http://www.thedesertsun.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20050808/NEWS11/50808
0326/1208

 

Lack of U.S. terror attacks begs question
Many wonder why suicide bombers have not struck since 9/11 

Rick Hampson
USA TODAY
August 8, 2005 

  _____  

NEW YORK - After the bombings in London and Sharm el-Sheik, Egypt, the
question that rivets America is one that has no sure answer: Why haven't
Muslim militants executed another suicide terror attack on the U.S. home
front?

If suicide bombers can strike daily in the Middle East and hit the capitals
of Europe, why does 9/11 remain a spectacular exception?

Over the past four years, Jeremiahs as varied as Dick Cheney and Osama bin
Laden have said another attack is inevitable. It could come at any time, and
it could come from within; homegrown suicide terrorists are notoriously
difficult to identify before they strike.

Robert Pape, a University of Chicago political scientist who has studied
suicide terrorists, says most are "walk-in volunteers who decide to do it
only months beforehand. They're not long-term criminals you can track." He
cites the July 7 London bombers - wage earners, family men, cricket fans
and, apparently, suicides.

Contrary to popular stereotype, most are not poor, ill-educated, disturbed
or disconnected. Suicide terrorists are men and women, young and old, rich
and poor, educated and ignorant.

If anything, they tend to be relatively well off and, to outward
appearances, well adjusted. Mohammed Atta, ringleader in the Sept. 11
attacks, was a college graduate and the son of a lawyer.

"There is no accurate criminal profile for them. Anyone who tells you
differently is trying to get on TV," says Mia Bloom, author of "Dying to
Kill," a study of suicide terror. "And if we had a profile, the terrorists
would learn about it and use it against us."

There are theories about why suicide terrorists have yet to carry out a
second attack here, and why the United States still hasn't had a homegrown
attack like the ones last month in London.

These explanations - not all reassuring and not all compatible - include the
following:

SUICIDE TERROR TAKES A TEAM. Such attacks in the Middle East usually are
executed by a group that recruits the bomber, gets the explosives, builds
the bomb, surveys the target and gets the bomber there undetected. Sometimes
there's even a video crew.

But the U.S.A. lacks such a "suicide terrorist infrastructure," says Bloom,
a University of Cincinnati political scientist. There's no cottage industry
in "suicide belts," as on the West Bank, where such a package of wearable
explosives goes for less than $200.

To the contrary, police in the New York City area visit chemical and
demolition suppliers to ask about large purchases of explosives by new
customers. Home Depot stores automatically tell authorities about any sale
of more than 500 pounds of fertilizer, which can be used to make bombs.

U.S. MUSLIMS WANT THE AMERICAN DREAM, NOT JIHAD. The United States has
assimilated immigrant Muslims more successfully than Western Europe, where
there is a higher proportion of poor, alienated Muslims, according to Ahmed
Bedier of the Council on American-Islamic Relations. American Muslims seem
to have more of a stake in keeping peace.

"No one wants to attack their own people," Bedier says. "Muslims here see
themselves as Americans more than Muslims in France see themselves as
French."

Last week a council of leading American Muslim scholars issued an edict
condemning those who commit terrorism in the name of Islam as "criminals,
not 'martyrs.'"

Bloom, who has worked with the New Jersey Office of Counter-Terrorism, says
the state's Arab and Muslim communities are "hotbeds of dissent. But they're
not taking it to the next level. When a rabble-rouser comes to a mosque,
he's met with a great deal of resistance. People in that community say (to
the authorities), 'Please come get this person.'"

Example: Last August, police charged two Muslims - one the American son of
an Egyptian man, the other an illegal immigrant from Pakistan - with
conspiring to bomb the Herald Square subway station. The suspects came to
the attention of the New York police intelligence unit through tips from
Brooklyn's Islamic community.

Bedier says an experience last month left him modestly optimistic about
relations between Muslims and non-Muslims.

He stopped his car outside a house in Pinellas Park, Fla., that had a toilet
in the front yard and a sign: "Koran flushing, 1 p.m."

Bedier, a 31-year-old native Egyptian, knocked on the door and asked the
homeowner, Mike Allen, what he was trying to say. Allen invited him inside,
where he complained that Muslim Americans were not condemning terrorism.
Bedier went to his car, got his laptop, and showed Allen what his own group
had done. After a long talk, they parted amicably. "He realized we have the
same issue," Bedier says. "We're both against terrorism."

But Tom Ridge, the former homeland security secretary, has this warning:
"You don't need too many committed to martyrdom to wreak havoc."

THE U.S. HOMELAND IS BETTER PROTECTED. America has become a land scoured,
probed, patrolled and fenced by a web of informers, computers, guards,
spies, tape recorders, detectors, sensors, Jersey barriers, concrete
planters and bomb-sniffing dogs. It may have nipped some plots in the bud
and deterred others. "We look differently as a country now to the
terrorists," Ridge says. "We have created security measures unlike the
terrorists have seen before, and we continue to upgrade them."

In New York City, for instance, the police department has increased its
counterterrorism squad from a few dozen officers to about a thousand. People
who run parking garages, marinas and hunting stores routinely report
anything unusual. Arabic, Pashto and Urdu-speakers, working with law
enforcement authorities, monitor online chat and chatter on the airwaves.

The case against the accused Herald Square bomb conspirators was developed
by an informer posing as a Muslim fundamentalist.

"I don't want to give a sense of false security," says Pape, author of a new
book on suicide terrorism, "Dying to Win," "but right now we're doing pretty
well."

AL-QAIDA CENTRAL IS DEAD. Since 9/11, the world's most notorious terrorist
organization has lost its headquarters and training centers in Afghanistan.
Most of its leaders are dead, in prison or on the run. Time and energy once
devoted to elaborate terror attacks are spent staying alive and at large.

Al-Qaida has become less of an organization and more of a movement, Pape
says. Sometimes there's coordination among leaders, or among leaders and
followers. Sometimes things percolate from the bottom up.

"The old centralized al-Qaida is gone," agrees Bloom. "It's become more like
a franchise operation."

But terrorists don't always need directions from the home office. Last week
a screen at a news media briefing at New York City police headquarters bore
a list of lessons learned from the London bombings. No. 1: "This Can Happen
Here." As Commissioner Ray Kelly put it, "The recipe to make a bomb,
unfortunately, is as available on the Internet as a recipe for meat loaf."

BIN LADEN IS PATIENTLY PLANNING ANOTHER BLOCKBUSTER. The man who brought
down the World Trade Center likes to bide his time. If this is a struggle of
centuries, as bin Laden has argued, what are four years? Eight years elapsed
between attacks on the Trade Center. Ridge says that could explain why
al-Qaida hasn't struck again - "they're just not ready."

"That they would attack again soon after 9/11 was 'our' expectation, not
'their' expectation," Bloom adds. "If they wanted to send a guy into
Wal-Mart with an AK-47, they could have a long time ago. But usually they
wait until they can do something shocking, maybe three or four simultaneous
attacks. You need time to do that."

Intelligence gathered after the invasion of Afghanistan stoked the U.S.
government's fear of smaller suicide attacks on "soft" domestic targets such
as shopping malls. By late 2003, however, investigators said information
indicated a new focus on one spectacular plot.

The detonation of a radioactive or "dirty" bomb in a suitcase in Times
Square would panic the entire metro area. In minutes, the years of seeming
immunity would be forgotten.

MUSLIM TERRORISTS ARE FOCUSED ON U.S. ALLIES IN EUROPE AND U.S. SOLDIERS IN
IRAQ. In 2002-03, Australians and Europeans whose nations had troops in
Afghanistan or Iraq became al-Qaida's most frequent suicide attack targets.
This was before the Madrid train bombings last year, and the attacks on the
London transit system and the Egyptian resort last month.

Pape, who has charted the hundreds of suicide bombings worldwide since 1980,
says al-Qaida even put its current strategy in writing. In 2003 a Norwegian
intelligence agency discovered what appeared to be an al-Qaida planning
document on a radical Islamic Web site. It said direct attacks on America
would be insufficient to compel U.S. withdrawal from Iraq and recommended
attacks on its European allies to get them to withdraw their forces -
thereby increasing the burden on the United States. Specifically mentioned:
Britain and Spain.

The other focus of Muslim suicide terrorism is Iraq. From a would-be
martyr's perspective, what's better than killing a "crusader"?

The Iraq war, Pape argues, inflames al-Qaida's real dispute with the West -
the presence of "infidel" troops in Arabia. It's also an effective way to
tie down the United States in an unpopular war - a view bin Laden himself
expressed in a videotape released before the 2004 election.

Bin Laden's strategy effectively dovetails with the Bush administration's,
which is to take the war on terrorism to the enemy by fighting over there
instead of back here. Most suicide bombers in Iraq are not Iraqis, Pape
says, suggesting that the war may be sucking up the supply of international
suicide bombers.

But Pape and Bloom say that by inflaming Muslim sensibilities, the war will
only create more suicide bombers. The war, Bloom says, is "less a flame
drawing the moths than a chrysalis in which many more are being created."

WE'VE BEEN LUCKY. Ridge speculated last year that the homeland's post-9/11
immunity from terror attack may simply have been luck.

Bloom says there has been luck - certain clues and leads. But she doesn't
believe in luck "if it means that if there's another attack, we were just
unlucky. If there's another attack, it means we messed up."

  _____  

 



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