"According to the NCTC figures, America suffered only five terrorism
incidents last year, which included an arson attack in Utah for which
the Animal Liberation Front claimed responsibility. Mr Brennan said
that the low number of attacks on US soil reflected the good job that
the Bush Administration has done in protecting the US homeland."

But of course, attacks against abortion clinics and their physicians
are not counted as terrorism even though they fit the definition in
the Patriot Act.  Nor are right wing terror groups such as the Army of
God and others listed as terrorist groups even though their stated
aims and actions fit the Patriot Act definition of a terrorist group.
A good example of how to lie with statistics and hide a problem which,
if exposed, would have to be addressed. But adding those groups to the
terrorist list and pursuing them would anger Bush43 right wing
Christian supporters.  So they bury the problem, with the FBI listing
the abortion clinic attacks as just local crime. 

And Bush43's folks brag about doing a good job...

David Bier

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/printFriendly/0,,1-3-1684077-3,00.html

July 07, 2005

The 28,000 victims of terrorism
>From Tim Reid in Washington
New figures show dramatic increase in global attacks

THERE were nearly 3,200 terrorist attacks worldwide last year, the
Bush Administration said yesterday, using a broader definition that
increased fivefold the number of incidents that Washington had
previously tallied for 2004.

In figures published in April, the US State Department said that there
were 651 significant international terror incidents, with more than
9,000 victims.

But under the newer, less-stringent definition of terrorism, which
counts domestic attacks without an international element, the National
Counterterrorism Centre (NCTC) reported 3,192 attacks worldwide, with
28,433 people killed, wounded or kidnapped.

Iraq, with 866, had the most attacks against civilians and other
non-combatants, according to the report. Under the April figures, Iraq
was considered to have suffered 201 attacks in 2004.

The new tally included attacks on Iraqis by Iraqis, a category
previously excluded because it was not considered international
terrorism. But attacks against coalition forces were omitted, because
soldiers are considered combatants. Insurgent attacks on Iraqi police,
deemed non-combatants, were included.

The Bush Administration’s terrorism figures have been the
subject of
repeated controversies. Last year the State Department withdrew its
annual report on global terrorism after claiming that terrorism
incidents had been declining for three years and that 190 cases
reported in 2003 represented the lowest total since 1969.

American officials trumpeted the report as evidence that the US was
winning the War on Terror. But the document was found to be full of
errors, and officials acknowledged that it had vastly understated the
number of attacks.

This year the State Department decided not to publish the terrorism
figures in its annual report. It handed the responsibility to the new
NCTC. John Brennan, its interim director, said that the methodology
that produced the April statistics was so flawed that the numbers were
unreliable.

For example, when Chechen rebels blew up two airliners over Russia in
near- simultaneous attacks last year, only one attack was counted
under the old system.

On board one aircraft were 46 Russians. The other had 43 Russians and
one Israeli civilian, a foreign citizen. That allowed only the second
attack to meet the criteria for international terrorism, which under
the old system required terrorists to claim at least one citizen from
another country among their victims.

According to the NCTC figures, America suffered only five terrorism
incidents last year, which included an arson attack in Utah for which
the Animal Liberation Front claimed responsibility. Mr Brennan said
that the low number of attacks on US soil reflected the good job that
the Bush Administration has done in protecting the US homeland. But he
noted that many attacks overseas are aimed at American and Western
interests. According to the report, only 19 per cent of terrorist
incidents last year were attributable to Islamic extremists.

A quarter were recorded as secular or political attacks, but it said
that the motives for 56 per cent remain unknown. Asked how the NCTC
distinguishes between freedom fighters and terrorists, Mr Brennan said
that the centre’s database is not “black and white and
perfect”.




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