http://www.smh.com.au/news/Global-Terrorism/The-howto-of-terror-alQaeda-bull
etin-revealed/2004/12/30/1104344900198.html 

 


The how-to of terror: al-Qaeda bulletin revealed


December 30, 2004 - 11:27AM

A new US government intelligence bulletin describes in the greatest detail
yet al-Qaeda's techniques for assessing potential targets, extolling the
lethal power of flying, shattered building glass and advising that kerosene
and tyres are effective for a deadly arson attack.

"The focus is on maximising the destructive and killing power of an attack,"
the bulletin says.

The bulletin provides a fresh glimpse of terrorist reports found in
computers and disks seized in Pakistan in July. The reports described the
casing by terrorists of several buildings in the United States and prompted
US authorities to raise the terror threat level earlier this year for
high-profile financial facilities in New York, Washington and Newark, New
Jersey.

The heightened alert was released shortly after the November 2 election, and
there is no evidence a potential attack ever moved beyond initial planning.

"Current intelligence provides no indications that al-Qaeda has operatives
to conduct an attack based upon the information in these reports," the
eight-page bulletin said.

Produced by the FBI and Homeland Security Department, the bulletin was
circulated on Tuesday to law enforcement, government and industry officials
nationwide and obtained by The Associated Press.

The excerpts, according to the bulletin, show that al-Qaeda operatives go
well beyond the basic description of a potential target to sophisticated
analysis of vulnerabilities in building construction, an examination of
potential police and emergency response and recommendations for possible
methods of attack.

In one report, an unidentified al-Qaeda operative notes that a building "is
almost completely made to resemble a glass house - which could be
devastating in an emergency scenario ... that is to say, that when
shattered, each piece of glass becomes a potential flying piece of cutthroat
shrapnel!"

Another excerpt calculates that a particular building has precisely
67,000-square-feet of glass, adding for emphasis that it amounts to "an acre
and a half of glass."

The author provides five possible methods of attack in one scenario, leading
with parking a vehicle packed with explosives next to an exposed building
column. The terrorist also suggests that operatives rent space in the
building or use any of several substances in an arson attack.

"Combinations with leaking gas cylinders (esp.oxygen), bleach, ammonia and
tires (they burn well) could be lethal," the al-Qaeda report says. "Added to
this, also be advised that kerosene burns more powerfully than an ordinarily
fuelled fire (although it may not be hot enough to melt steel unless used in
very large quantities)."

The reports note such things as when people take lunch and smoking breaks,
where surveillance cameras are positioned, what public events were scheduled
near buildings and how many cars and pedestrians typically pass by per
minute. Detailed descriptions of security guards included their uniforms,
whether they were armed and a notation that one male guard's weapon "appears
to be a Colt .45 pistol."

In two reports, the al-Qaeda author assumed that undercover security
officers are likely to be stationed near possible targets. That shows that
security officials must "regularly review, refresh and reinforce" their
undercover teams to prevent them from being identified, the bulletin said.

One al-Qaeda operative also advises where additional reconnaissance could be
performed before an attack, such as "inside the coffee shop, restaurants or
bars etc. Or even on the upstairs floor of the bookshop (there is one end
where people regularly sit and browse through books)."

The bulletin said the casing reports demonstrate a high level of
sophistication among al-Qaeda surveillance operatives and suggest that the
terror group wants to use people who have experience living in the United
States to help choose targets.

Many of the reconnaissance techniques are described in a captured al-Qaeda
manual titled "Military Studies in the Jihad Against the Tyrants." That
manual says that public information can provide 80 per cent of the
information needed about a possible target, demonstrating that security
officials in government and the private sector must carefully review what is
available on the Internet and elsewhere, the bulletin said.

"Surveillance of a potential target can occur as little as one week to as
much as three years prior to an attack," the bulletin said.

 



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