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Is al Qaeda Preparing a Nuclear Hit?
Global Analysis ^ | July 19, 2004 | JR Nyquist

Posted on 07/19/2004 7:30:11 PM PDT by thinkahead

Is al Qaeda Preparing a Nuclear Hit?
by J. R. Nyquist


Top U.S. officials are worried that al Qaeda is preparing a major assault before the November elections. The present level of concern was first voiced by the U.S. Attorney General, then by the Secretary of Homeland Security, and now by the acting Director of Central Intelligence. The warnings qualitatively differ from previous warnings. Two data points serve to explain this qualitative shift. The first data point is the claim that al Qaeda has nuclear weapons that are probably deployed on U.S. soil. The second data point is the fact that steps are being taken to cope with a major disruption of the November elections.

A new book by terrorism expert and former FBI consultant Paul Williams says that al Qaeda acquired 20 nuclear suitcase bombs from the Chechen mafia between 1996 and 2001. This agrees with similar statements made by Yossef Bodansky in his 1999 book, Bin Laden: The Man Who Declared War On America. In saying that al Qaeda poses a nuclear threat, Williams takes his analysis a step farther. He says that al Qaeda has almost assuredly smuggled suitcase bombs into the United States. He also says that these bombs are in the10 kiloton range, capable of inflicting millions of casualties. Williams believes that al Qaeda will use several of these devices in simultaneous attacks against urban targets by the end of 2005.

Is there any reason to credit this dreadful conclusion?

This week the country’s journalists were jolted by reports that security officials are looking into legal mechanisms for postponing the November elections in the event of a terror assault on the homeland. Conspiracy theorists and Bush-haters are already decrying what they call “the obvious power-grab.” But the story is not so simple, since the underlying threat is undeniably real. To be sure, Al Qaeda promised to bring death to America in the wake of 9/11 and death’s tardiness is evident. Many are therefore encouraged to denounce those who offer dire warnings. The July 19 issue of Newsweek offers a startling check to this view. American counter-terror officials have “alarming” intelligence, writes Michael Isikoff, “about a possible al Qaeda strike inside the United States this fall….” Government officials are anticipating an attack that may force the postponement of the November presidential elections.

Now let us think. Would explosions on subways, buses or trains, etc., force a closure of the polls? Spain was hit by train bombings on the eve of its recent elections, and the elections went forward without postponement. To disrupt America’s elections a terrorist would need more than a few conventional bombs. He would have to kill more than a few hundred people to disrupt America’s elections.

According to Isikoff, U.S. intelligence analysts have concluded that al Qaeda wants to “interfere with the [U.S.] elections.” Newsweek’s sources allege that the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel has been asked by the Department of Homeland Security to outline the legal steps required for election postponement

 In a July 8 background briefing by the Department of Homeland Security, a senior official said that a major offensive was being planned by bin Laden’s group. “Osama bin Laden and Ayman Zawahiri have issued several public statements last fall,” he explained, “threatening to carry out those attacks. And numerous al Qaeda spokespersons have, in fact, said that these plans are underway and are near completion.”

Al Qaeda’s stated goal is the destruction of the United States. This goal is peculiar in terms of its grandiosity and the frankness with which it has been broadcast. What are we to make of this? A small group cannot realistically hope to achieve such an objective on its own. Yet this is the stated objective. How on earth do they hope to advance their cause when it is so baldly overstated? After all, to propose unrealistic objectives is to court the disappointment of your own followers. If you say that you will soon destroy the United States you had better deliver a devastating attack or brace for a crippling loss of credibility and prestige. Be careful, as well, that your attack is not ineffectual since you will only raise the level of your adversary’s vigilance.

Clearly, it makes no sense that al Qaeda would declare an objective without the means to achieve that objective. Furthermore, Superpowers do not scare easily. A social system predicated on economic optimism isn’t going to surrender its most fundamental assumptions to an Islamic scarecrow hiding in a distant cave. And yet, American officials are worried. Now ask yourselves the next logical question: If the White House suspected that al Qaeda was ready with nuclear weapons on U.S. soil would the president warn the public?

In the first place, the government could not afford to warn the public. The warning itself would trigger an economic disaster and the government would be blamed. The government itself would be called on the carpet. The opposition party would turn the situation to political advantage. Therefore, a warning about nuclear strikes would be political suicide. The ruling power in this country cannot close the border because we depend on foreign trade. The government cannot arrest and deport illegal aliens because we depend on their labor. We cannot deport all Muslim aliens, since political correctness forbids such blatant profiling. The most effective security measures are impossible under the present political system. As it stands the U.S. would have to undergo an internal revolution before Washington could enact the policies most needed to defend against the suitcase nuclear threat. Simply put, the country is not ready to accept such measures. The country is not convinced that such measures are absolutely necessary. Therefore, the government cannot accept the reality of suitcase nuclear bombs sitting on U.S. soil! To admit of such a thing would be tantamount to admitting that our form of government must come to an end.

The basis of our nuclear defense for half a century has been “deterrence.” Unless you can pinpoint your enemy, unless you can locate him on a map, you cannot send a missile against him. You cannot retaliate. In the case of terrorists hiding in remote mountain caves, there may be no deterrence even if you threaten to locate them and nuke their cave. Since they do not care about their own lives, since they are determined to die for their cause, deterrence is ineffective.

Here is the dilemma of the United States in the first decade of the twenty-first century. 


© 2004 Jeffrey R. Nyquist
July 14, 2004


TOPICS: Front Page News; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: 90dayhalflife; alqaeda; alqaedanukes; blackhelicopters; doommongering; fearmongering; jihadinamerica; kooks; lol; novemberattack; repost; retread; skyisfalling; waronterror
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To: exhaustedmomma
I take it you have a "take" on all of this. So... what is it.

My take on it is pretty straightforward. I believe Hitchens is telling the truth. I believe that his two sources are as credible as he says they are, and, I believe that he is credible. His personal politics differ from mine, but, he strikes me as an honest person, and he is held in high regard by people such as Ann Coulter, who I also judge to be a credible person.

In short, he is not some spittle-chinned lunatic sputtering on the streetcorner handing out mimeo'd screeds typed out on his 50 year old Underwood in some flophouse (if you've been to NYC you know the type ;)

So, we have a credible person, relating a very sobering incident that he personally experienced.

I won't say "it doesn't get more real than that", because, yes, it does "get more real than that" -- but not by very much.

The implication is that the potential for something truly ugly -- a bona fide nuclear weapon -- NOT a "dirty bomb", but the genuine article -- the potential is viewed as real enough to trouble those who are "in a position to know, and ... in a position where he was actually paid to know."

And THAT is real enough to trouble ME.

Moving right along...

I used to get pissed at "the crew" that inevitably shows up, like crockwork, to "debunk" the truth.

Now, I feel sorry for them.

I mean, on the one hand, yeah, it's a job. But man oh man, you've got to have pity on someone who's got to stoop that low just to pay the rent.

121 posted on 07/19/2004 11:27:09 PM PDT by Don Joe (We've traded the Rule of Law for the Law of Rule.)
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To: nyconse
Why haven't we closed our borders. If nukes or chemical weapons are smuggled into this country via Canada or Mexica, our government will have completely failed in it's most important job- protecting American soil and the American people.

Why haven't we closed our borders?

Offhand, I can think of two reasons, which, for better or worse, are not mutually exclusive. It could be that we know that the weapons are already inside our borders, or, (and/or, I suppose), it could be that we're being blackmailed.

122 posted on 07/19/2004 11:30:17 PM PDT by Don Joe (We've traded the Rule of Law for the Law of Rule.)
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To: thinkahead

Suitcase nukes radiate enought radioactivity to fry the person who would dare carry it and would be picked up by spy sattelites.


123 posted on 07/19/2004 11:31:22 PM PDT by John Lenin (If you remember the 60's you were not there)
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To: John Lenin

Balderdash.


124 posted on 07/19/2004 11:52:41 PM PDT by Don Joe (We've traded the Rule of Law for the Law of Rule.)
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To: exhaustedmomma
They already did that in the 50's & early 60's; dismal joke. However, civil patrol was a good idea.

The fact most kids know about "don't talk to strangers" means that there is the ability to teach kids about this stuff, especially what to do when there is a terror-related incident. In Israel, for example, every single kid knew what to do during the first Gulf War when they heard the siren.

125 posted on 07/20/2004 12:17:46 AM PDT by yonif ("So perish all Thine enemies, O the Lord" - Judges 5:31)
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To: thinkahead

no data on the site, but by counting the "fnords" in just the blurb you posted, sounds no more reliable than the Alphabet News.


126 posted on 07/20/2004 4:38:32 AM PDT by King Prout ("Thou has been found guilty and convicted of malum zambonifactum most foul... REPENT!)
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To: Joe Hadenuf

Joe, if Israel turned into a parking lot ... they'd lose their scapegoat.

My 2 cent,
Tilly


127 posted on 07/20/2004 6:24:22 AM PDT by Tilly (Tilly)
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To: GOPJ
Announce names of countries that will be retaliated against, and they'll become allies in finding terrorist who hold nukes.

Maybe that is why Quadaffi is our new friend?

128 posted on 07/20/2004 6:55:59 AM PDT by ladyjane
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To: King Prout

I think you're right. The maintenance to maintain them in optimal condition is high and I don't think they have the tech to do that. Of course if someone else gave them fresh ones that might be a different story. Also, they are not, if I understand correctly, truly "backpack" size but more on the order of 160 pounds or so. Of course with our Southern border in the shape it's in they could just ship the damn thing in from Mexico.


129 posted on 07/20/2004 7:01:13 AM PDT by dljordan
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To: dljordan

the ones we developed during the Vietnam War were "manportable" - if ya had 2 guys - and were packed in 2 major subassemblies. These were designed to take out airfields and such. Never deployed, so far as I know.


130 posted on 07/20/2004 7:05:25 AM PDT by King Prout ("Thou has been found guilty and convicted of malum zambonifactum most foul... REPENT!)
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To: King Prout

Regarding the scientist at Los Alamos who died, we was pushing two subcritical masses of plutonium towards each other with a screwdriver. The called it "tickling the dragons tail"

There was no explosion, but he died when he recieved massive radiation exposure due to the increased release of neutrons.


131 posted on 07/20/2004 7:22:48 AM PDT by EEDUDE (Time flies like an arrow. Fruit flies like a banana.)
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To: Don Joe

...NONE of it been documented, but, insisting that it is categorically impossible...



Come on now, it's not like there are Islamic countries with advanced nuclear programs whose scientists would help out the AQ's, and it's not like there are muslims sitting on vast mountains of cash to finance terror.

And it's not like these Jihadis love torturing their victims endlessly before they kill them, like a cat with a bay bird.
They don't have endlessly long memories and dreams of exruciating vengeance for the slightes insults from a hundred years ago.


132 posted on 07/20/2004 7:33:12 AM PDT by the gillman@blacklagoon.com
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To: Don Joe

I heard that from a nuclear expert on the Michael Savage show. He knew what he was talking about.


133 posted on 07/20/2004 7:54:48 AM PDT by John Lenin
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To: Don Joe

"Balderdash."

Exactly.

This fellow does not know of what he speaks.

I think it is entirely possible that a nuclear weapon is here in the US. And it need not be of the subcritical tritium boost/trigger variety.

It doesn't take all that much more plutonium to produce a crude "gun barrel" type weapon that would have a significant yield. It doesn't have to be perfect.

This was the type of design used in "Little Boy", the bomb that destroyed Nagasaki.

OTOH, can you imagine the disaster and disruption that several pounds of anthrax released by balloons over several cities would cause?

This may be just as likely, and probably much easier to achieve.

Either way I am not discounting the idea that there is something big brewing.


134 posted on 07/20/2004 8:02:42 AM PDT by EEDUDE (Time flies like an arrow. Fruit flies like a banana.)
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To: Don Joe
in addition to not closing the borders we are not allowing trucks across our nation entering from Mexico, despite the fact that using a tanker or truck is one of the plausible scenarios.
135 posted on 07/20/2004 8:04:02 AM PDT by PersonalLiberties (An honest politician is one who, when he's bought, stays bought. -Simon Cameron, political boss)
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To: PersonalLiberties

not = now


136 posted on 07/20/2004 8:06:41 AM PDT by PersonalLiberties (An honest politician is one who, when he's bought, stays bought. -Simon Cameron, political boss)
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To: King Prout

The terrorists can read the net and find out what they need to make it work just as much as anybody here on FR can.

Don't dismiss the threat just because the possible (probably non-existent...but who knows) suitcase nukes are old.


137 posted on 07/20/2004 8:17:27 AM PDT by rwfromkansas (BYPASS FORCED WEB REGISTRATION! **** http://www.bugmenot.com ****)
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To: Oztrich Boy

Ever heard of putting in a new fuse?


138 posted on 07/20/2004 8:22:22 AM PDT by rwfromkansas (BYPASS FORCED WEB REGISTRATION! **** http://www.bugmenot.com ****)
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To: jerrydavenport

Suitcase nuke are real. They exist. They weigh about 200 lbs. each. And, according to some ex-Soviet General (Lebed?) some are missing.

That said, there is a short shelf life on these devices (think about all the old Stingers that don't really work any more...). It is likely that, by now, they would have to be re-manufactured.
Also, even if they had the nukes, that doesn't mean they have codes, etc. to detonate them.
I am definitely a member of the "If they had them they would have already used them" club.


139 posted on 07/20/2004 8:32:37 AM PDT by Little Ray (John Ffing sKerry: Just a gigolo!)
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To: thinkahead
Is al Qaeda Preparing a Nuclear Hit?

I do not remember his exact words, but former Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu said they would throw atom bombs at us, if they could.

140 posted on 07/20/2004 8:38:18 AM PDT by Mark17
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