Silly.  Take care of Islamic terrorists first, organizations will always
have the potential to do far more damage than any singleton could.
 
Bruce

 

'Lone Wolf' Attackers a Security Concern

August 09, 2005
By MICHAEL WEISSENSTEIN
Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK- Slumping in his prison clothes and pallid from a year behind bars,
Shahawar Matin Siraj didn't look like much of a threat as he silently
endured a routine hearing in federal court this month.

But the 23-year-old Pakistani immigrant stands accused of a scheme to attack
a busy New York subway station with bombs hidden in backpacks.

As police seek to secure the nation's largest transit system in the wake of
the London Underground bombings, they say they are concerned about angry,
isolated men like Siraj as much as organized terror networks like al-Qaida.

"One of the department's ongoing concerns is the emergence of 'lone
wolves,'" said Paul Browne, the New York Police Department's chief
spokesman.

The first known plot against New York's subways was averted in 1997, police
said, when officers acting on a tip burst into Palestinian-born Gazi Ibrahim
Abu Mezer's Brooklyn apartment and shot him in the leg as he reached for a
toggle switch on a pipe bomb. He was sentenced to life in prison after
testifying he wanted to kill Jews riding the subway in Brooklyn.

Despite initial reports of Hamas ties, Mezer was acting with a single
alleged accomplice, who was convicted of an immigration violation and
deported after three years in prison.

Siraj was working at an Islamic bookstore in Brooklyn when he was approached
in 2003 by an Egyptian-born police informant. The informant spent months
secretly monitoring Siraj and his co-defendant James Elshafay.

As a result, police say they have recordings of the two men and the
informant discussing how attacks on three spots - the Verrazano Narrows
Bridge and subway stations at Herald Square near Macy's and next to
Bloomingdale's on Manhattan's East Side - could damage the economy as part
of a holy war against the United States.

Siraj and Elshafay were arrested last August and charged with conspiring to
damage the Herald Square station, a charge with a maximum 20-year sentence.

Defense attorney Khurrum Wahid described Siraj as a hardworking immigrant
entrapped by an informant who whipped his client into a rage over abuses
against Muslims like the scandal at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq, Wahid said.

"He manages to convince them that they need to do something," Wahid said.
"He puts the idea of attacking the United States into their head."

Elshafay has stopped appearing at court hearings, and Wahid said he believes
the 20-year-old man is cooperating with authorities.

Besides the 1993 World Trade Center bombing and the attack of Sept. 11,
2001, the nation's most significant terrorist plots and attacks were by men
acting alone or in pairs without ties to known radical networks, said Bruce
Hoffman, a terrorism expert at the Rand Corporation.

Their ranks include Theodore Kacyznski, Timothy McVeigh and Eric Rudolph, as
well as Palestinian-born Ali Abu Kamal, who shot a group of tourists at the
Empire State Building in 1997, killing one. Others include Egyptian
immigrant Hesham Mohamed Hadayet, who opened fire at an El Al ticket counter
in Los Angeles in 2002, killing two.

"I think this is one of the major challenges that we face in the U.S.,"
Hoffman said. "The major incidents in the U.S. have not conformed to our
stereotype of an established terror organization attacking a major iconic
landmark."

The FBI worries most about a catastrophic attack by seasoned al-Qaida agents
armed with a biological, chemical, nuclear or radiological bomb, said Tim
Herlocker, special agent-in-charge of intelligence for the counterterrorism
division of the FBI's New York office.

But second on the bureau's list of concerns are newer al-Qaida affiliates,
he said, followed by lone wolf attackers.

The latter, Herlocker said, "probably do the least damage."

Nonetheless, he said, "The lone wolf, when influenced by day-to-day events,
is harder to stop, harder to know about, much more difficult to defend
against."





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