Middle East, Africa
instability cause for terror: report
By Eileen Sullivan | December 26, 2008 WASHINGTON The terrorism
threat to the United States over the next five years will be driven
by instability in the Middle East and Africa, persistent challenges
to border security and increasing Internet savvy, says a new intelligence
assessment obtained by The Associated Press.
Chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear attacks are considered
the most dangerous threats that could be carried out against the
U.S. But those threats are also the most unlikely because it is
so difficult for al-Qaida and similar groups to acquire the materials
needed to carry out such plots, according to the internal Homeland
Security Threat Assessment for the years 2008-2013.
The al-Qaida terrorist network continues to focus on U.S. attack
targets vulnerable to massive economic losses, casualties and political
"turmoil," the assessment said.
Earlier this month, Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff
said the threat posed by weapons of mass destruction remains "the
highest priority at the federal level." Speaking to reporters
on Dec. 3, Chertoff explained that more people, such as terrorists,
will learn how to make dirty bombs, biological and chemical weapons.
"The other side is going to continue to learn more about doing
things," he said.
Marked "for official use only," the report does not specify
its audience, but the assessments typically go to law enforcement,
intelligence officials and the private sector. When determining
threats, intelligence officials consider loss of life, economic
and psychological consequences.
Intelligence officials also predict that in the next five years,
terrorists will try to conduct a destructive biological attack.
Officials are concerned about the possibility of infections to thousands
of U.S. citizens, overwhelming regional health care systems.
There could also be dire economic impacts caused by workers' illnesses
and deaths. Officials are most concerned about biological agents
stolen from labs or other storage facilities, such as anthrax.
"The threat of terrorism and the threat of extremist ideologies
has not abated," Chertoff said in his year-end address on Dec.
18. "This threat has not evaporated, and we can't turn the
page on it."
These high-consequence threats are not the only kind of challenges
that will confront the U.S. over the next five years.
Terrorists will continue to try to evade U.S. border security measures
and place operatives inside the mainland to carry out attacks, the
38-page assessment said. It also said that they may pose as refugees
or asylum seekers or try to exploit foreign travel channels such
as the visa waiver program, which allows citizens of 34 countries
to enter the U.S. without visas.
Long waits for immigration and more restrictive European refugee
and asylum programs will cause more foreigners to try to enter the
U.S. illegally. Increasing numbers of Iraqis are expected to migrate
to the U.S. in the next five years; and refugees from Somalia and
Sudan could increase because of conflicts in those countries, the
assessment said.
Because there is a proposed cap of 12,000 refugees from Africa,
officials expect more will try to enter the U.S. illegally as well.
Officials predict the same scenario for refugees from Afghanistan,
Bangladesh and Pakistan.
Intelligence officials predict the pool of radical Islamists within
the U.S. will increase over the next five years due partly to the
ease of online recruiting means. Officials foresee "a wave
of young, self-identified Muslim 'terrorist wannabes' who aspire
to carry out violent acts."
The U.S. has already seen some examples of these homegrown terrorists.
Recently five Muslim immigrants were convicted of plotting to massacre
U.S. soldiers at Fort Dix in a case the government said demonstrated
its post-Sept. 11 determination to stop terrorist attacks in the
planning stages.
The Lebanese Shiite group Hezbollah does not have a known history
of fomenting attacks inside the U.S., but that could change if there
is some kind of "triggering" event, the Homeland assessment
cautions.
A 2008 Interagency Intelligence Committee on Terrorism assessment
said that Hezbollah members based in the U.S. do local fundraising
through charity projects and criminal activity, like money laundering,
smuggling, drug trafficking, fraud and extortion, according to the
homeland security assessment.
In addition, the cyber terror threat is expected to increase over
the next five years, as hacking tools become more sophisticated
and available. "Youthful, Internet-savvy extremists might apply
their online acumen to conduct cyber attacks rather than offer themselves
up as operatives to conduct physical attacks," according to
the assessment.
Currently, Islamic terrorists, including al-Qaida, would like to
conduct cyber attacks, but they lack the capability to do so, the
assessment said. The large-scale attacks that are on al-Qaida's
wishlist _ such as disrupting a major city's water or power systems
_ require sophisticated cyber capabilities that the terrorist group
does not possess.
But al-Qaida has the capability to hire sophisticated hackers to
carry out these kinds of attacks, the assessment said. And federal
officials believe that in the next three to five years, al-Qaida
could direct or inspire cyber attacks that target the U.S. economy.
Counterterrorism expert Frank Cilluffo says the typical cyber attack
would not achieve al-Qaida's main goal of inflicting mass devastation
with its resulting widespread media coverage. However, al-Qaida
is likely to continue to rely on the Internet to spread its message,
said Cilluffo, who runs the Homeland Security Policy Institute at
George Washington University.
Officials also predict that domestic terrorists in the forms of
radical animal rights and environmental extremists will become more
adept with explosives and increase their use of arson attacks.
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Source: The Huffington Post