http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-
homegrown1aug01,0,758072.story?track=tothtml

August 1, 2005          

Fear Over U.S.-Born Extremists Is Brewing

# London attacks raise concerns over the potential for sleeper cells 
of Americans.

By Josh Meyer, Times Staff Writer

WASHINGTON — When security cameras captured four young Britons 
sauntering into the London Underground before detonating their 
deadly backpacks last month, the chilling images raised questions 
about whether such homegrown sleeper terrorists could be plotting 
attacks in the United States.

U.S. counter-terrorism officials say there is no evidence that such 
would-be terrorists exist in large numbers in the United States, or 
that any of them are in the operational stages of a plot. And some 
U.S. officials and experts downplay the threat such domestic 
militants might pose to Americans.


But some senior authorities say there is enough anecdotal evidence 
to warrant concern, and suggest that whatever radicalized the 
British bombers could presumably also motivate Americans who have 
embraced Islamic extremist views expressed on websites and chat 
rooms, in radical mosques and elsewhere.

Terrorism investigators worry particularly about the American-born 
children of immigrants from countries known to harbor international 
terrorists or their training camps. An ability to move easily 
between cultures, and to travel widely on U.S. passports, would give 
such citizens a unique set of skills should they pursue terrorist 
intentions.

"These are second-generation Americans, people who grew up here, 
were educated here or were raised in this country and are now 
adopting this extremist view, and are now viewing their home country 
as the enemy," said Joseph Billy Jr., who heads the FBI's 
international counter-terrorism operations.

"You are talking about people who are actually here and living in 
the country and view us as the enemy," Billy said in an 
interview. "If the [terrorist] message is so strong that these 
people are willing to travel overseas and take up weapons, when are 
they going to be ready to cross the line?"

Efforts to identify and intercept anyone crossing that line have led 
to at least several ongoing domestic investigations, authorities 
confirmed in interviews. Some have resulted in arrests and 
prosecutions, and some have fallen apart or been downgraded to minor 
immigration violations.

Those not convinced that a significant domestic threat exists said 
most Muslim immigrants to the United States don't face the same 
degree of economic hardship and cultural isolation that their 
counterparts in Europe have endured for decades and that are thought 
to contribute to radicalization.

But others noted that several of the alleged London bombers appeared 
to have come from prosperous homes and had received good educations.

One London bombing suspect, Haroon Rashid Aswat, who was raised in 
Britain, had worked closely with a U.S.-spawned terrorist operative 
from Seattle, Earnest James Ujaama, in an abortive effort to 
establish a terrorist training camp in rural Oregon. Ujaama pleaded 
guilty in 2003; Aswat is an unindicted co-conspirator in the same 
case, authorities say.

"In general, terrorism recruiters are using the Internet and not 
focusing on the individual but rather a shotgun approach that 
reaches people from Portland, Ore., to Kuala Lumpur," said Matthew 
Levitt, a former FBI counter-terrorism analyst who heads terrorism 
studies at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. "We're as 
susceptible as anyone else, if not more so. We'd be fools to think 
that what is happening in Western Europe doesn't affect us. In a 
globalized world, it certainly does."

But like other current and former authorities, Levitt conceded that 
it was difficult to know how many homegrown terrorists might be in 
the United States.

Billy, a deputy assistant FBI director, said he could not discuss 
the details of any ongoing investigations or the number of potential 
suspects.

But authorities from several U.S. agencies confirmed that the FBI 
was investigating several dozen suspected American militants 
operating in groups and alone, who had had varying degrees of 
contact with terrorist organizations in the Middle East, South Asia, 
Europe, North Africa and elsewhere overseas. And they said the 
potential numbers of such U.S.-born and bred extremists have 
expanded domestically apace with global antagonism toward the United 
States for its invasion and occupation of Iraq.

Some of the U.S. suspects are believed to have direct ties to Al 
Qaeda or its many affiliate groups, often through training at war 
camps in Afghanistan, Pakistan and other havens.

Other investigations focus on U.S. suspects linked to other 
terrorist groups from Central Asia and South Asia and to Palestinian 
terrorist organizations such as Hamas, Islamic Jihad and Al Aqsa 
Martyrs Brigade.

What has the FBI — and state and local police — so on edge is that 
there are "so many different degrees of connectivity" between such 
U.S. suspects and terrorist groups, according to a second senior 
U.S. counter-terrorism official. Some play a peripheral role but are 
nevertheless of serious concern because of their ability to provide 
financial, logistical and even operational assistance in the United 
States, he said.

Authorities say they can never predict which of the potential 
operatives could suddenly help launch an attack, or do something 
alone and without prompting. "That's our focus right now. We 
continue to look at these would-be jihadists and [try to determine] 
who is going to be the one who is going to do something," Billy said.

Another U.S. official, a top-ranking counter-terrorism authority who 
coordinates overseas intelligence gathering, agreed that the pool of 
such potential American militants was probably small. But he said 
the U.S. intelligence community had grown increasingly concerned 
about how easily militants with American passports could acquire 
deadly training overseas in explosives and guerrilla warfare 
techniques such as assassinations and kidnappings, without the CIA 
or State Department knowing about it.

Neither agency regularly tracks Americans traveling abroad to find 
out if they are ending up in the madrasas of Pakistan or the mosques 
of Saudi Arabia, Morocco or even the Finsbury Park mosque in London 
and other Western European bastions of anti-Western radicalization, 
according to that U.S. official and others.

Only those Americans who have already sparked the interest of the 
FBI or local law enforcement are likely to be monitored as they make 
their way around the world. And current and former counter-terrorism 
officials from various U.S. agencies acknowledged that they couldn't 
do much of that either.

"You have such large numbers of people going overseas and we don't 
have the resources," said Michael Kraft, who retired last year after 
many years as a senior State Department counter-terrorism 
official. "The sheer number of people who go back and forth, it'd be 
a huge tracking job."


U.S. officials note that in Pakistan alone, there are thousands of 
madrasas — informal schools that often teach radical curriculums. 
And they estimate that there could be tens of thousands more 
informal recruitment and training facilities around the world.

Additionally, Kraft and others said, most of the suspected American 
militants found to have gone overseas for such training took 
circuitous routes there and back to cover their tracks.

Authorities point to Hamid Hayat, a 22-year-old Pakistani American 
from Lodi, Calif., who with his father, Umer Hayat, was charged in 
June with lying to federal agents about the younger Hayat's alleged 
2003-04 attendance at a terrorist training camp in Pakistan. That 
trip, to which Hamid Hayat has confessed, is part of a broader 
inquiry into a potential sleeper cell within the Pakistani American 
community in Lodi, according to the FBI.

Hayat was born in Stockton and lived in Lodi with his family. He and 
his father have pleaded not guilty and denied any ties to terrorism.

But an FBI affidavit alleges in detail how Hayat confessed to 
spending six months at an Al Qaeda-affiliated camp at which he 
taught paramilitary training and "how to kill Americans." Hayat said 
he agreed to return home and launch a terrorist attack, the 
affidavit alleges.

Hayat traveled home by way of South Korea, but his plane was 
diverted May 29 on the way to the United States because his name 
showed up on a "no-fly" list, apparently because of his connections 
to others in Lodi under investigation.

Several groups of young men born or reared in the U.S. have been 
convicted of terrorism-related charges in high-profile cases in 
Lackawanna, N.Y., a suburb of Buffalo; in Portland, Ore.; and in 
Northern Virginia. In the Lackawanna case, six Yemeni Americans 
admitted to attending a terrorist training camp in Afghanistan.

In August 2002, a Miami-based U.S. citizen named Shueyb Mossa Jokhan 
pleaded guilty to plotting with a local teenager to bomb electrical 
power stations and a National Guard armory as part of an Islamic 
holy war.

The two allegedly attempted to find money to buy AK-47 assault 
rifles and other weapons, night vision equipment, stun guns, pepper 
spray and smoke grenades.

That summer, authorities arrested U.S.-born Jose Padilla, 34, as he 
stepped off a plane in Chicago from Zurich, Switzerland. He was 
accused of plotting with senior Al Qaeda leaders to explode a "dirty 
bomb" made up of conventional explosives and radioactive material 
somewhere in the United States. Padilla remains in custody as 
an "enemy combatant."

Last summer, U.S. authorities quietly stepped up their scrutiny of 
all incoming travelers of Pakistani descent, including U.S. 
citizens, particularly at airports in Los Angeles; New York; 
Chicago; Detroit; Newark, N.J.; and metropolitan Washington.

In a confidential warning, Customs and Border Protection agents were 
told to look for signs of injuries that could have been received 
during paramilitary training — such as rope burns, unusual bruises 
and scars.

Citing information obtained during Pakistani military raids near the 
border with Afghanistan, the memo also warned that, "it is 
reasonable to expect that many of the individuals trained are 
destined to commit illegal activities in the United States."

Several months ago, FBI Director Robert S. Mueller III told the 
Senate intelligence committee that the FBI had identified various 
extremists throughout the U.S. and was monitoring terrorism-related 
activities in Virginia, Minneapolis, New York and elsewhere.

Mueller testified that Al Qaeda had demonstrated the ability to 
exploit radical American converts "and other indigenous extremists" 
to the point at which they could play a role in future terrorist 
plots. One, Iyman Faris, an Ohio trucker and Pakistani-born U.S. 
citizen, admitted to plotting with Al Qaeda leaders to destroy the 
Brooklyn Bridge.

The FBI was especially concerned about peripheral groups, including 
some radical fundamentalist religious and political organizations, 
Mueller said. They have even more followers than Al Qaeda among so-
called second-generation militants, authorities say. That is because 
they are perceived as being a more mainstream presence within U.S.-
based Islamic communities, and thus less likely to raise suspicions.

Authorities also say there is growing evidence that such extremists 
have tried to obtain paramilitary training inside the United States. 
There are several ongoing investigations into such alleged 
activities by small groups who FBI officials say are inspired by the 
jihadist rhetoric found in radical mosques, in U.S. prisons and on 
the Internet.

U.S. authorities told The Times that Mohammed Junaid Babar, a 
Pakistani American who grew up in Queens, N.Y., had been quietly 
cooperating with their investigation into the July 7 bombings in 
London. Babar has been linked to an alleged Al Qaeda effort to 
conduct detailed surveillance on financial institutions in New York, 
Washington and Newark in order to blow them up.

Babar was also indicted on terrorism-related charges; authorities 
say in court documents that he conspired with top Al Qaeda leaders 
to organize a jihad training camp in Pakistan and to blow up targets 
in Britain such as Heathrow Airport.

One of Babar's other alleged associates is Adnan G. El Shukrijumah, 
born overseas but raised in South Florida.

El Shukrijumah is described as one of Al Qaeda's most dangerous 
operatives, and catching him is a top priority for U.S. authorities.

U.S. authorities say El Shukrijumah, who also has been linked to 
Padilla's alleged dirty bomb plot, has the same kind of 
organizational and leadership skills as alleged Sept. 11 ringleader 
Mohamed Atta, but with a U.S. passport and ability to speak and 
appear like any other youthful American.

Also among the FBI's most wanted is a man known only as "Azzam the 
American."

Shortly before last year's presidential election, a group affiliated 
with Al Qaeda released a lengthy tape in which Azzam warned U.S. 
citizens that support of their government's policies would cost them 
their lives.

His face hidden under sunglasses and a Palestinian head-scarf, Azzam 
said that the attacks of Sept. 11 were only the "opening salvo of 
the global war on America."

U.S. intelligence officials believe that the tape is authentic, and 
that Azzam the American could actually be Adam Yahiye Gadahn, 
another alleged Al Qaeda operative, who was reared on a goat farm in 
Southern California.

Gadahn, also wanted by the FBI, allegedly has worked as a translator 
and aide for some of Al Qaeda's senior leaders.







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