On Friday, August 10, US security Authorities were taking extra
counterterrorism precautions in response to what they said was
an unsubstantiated radiological threat to the New York City. NYPD
deployed special sensors on street, water and air patrols, and
were stopping vehicles at checkpoints in lower Manhattan and on
bridges and tunnels entering the city. In an effort to prevent
panic, New York Deputy Police Commissioner Paul J. Browne called
the measures "strictly precautionary", but the news
nevertheless spread like wildfire.
According to a report published by the Jerusalem Post, an Israeli
web site reported that a video released last Sunday allegedly featured
an al Qaeda spokesman, Californian-born Adam Gaddahn, also known
as Azzan al-Amriki, who is wanted by the FBI, who warned of an attack,
by means of trucks loaded with radioactive material, targeted against
American financial nerve centers. The source, named DebkaFile,
is usually reporting from seemingly well placed sources within the
Israeli Military and Intelligence Communities, but cannot always
be relied-on for accurate, non-speculative nature information.
In
fact, Israeli counter-terror sources and even DebkaFile's monitors
have already said that there is no way of gauging for sure how serious
these threats are, how real, or whether they are not part of a war
of nerves to give the Gaddahn tape "extra mileage". But,
sources indicate, it should be important to note that the exchange
of messages took place over al Qaeda’s internal Internet sites
which contained the threat of radioactive terror, pointing to specific
American cities for the first time, after a long silence on such
subjects.
"We are closely monitoring the situation," said Homeland
Security Department spokesman Russ Knocke. "There continues
to be no credible information telling us that there's a threat to
the homeland at this time." But New York has remained on an
orange alert - the second highest such level, below red -since the
September 11, 2001, attacks that destroyed the World Trade Center.
A spokesman for the Department of Homeland Security in Washington
said the threat to New York was "unsubstantiated" and
there was "no credible information telling us there is an imminent
threat to the homeland at this time."
Nevertheless, separate reports, by the US Department of Homeland
Security and the Canadian Border Services Agency have each recently
issued security notices alerting law enforcement officials to border-crossing
issues, including illicit smuggling tunnels. Canadian official have
also issued a warning that "several counterfeit visas have
been intercepted at Toronto Pearson International Airport."
No further details were released.
The Threat of Bio-chemical and radiological terrorism
But whether the present threat is real or not, for the time being-
the acute danger of bio-chemical and radiological terrorism is certainly
building up, creating sleepless nights to international anti-terrorist
agencies. And not enough attention is apparently given by national
political decision-makers to this highly lethal threat.
In a recent report, published in the Israeli Daily Haaretz, veteran
reporter Yossi Melman, reveals the sad state of biological security
in Israel, as evidenced by the absence of appropriate legislation
and a supreme government authority keeping track of what is being
done, to prepare the nation against this horrifying threat. According
to Melman, Prof. Ethan Rubinstein conducted a study in which he
tried to examine the resistance of anthrax microbes to antibiotics.
They published the results of their study, of producing antibiotic-resistant
anthrax microbes, in the Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy.
"The study lit a warning light," says Colonel (res.)
Dr. David Friedman, the Defense Ministry expert on biological and
chemical warfare. "It could be an example of a research study
that is liable to be labeled sensitive." The dream of every
terror organization or enemy country is to get their hands on anthrax
microbes against which there is no effective antibiotic or vaccine.
But Anthrax research is only one example of the danger that bioterrorism
threatens not only Israel, but th rest of the free world. If terrorists
can get their hands on highly toxic material and turn these into
lethal warfare elements, the danger to society can become catastrophic.
Dr. Friedman, who is a biologist by training, was involved in R&D
in the Israel Defense Forces and the Defense Ministry's R&D.
He also served as a representative of the counter-terrorism unit
on a special counter-terrorism steering committee established jointly
in late 2005, at the department in the National Security Council
in the Prime Minister's Office and the Israeli National Academy
of Sciences. The Israel Biological Institute is one of the most
clandestine research institutions in the country, where, according
to foreign publications, Israel is developing chemical and biological
weapons countermeasures.
Nevertheless,
Israel may already be preparing at last to face the threat of this
kind of unconventional warfare. In a recent nationwide large-scale
civil defense drill, anti-terrorist security forces featured a response
to a mock chemical terror strike at a school in Ramat Gan. The scenario
envisioned a group of terrorists breaking into the school and attacking
with a chemical that caused symptoms such as sweating and breathing
difficulty. Officials mentioned this being the first of following
drills by the Home Front Command.
According to western intelligence sources, Al Qaeda has obtained
access to anthrax since already in 1997. Dr. Ayman Zawahiri's right-hand
man confessed that the organization had succeeded in obtaining anthrax
and intended to use it against US targets. In 2001, CNN reporter
Mike Boettcher indicated the capture of an Al Qaeda bioterrorism
manual with chemical formulas and "step-by-step instructions
in the manufacture of deadly biological weapons. The Biological
warfare sections of the manual, give exact formulas for the production
of deadly toxins botulinum and ricin, although there's no evidence
of instructions on how to make or distribute anthrax.
There is no doubt that Al Qaeda has shown an eagerness to use whatever
weapons it can obtain against American targets in its terrorist
operations, and that makes its efforts to acquire chemical and biological
weapons particularly worrisome to United States intelligence officials.
The official intelligence assessment is that Al Qaeda has a ''crude
chemical and possibly biological capability,'' a Pentagon official
said recently. In fact, American intelligence officials reported
after the 2001 Afghanistan war, that Al Qaeda had already experimented
with cyanide gas at a crude chemical weapons research laboratory
in Derunta, a small village near the eastern Afghan city of Jalalabad.
There are intelligence reports showing the possible production
of small quantities of cyanide gas providing the strongest indication
received of Al Qaeda's success in its efforts to develop chemical
weapons. According to US military intelligence, another fertilizer
plant was found in Mazar-i-Sharif, which the Northern Alliance captured
during the war, which had allegedly been under the control of the
Taliban and Al Qaeda, but had also used by Osama bin Laden and his
organization, because its equipment could produce either biological
or chemical weapons grade material.
That a biological, chemical and radiological terrorist threat is
real goes to show without doubt in a December 2004 jihadist website
slogan "Dirty bombs for a dirty nation". Its author, veteran
Syrian jihadist named Mustafa Setmariam Nasar, complained that the
brutal attack on the New York World Trade Center in 9/11 could have
been much more "effective" if the planes were laden with
weapons of mass destruction. He proposed that future attacks be
carried out with deadly "dirty Bomb" material. His warning
should be given serious attention if the West wishes to prevent
a new catastrophe.
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