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To: callmejoe

Thanks for the ping and post CallMeJoe.


136 posted on 05/30/2006 3:33:12 PM PDT by Cindy
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To: Cindy; Velveeta

Not a problem.

http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/world/20060529-1623-canada-terrorism.html

Canadian spy agency says potential terrorists living in Canada


By Beth Duff-Brown
ASSOCIATED PRESS

4:23 p.m. May 29, 2006

TORONTO – Canada's spy agency said Monday that some Canadian citizens or residents received terror training in al-Qaeda-run camps in Afghanistan, providing official reinforcement to what security analysts have warned for years.

The deputy director of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service, Jack Hooper, told a Senate committee studying Canada's role in Afghanistan that there are people living in Canada who fought with al-Qaeda during the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan.

The Senate Standing Committee on National Security and Defense held a full day of hearings on Canada's military mission in Afghanistan, and how it relates to security at home.

The hearings come as Canadians and some lawmakers voice growing concern over the deaths of Canadian soldiers serving in Afghanistan as part of a NATO force. Parliament voted earlier this month to extend Canada's mission in Afghanistan until 2009.

Canada has about 2,000 soldiers based in Afghanistan, most of them in Kandahar.

In outlining the domestic threat, he pointed to examples of people who had lived in Canada who later took part in terrorist attacks. A common thread among them was time spent at training camps in Afghanistan.

“When we talk about the homegrown terrorist phenomenon, these are people ... in most instances who are Canadian citizens,” he said. “A lot of them were born here. A lot of them who were not born here emigrated to Canada with their parents at a very young age.”

Hooper did not provide any specifics on numbers of potential terrorists or their whereabouts. It also wasn't clear what the agency was doing in relation to monitoring or possibly questioning and detaining potential terrorists. Canadian Press news agency said Hooper did not respond to questions from reporters after the hearing.

“I can tell you that all of the circumstances that led to the London transit bombings ... are resident here and now in Canada,” said Hooper, the service's operations director, referring to the bombings in Britain's capital that killed 52 civilians and four terrorists last July 7.

Committee chairman Sen. Colin Kenny said the attacks on Britain should serve as a wake-up call for the problems Canada could encounter with homegrown terrorists.

“They'd been born in country,” Kenny said of the London bombers. “They had all of the slang and comfort with the culture that you and I have, and yet, boom, here they are committing terrorist acts.”

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20060530/wl_canada_nm/canada_security_canada_col_3

CSIS can't find many terror suspects

By David Ljunggren

Canada's spy service admitted on Monday it couldn't track down many domestic terror suspects and said the country faced an increasing threat from "home-grown terrorists" who are assimilated into society.

The frank comments by a senior official at the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) underscore the problems facing the country's counter-terrorism operatives in the wake of the September 11 suicide attacks in New York.

Jack Hooper, deputy director of operations at CSIS, said the service was trying to keep track of "350 high-level targets" as well as 50 to 60 organizations thought to be linked to groups such as al-Qaeda.

"We know who and where some of them are," he told the Senate's national defense committee.

Both the current and previous directors of the CSIS have said over the last two years that an attack by militants inside Canada is inevitable.

Hooper, who complained about a lack of funding, said the overall number of targets CSIS was tracking had not changed since 1998.

"Since 1998 ... we have cut back back considerably in a number of investigative fields. We've reduced the number of individual and organizational targets and yet the target numbers themselves have remained static," he said.

"So we've effectively augmented our target base in a number of particularly terrorist domains. I am concerned that ... maybe we operate at top operational capacity and we've reached that and that critical capacity hasn't really been enhanced over the years."

In recent years, al-Qaeda has twice specifically threatened to strike against Canada.

"We stay up at night worrying about the threats we don't know about. We always used to work on the basis ... that for every one we knew (about), there were probably 10 we didn't," said Hooper. "I worry that the ratio is increased. I think there may be more unknowns now there than ever."

Hooper said CSIS was increasingly concerned by what it called the emergence of "home-grown terrorists" -- young Canadians from immigrant backgrounds.

"They are virtually indistinguishable from other youth. They blend in very well to our society, they speak our language and they appear to be -- to all intents and purposes -- well-assimilated ... (they) look to Canada to execute their targeting," he said.

Hooper drew parallels to last year's London bombings, where four young British men from immigrant families set off bombs in the transit system which killed 52 people and wounded 700.

"I can tell you that all of the circumstances that led to the London transit bombings, to take one example, are resident here now in Canada," Hooper said.

Because home-grown suspects were Canadian, they could not be deported, Hooper told the committee.

"We have two remedies -- we can work in collaboration with law enforcement to see them prosecuted or we can work to disrupt their activities," said Hooper, who declined to answer reporters' questions afterward.

The Senate committee was examining the possible ramifications of Canada's military mission to Afghanistan, which Canada wants to extend for two years to 2009.

Hooper said there could be a risk of veterans of the fighting coming to Canada and launching terror attacks.

CSIS staff could only investigate about 10 percent of the 20,000 immigrants who have come to Canada from Pakistan and Afghanistan over the last five years.

"That may be inadequate," said Hooper.


137 posted on 05/30/2006 4:40:18 PM PDT by callmejoe
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