorial parks to the fake Statue of Liberty outside a Las Vegas casino to a tiny chapel by ground zero. The attacks have spawned a ritual of extravagant public mourning that hasn't waned; even Americans who didn't lose a loved one on Sept. 11 are still grieving as if they had.

Gilkerson says it best: "I think we'll always mourn our losses from that day."

Experts in grief say the outsized sorrow for "our losses" is Americans' way of processing the most devastating public event of their lifetimes, which they need to do before they can begin to let go. "This," says Michael Katovich, a Texas sociology professor who teaches on death and dying, "is a process of solidifying our memories."

They're still grieving in Hilliard, a suburb of the state capital of Columbus, and an eight hour's drive from New York City. None of its 28,000 residents died on Sept. 11, yet the people who live in the new subdivisions and work in the small brick buildings that line the downtown still mourned. Mayor Don Schonhardt was one of the mourners, and he went to New York to ask authorities there for trade center steel for the city's memorial.

"We felt it was important to be a community in middle America that would say to the U.S. and the world, that we do remember what happened that day," Schonhardt said.

The memorial fills a city block in the center of town with its two pieces of rusted track from the subway that ran underneath the World Trade Center, and two other large hunks of twisted metal from the towers themselves.

Las Vegas has a permanent memorial at the fake Statue of Liberty outside the New York, New York-Hotel Casino. There's a rotating exhibit of items that were left at the casino in the days after the attacks. Recently, about a dozen Fire Department and police T-shirts from around the U.S. were on display in the shadow boxes, which are lighted at night. The hundreds of other items are archived and stored at the University of Nevada Las Vegas. In a city of excess and fantasy, the memorial — which is across the street from the MGM Grand casino and its golden Lion statue and from Excalibur, a medieval-themed gambling hall — is a sober reminder of reality, and visitors stop and peer into the shadow boxes while walking from one casino to the next.

The small western Pennsylvania town of Shanksville is touched like no other by the attacks; it's believed to have been an attack site by accident, but one whose residents had little connection to the 40 people who perished aboard the hijacked jetliner that crashed at more than 500 mph into the lush, green landscape.

A $60 million memorial is being built in the field. Inside a temporary visitor center, people write messages on slips of paper. A message signed by "Cathy" on June 18 reads, "Almost ten years and I still can keep back the tears when I visit any of the three memorials or watch a TV show about 9/11. So truly, we never forget."

Psychologists and sociologists who study grief and public mourning say that most of us — at least for those who didn't lose a loved one in the attacks — are still processing the pain, which will dwindle with each successive generation.

"It's part of our defense mechanism to distance ourselves," said Katovich, a professor at Texas Christian University.

Carla Ross, an expert on grief and forgiveness from Raleigh, N.C., said many Americans are still actively mourning 9/11.

"There's two things that make it really complicated for people," said Ross, a communication professor at Meredith College. "People don't know who to forgive. They don't know how to let it go. And instead of grieving and letting go, we're blaming a whole culture of people. People are really struggling with that."

Gilkerson and her friends don't want to stop. They say if we do, we'll forget what happened and the sacrifices made by first responders and soldiers who fought in the wars the attacks wrought.

Brad Fetty, a 34-year-old firefighter-in-training and a bus driver with Gilkerson, said that his city's memorial conjures up complicated emotions and questions about that day. While looking at the twisted and rusted steel beams, he said he wonders, "What am I looking at? Was there blood, were there tears, actually on this piece of metal?"

Ross thinks that societies that have experienced large tragedies never really stop grieving, but that the mourning becomes softer, less edgy.

"Usually when people get to the end of the grieving process, they start making sense of things, how it's impacted their lives for the positive," she said.

Karl Glessner is a 60-year-old volunteer "ambassador" at the Flight 93 memorial in Shanksville. He spends entire days at the public viewing area that overlooks the field where the 40 people aboard the plane died, and explains what he saw and heard that day. Glessner stands at the viewing area when it's raining and when it's sweltering, telling people how he felt the ground shake from the plane's impact and saw the smoke cloud from the crash.

He still sometimes chokes up when talking about the day. Talking to hundreds of people a day at the somber viewing area has made him "a better person," he said. "This is basically the best thing I do," he added.

Schonhardt said he pushed to build the Hilliard memorial after talking about Sept. 11 at local schools, and realizing some of the second-graders weren't even born when the attacks happened.

"It was designed to help children of our community understand what happened," he said. "This park helps us put the whole thing in perspective. When you lose that much innocence, it's profound. I think this is one we don't want to forget."

When asked whether Americans will ever stop mourning Sept. 11, Schonhardt paused.

"I hope not," he said. "I think it's important we recall the sacrifice and the way the day changed our lives. Once you stop that mourning process and you move on, there's a tendency to forget."

___

EDITOR'S NOTE — Tamara Lush is traveling the country writing about the 10th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks. Follow her on Twitter at twitter.com/tamaralush.


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Park service reveals Flight 93 memorial drawings (AP)

SHANKSVILLE, Pa. – The National Park Service on Monday released new architectural drawings of the first phase of the Flight 93 memorial, which is to be dedicated in time for the 10th anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks this fall.

One rendering shows a pair of white marble walls framing a ceremonial gateway that provides an entrance to a walkway tracing the path the airplane followed before crashing into the rural field.

The other shows a separate memorial gateway — an open-air, concrete structure. A smaller glass enclosure will help provide shelter during bad weather.

Only relatives of the 40 passengers and crew who died will be allowed to enter the actual crash site, but the public will be able to view it. There will be 40 vertical marble slabs along one side of the flight path walkway, each with a name of one of the victims on it.

The Families of Flight 93 say about $50 million in public and private money has been raised for the project and the dedication of the first phase is scheduled for Sept. 10.

More private funding is still needed to finish the remaining elements of the memorial, including a grove of trees, a visitor center and an entry portal with high walls framing the plane's flight path.

"It's gratifying to see our design, expressed in these renderings, will soon be realized with completion of the first phase of construction," Paul Murdoch, the memorial's architect, said in a statement. "I hope once the public experiences the opening of the memorial, they will be further motivated to support the remaining features."

United Airlines Flight 93 was traveling from Newark, N.J., to San Francisco on Sept. 11, 2001. The 9/11 Commission found that the hijackers likely wanted to crash into the White House or Capitol building but downed the jet in Pennsylvania as passengers fought back. The crash site is near Shanksville, Pa., about 65 miles southeast of Pittsburgh.

___

Online:

http://www.nps.gov/flni/index.htm

http://www.honorflight93.org


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Israel to cope with flotilla 'hardcore activists' (AFP)

JERUSALEM (AFP) – Israel will be able to handle any violence from "hardcore activists" on board a new Gaza-bound flotilla, the foreign minister said Tuesday, amid claims some were planning attacks with chemicals.

"The moderate elements who were planning to join the flotilla... know that for everyone who wants to help people in Gaza, that there is a legal way to do it," Avigdor Lieberman told public radio in a telephone interview from Zagreb.

"It is clear that those who are still participating in the flotilla are the hardcore terror activists," he said just hours after military officials warned that some of the passengers were bent on killing soldiers.

"No one doubts the intention of those people... But I am sure we will cope with them."

Israel is gearing up to block the arrival of a new international aid flotilla which is planning to set sail from Greece later this week in a bid to break the five-year blockade on the Gaza Strip.

A similar attempt by a six-ship convoy to reach the Palestinian territory in May 2010 ended in bloodshed when Israeli troops stormed the lead vessel, killing nine Turkish activists and sparking a diplomatic crisis with Ankara.

Following two days of deliberations, Israel's security cabinet on Monday ordered the navy to stop the second flotilla from reaching Gaza, but urged it to do so with "minimal confrontation" with the passengers.

Some 350 pro-Palestinian activists from 22 countries including Canada, France, Greece, Ireland, Italy and Spain are set to join the flotilla, among them a good number of middle-aged as well as elderly Americans and Europeans.

Security officials initially told the cabinet that Israel had no information that anyone linked to a terror group was planning to take part in the flotilla, the Haaretz newspaper reported on Monday.

But by nightfall, the assessment had changed dramatically, with a military spokeswoman telling reporters they had information about "radical elements" who were planning to murder Israeli soldiers.

"There are radical elements on board the American boat who have said they want to kill Israeli soldiers," said Lieutenant Colonel Avital Leibovitz.

"We also know that one of the boats is carrying dangerous incendiary chemicals that these human rights militants want to use against Israeli soldiers," she said.

But Dror Feiler, an Israeli-Swedish spokesman for the flotilla, denied the allegations, telling Israel's army radio it was a barefaced attempt to pre-empt the military's use of violence.

"All the passengers signed a pledge of non-violence because we don't want the flotilla to resemble what happened on the last one," he said, rejecting Israeli claims as "an attempt to rationalise in advance the use of violence by the army."

"We have no intention of confronting anyone," said Feiler who will be travelling on board a Swedish ship to Gaza.

He also dismissed reports suggesting the activists were transporting dangerous chemicals, such as sulphur which they were allegedly planning to throw at the soldiers.

"There will be petrol on board the ship. Is this petrol meant to burn the soldiers?" he asked.

But Israel's ultra-nationalist foreign minister said it was clear that the passengers were "hardcore" activists.

"There are all sorts of groups and factions who, despite the dangers, will take part," Lieberman said, describing them as "hardcore activists, terror activists" who were not interested in humanitarian aid.

"They want to purposely create a provocation, they are looking for a confrontation, they are looking for blood, they are looking for many images on the TV screens," he said.

Seven of the boats are currently docked at ports in Greece, with organisers saying one of them was "sabotaged" late on Monday.

The ships are expected to meet up with the three other boats off the Greek island of Crete on Thursday or Friday before making the voyage to Gaza.

Israel first imposed a blockade on the enclave in 2006 after militants there snatched Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit in a deadly cross-border raid. He is still being held.

A ban on civilian goods and foodstuffs was eased last year but many restrictions remain in place.


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Official: 17 killed in terror camp raid in Mali (AP)

NOUAKCHOTT, Mauritania – A Mauritanian colonel who led a military raid last week on a suspected al-Qaida camp in the neighboring nation of Mali says that 17 people were killed during the operation.

Col. Brahim Fall Ould Cheibani told a news conference Sunday that his men carried out the raid on Friday in the Wagadou region of Mali, a forested area bordering Mauritania.

He says those killed included two Mauritanian soldiers and 15 members of the terrorist cell.

Al-Qaida's African affiliate is known to operate in the deserts and remote forests between the two countries. The group has claimed responsibility for the kidnapping of dozens of foreigners, as well as a series of attacks on Mauritanian military installations and government buildings.


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Saudi trial opens for 85 suspected al-Qaida agents (AP)

RIYADH, Saudi Arabia – Saudi Arabia's state news agency says 85 suspected members of al-Qaida accused of taking part in a deadly 2003 terrorist attack have gone on trial in a Riyadh court.

The SPA news agency says some of the defendants were charged with carrying out car bombings on three Riyadh housing compounds for foreigners that killed more than 30 people. Others were charged with attacking security forces, weapons possession, bomb making and armed robbery.

SPA did not say when the men were arrested or why they facing trial now, eight years after the attacks.

However, it claimed their arrest had foiled several plots to bomb two air bases and residential compounds in the eastern region.

It said security forces had confiscated videos documenting some of the defendants' operations.


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Pakistan, India say they'll keep pushing for peace (AP)

ISLAMABAD – India's foreign secretary said Friday that her country remains concerned about the threat of terrorism, but is committed to peace talks with Pakistan that have stumbled since the 2008 terrorist attacks in Mumbai.

Nirupama Rao's comments capped two days of meetings in Islamabad between delegations from the nuclear-armed archrivals — the first formal talks between the neighbors on the disputed region of Kashmir since the attacks in the Indian financial hub.

Both nations claim Kashmir in its entirety, and have fought two of their three wars over the region since they gained independence from Britain in 1947.

The siege of Mumbai killed 166 people and has been blamed on Pakistani militants belonging to Lashkar-e-Taiba, a group Pakistan's spy agencies are suspected of nurturing as a proxy fighting force in Kashmir. Pakistan has denied any state institutions played a role in the attack on Mumbai.

"We must do away with the shadow of the gun and extremist violence because it's only in the atmosphere free of terror and violence that we can discuss the resolution of such a complex issue" as Kashmir, Rao said during a press conference with her Pakistani counterpart, Salman Bashir.

Pakistan has nudged India to push ahead with talks even as it has struggled to stem the growth of the Taliban and other militants who have proliferated on its soil since the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan. Bashir said the issue of terrorism "requires objectivity, requires to be addressed in a collaborative approach."

Bashir and Rao's meetings were aimed in part at laying the groundwork for ministerial level meetings in the next few weeks.

A joint statement issued after the sessions Friday said the two countries would keep discussing a range of subjects, including confidence building measures involving their nuclear programs and trade across the border that divides each side's current section of Kashmir.

Last month, Indian and Pakistani officials met in the Indian capital and agreed to continue working to reduce tension on a glacier battlefield in the Himalayas where grueling conditions have killed more troops than hostile fire.

The home secretaries from both sides met in New Delhi in March and agreed to set up a terrorism hotline and to cooperate on the Mumbai attack investigation — a major step in placating India's concerns. The secretaries for commerce also met in April.

___

Associated Press Writer Munir Ahmed contributed to this report.


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Tuesday, June 28, 2011

London man in court on terror funding charges (AFP)

LONDON (AFP) – A suspected terrorist fundraiser appeared in court on Monday charged with providing money or property for terrorism purposes.

Shabaaz Hussain, 27, from east London, is accused of committing the offences on April 12, July 6 and September 3 last year.

Hussain is also accused of playing a part in preparing for acts of terrorism between January 1, 2009 and October 22, 2010, though there was no suggestion these were to be carried out on UK soil.

In total, he faces five charges under the Terrorism Act 2000 and 2006.

Hussain, who appeared at City of Westminster Magistrates' Court, in central London, was remanded in custody until July 15.


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US taps $45M in gear for terror fight in Somalia (AP)

By LOLITA C. BALDOR, Associated Press Lolita C. Baldor, Associated Press – Sun Jun 26, 1:51 pm ET

WASHINGTON – The Pentagon is sending nearly $45 million in military equipment, including four small drones, to Uganda and Burundi to help battle the escalating terror threat in Somalia.

The latest aid, laid out in documents obtained by The Associated Press, comes as attacks intensify in Somalia against the al-Qaida-linked terror group al-Shabab, including an airstrike late Thursday that hit a militant convoy, killing a number of foreign fighters, according to officials there.

U.S. officials, including incoming Pentagon chief Leon Panetta, have warned that the threat from al-Shabab is growing, and the group is developing stronger ties with the Yemen-based al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula. Panetta told lawmakers earlier this month that as the core al-Qaida leadership in Pakistan undergoes leadership changes, with the killing of Osama bin Laden, the U.S. needs to make sure that the group does not relocate to Somalia.

The Pentagon plan is aimed at helping to build the counterterrorism of Uganda and Burundi, two African Union nations that have sent about 9,000 peacekeeping forces to Somalia. The military aid includes four small, shoulder-launched Raven drones, body armor, night-vision gear, communications and heavy construction equipment, generators and surveillance systems. Training is also provided with the equipment.

In addition, the Pentagon will send $4.4 million in communications and engineering equipment to Uganda.

Somalia has not had a fully functioning government in two decades. The government controls just a small slice of Mogadishu, but officials have said that the peacekeeping offensive is enabling them to wrest swaths of territory in the city and in southern Somalia from the insurgents.

The aid is part of a $145.4 million package that Pentagon officials approved and sent to Capitol Hill last week as part of a notification process before the equipment can be delivered.

Up to $350 million in military aid can be distributed this year to support counterterror operations in other countries. The Pentagon routinely releases the military aid in three or four installments each year, and the first package approved earlier this year was for about $43 million. So far, none of the assistance this year has gone to Yemen — which has been a top counterterrorism priority for the U.S.

Last year, the Pentagon allocated $155 million for aid to Yemen, and military leaders had proposed as much as $200 million for this year. But U.S. officials have become increasingly alarmed about the violent anti-government protests and unrest rocking the country.

Protesters are demanding that President Ali Abdullah Saleh's powerful sons and other members of his inner circle leave the country, even as Saleh remains in Saudi Arabia receiving treatment for injuries he suffered in an attack on his palace early this month.

Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, has said that aid to Yemen has been interrupted by the chaos there, and once that ebbs the U.S. will consider what next steps to take. But U.S. officials consider AQAP in Yemen one of the most serious and immediate terrorist threats, fueled in part by radical American-born cleric Anwar al-Awlaki.

Al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula has been linked to a number of terror attacks in the U.S., including the Christmas Day 2009 attempted airliner bombing.

The Pentagon aid package also includes funding a number of other North African countries, including several where there is a continuing terror threat from al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb. The plan includes:

_$22.6 million for Mauritania for a turbo prop aircraft for troop transport and surveillance, and necessary maintenance and training; and $8.1 million for airfield systems and construction and communications equipment to develop a forward operating base in the country.

_$17.7 million for an aircraft for Djibouti, where the U.S. has its only Africa military base.

_$12.1 million for helicopter upgrades and training for Kenya.

_$1 million for Mali for mine detector kits.

Also included in the aid package is $12 million for small boats and communications equipment for Maldives; $12 million for six patrol boats and trailers, body armor and communications equipment for Philippines; $8.4 million for communications equipment and weapons for Bangladesh; $900,000 for biometric data collection devices for Oman; and $850,000 for radar installation services for Malaysia.

There is also about $600,000 in the plan for human rights training in the countries.


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Petraeus ponders how far interrogators should go (AP)

By KIMBERLY DOZIER, AP Intelligence Writer Kimberly Dozier, Ap Intelligence Writer – Thu Jun 23, 4:59 pm ET

WASHINGTON – Army Gen. David Petraeus is urging lawmakers to determine how far interrogators should be allowed to go when faced with a terror suspect who may have time-sensitive information like the codes to disarm a nuclear weapon set to explode in the U.S.

Testifying at his Senate confirmation hearing Thursday, Petraeus backed interrogation methods set out in the U.S. Army field manual. Those methods reject enhanced interrogation methods used by the CIA during the Bush administration.

Petraeus said lawmakers should consider setting policies that would require authorization from the top, implying that the president would be consulted on whether to use enhanced interrogation techniques and lower-level officials would not be under pressure to make the decision in what Petraeus called a "ticking time bomb" situation.


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Wheelchair bomber attacks Iraqi police station (AP)

By QASSIM ABDUL-ZAHRA, Associated Press Qassim Abdul-zahra, Associated Press – Sun Jun 26, 11:35 am ET

BAGHDAD – A suicide bomber in a wheelchair blew himself up at the entrance to a police station north of the capital Baghdad on Sunday, killing three people and wounding 18, officials said.

Two police officers were killed and 10 injured in Tarmiyah, about 30 miles (50 kilometers) north of Baghdad, two police officers and one medical official said.

The head of the Tarmiyah city council, Qassim Khalifa, told The Associated Press that it was not clear whether the bomber was really handicapped or using the wheelchair as a way to deflect attention from security personnel.

The bomber went to the police station claiming to need a letter from the police certifying he'd been maimed in a terror attack, Khalifa said. Iraqis who have been disabled from a bombing or shooting can receive compensation from the government if their injuries are documented.

"Police inspected him but not very carefully as he was handicapped or pretending to be handicapped, so they let him go inside the police reception area where the blast occurred," Khalifa said.

In Baghdad, security authorities were out in force to protect Shiite pilgrims converging from around the country to commemorate the death of Imam Moussa al-Kadhim, a revered Shiite figure. Pilgrims traditionally walk to the twin-domed shrine in the northern Baghdad neighborhood of Kazimiyah, where al-Kadhim is buried.

Predominantly Sunni militants often target the pilgrims as they are walking to and from the shrine from cities and towns across Iraq. Sunday morning a sniper shot and wounded two Iraqi soldiers near the village of Wahda, a mixed Shiite-Sunni village 20 miles (30 kilometers) south of the capital, said a police and hospital official. The soldiers were manning one of the checkpoints set up to protect pilgrims as they walk to the shrine.

All officials spoke on condition of anonymity as they were not authorized to release information.

Meanwhile, an Iraqi court has sentenced the wife of a slain al-Qaida leader to 20 years in prison on terrorism-related charges, an Iraqi judicial spokesman said.

Hasna Ali Yahya, the Yemeni wife of Abu Ayyub al-Masri, was convicted last Thursday, according to Iraqi Supreme Judicial Council spokesman Abdul-Sattar Bayrkdar.

Bayrkdar didn't give details on the charges, but a government official said she was convicted of facilitating correspondence between insurgents and preparing explosive-laden belts. The official spoke on condition of anonymity as he was not authorized to release information.

Al-Masri's wife, a mother of three has been in custody since the April 2010 joint U.S.-Iraqi raid north of Baghdad that killed al-Masri along with another prominent al-Qaida in Iraq militant.

Six months later, Iraq's al-Qaida umbrella group, the Islamic State of Iraq threatened to kidnap family members of Iraqi politicians and ministers if al-Masri's wife and children were not released.

Last month, the two daughters and son were handed over to their uncle in Yemen, according to a Yemeni diplomat in Baghdad. The youngest child is 18 months old, while the others are 9 and 7, the diplomat said. He spoke on condition of anonymity as he was not authorized to release information.

Al-Masri, an Egyptian, joined al-Qaida camps in Afghanistan in the late 1990s and trained as a car bomb expert before traveling to Iraq after the U.S.-led invasion in 2003, U.S. officials have said.

He led the terror organization after Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the Jordanian-born founder of al-Qaida in Iraq, was killed in June 2006. The group launched a bombing campaign shortly afterward to show that al-Qaida was far from eliminated.

___

Associated Press Writer Saad Abdul-Kadir contributed to this report.


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Iran's supreme leader accuses US of terrorism (AP)

TEHRAN, Iran – Iran's supreme leader on Saturday accused the United States of supporting terrorism, pointing to American drone strikes in Pakistan and Afghanistan that he said have killed scores of civilians.

Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said a country whose military forces are responsible for such deaths can't lecture the world about fighting terror.

Strong anti-U.S. salvos are heard regularly from Iran's leadership. Saturday's statement by Khamenei revealed the differences between Iran and the U.S. on the issue of who is a terrorist and who is a freedom fighter.

"The U.S. and the European governments that follow it describe Palestinian combatant groups who fight for the liberation of their land as terrorists," Khamenei said in a written message to an international conference on combating terrorism that opened Saturday in Tehran.

At the same time, Khamenei said, Israeli military strikes that hit civilians or assassinations of Palestinians by Israeli security agents are not condemned by the West as acts of terrorism.

Iranian leaders say Palestinian groups and the Lebanese Hezbollah are fighting to liberate occupied lands. Iran openly praises groups such as Islamic Jihad and Hamas, which have claimed responsibility for suicide bombings and other attacks.

Khamenei said Iran was a victim of what he called U.S. "terrorism" for the 1988 downing of an Iranian passenger plane by the warship USS Vincennes, which killed all 290 people aboard. The U.S. Defense Department said at the time that the crew mistook the plane for a hostile aircraft, which Iran rejects.

Later Saturday, Khamenei warned visiting Afghan President Hamid Karzai that the United States is seeking to set up permanent bases in Afghanistan.

"Americans are after setting up permanent bases in Afghanistan. This is a dangerous issue. As long as American troops are based in Afghanistan, there will be no real security," state TV quoted Khamenei as saying.

The United States has said it will have all its fighting forces out of Afghanistan by 2014 and that the security of Afghanistan will be turned over to Afghan forces. The U.S. has not asked for any bases or centers to remain under its control.


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Government: No known terror threat tied to July 4 (AP)

WASHINGTON – U.S. intelligence officials say there is no specific or credible information that terrorists intend to strike over the upcoming holiday weekend.

Documents found in Osama bin Laden's home show that, as recently as February 2010, al-Qaida was considering plots against the U.S. during major holidays, including Independence Day.

Bin Laden was killed in a U.S. military operation in May.

A joint FBI and Homeland Security Department intelligence bulletin, obtained by The Associated Press, shows that counterterrorism officials remain concerned that terrorists will target large gatherings in urban areas across the U.S. Yet they have no specific intelligence about an attack tied to the July 4 holiday.

Counterterrorism officials say the driving factor for the timing of attacks is whether the operatives are ready to carry out the plan.


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Accused Seattle attackers wanted media attention (AP)

SEATTLE – Two ex-convicts planned an attack on a Seattle military recruiting station hoping that it would get attention from the media, authorities say, and even imagined the headlines: "Three Muslim Males Walk Into MEPS Building, Seattle, Washington, And Gun Down Everybody."

Abu Khalid Abdul-Latif, also known as Joseph Anthony Davis, 33, of Seattle, was arrested Wednesday when he and another man showed up at a warehouse garage to pick up machine guns they planned to use in the attack, authorities said Thursday. The weapons had been rendered inoperable by federal agents and posed no risk to the public.

Authorities learned of the plot this month when a third person recruited to participate alerted Seattle police, according to court documents. Agents then set up the sting through the confidential informant, who had known Abdul-Latif for years.

Abdul-Latif had little knowledge of weapons, but served briefly in the Navy in the mid-1990s and was familiar with recruiting stations like the one they targeted, a criminal complaint said. The U.S. Attorney's Office in Seattle said he and his alleged accomplice, Walli Mujahidh, planned to attack Joint Base Lewis-McChord but later changed targets.

"If we can get control of the building and we can hold it for a while, then we'll get the local news down there, the media down there, you know what I'm saying," Abdul-Latif was quoted in a court document as saying. "It's a confined space, not a lot of people carrying weapons, and we'd have an advantage."

Mujahidh pictured the headline — "Three Muslim Males Walk Into MEPS Building, Seattle, Washington, And Gun Down Everybody" — according to the court document. Authorities said the two planned to use machine guns and grenades in the attack. In audio and video recordings, they discussed the plot, including strategies to time their attack on military recruits, such as by tossing grenades in the cafeteria, the complaint said.

The attack would not target "anybody innocent — that means old people, women out of uniform, any children," Abdul-Latif allegedly said. "Just people who wear the green for the kaffir army, that's who we're going after."

Abdul-Latif was recorded in conversations with the informant where he spoke admiringly of the 2009 massacre at Fort Hood, Texas, that claimed 13 lives. He referred to war crimes charges against five soldiers accused of killing Afghan civilians for sport last year, saying "he was not comfortable with letting the legal system deal with these matters," according to an FBI agent's affidavit filed in U.S. District Court.

Mujahidh confessed after the arrest, saying the attack was aimed at preventing the U.S. military "from going to Islamic lands and killing Muslims," court documents said. He is also known as Frederick Domingue Jr., 32, of Los Angeles.

Court-appointed lawyers for the men declined to comment.

The arrests and news of the plot come after a May 31 assessment from the Homeland Security Department that said coordinated terrorist attacks against military recruiting and National Guard facilities were unlikely. But it warned that lone offenders or groups would try to launch attacks against those facilities.

Abdul-Latif and Mujahidh face federal charges of conspiracy to murder officers and employees of the United States, conspiracy to use a weapon of mass destruction, and possession of firearms in furtherance of crimes of violence. Abdul-Latif was also charged with two counts of illegal possession of firearms.

"The complaint alleges these men intended to carry out a deadly attack against our military where they should be most safe, here at home," U.S. Attorney Jenny A. Durkan, of Seattle, said in a statement. "This is a sobering reminder of our need to be vigilant."

Abdul-Latif was previously convicted for robbing a Bremerton, Wash., convenience store and for custodial assault, as well as for obstructing a law enforcement officer, assault and theft. When he faced the robbery charge in 2002, he was found to have some "issues" during a psychological evaluation but allowed to stand trial, FBI Special Agent Albert C. Kelly III wrote in the complaint.

A copy of the evaluation showed that Abdul-Latif believed he suffered from depression and abandonment issues, because his father served time in prison in California and he had not seen his mother in a long time. He also said he "huffed" gasoline and smoked marijuana to get high, and that he tried to kill himself in 2001 by deliberately overdosing on seizure medication.

He served prison time on the robbery charge from January 2002 until July 2004. State Corrections Department spokesman Chad Lewis said "nothing in Davis' records that indicates that he converted to Islam while he was in prison."

A sign on the door of Abdul-Latif's apartment read in part: "In the Name of Allah we enter, in the name of Allah we leave, and upon our Lord we depend."

It wasn't immediately clear how the suspects became acquainted, though Mujahidh formerly lived in Seattle. He was convicted in municipal court of violating a domestic violence protection order stemming from a 2007 incident.

Abdul-Latif filed for bankruptcy last month, reporting that his monthly income from his janitorial business was nullified by its operating expenses. Steve Dashiak, his bankruptcy attorney, told The Associated Press he was stunned by the charges.

"I sensed no ill will from him whatsoever," Dashiak said. "He seemed like a guy just trying to make it, having a rough time because business wasn't going very well. To say that I didn't see this coming would be an understatement."

___

Associated Press counterterrorism reporter Eileen Sullivan contributed from Washington, D.C., writer Mike Baker contributed from Olympia, Wash., and writer Manuel Valdes contributed from Seattle.

___

Johnson can be reached at http://twitter.com/GeneAPseattle

Baker can be reached at http://twitter.com/MikeBakerAP

Valdes can be reached at http://twitter.com/manevaldes


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Afghanistan, Iran, Pakistan to combat terrorism (AFP)

TEHRAN (AFP) – Afghanistan, Iran and Pakistan agreed on Saturday to jointly fight militancy as they attended a counter-terrorism summit overshadowed by an Afghan hospital bombing that killed at least 20 people.

The statement by the three neighbouring presidents followed an announcement by US President Barack Obama that Washington will withdraw 33,000 of its 99,000 troops from Afghanistan by the end of next summer.

"All sides stressed their commitment to efforts aimed at eliminating extremism, militancy, terrorism, as well as rejecting foreign interference, which is in blatant opposition to the spirit of Islam, the peaceful cultural traditions of the region and its peoples' interests," the statement said.

They agreed to continue meeting at ministerial level ahead of the next summit in Islamabad before the end of 2011, added the statement carried by Iran's official IRNA news agency.

Afghan President Hamid Karzai and his Iranian and Pakistani counterparts Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Asif Ali Zardari also held three-way talks on Friday ahead of Saturday's six-nation gathering.

Speaking at the opening session of the two-day summit, Karzai said that despite his government's efforts, regional militancy was rising.

"Unfortunately, despite all the achievements in the fields of education, infrastructure and reconstruction, not only has Afghanistan not yet achieved peace and security, but terrorism is expanding and threatening more than ever Afghanistan and the region," Karzai said.

A brazen suicide attack on Saturday on a hospital some 75 kilometres (45 miles) south of the Afghan capital Kabul killed at least 20 people and wounded more than 20.

"Terrorists violate both human and divine values by inflicting death and destruction on fellow human beings. They have no religion," Pakistan's president said.

He said terrorism has cost 35,000 lives in Pakistan, 5,000 of them law enforcement personnel, and caused material damage totalling $67 billion.

In his speech, Ahmadinejad again accused Iran's arch-foe the United States of using the September 11, 2001 attacks as a "pretext" to send troops to the region.

"In light of the way it was approached and exploited, September 11 is very much like the Holocaust," he charged.

"The American government used the attacks as a pretext to occupy two countries, and kill, injure and displace people in the region.

"If the black box of the Holocaust and September 11 is opened, many of the realities will come to light. But unfortunately despite worldwide demand, the American government has not allowed it."

Ahmadinejad has repeatedly courted controversy by questioning the accepted version of both the September 11 attacks, which killed nearly 3,000 people, and the Holocaust during which six million Jews were killed.

In a message read to the counter-terrorism conference, also attended by the leaders of Iraq, Sudan and Tajikistan, Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei spoke out against what called Western abuse of the terrorist threat.

"The diabolical calculation of the dominating powers is to exploit terrorism as a tool to gain their illegitimate aims and they have used it in their plans," Khamenei said.

Khamenei later received Karzai, Talabani and Zardari.

"The Americans seek permanent bases in Afghanistan. This is a dangerous issue because as long as American troops are present in Afghanistan, real security will not prevail," IRNA cited Khamenei telling Karzai.

"US intervention is the root of Iraq's problems... Americans are banking on differences between Iraqi factions to extend their presence there, and Iraqi groups should be aware of this," he told Talabani, Iranian media reported.

"America tries to sow discord in Pakistan so it can harvest its illegitimate aims, but the Pakistani people, aware of Washington's evil intentions, should resist American domination," Khamenei told Zardari.

On the summit's sidelines, Talabani said Camp Ashraf, home to an outlawed armed Iranian opposition group, would be closed before the end of 2011.

He said a a tripartite committee had been created by Iraq, Iran and the International Red Cross to oversee the closure, IRNA reported.

The People's Mujahedeen established Ashraf in the 1980s, when now-executed Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein's regime was at war with Tehran, as a base from which to attack Iran.


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Seattle arrests show how domestic terror fight is evolving (The Christian Science Monitor)

The arrest of terror suspects in Seattle this week presents a good example of what US law-enforcement agencies are facing today:

• One or two potential attackers not affiliated with any broader group.

• Emotional, psychological, and perhaps personal economic difficulties driving a plot to attack Americans.

• “Soft targets” picked for maximum damage to innocent victims.

a€? The importance of paid informants and sting operations.

“Our review of attempted attacks during the past two years suggests that lone offenders currently present the greatest threat,” according to a recent assessment by federal agencies, marked “for official use only” and obtained by The Associated Press. “Unlike hardened facilities such as active duty military bases and installations, soft targets such as recruiting stations are more likely to be deemed a feasible target due to their easy, open access to the public.”

IN PICTURES: American Jihadis

That appears to describe the episode in Seattle this week.

Abu Khalid Abdul-Latif, also known as Joseph Anthony Davis, of Seattle, and Walli Mujahidh, also known as Frederick Domingue Jr., of Los Angeles, were arrested Wednesday night when they arrived at a warehouse to pick up machine guns they intended to use in an alleged terror plot.

The alleged plotters – both US citizens who had converted to Islam – had sought firearms through an acquaintance of Mr. Abdul-Latif’s. That man, a convicted felon, alerted the Seattle Police Department, which put him in touch with the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

According to conversations recorded by the paid informant, Abdul-Latif and Mr. Mujahidh were inspired by the Fort Hood shootings, which killed 13 people in 2009. In that case, Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan, a US Army psychiatrist, apparently acted alone using his personal military weapons.

"If one person [at Fort Hood] could kill so many people, three attackers could kill many more," the informant told authorities, according to the criminal complaint.

Over the next three weeks, the informant secretly recorded conversations in which Abdul-Latif and Mujahidh allegedly spoke of wanting to attack service personnel at Joint Base Lewis-McChord, an Army and Air Force base south of Tacoma. Several US Army soldiers based there are being prosecuted for allegedly killing civilians for sport in Afghanistan.

Yet the alleged plot was switched to a location thought to be a softer target – the Military Entrance Processing Station just south of Seattle. Some 900 military personnel and civilians are employed there, many of them working for the US Army Corps of Engineers or processing new military recruits. The campus includes a child-care facility.

"It's a confined space, not a lot of people carrying weapons, and we'd have an advantage," Abdul-Latif allegedly said in a recording.

The suspects were arrested in a Seattle warehouse where they expected to buy the firearms (which had been rendered inoperable) from the informant.

According to the AP, this case marks the eighth time in the past two years that attacks have been planned or carried out against military installations in the US.

The number of Muslim-American terrorism suspects and perpetrators has averaged about 16 per year since the terrorist attacks of 9/11, according to the Triangle Center on Terrorism and Homeland Security in Durham, N.C.

While most attacks failed on their own or were disrupted, 11 attacks since 9/11 have resulted in 33 deaths – including the 13 at Fort Hood.

In the years since 9/11, sting operations and the use of informants have become among the most important weapons in the fight against domestic terrorism – in about 30 cases over the past five years or so, according to Mark Pitcavage, director of investigative research at the Anti-Defamation League.

Recently, that has included Antonio Martinez (a Muslim convert who had changed his name to Muhammad Hussain), who allegedly attempted to detonate a car bomb at a US Army recruitment center in Maryland, and Somalia-born Mohamed Osman Mohamud, arrested in December for allegedly plotting to explode a bomb at the Pioneer Courthouse Square in Portland, Ore., where thousands of families had gathered for the traditional Christmas tree lighting.

In another case last year, Pakistani-born US citizen Farooque Ahmed of Ashburn, Va., was charged with plotting to carry out a coordinated bombing attack on Metrorail stations in suburban Virginia near Washington, D.C.

Abdul-Latif and Mujahidh, the suspects in this week’s alleged plot in Seattle, are charged with conspiracy to murder officers and employees of the United States, conspiracy to use a weapon of mass destruction (grenades), and possession of firearms in furtherance of crimes of violence. They could face life sentences.

IN PICTURES: American Jihadis


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Friday, June 24, 2011

Judge won't dismiss Minnesota women's terror case (AP)

MINNEAPOLIS – A federal judge won't dismiss the indictment against two Minnesota women accused of funneling money to the terror group al-Shabab in Somalia.

Chief U.S. District Judge Michael Davis says in a written opinion that 34-year-old Amina Farah Ali and 64-year-old Hawo Mohamed Hassan are charged with knowingly providing material support to a foreign terrorist organization.

He says providing material support is conduct — not protected speech.

Attorneys for the women argued their clients were charged under an unconstitutional statute, and asked that the case be dismissed.

Davis says when the case goes to trial, the women may argue they didn't know money they raised was meant for al-Shabab.

The women claim they are innocent and were raising money for the poor in Somalia.

An Oct. 3 trial is scheduled.


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2 congressmen call for Honolulu TSA probe (AP)

By JENNIFER SINCO KELLEHER, Associated Press Jennifer Sinco Kelleher, Associated Press – Tue Jun 21, 5:46 pm ET

HONOLULU – Two congressmen called Tuesday for the U.S. Department of Homeland Security to investigate lapses at Honolulu International Airport that prompted a move to fire dozens of baggage screeners.

In a letter obtained by The Associated Press, U.S. Reps. John L. Mica, R-Fla., and Jason Chaffetz, R-Utah, urged a probe into why Transportation Security Administration screeners "dramatically failed" in their responsibilities.

The TSA wants to fire 36 workers, including two top officials, and has suspended 12 others after a six-month investigation found they did not properly screen baggage during one shift at the airport.

The workers facing termination are on paid leave while the TSA goes through the firing process, which employees can appeal. The 12 others are to return to their jobs after unpaid suspensions of up to 30 days.

It was the single largest personnel action for misconduct in the agency's 10-year history.

The proposed firings "highlight the conflict that exists when the TSA acts as both the operator and regulator of the aviation screening programs," the letter to Homeland Security Acting Inspector General Charles K. Edwards said.

The letter demanded a number of items, including an analysis of the failure of TSA's oversight and supervision of screening in Honolulu; past evaluations of the airport's security officers and all performance disciplinary actions; and the titles, positions and current wage level of those involved.

Mica chairs the Transportation and Infrastructure committee and Chaffetz chairs the National Security, Homeland Defense and Foreign Operations subcommittee. Both have been critical of the TSA.

"It is essential that we have a full investigation of this massive TSA lapse and ensure the nation has the most effective security system possible," Mica said in a statement. "TSA can function more effectively as a security agency if it gets out of the business of managing a bloated bureaucracy of nearly 63,000."

Mica has long urged airports to use private, contracted screeners that are supervised by the TSA, said his spokesman Justin Harclerode.

"That's a better security model than when TSA performs all roles in the security structure," he said. Mica "thinks they have a much more appropriate role as regulator, standard-setter and auditor."

Chaffetz hopes an investigation will bring change.

The investigation request came as TSA workers conclude voting to select the union to represent what would be a bargaining unit of about 43,000 people. Some of the Honolulu employees under fire have sought help from the two unions vying to represent them: American Federation of Government Employees and the National Treasury Employees Union.


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