I don't recall seeing this yet. I apologize if I missed it and it's already been posted.
Whats Next?
Homemade Chemical Bomb Could Be Al Qaeda's Greatest Threat
Brian Ross, Chris Isham and Len Tepper
Sept. 10, 2004 A U.S. government surveillance tape obtained by ABC News shows suspected al Qaeda operatives delivering a chemical bomb to the U.S. consulate in Karachi, Pakistan, this past March. The attempted bombing which was thwarted by an alert security guard would have been the terror network's first chemical bomb attack.
The videotape shows an unidentified man leaving a white van outside the consulate and being picked up by accomplices. Inside the van was a large blue vat containing a 200-gallon mixture of easily available chemicals meant to produce a powerful explosion and potentially fatal fumes.
Many experts now regard this to be al Qaeda's greatest threat the homemade chemical bomb.
"This is no longer theory," said Richard Clarke, who served as a top counterterrorism official under Presidents Bill Clinton and George W. Bush. "This is something al Qaeda always wanted to do. They wrote about it in their encyclopedia of jihad, they experimented with it in Afghanistan, and now in the last year we see evidence that the new al Qaeda is about the process of collecting these chemicals around the world."
The videotape, obtained by ABC News exclusively, shows a fast, coordinated effort. After leaving the van parked outside the consulate, the driver is quickly picked up by accomplices in a car. But a consulate security guard approached the van and discovered its contents......
http://abcnews.go.com/sections/WNT/US/america_at_risk_chemical_attack_040910-1.html
I hadn't a chance to read this when I came across it also, so thanks for it, I save so many articles I can't find them nor recently get a chance to read any of them...I really believe a chem attack has been thwarted lately...
Saturday, September 11, 2004, 9:29 AM PDT
BERLIN (AP) France, Germany and Britain agree for the first time to set a deadline on Iran to comply with international demands on its nuclear activities.