Secret Document: Terror Act on U.S. Summer 2007

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
<font size="5"><center>Secret Document:
U.S. Fears Terror 'Spectacular'
Planned In U.S. This Summer</font size>
<font size="4">
Official Cites Resemblance to Warnings and Intelligence Before 9/11</font size></center>


ABC News
By BRIAN ROSS,
RHONDA SCHWARTZ
and RICHARD ESPOSITO
July 1, 2007

A secret U.S. law enforcement report, prepared for the Department of Homeland Security, warns that al Qaeda is planning a terror "spectacular" this summer, according to a senior official with access to the document.

"This is reminiscent of the warnings and intelligence we were getting in the summer of 2001," the official told ABCNews.com.


U.S. officials have kept the information secret, and Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff said today on ABC News' "This Week with George Stephanopoulos" that the United States did not have "have any specific credible evidence that there's an attack focused on the United States at this point."


As ABCNews.com reported, U.S. law enforcement officials received intelligence reports two weeks ago warning of terror attacks in Glasgow and Prague, the Czech Republic, against "airport infrastructure and aircraft."


The warnings apparently never reached officials in Scotland, who said this weekend they had received "no advance intelligence" that Glasgow might be a target.


Homeland Security Secretary Chertoff declined to comment specifically on on the report today, but said "everything that we get is shared virtually instantaneously with our counterparts in Britain and vice versa."


Unlike the United States, officials in Germany have publicly warned that the country could face a major attack this summer, also comparing the situation to the pre-9/11 summer of 2001.

http://abcnews.go.com/Blotter/story?id=3336148
 
And even with this secret out, (translation: internet secret) the borders won't get sealed. Seems the president is gonna let yall feel how pissed he is about his amnesty bill going down in flames. Probably happen in Vegas or Cali. So with all the attention over there, Mexico can empty it's underclass.

-VG
 
<font size="5"><center>US counter-terror authorities fear
major campaign in Europe, possibly
even 9/11-scale mega-attack in America
presaged by failed London and Glasgow bombings </font size></center>


DEBKAFile
July 2, 2007, 1:55 PM (GMT+02:00)

DEBKAfile counter-terror sources report that ten days ago, the US gave the Czech government specific warning of large-scale al Qaeda terrorist attacks in Prague, targeting government buildings, the US embassy, American firms and Jewish and Israel locations in the Czech capital. All American missions and military facilities in Europe were placed on alert.

France, Germany, Italy, Denmark and Spain have also tightened their anti-terror precautions.

Our sources add that the London and Glasgow bombing attempts took the Americans by surprise. They had expected the jihadists to strike elsewhere in Europe.

US homeland security secretary Michael Chertoff Monday played down the threat by denying knowledge of any specific warning in the United States. He said the current alert level of yellow would not be raised for now as it has been in the UK.

However, al Qaeda’s coded messages on internal forums announcing that preparations are now in place for attacks in the US during this summer are appearing with greater frequency than the traffic prior to the 2001 attacks in America and the 2004 Madrid rail bombings.

Security has been tightened at US airports and transport systems ahead of the Fourth of July holiday and New York stepped up security at airports, rail stations, tourist spots and crowd centers after the botched attacks in Britain.

Chertoff spoke of increasing concerns about “the movement of Europeans, including people with European citizenship, into areas of South Asia to get trained and get experience and then coming back to carry out operations in Europe or in the United States using Europe as a departure point."

http://www.debka.com/headline.php?hid=4373
 
VegasGuy said:
And even with this secret out, (translation: internet secret) the borders won't get sealed. Seems the president is gonna let yall feel how pissed he is about his amnesty bill going down in flames. Probably happen in Vegas or Cali. So with all the attention over there, Mexico can empty it's underclass.

-VG
The president wouldn't do that. Would he?

QueEx
 
<font size="5"><center>Officials Worry of Summer Terror Attack</font size></center>

By KATHERINE SHRADER
The Associated Press
Tuesday, July 10, 2007; 11:26 PM

WASHINGTON -- U.S. counterterror officials are warning of an increased risk of an attack this summer, given al-Qaida's apparent interest in summertime strikes and increased al-Qaida training in the Afghan-Pakistani border region.

On Tuesday, Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff told the editorial board of The Chicago Tribune that he had a "gut feeling" about a new period of increased risk.

He based his assessment on earlier patterns of terrorists in Europe and intelligence he would not disclose.

"Summertime seems to be appealing to them," Chertoff said in his discussion with the newspaper about terrorists. "We worry that they are rebuilding their activities."

Other U.S. counterterrorism officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity, shared Chertoff's concern and said that al-Qaida and like-minded groups have been able to plot and train more freely in the tribal areas along the Afghan-Pakistani border in recent months. Osama bin Laden and his top deputy, Ayman al-Zawahri, are believed to be hiding in the rugged region.

"The threat coming out of there is very real, even if there aren't a lot of specifics attached to it," one of the officials said.

Chertoff's department has not made any move to increase the nation's color-coded terror alert system. Now, airlines are under orange _ or high _ alert, which is the second most serious level on a five-point scale. The rest of the country remains a step below at yellow, or elevated.

Chertoff said he is convinced that terrorists are regrouping. "Our edge is technology and the vigilance of the ordinary citizen," he said.

The secretary also urged Americans to be watchful for suspicious activities in the wake of recent terror incidents in England and Scotland. On June 29, two cars packed with gas cylinders and nails were discovered in London's entertainment district. The next day, two extremists smashed their flaming Jeep Cherokee into security barriers at Glasgow Airport's main terminal.

Al-Qaida and its sympathizers have shown an interest in summertime attacks. Some examples from recent years:

_ In 2005, London faced two separate sets of transit attacks. The July 7 attacks on three trains and a bus killed 52. A second attack on July 21 was bungled when the detonators failed to light the explosives.

_ Last summer, international counterterror authorities said they foiled a plot to use liquid explosives to take down roughly 10 U.S.-bound airliners leaving Britain.

___

On the Net:

Department of Homeland Security: http://www.dhs.gov

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/07/10/AR2007071001206.html
 
They are going to keep trying to further disturb our movement, and I think it will eventually backfire. When the attacks on 9/11 occured, the US and much of western Europe did not cower, but got aggressive. If it wasn't for this misbe-fuckin-gotten Iraq clusterfuck, Al-Queda would be done. I think there will be a big nothing here in the states until winter at the earliest because activity will pick up during the election cycle.
 
What's sad is that they will probably succeed or be allowed to succeed sometime between now and November, 2008.

If people gave up a bunch of civil rights after 9/11, imagine what they'll give up if a nuke goes off in a major U.S. city. People will be crying and screaming in the streets and asking for the government to help them. The perfect time to activate the Presidential Directive (dictatorship).

National Security and Homeland Security Presidential Directive

"It is with great reluctance that I have agreed to this calling. I love democracy. I love the Republic. Once this crisis has abated, I will lay down the powers you have given me!" – Palpatine, Star Wars: Episode II - Attack of the Clones

:smh:
 
Fuckallyall said:
They are going to keep trying to further disturb our movement, and I think it will eventually backfire. When the attacks on 9/11 occured, the US and much of western Europe did not cower, but got aggressive. If it wasn't for this misbe-fuckin-gotten Iraq clusterfuck, Al-Queda would be done. I think there will be a big nothing here in the states until winter at the earliest because activity will pick up during the election cycle.
I have to agree with you. We had Al Qaeda on the run in Afghanistan and should have pursued it to no end. Unfortunately, there was a country called Iraq which diverted the pursuit of Al Qaeda and, from the appearance of things, actually opened up the door to the presence of Al Qaeda in a country where it was probably least likely to be tolerated.

QueEx
 
So...if its pre 9/11 parallel, the secret government has knowledge of catastrophic staged event and its location, usual suspects and estimated casualty count...
 
<font size="5"><center>The July 4 Al-Zawahiri Video:
Protesting Too Much</font size></center>


Strategic Forecasting
Terrorism Intelligence Report
By Fred Burton and Scott Stewart
July 11, 2007

On July 4, As-Sahab productions released a video to jihadist Web sites that featured al Qaeda's second-in-command, Ayman al-Zawahiri. The 90-minute production differs from other videos featuring al-Zawahiri in that it uses a number of short audio and video cameos of other people to underscore the points al-Zawahiri is attempting to make. In some ways, the video is almost like a jihadist version of "The Daily Show," with al-Zawahiri as the host using audio and video footage to emphasize his points.

The cameo appearances in the video include jihadist hero Abdullah Azzam, Al-Quds Al-Arabi Editor-in-Chief Abdul Bari Atwan, 9/11 Commission Chair Thomas Kean, Saudi National Security Council Secretary-General Prince Bandar bin Sultan, former U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell, Kuwaiti academic and Islamist writer Abdullah al-Nafisi and Movement for Islamic Reform in Arabia leader Saad al-Faqih, among others.

The tone with which al-Zawahiri addresses Hamas and the larger Palestinian situation seems to indicate the video was recorded prior to Hamas' mid-June offensive that consolidated the group's control over Gaza. That would mean the video was recorded before al-Zawahiri's audio message released June 25, which noted the Hamas victory in Gaza and called on Hamas to establish a government in Gaza based on Islamic law.

The video was followed by the July 10 release of another recording from al-Zawahiri in which he threatens the United Kingdom for knighting author Salman Rushdie. Like his June 25 recording, it is a video comprising an audio recording and a still picture of al-Zawahiri. The flurry of recent recordings has been similar to the media blitz of last summer, except that Osama bin Laden was in the mix last time.

The July 4 video is clearly defensive in nature, though al-Zawahiri attempts to adopt a positive tone. It is an attempt to shore up the crumbling jihadist facade in Iraq, counter the fatwas and other statements from clerics condemning al Qaeda and jihadist ideology and, in a larger sense, assert al Qaeda's power. However, a careful review of the video reveals the places in which al Qaeda is feeling pressured and is attempting to push back. Furthermore, al-Zawahiri's need to have others proclaim al Qaeda's accomplishments -- a need a truly powerful entity would not have -- leaves viewers with the feeling that, to paraphrase The Bard, the jihadist doth protest too much.

Pressure Points: Unity in Iraq

The first obvious pressure point for al-Zawahiri and al Qaeda's core leadership is Iraq. Momentum has shifted in Iraq, and things are not going well for al Qaeda there. Tactically, al Qaeda's Iraqi node can still kill people -- but strategically, the group's hopes of establishing a caliphate there under the mantle of the Islamic State of Iraq are rapidly fading. These dashed hopes have caused the group to lash out against former allies, which has worsened al Qaeda's position.

One of the reasons for this state of affairs is, according to al-Zawahiri, lack of unity. The controversy over the legitimacy of the Islamic State of Iraq is one source of that disunity. Some Islamic scholars and Iraqi tribal leaders say the formation of the Islamic State of Iraq was proclaimed prematurely, and that such a political entity can only be legitimately formed after the jihadists have been empowered. Al-Zawahiri says that many of the people who call the Islamic State of Iraq premature supported the formation of a similar government in Peshawar while the Soviets still controlled Afghanistan. Of course, al-Zawahiri fails to mention that, unlike Iraq, all the groups involved in Afghanistan were united in their opposition to the Marxist government in Kabul and its Red Army backers.

Al-Zawahiri also says the Islamic State of Iraq is more empowered and independent than the Hamas-led government in the Palestinian territories and has a larger army, but that the Palestinian government is considered legitimate while the Islamic State of Iraq is not.

During the video, al-Zawahiri not only calls for unity among the jihadists and nationalists in Iraq, he also tries to reach out to the Palestinians, Shia, Arab nationalists and Kurdish nationalists. This outreach to the Shia and failure to criticize Iran when discussing the situation in Iraq is a marked contrast to the July 8 statement from Abu Omar al-Baghdadi, emir of the Islamic State of Iraq, in which he threatened the Shia and the Iranian government. Al-Baghdadi's group has also attacked scores of Shiite targets -- a strategy the group began under Abu Musab al-Zarqawi's leadership, and one that al-Zawahiri counseled against.

Al-Zawahiri calls on the jihadists to "strengthen one another, and guide one another, and advise and instruct our brothers, even if we differ with them, and that we must study how to close gaps between us, in order to make use of and benefit from every achievement achieved by our mujahideen brothers." He also says this must be done "even where there are shortcomings or something less than perfection" -- a reference to the Islamic State of Iraq.

Al-Zawahiri posits that al Qaeda's efforts at fostering unity have set an example for others to follow. He says that because of al Qaeda's promotion of unity, Allah blessed its attacks against the U.S. embassies in East Africa and the USS Cole, along with the 9/11 attacks, and has protected al Qaeda's leaders from their enemies. He seems to forget the way his own ideological shift from the near to the far enemy, and his alignment with bin Laden, inflamed divisions in the already fractious Egyptian militant community.

Al-Zawahiri says al Qaeda is constantly striving to "unite the ranks of the mujahideen" and indicates that other independent jihadist groups have recently agreed to join the al Qaeda umbrella group. He says al Qaeda will soon announce the addition of some groups to its coalition, but that other groups prefer their union with al Qaeda be kept quiet right now. Al-Zawahiri did not provide any clues as to which groups have joined, but it is not illogical to conclude that, based on recent events, he could have been referring to Palestinian, Lebanese and Kashmiri groups.

However, even this assertion that more groups are in al Qaeda's ideological orbit is telling. If al Qaeda's ideology had momentum, if the Ummah were rising up in response to al Qaeda's call, there would be no reason to hide the affiliation. If, on the other hand, the United States and its allies have begun systematically dismantling al Qaeda's local nodes, then it makes sense that some of the weaker groups would want to avoid bringing that kind of pressure on themselves. Thus, a statement that al-Zawahiri intended to be an expression of strength is, in effect, a concession of weakness.

Ideological Assaults

Al-Zawahiri notes that the battles of the "crusaders and their slaves" (referring to the Muslims who cooperate with the United States and its Western allies) have expanded to the "doctrinal and moral fronts." He also says the "Ummah is currently facing a deceptive propaganda war from the Americans and their agents." These are references to the ideological war Stratfor has discussed as the only way jihadism can ultimately be defeated.

Clearly, al Qaeda also sees the attacks against its ideology as a significant threat. In fact, al-Zawahiri says, "I would like to remind everyone that the most dangerous weapons in the Saudi-American system are not buying of loyalties, spying on behalf of the Americans or providing facilities to them. No, the most dangerous weapons of that system are those who outwardly profess advice, guidance and instruction …" In other words, al Qaeda fears fatwas more than 500-pound bombs or cruise missiles. Bombs can kill people; fatwas can kill the ideology that lies at the root of the problem.

Al-Zawahiri also laments specific fatwas issued by clerics declaring that the jihad in Iraq is not obligatory and who forbid young Muslim men from going to Iraq. To counter these fatwas, al-Zawahiri plays an audiotape of Azzam (while a photo of Azzam is shown), in which Azzam comments on how jihad is the individual duty of every Muslim. Al-Zawahiri then urges Muslims to ignore such fatwas and scholars: "O youth of Islam, don't listen to them, and I convey to you the mujahideen's commanders' mobilization of you, so hurry to Afghanistan, hurry to Iraq, hurry to Somalia, hurry to Palestine and hurry to the towering Atlas Mountains." He also rails against the "religion traders in Iraq and Afghanistan to deem as haram (forbidden) the jihad against the invaders."

One reason the al Qaeda leadership is so threatened by these ideological attacks is that neither bin Laden nor al-Zawahiri has any Islamic scholarly credentials. Many Muslims do not believe they possess the training and authority to issue a fatwa.

Attacks Against the House of Saud

A significant amount of this video is devoted to an attempt to undermine the Saudi government as personified by the Saudi royal family. Though the tape also briefly mentions the other Gulf Cooperation Council countries, the Saudi regime receives a prolonged treatment, and the video clips of al-Faqih, Prince Bandar, al-Nafisi and others are used to vilify the House of Saud. Of course, verbal attacks against the Saudi regime are nothing new for al Qaeda. In bin Laden's August 1996 fatwa, "Declaration of War against the Americans Occupying the Land of the Two Holy Places," he spends more ink condemning the Saudis than he does condemning the Americans the fatwa was reputedly authored against.

These attacks against the Saudis are meant to not only undermine the Saudi clerics' authority to issue fatwas, they also attempt to thwart Saudi efforts to halt the violence in Iraq. Such a settlement would effectively put al Qaeda's Iraq node out of business and hasten the demise of the Islamic State of Iraq. To this end, al-Zawahiri warns the divided jihadist and nationalist militant groups in Iraq that, "If the agents of the Saudi state were to take control of government in Iraq, or the regions of the people of the Sunnah, the Iraqis would then suffer the same repression and humiliation which the people suffer under Saudi rule." Elsewhere he says, "If Saudi influence were to spread in Iraq, it would impose on the people of Iraq a ruling clique which would own what is above the ground and beneath it, and would sell Iraq in its entirety to the Americans." He clearly wants to keep Iraq's tribal leaders off the Saudi bandwagon.

Egyptian Statements

Over the past several months, former Egyptian militants have issued a string of statements renouncing violence and al Qaeda. These statements, some of which have come from al-Zawahiri's friends and family members, appear to be another pressure point for him. He denounces the statements as the "blackmailing of the tortured and mutilated captives … who have been stripped of their thoughts and beliefs, and had their convictions removed for them to declare their remorse, regret and retractions ..."

Elsewhere he says, "I read a ridiculous bit of humor in Asharq Al-Awsat newspaper, which claimed that it received a communique from one of the backtrackers, who faxed it from prison. I laughed inside and asked myself, 'Do the prison cells of Egypt now have fax machines? And I wonder, are these fax machines connected to the same line as the electric shock machines, or do they have a separate line?'

"Thus, I caution my Muslim brothers everywhere against the statements and retractions of the graduates and guests of the prisons, on the peninsula and in Egypt, Yemen, Algeria, Indonesia and all lands of Islam. They are either those who have been coerced and before whose eyes the memories of the torture, lashing, suspension and shocks play like a film, or are those who are disheartened and fallen and looking for a way out of prison and a little comfort. Neither type is to be listened to or relied upon in his statements and opinions …"

Despite his joke about the fax machine and the advice not to listen to these statements, al-Zawahiri is clearly bothered and issues a challenge: "Thus, I tell these enemies: This is not a noble fight, to be alone with an isolated prisoner and squeeze him physically and psychologically until he agrees with you for you, then to applaud that. If you are real men, then compete with us by yourselves, in the arenas of ideology, invitation and information, which are the arenas in which you yourselves have admitted your defeat."

Now, if the enemies of al Qaeda have admitted defeat in the area of ideology, how can al-Zawahiri call ideological attacks the most dangerous weapon facing al Qaeda? These ideological attacks clearly concern him greatly.

The End Strategy

Al-Zawahiri ends the video by mapping out a two-part strategy. The short-term plan involves targeting "Crusader-Jewish interests … in Iraq, Afghanistan, Palestine and Somalia and everywhere we are able to strike their interests." The long-term plan is to change the "corrupt and corrupting" regimes in the Muslim world once the crusaders and Jews have been defeated and can no longer support these regimes.

The video contains some clips of Atwan and al-Nafisi talking about how al Qaeda has masterfully played its strategic hand, and trumpeting the organization's strength, but when taken in light of the only criterion that really matters -- successful attacks -- these proclamations ring hollow. Had al Qaeda recently conducted spectacular attacks, there would have been no need for the inclusion of video and audio footage of people informing the public of the jihadists' power. Their actions would have spoken for themselves.

Upon reflection, perhaps their actions have.

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