Posted on 10/11/2002 6:54:58 AM PDT by seamus
That's what I'm leaning towards, in my near-total ignorance of any real hard data. I'm sure that something like that would be right up Al-Qaeda's alley, and Saddam Hussein would love it too.
"On a sunny day in rural Ohio, a routine traffic stop becomes a nightmare. As a sheriff's deputy approaches an apparently disabled pickup truck, armed men leap from its bed, spray him with gunfire and toss a homemade bomb into his squad car before escaping. In Los Angeles, masked men capture a small office building, killing its security guards before taking more than a dozen hostages. As the day unfolds, the masked men demand time on local television, and use it to rail against American "decadence." Sometime near midnight, the terrorists kill all of their hostages in front of live cameras before setting off a bomb that destroys the building, kills themselves and leaves an indelible impression on the horrified audience. In suburban Washington, D.C., a band of terrorists attack and kill a senator out for a round of golf. In Dallas, an unknown attacker gains entry into the house of a wealthy local businessman, and kills him by pumping 15 rounds from a .45 into his body. The assailant escapes into the night. On the average day, any one of these crimes would make national headlines. Imagine if they all happened on the same day, at roughly the same time. Imagine if America's number-one enemy in the war on terror, al Qaeda, claimed responsibility before finishing the day with a cataclysmic attack reminiscent of 9/11. If training videos unearthed during last fall's campaign in Afghanistan are accurate, al Qaeda is planning just such a day for America and her allies. According to a U.S. Army assessment of its training videos, al Qaeda operatives get high quality, professional preparation to carry out a number of combat operations. According to the Army's assessment, which I have reviewed, al Qaeda troops are well trained and can pose a serious tactical threat to American and allied forces engaging them. In fact, their training in matters ranging from weapons handling to multi-layered force structure suggests a level of professionalism that is likely the result of contact with a state military structure. When they initiate an attack, they don't go in as cowboys. Carrying their handguns in the high ready position, or their assault rifles in a disciplined, military bearing, they never handle or fire their weapons in a haphazard manner. Their strike forces divide into teams, coordinated along lines of responsibility such as assault, security and support elements. These sub-elements maintain synchronicity via handheld radios. Most chilling of all, the tactics seen on the al Qaeda training tape match nothing seen on the battlefields of Afghanistan. It's therefore reasonable to conclude that the videotaped tactics are for some future attack. The entire tape points to such a conclusion. The ambush scenario featured six-lane highways with cloverleaf exit and entry patterns similar to those in the United States and Europe. Some of the hostage scenarios featured raids of buildings with large numbers of occupants, suggesting schools or businesses. The golf-course scenario certainly doesn't look like anything likely to be pulled off in most Middle Eastern countries. Dignitaries seem to be the target of the assassination on a golf course, as mentioned above. The assessment also concludes that al Qaeda designs these raids to maximize media coverage. They would do this by combining mass casualty attacks such as 9/11 with other, smaller-scale attacks designed to get their operatives on camera to deliver messages and speeches. Al Qaeda would carry out the attacks simultaneously at multiple geographical locations to maximize their psychological effect. The tapes also suggest that the group is shifting its tactics to take into account post 9/11 realities. During the past decade, al Qaeda established a pattern of always trying to top its last feat: if the training tapes are our guide, a weakened al Qaeda would be planning a series of smaller attacks spread around the West, targeting soft targets which would offer little or no resistance. The purpose of such a spread attack would be to demonstrate that al Qaeda is still capable of carrying out attacks on our soil, and to instill fear and panic around the world. It would be successful on both counts, if we aren't prepared for it. Al Qaeda trains its fighters in everything from multiple-team raids to motorcycle-borne drive-by shootings. They are trained to properly handle their weapons, to use explosives both for infiltrating buildings as well as intimidating their victims. They also train with live-fire as the norm, which gets them used to the sound, smell, and feel of combat. Recent reports indicate that Iraq hosted and trained several of al Qaeda's top lieutenants the taped tactics suggest the involvement of a professional military at some level. The attacks depicted focused on vulnerable, unguarded, even random targets, and seem tailor-made to create panic and instill a lasting sense of insecurity. As Western intelligence uncovers more sleeper cells of al Qaeda's terrorists around the world, we should endeavor to learn all that we can about who has been to al Qaeda's camps, and where those operatives are now. The training should also serve to remind us of the true nature of our enemy: Al Qaeda is a ruthless, violent, but highly disciplined and organized enemy. We underestimate them at our peril." (Brian Preston, National Review)
Thanks for sharing...:)
Shot fired in Bethesda? That's highly unusual, isn't it?
Where in Bethesda? What time? Can they tell if it was from the sniper's gun?
Hey, at least if the ethanol seeps out of the underground tanks and hits the groundwater, one can drink it...
I can imagine! I was lucky, it was all pit work and I was expecting something.
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