Gulp.
I guess the good news is that if they still have to use suicide bombers, they may not have the "other" stuff.
I'm not sure I'd count on that. Did y'all see this?
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/apeurope_story.asp?category=1103&slug=Italy%20US%20Terror
ROME -- An Italian prosecutor said Wednesday he had provided U.S. authorities with transcripts of phone calls between terror suspects, including one that reportedly refers to a woman ready to carry out a chemical attack in the United States.
The two terror suspects were arrested Tuesday in Milan and include Rabie Osman Ahmed, an Egyptian believed to be behind the March 11 train bombings in Madrid, said Milan prosecutor Maurizio Romanelli.
In one of the intercepted phone conversations, Osman Ahmed refers to a woman ready to carry out a chemical attack in America, the ANSA news agency reported.
When asked about the content of the transcripts, Romanelli pointed to news reports that mention the alleged chemical plot. He did not dispute the reports, but he said he would not comment further on the content of the wiretaps.
The wiretaps refer to "small groups ready to carry out suicide attacks," he said. In most cases, the likely location of the attacks was Iraq, he said. The prosecutor gave no further details.
Police arrested Osman Ahmed in Milan on Monday along with the man he was lodging with, a Palestinian identified as Yahia Payumi.
Authorities say Osman Ahmed is a key suspect in the Madrid attacks. The bombings killed 191 people and have been blamed on Islamic extremists with possible links to al-Qaida.
Italian officials suspect Osman Ahmed was planning further attacks, and they tipped off Belgian counterparts who arrested 15 people Wednesday in coordinated raids.
At least one of the 15 - mostly Palestinian, Jordanian, Moroccan and Egyptian - had previously been in contact with Osman Ahmed, Romanelli said.
The AGI news agency reported Wednesday that the suspects may have been planning an attack on the Paris subway system. Osman Ahmed was recorded asking one of those arrested in Belgium about the Paris Metro and security there, AGI said, citing police sources. Authorities were not immediately available to confirm the report.
Asked about a report in Milan daily Corriere della Sera that the suspects were planning an attack against a NATO base in Belgium, Romanelli said investigators had no information on specific targets.
Isabelle van Heers, spokeswoman for the federal prosecutor's office in Brussels, said Wednesday that authorities there had "no information which would suggest a target in Belgium."
Viviana Bossi, defense lawyer for the two suspects, said Wednesday that her clients are unclear of the exact charges against them. "They deny they are terrorists," she said.
Osman Ahmed was arrested on a Spanish warrant; officials there have said they would request his extradition on multiple counts of murder and attempted murder. Payumi was arrested on the charge of association for international terrorism, which was introduced in Italy after the Sept. 11 attacks.
The two, who are detained in a Milan prison, will face a preliminary hearing from a judge Thursday