The authorities can downplay and CYA all they want.there is no other
explanation for the combination of bomb parts (minus explosives) in an
unaccompanied suitcase belonging to 2 Yemeni Muslims.  String of
coincidences (if all were innocent) beggars the imagination.

 

B

 

http://news.yahoo.com/s/time/20100901/wl_time/08599201482400

 


Amsterdam Arrests: Terrorism Trial Run for Yemeni Men?


By BRUCE CRUMLEY / PARIS Bruce Crumley / Paris - Wed Sep 1, 3:55 am ET

Were the two U.S. residents of Yemeni origin who were arrested upon landing
in Amsterdam on Monday tripped up amid a trial run for a terrorism attack?
Or was their apprehension a belated reaction by airline and
<http://news.yahoo.com/s/time/20100901/wl_time/08599201482400> airport
authorities to behavior in Chicago and Alabama that, while strange, was
ultimately innocent?

As Dutch officials sift through the clues they have gathered, the public and
the media have this information to work on: the men identified in
<http://news.yahoo.com/s/time/20100901/wl_time/08599201482400> press reports
as Ahmed Mohamed Nasser al Soofi, 48, and Hezam al Murisi, 37, were
apprehended by Dutch police based on information sent by U.S. authorities
after the pair's plane was en route from Chicago. Al Soofi first drew
attention on Sunday in
<http://news.yahoo.com/s/time/20100901/wl_time/08599201482400> Birmingham,
Ala., as he sought to board a flight to Chicago in what reports said was
unusually baggy clothing. A subsequent search allegedly found him carrying
$7,000 in cash; there were reportedly also bundles of cell phones and
watches taped together in his luggage. Another cell phone in his bag was
allegedly taped to a bottle of Pepto-Bismol. In the absence of anything that
could act as an explosive in his luggage, however, al Soofi was allowed to
take his plane to Chicago, where he met up with al Murisi. Once together,
both men changed their scheduled itineraries to fly to Amsterdam. Before
that, however, al Soofi apparently checked his suitcase onto the flight he'd
initially booked to Yemen via Washington, D.C., and Dubai. When transport
authorities discovered that al Soofi wasn't on that flight as it prepared to
leave from  <http://news.yahoo.com/s/time/20100901/wl_time/08599201482400>
Dulles International Airport for Dubai on Sunday, the orphaned bag was
removed from the plane. In addition to the cell phones and watches, a search
of the suitcase also reportedly turned up knives and box cutters. (See the
top 10 inept terrorist plots.)
<http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/time/wl_time/storytext/08599201482400/3740
3717/SIG=12ki9m8qo/*http:/www.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,2880
4,1920898_1920896,00.html> 

None of that is against any rules or laws, however, and even a Homeland
Security Authority official was quoted in reports as saying the items in al
Soofi's checked baggage didn't pose any danger on their own. So why all the
drama? 

The pair's ultimate destination, Yemen, most likely had investigators
wondering whether the men were planning some future incident. Yemen is, of
course, the country where
<http://news.yahoo.com/s/time/20100901/wl_time/08599201482400> Umar Farouk
Abdulmutallab prepared for and departed from on his failed Christmas 2009
attempt to blow up an Amsterdam-Detroit flight using explosives hidden in
his underwear. Given that failure, there was some conjecture that al-Qaeda
and its supporters may have decided to test
<http://news.yahoo.com/s/time/20100901/wl_time/08599201482400> attack plans
before putting them into action. (See how the war against al-Qaeda in Yemen
is heating up.)
<http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/time/wl_time/storytext/08599201482400/3740
3717/SIG=11vhb689i/*http:/www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,2002482,00.
html> 

However, a European counterterrorism official who has experience with
countless inquiries - including partnerships with Dutch, American and Yemeni
peers - advises against jumping to conclusions that al Soofi and al Murisi
were on a dry terrorism run, even if the details in the case are bizarre.
There is the possibility that al Murisi may simply have been packing a lot
of cash and a stash of cell phones for family and friends in Yemen. And
while the official says the presence of the checked bag on the second flight
from Dulles was alarming, that could have been the result of both men
deciding to fly together after it was too late to retrieve the checked bag -
which should have been pulled off the Chicago-Washington flight.

The official says he can't recall a dry run in any of the scores of cases
he's worked on. "Rehearsing an attack runs the considerable risk you'll be
caught without ever being able to attempt the strike - which is the only
goal of terrorists," he says. "If you're determined to strike and have
chosen your method, you'd be better off taking your chances, since success
isn't even an option if you don't try. Testing the terrain simply increases
the risk you'll be caught without ever really have constituted a threat."
Most would-be terrorists, he says, go through painstaking, detail-obsessed
planning in the shadows to increase their chances of success once they go
into action - though that sort of sweating the small stuff usually helps set
off vigilant antiterrorism agencies. (See the Nigeria connection in the
attempted Christmas Day
<http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/time/wl_time/storytext/08599201482400/3740
3717/SIG=120pir48n/*http:/www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,1950159,00
.html>  bombing.)

The official admits that he has not heard from his Dutch counterparts or
authorities in Amsterdam on whether the men were seriously planning misdeeds
or simply bringing the largesse of their American lives home to relatives in
one of the poorest countries in the world. The Dutch are staying
tight-lipped about the situation, and repeated calls by TIME to public
prosecutors and police overseeing the questioning have gone unanswered. Says
the official: "Until the Dutch start sharing, either version is just
speculation."

 



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