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To: blackie

Oh yeah! Good stuff!


415 posted on 05/14/2010 9:56:38 AM PDT by caww
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To: caww; All
Filed under ANYTHING by Paul Sperry is worth payin' attention to.
*******************

How Faisal snuck through
Easy path from terror camp to US
By PAUL SPERRY

Excerpt:
Six years ago, Homeland Security ordered customs agents at JFK and other international airports to examine all travelers of Pakistani descent -- including US citizens -- for "rope burns," "unusual bruises," "wounds/scars" and other signs of minor injuries suffered while attending "terrorist training camps in Pakistan."

The sensitive two-page action alert -- dated June 17, 2004 -- warned that individuals trained in the Pakistani camps "are destined" to carry out terror attacks inside the US.

A lot of good it did. The system flagged Shahzad -- but he was allowed to continue traveling to Pakistan and eventually obtain a US passport, all the while eluding FBI monitoring.

The "Pakistan watch" intensified in January 2005, when the Department of Homeland Security directed airport inspectors to help intercept "Pakistani-based young men in their 20s traveling to the US." The men were believed to be plotting to attack New York and other terror targets. But inspectors stood down once that specific threat passed.

Months later, British citizens of Pakistani origin bombed the London subways after training at Pakistan camps -- and DHS ordered US border authorities to renew their focus on Pakistani travelers. But Washington soon backed off the increased scrutiny after the Pakistani Embassy and US Muslim groups complained about profiling.

Then UK authorities foiled the August 2006 plot to blow up planes over US cities. The Pakistani Britons in that cell had also trained at camps in Pakistan -- so Homeland Security again put agents back on high alert for Pakistani travelers.

The department even created a temporary watchlist, called a "one-day lookout," to screen high-risk passengers inbound from Pakistan. Those flagged (in the so-called ATS-P computer system) are subjected to a battery of questions and additional searches to determine if they've visited Pakistan terror camps.

And that system flagged Shahzad this past February when he re-entered the US from a five-month stint in Pakistan. He was sent to secondary inspection for a more detailed screening, where his bags were searched and he was asked about his long stay in Pakistan.

In fact, during that time he learned bomb-making at a terror camp. But he simply explained that he was visiting family and was released from custody. ("Looking for a bride" is another common line jihadist suspects returning from Pakistan use to escape investigation.)

DHS agents sent a report to the FBI, noting that Shahzad had been flagged after bringing some $80,000 in cash into the US. There were other red flags as well, such as the fact he'd come back this time without his wife.

But the bureau didn't aggressively follow up. "The FBI should have kept an eye on him," a DHS official told me.

Maybe the bureau was still smarting from the response to its September 2008 FBI manhunt for Pakistan-trained cells (launched in response to leads developed in the arrest of an al Qaeda operative). That got tamped down after Muslim groups led by CAIR (the Council on American-Islamic Relations) and their Hill cheerleaders hounded FBI Director Robert Mueller for singling out young Muslim men. (House Judiciary Committee Chairman John Conyers hammered Mueller in a public hearing over "racially profiling" Pakistanis.)

After the bombing attempt last Christmas, DHS increased airport scrutiny of travelers from Yemen, Pakistan and other high-risk Muslim nations. But howls over profiling soon prompted Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano to scrap the policy.

This politically correct, piecemeal system isn't enough to protect us from the growing threat of American turncoats training for jihad in Pakistan.

Bad guys like Shahzad -- and Najibullah Zazi, the Queens native who plotted to blow up the New York subways, and Daood Gilani (aka David Headley), who helped plan the Mumbai massacre -- still slip back into the US after training to kill in Pakistan, then go on their way.

We need to close the front door overseas: Washington should place a moratorium on new visas for young male immigrants from Pakistan until the terror camps are permanently closed. And the FBI must keep a closer eye on young Pakistani-American men and their mosques -- and not apologize for it.

Otherwise, it's just a matter of time before one of them uses his overseas terror training against his American countrymen -- this time successfully.

416 posted on 05/15/2010 3:53:55 AM PDT by MestaMachine (De inimico non loquaris sed cogites- Don't wish ill for your enemy; plan it)
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