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To: Constitution Day
An underwater drop would be simple to do.

Heck, a few years ago we found a damn 100+' SUBMARINE being built high up in Colombia for shipping cocaine to the USA! It was built in segments for road transport and assembly at the coast and was almost ready. A SUBMARINE.

Getting WMD into the USA is a joke. One 40 foot shipping container could be the equivalent of 20 OKC bombs, and set with a GPS trigger to detonate when crossing a certain bridge, or when being trucked across a city. (98% of containers are offloaded by automated cranes and never looked at inside until they reach Walmart etc.)

295 posted on 09/12/2002 11:48:25 AM PDT by Travis McGee
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To: Travis McGee
http://hypocrisytoday.com/stowaway.html

Terrorist in a Box Business-class suspect caught in container

BY RICHARD OWEN IN ROME AND DANIEL MCGRORY, The Times (UK), OCTOBER 25 2001

ITALIAN police were investigating last night why a suspected al-Qaeda hijacker would smuggle himself halfway around the world locked inside a shipping container with its own bed and toilet.

The bizarre discovery of an Egyptian carrying a Canadian passport was made on the dockside in Gioia Tauro in southern Italy, where detectives believe they may have foiled another hijacking.

They were questioning Rizik Amid Farid, 43, about his choice of travel and why he was carrying airport maps and airside security passes for Canada, Thailand and Egypt.

Unlike most stowaways they find, Mr Farid was smartly dressed, clean-shaven and rested as he stepped from his makeshift home.

He was, his captors said, "stunned" to be found with a laptop computer, two mobile phones, cameras, a Canadian passport, other identity documents and a certificate saying he is an aircraft mechanic.

Mr Farid was found last week but it was only yesterday that police admitted their curious discovery.

Roberto Di Palma, a prosecutor, said: "He was in possession of documents and apparatus that no ordinary illegal immigrant would have been able to afford. The average illegal immigrant does not have high-tech equipment and airport security passes. The FBI has been alerted to the discovery of Mr Farid.

Like the 19 hijackers that al-Qaeda used on September 11, Mr Farid’s name is not on Interpol’s wanted list.

The successful capture of this suspected hijacker is timely for the Italians after the admission that they had allowed nine Islamic militants to abscond from bail after a legal bungle.

Police said Mr Farid was finding it difficult to explain why he was carrying a return airline ticket from Montreal to Egypt, via Rome. Investigators said that could be an "insurance policy" enabling him to reach Canada by air in case he was discovered on the ship but managed to escape.

The priority now, police said, was to authenticate his identity and discover why he was heading for Canada. Had he not been found during a security check, Mr Farid would have faced another three weeks at sea to reach Toronto.

Mr Farid was discovered during a "technical inspection" of a ship from Port Said that had docked at the container port of Gioia Tauro.

The container in which Mr Farid had been hidden was "very tidy and well appointed", investigators said. It was furnished with supplies for a long journey and had a bucket which he used as a toilet.

Magistrates said they were considering a charge of "links with international terrorism", a new offence introduced last week as part of an emergency anti-terrorism package passed by Parliament after the attacks of September 11.

Il Messaggero, the Rome daily, said it was a "reasonable inference" that his intention had been to gain admittance to an airport in Canada and perhaps commandeer an aircraft with the help of accomplices and fly it over the border to the United States.

Michele Filippo Italiano, Mr Farid’s lawyer, denied that. He said Mr Farid lived in Montreal and had Canadian citizenship. "He had fallen out with his brother-in-law in Cairo and feared he would be prevented from leaving Egypt," he said.

314 posted on 09/12/2002 11:54:51 AM PDT by crypt2k
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To: Travis McGee
Holy borders, Travis!

I think I'll be having a drink or three tonight.

326 posted on 09/12/2002 12:01:43 PM PDT by Constitution Day
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To: Travis McGee
Travis, this is one of those things that I don't think anything will fix. I have worked in a space that was subject to Intermediate Nuclear Forces Treaty inspection visits, and the size of an INF Treaty "controlled item" (i.e., something that the inspectors could demand to look inside) was a file cabinet drawer. They couldn't shuffle through papers inside the cabinet, but they had every right to demand that the cabinet be opened up so they could make sure it ONLY had papers in it.]

The "Davy Crockett" was a recoilless rifle roundwith a nuclear warhead. Casing diameter was 11 inches at its widest point; length was 30 inches long. Yield was variable from 0.01 kilotons (about four-five times as big as the Alfred P. Murrah Building truck bomb) to 1 kiloton (400-500 times as large as the APMFB device).

Something like that would fit inside a file cabinet. I don't see how you could check everything closely enough to prevent a cagey opponent from smuggling in a small nuke--one could simply hide it inside an electrical transformer casing with layers of boron-impregnated foam rubber and lead to stop the signatures from leaking out.

I'm going to have to find Erwin Strauss' book, Basement Nukes: the Consequences of Cheap Weapons of Mass Destruction.

330 posted on 09/12/2002 12:04:34 PM PDT by Poohbah
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