Tim Osman. (this one’s going to earn me the tinfoil hat of the year and batshit crazy nut award.)

 November 2001. Thanks to J. Orlin Grabbe


November 8, 2001

When Osama Bin Ladin Was Tim Osman

By J. Orlin Grabbe

The two men headed to the Hilton Hotel in Sherman Oaks, California in the late Spring of 1986 were on their way to meet representatives of the mujahadeen, the Afghan fighters resisting the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.

One of the two, Ted Gunderson, had had a distinguished career in the FBI, serving as some sort of supervisor over Special Agents in the early 60s, as head of the Dallas field office from 1973-75, and as head of the Los Angeles field office from 1977-1979. He retired to become an investigator for, among others, well-known attorney F. Lee Bailey. And all along the way, Gunderson, whether or not actually a CIA contract agent, had been around to provide services to various CIA and National Security Council operations, as he was doing now.

In more recent years Gunderson was to become controversial for his investigations into child prostitution rings, after he became convinced of the innocence of an Army medical doctor named Jeffrey McDonald, who had been convicted of the murder of his wife and three young children in the 1970s. This has led to various attempts by the patrons and operators of the child prostitution industry to smear Gunderson’s reputation.

Michael Riconosciuto was there to discuss assisting the mujahadeen with MANPADs—Man Portable Air Defense Systems. Stinger missiles were one possibility. If the U.S. would permit their export, Riconosciuto could modify the Stinger’s electronics, so the guided missile would still be effective against Soviet aircraft, but would not be a threat to U.S. or NATO forces.

But Riconosciuto had another idea. Through his connections with the Chinese industrial and military group Norinco, he could obtain the basic components for the unassembled Chinese 107 MM rocket system. These could be reconfigured into a man-portable, shoulder-fired, anti-aircraft guided missile sytem, and produced in Pakistan at a facility called the Pakistan Ordinance Works. The mujahadeen would then have a lethal weapon against Soviet helicopter, observation, and transport aircraft.

Riconosciuto was more than just an expert on missile electronics; he was also an expert on electronic computers and associated subjects such as cryptology (see my “Michael Riconosciuto on Encryption“).

Riconosciuto was a prodigy who had grown up in the spook community. The Riconosciuto family had once run Hercules, California, as a company town. In the early days (1861) a company called California Powder Works had been established in Santa Cruz, CA. It later purchased land on San Pablo Bay, and in 1881 started producing dynamite, locating buildings in gullies and ravines for safety purposes. A particularly potent type of black powder was named “Hercules Powder”, which gave the name to the town of Hercules, formally incorporated in 1900. In World War I, Hercules became the largest producer of TNT in the U.S. Hercules, however, had gotten out of the explosives business by 1940 when an anhydrous ammonia plant was constructed. In 1959 Hercules began a new manufacturing facility to produce methanol, formaldehyde, and urea formaldehyde. In 1966 the plant was sold to Valley Nitrogen Producers. Labor problems led to a plant closure in 1977. In 1979 the plant and site was purchased by a group of investors calling themselves Hercules Properties, Ltd.

However, Michael and his father Marshall Riconosciuto, a friend of Richard Nixon, continued to run the Hercules Research Corporation. In the early 1980s Michael also served as the Director of Research for a joint venture between the Wackenhut Corporation of Coral Gables, Florida, and the Cabazon Band of Indians in Indio, California. Riconosciuto’s talents were much in demand. He had created the a-neutronic bomb (or “Electro-Hydrodynamic Gaseous Fuel Device”), which sank the ground level of the Nevada test site by 30 feet when a prototype was tested. Samuel Cohen, the inventor of the neutron bomb, said of Riconosciuto: “I’ve spoken to Michael Riconosciuto (the inventor of the a-neutronic bomb) and he’s an extraordinarily bright guy. I also have a hunch, which I can’t prove, that they both (Riconosciuto and Lavos, his partner) indirectly work for the CIA.”

Riconosciuto’s bomb made suitcase nukes obsolete, because it achieved near-atomic explosive yields, but could be more easily minaturized. You could have a suitcase a-neutronic bomb, or a briefcase a-neutronic bomb, or simply a lady’s purse a-neutronic bomb. Or just pull out your wallet for identification and —. The Meridian Arms Corporation, as well as the Universities of California and Chicago owned a piece of the technology.

But there was more than explosives in the portfolios of the CIA agents who surrounded Riconosciuto like moths around a candle. Both Robert Booth Nichols, the shady head of Meridian Arms Corporation (with both CIA and organized crime conections), and Dr. John Phillip Nichols, the manager of the Cabazon reservation, were involved in bio-warfare work—the first in trying to sell bio-warfare products to the army through Wackenhut, the second in giving tribal permission for research to take place at Cabazon. According to Riconosciuto, the Pentagon’s Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) was in charge of the classified contracts for biological warfare research. Riconosciuto would later testify under oath that Stormont Laboratories was involved in the DARPA-Wackenhut-Cabazon project. Jonathan Littman, a reporter for the San Francisco Chronicle would relate: “Cabazons and Wackenhut appeared to be acting as middlemen between the Pentagon’s DARPA and Stormont Laboratories, a small facility in Woodland near Sacramento.”

The Race Weapon

Riconosciuto would make additional claims about Bio-Rad corporation, a medical supplier which had gradually taken over Hercules, California. They were also, Riconosciuto would say, covertly engaged in bio-warfare research—producing some of the deadliest toxins known to man. The focus of Bio-Rad’s research was said to be bio-active elements that could be tailored to attack those with certain types of DNA. Weapons could thus be produced that were specifically designed to wipe out specific races or genetic classes of human beings. (Alternatively, particular DNA types could be immunized against a deadly biological agent; the agent could then be released, and everyone else would die.)

A couple of years later, Meridian International Logistics, the parent company of Meridian Arms, was to farm similar research out to the Japanese. This included (according to minutes of a corporate meeting dated Aug. 26, 1988) methods for “induction and activation of cytotoxic T-lymphocytes”. Associated with Meridian’s Robert Booth Nichols in a Middle Eastern operation called FIDCO, a company that ran arms into and heroin out of Lebanon’s Beqaa (Bekaa) Valley, was Harold Okimoto, a high-ranking member of the Yakuza. Okimoto had longed worked under Frank Carlucci (who served as Secretary of Defense and Deputy Director of the CIA before becoming Chairman of The Carlyle Group). Okimoto owned food concessions in casinos around the world—Las Vega, Reno, Macao, and the Middle East. (Free drinks and anthrax while you play blackjack, anyone?)

Meeting Riconosciuto and Gunderson at the hotel were two representatives of the mujahadeen, waiting to discuss their armament needs. One of the two was named “Ralph Olberg.” The other one was called Tim Osman (or Ossman).

“Ralph Olberg” was an American businesman who was leading the procurement of American weapons and technology on behalf of the Afghan rebels. He worked through the Afghan desk at the U.S. State Department, as well as through Senator Hubert Humphrey’s office. Olberg looked after the Afghanis through a curious front called MSH—Management Sciences for Health.

The other man, dressed in Docker’s clothing, was not a native Afghan any more than Olberg was. He was a 27-year-old Saudi. Tim Osman (Ossman) has recently become better known as Osama Bin Ladin. “Tim Osman” was the name assigned to him by the CIA for his tour of the U.S. and U.S. military bases, in search of political support and armaments.

Gunderson and Riconosciuto were not on an altruistic mission. They had some conditions for their help. And they had some bad news to deliver. The mujahadeen needed to be willing to test new weapons in the field and to return a research report, complete with photos.

The bad news was that some factions of the CIA didn’t feel that Oldberg and Osman’s group were the real representatives of the Afghans. Upon hearing this both Tim and Ralph were indignant. They wanted to mount a full-court press. Round up other members of their group and do a congressional and White House lobbying effort in Washington, D.C.

“Pleased to meet you. Hope you guess my name.”— The Rolling Stones, Sympathy for the Devil

Did the lobbying effort take place? I don’t know. There is some evidence that Tim Osman and Ralph Oldberg visited the White House. There is certainty that Tim Osman toured some U.S. military bases, even receiving special demonstrations of the latest equipment. Why hasn’t this been reported in the major media?

One week after giving an affidavit to Inslaw regarding the PROMIS software in 1991, Riconosciuto was arrested on trumped-up drug charges. The Assistant U.S. Attorney prosecuting the case attempted to cover up Riconosciuto’s intelligence background by claiming to the jury he was “delusional.” A TV station came and pointed a camera out at the desert at Cabazon and said, “Riconosciuto says he modified the PROMIS software here.” Of course Riconosciuto didn’t modify the software out between the cacti and yucca. Sand isn’t good for computers. He did the modifications in offices in nearby Indio, California. The AUSA told reporters Riconosciuto had been diagnosed with a mental condition, the implication being “he’s making all this stuff up”. Yes, there had been a mental evaluation of Riconosciuto. I have a copy of the report. The diagnosis? Here it is: NO MENTAL DISORDER. The Department of Justice consistently and maliciously lied to the jury, just as had been threatened by Justice Department official Peter Viednicks if Riconosciuto cooperated with the congressional investigation of PROMIS.

If the war against Osama Bin Ladin (Tim Osman) is not a total fraud, then what is Michael Riconosciuto doing in prison? Why doesn’t he have an office next to Colin Powell so he can give realistic advice on Bin Ladin’s thinking? And where is Ralph Olberg?

Thirty-four days before the East African embassy bombings of August 7, 1998, Riconosciuto notified the FBI in Miami that the bombings were going to take place. Two days prior to the bombings he requested of BOP (Bureau of Prisons) officials at the Federal Corrections Institution (FCI) in Coleman, FL., that he be allowed to call ECOMOG security headquarters to warn African officials. The BOP denied the request. Riconosciuto was mystified at being ignored by the relevant government authorities. I’m not mystified. I suspect the reason Riconosciuto was ignored was that the relevant parties, including especially the Miami FBI office, knew all along the bombings would take place. And they wanted them to happen.

The same is true with respect to the recent plane bombings of the WTC. It wasn’t an intelligence “failure”. The terrorist acts were deliberately allowed to happen. The actors may have been foreign. But the stage directors appear to have been all along here in the U.S. Cui bono?

Isn’t it time to let Michael Riconosciuto out of prison, and wipe the slate clean of the trumped up drug charges, and let him be a national security advisor—at least with respect to the government’s pursuit of Osama Bin Ladin? Isn’t it time to quit pretending Osama Bin Ladin came out of nowhere?

This is not an academic argument. Sources say three dozen MANPADs have been imported into Quebec, Canada, from Colombia (where they arrived from Eastern Europe). The missile shipments followed the “northern” drug route—from Colombia into Canada. The missiles involved are Russian Strellas and Iglas. These will serve just fine to take down commercial airline flights. Just like TWA 800. Which group of terrorists has the missiles? Meanwhile, how many biological warfare agents are in the hands of organized crime? Maybe you should ask Riconosciuto about all this.

Michael Riconosciuto is now incarcerated at the FCI Allenwood, PA. You know where to find him.


Note: Michael Riconosciuto has just been moved to Springfield, MO. His address is:Michael J. Riconosciuto
21309-086 Box 4000
U.S. Medical Center
Springfield, MO
65801-4000


J. Orlin Grabbe’s homepage is located at http://orlingrabbe.com.

-30-

from The Laissez Faire City Times, Vol 5, No 46, November 12, 2001


executive orders not stepping on freedom of speech?

ACLU of Arkansas Supports Judge Facing Discipline for Criticizing Bush Administration (7/10/2007)

ACLU Files Legal Statement on Behalf of Appellate Court Judge Wendell Griffen

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: media@aclu.org

LITTLE ROCK, AR The American Civil Liberties Union of Arkansas filed a letter today with the Arkansas Judicial Discipline and Disability Commission in support of State Appeals Court Judge Wendell Griffen, who is facing disciplinary action by the commission for making public statements that are critical of the Bush administration. The ACLU said that any discipline by the commission would violate the judge’s right to freedom of speech.

“The state cannot require judges to stand for election and then deprive them of the ability to comment on important issues of the day,” said Rita Sklar, Executive Director of the ACLU of Arkansas. “If a litigant thinks a judge’s views reveal a ground for recusal, then that is the way to handle questions of impartiality or the appearance of impartiality.But an electedjudge’s First Amendment rightsshould notbeextinguished. As a prominent African American and Baptist pastor in a small southern state, Judge Griffen is a community leader in a strong position to inform public debate on today’s social problems.”

The ACLU said that Judge Griffen’s speech is protected by the First Amendment because the judge’s comments were made on matters of great public concern or importance, which cuts to the core values of the First Amendment, and that these comments did not concern matters that are likely to come before him as a judge. Furthermore, the ACLU says in its letter that forbidding judges from speaking on matters of public concern would do nothing to ensure impartiality, but instead would conceal partiality that they might otherwise reveal in their remarks.

The ACLU cited the United States Supreme Court decision in Republican Party of Minnesota v. White, which held that Minnesota’s policy of barring judges from discussing political views was unconstitutional. That decision, written by Justice Antonin Scalia in 2002, identified two ways for handling real or perceived problems arising from judges speaking on public matters: disqualifying a judge from hearing a case because of a potential conflict of interest, or voting to remove a judge from office.

Judge Griffen faces discipline charges for the following incidents:

  • Criticizing President Bush’s nomination of John Roberts for Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court in a September 8, 2005 speech at the National Baptist Convention USA in Atlanta (Judge Griffen is a pastor and spoke as an official of the convention);
  • Criticizing the Bush administration’s handling of Hurricane Katrina, Vice President Dick Cheney, the “Christian right,” Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas and the late President Ronald Reagan in a September 10, 2005 speech to the Arkansas Chapter of the NAACP;
  • Expressing “wholehearted support” for a minimum wage increase at a January 19, 2006 news conference on the steps of the Christ Episcopal Church in Little Rock as one of a group of state religious leaders;
  • Speaking out against the Iraq war and people who speak negatively of immigrants and gay and lesbian people in an October 19, 2006 speech at St. Paul’s Episcopal Church in Fayetteville, Arkansas;
  • Criticizing some of the Bush administration’s policies in an October 26, 2006 opinion piece in the Arkansas Times.

In its letter to the commission, the ACLU asks the commissioners to consider whether judges who have been supportive of governmental officials or their actions would be subject to the same discipline as Judge Griffen, who has been critical of government action. The ACLU also cites a 2004 Mississippi Supreme Court case, Mississippi Comm’n on Judicial Performance v. Wilkerson, holding that discipline of a Mississippi judge for public statements that “gays and lesbians should be put in some type of mental institute” violated the First Amendment rights of that judge.

The hearing before the commission, which the judge has asked to be open to the public, will be held on July 20, 2007.

The ACLU of Arkansas letter is online at:
www.aclu.org/freespeech/censorship/30459res20070710.html

TOP TEN MYTHS ABOUT THE ILLEGAL NSA SPYING ON AMERICANS

MYTH: This is merely a “terrorist surveillance program.”

REALITY: When there is evidence a person may be a terrorist, both the criminal code and intelligence laws already authorize eavesdropping. This illegal program, however, allows electronic monitoring without any showing to a court that the person being spied upon in this country is a suspected terrorist. Plus, there already is a legitimate “terrorist surveillance program”—it’s called the “Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act” (FISA). This federal law requires judicial approval of all electronic surveillance in this country in investigations to prevent “international terrorism” or “sabotage.” It unequivocally requires court approval of such surveillance, whether by the NSA or FBI. And it applies to any telephone or email to or from any American person in this country. FISA protects the constitutional rights of Americans, but if a person in the US were suspected of assisting al Qaeda then that would be the basis for getting a court order authorizing a wiretap under FISA, not for ignoring the law. Without judicial oversight, there is no way to ensure that each person whose emails or phone calls are monitored by the NSA actually is a suspected terrorist. And, investigative reports that FBI intelligence agents have been flooded with worthless tips from the NSA about innocent schoolteachers and law abiding Americans cast serious doubt on this claim. And, as the New York Times noted: “The volume of information harvested from telecommunication data and voice networks, without court-approved warrants, is much larger than the White House has acknowledged…”1

MYTH: The program is legal.

REALITY: The program violates the Fourth Amendment and FISA and will chill free speech. The Fourth Amendment protects the right of the people of the United States to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures and requires court approval except in an emergency. As a bipartisan group of legal experts—including Judge William Sessions, the former Director of the FBI under President Ronald Reagan—concluded after analyzing all the constitutional and statutory assertions of the administration: “the Justice Department’s defense of what it concedes was secret and warrantless electronic surveillance of persons within the United States fails to identify any plausible legal authority for such surveillance.”2 The Supreme Court has long held that the conversations of Americans cannot be seized under the Fourth Amendment without court oversight.3 In a case involving warrantless wiretapping by President Nixon in the name of national security, the Supreme Court stressed that “Fourth Amendment freedoms cannot properly be guaranteed if domestic surveillance may be conducted solely within the discretion of the Executive Branch.”4 In that case, the

Keith case, the Court reaffirmed that “prior judicial approval is required for the type of domestic surveillance involved in this case and that such approval may be made in accordance with such reasonable standards as Congress may prescribe.”5

Taking up the Court’s invitation, the Church Committee conducted extensive hearings and found that in the absence of any judicial check, the executive branch had spied on government employees, journalists, anti-war activists and others for political purposes. So, Congress passed FISA to provide the “exclusive” authority for the wiretapping of US persons in investigations to

1 Eric Lichtblau and James Risen, “Domestic Surveillance: The Program; Spy Agency Mined Vast Date Trove, Officials Report,” New York Times, December 24, 2005.

2 http://www.aclu.org/safefree/nsaspying/24071leg20060109.html

3 Katz v. United States, 389 U.S. 347 (1967).

4 United States v. United States District Court, 407 U.S. 297 (1972).

5 Id. at 324.

protect national security.6 As the Senate Report noted, FISA “was designed . . . to curb the practice by which the Executive Branch may conduct warrantless electronic surveillance on its own unilateral determination that national security justifies it.”7 By failing to follow the exclusive provisions governing wiretaps of Americans, the program violates both the Fourth Amendment and the letter and spirit of the federal law passed to protect and vindicate those rights.

MYTH: The Authorization for the Use of Military Force (AUMF) allows this.

REALITY: The resolution about using force in Afghanistan does not mention wiretaps and does not apply domestically, but FISA does–it requires a court order. When Congress passed FISA it not only provided that it authorizes the exclusive means to conduct foreign intelligence surveillance in the US but Congress also made it a federal crime for agents to wiretap without a court order unless authorized by statute. The administration now claims that the AUMF provides statutory authority to monitor Americans’ telephone calls and emails.

But the AUMF says absolutely nothing about electronic surveillance, and the Senate majority leader at the time, Tom Daschle, has noted that the drafters of the AUMF specifically considered and rejected language giving the president additional domestic powers.8 Other Senators, from both sides of the aisle have concurred with Senator Daschle. As noted above, legal experts from across the spectrum have also written Congress to note that the AUMF does not authorize the NSA spying program.

In any event, Congress provided specific rules for wiretaps during war. FISA allows a limited 15-day exception to the requirement of court oversight of wiretaps in the US immediately following a declaration of war, but no more than that. In passing FISA, Congress sought to create a comprehensive statute to govern all possible justifications for wiretapping on these shores.

MYTH: The president has authority as commander in chief of the military to approve this program to spy on Americans without any court oversight.

REALITY: The Supreme Court recently found the administration’s claim of unlimited commander in chief powers during war to be an unacceptable effort to “condense power into a single branch of government,” contrary to the Constitution’s checks and balances.9 As Justice Sandra Day O’Connor declared in this case focused on combatants captured on the battlefield, it is “clear that a state of war is not a blank check for the President when it comes to the rights of the Nation’s citizens.”10

The President’s power to act in the area of electronic spying is at its lowest ebb–not its zenith, as claimed by Attorney General Gonzales—because Congress has created comprehensive rules governing electronic surveillance in the US in times of war and to protect against international terrorism. When President Truman tried to seize the steel mills to support the war in Korea, the Supreme Court rebuked him, stating that: “It is one thing to draw an intention of Congress from general language and to say that Congress would have explicitly written what is inferred, where Congress has not addressed itself to a specific situation. It is quite impossible, however, when Congress did specifically address itself to a problem, as Congress did to that of seizure, to find secreted in the interstices of legislation the very grant of power which Congress consciously withheld. To find authority so explicitly withheld is . . . to disrespect the whole legislative process and the constitutional division of authority between President and Congress.”11

And, the legislative history of FISA refutes the claims of the White House: “[E]ven if the President has the inherent authority in the absence of legislation to authorize warrantless electronic surveillance for foreign intelligence purposes, Congress has the power to regulate the conduct of such surveillance by legislating a reasonable procedure, which then becomes the

6 18 U.S.C. § 2511(2)(f)

7 S. Rep. No. 95-604(I), at 7, 1978 U.S.C.C.A.N. 3904, 3908.

8 Tom Daschle, “Power We Didn’t Grant,” Washington Post, December 23, 2005.

9 Hamdi v. Rumsfeld, 524 U.S. 507, 535-37 (2004) (noting that “even the war power does not remove constitutional limitations safeguarding essential liberties”).

10 Id.

11 Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. v. Sawyer, 343 U.S. 579, 609 (1952) 2

exclusive means by which such surveillance may be conducted.”12 As legal experts have established: “Congress did not implicitly authorize the NSA domestic spying program in the AUMF, and in fact expressly prohibited in FISA.”13

In the current crisis, not only did Congress specifically provide rules governing electronic surveillance on these shores to protect national security, it also reinforced those very rules after passing the AUMF. Within 40 days of the vote on the AUMF, Congress enacted 25 changes to FISA at the request of President Bush in the USA Patriot Act (Title II, including Section 215 relating to getting court approval for business or library records as well as Section 206 regarding getting court approval for multiple-point wiretaps), but none of these amendments struck the requirement that the president get judicial approval to conduct electronic surveillance of people in the U.S. Congress has made other changes to FISA in the past four years.14 This legislative history only serves to reinforce the continuing legal obligation of the administration to follow FISA regardless of the authority to use military force in Afghanistan.

MYTH: The president has the power to say what the law is.

REALITY: The courts have this power in our system of government, and no person is above the law, not even the president, or the rule of law means nothing. Under our democracy’s separation of powers, the president cannot act as judge or legislator. It is high school civics 101 that it is the province of the courts to say what the law is, the role of Congress to make law and the responsibility of the president to faithfully execute the law, not re-write it.15 The president’s actions violate these fundamental principles. This is especially so because the laws controlling government eavesdropping on Americans are well-established and clear. Numerous legal experts as well as non-partisan researchers agree that the president’s actions have violated these laws.16

The administration has claimed that Congress was briefed and thus approved of the program, but the few Members of Congress who were told about the program were prohibited from telling anyone else about it, and some of those members expressed serious concerns at the time.17 Strong concerns about the propriety of the program were not limited to Congress. It has been reported that some of the federal judges on the FISA court who learned of the program expressed objections to its legality. Even members of the executive branch, beyond those who blew the whistle on the program, have objected to it. For example, it has been reported that Acting Attorney General James Comey indicated he was unwilling to give his approval to certain aspects of the program. And the program apparently was audited only in advance of the presidential election for fear that a new president would prosecute those who participated in the program.

Nevertheless, President Bush has arrogated to himself the power to unilaterally and secretly ignore laws passed by Congress, contravening the balance struck by a democratically enacted law. Under our constitutional democracy the president has the power to sign or veto laws—not to disregard them or interpret them away. The administration’s radical approach to presidential power is sadly reminiscent of disgraced President Nixon who said: “When the President does it, that means that it is not illegal.” The president has claimed that he is doing everything within his authority to protect against terrorism but seems to have no awareness that there are any limits on that authority. He took an oath to “faithfully execute” the laws of the United States, not just the ones he chooses to follow.

The administration has also claimed the right to do so based on a distorted view of history. For example, some have claimed that “President Clinton exercised the same authority” as President Bush, based on the testimony of Deputy Attorney General Jamie Gorelick back in 1994,

12 H.R. Rep. No. 95-1283, pt. 1, at 24 (1978)

13 Id.

14 Pub. L. No. 107-56, 115 Stat. 272 (2001)

15 Marbury v. Madison, 5 U.S. 137 (1803)

16 http://www.aclu.org/safefree/nsaspying/24071leg20060109.html and see also http://www.aclu.org/safefree/nsaspying/24072leg20060105.html

17 http://www.aclu.org/safefree/nsaspying/24073leg20030717.html and see also http://www.house.gov/harman/press/releases/2006/0104PR_nsaprogram.html 3

but what she actually said was that FISA at that time restricted only electronic surveillance and not physical searches in intelligence investigations, which was correct. In the wake of the Aldrich Ames spying investigation, Gorelick testified that “the administration and the attorney general support, in principle, legislation establishing judicial warrant procedures under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act for physical searches undertaken for intelligence purposes… the Department of Justice believes that Congress can legislate in the area of physical searches as it has done with respect to electronic surveillances, and we are prepared to support appropriate legislation.” In October 1994, Congress amended FISA to require court oversight of requests to conduct physical searches in intelligence cases. Accordingly, claims that the last president did the same thing are just political red herrings.

So too are the arguments made by the administration about prior presidents. The Church Committee thoroughly examined the rationales used by some former administrations to try to justify warrantless spying in the name of national security, noting that any system of secret police “may become a menace to free government and free institutions because it carries with it the possibility of abuses of power which are not always quickly apprehended or understood’ . . . Our investigation has confirmed that warning. We have seen segments of our government, in their attitudes and action, adopt tactics unworthy of a democracy… We have seen a consistent pattern in which programs initiated with limited goals, such as preventing criminal violence or identifying foreign spies, were expanded to what witnesses characterized as ‘vacuum cleaners,’ sweeping in information about lawful activities of American citizens.” That is why, after its exhaustive examination of law and history, the Committee found: “There is no inherent constitutional authority for the President or any intelligence agency to violate the law.” It also stated “It is the intent of the Committee that statutes implementing these recommendations provide the exclusive legal authority for federal domestic security activities,” the gathering of foreign intelligence on these shores.18

MYTH: These warrantless wiretaps could never happen to you.

REALITY: Without court oversight, there is no way to ensure innocent people’s everyday communications are not monitored or catalogued by the NSA or other agencies. During the Cold War, the list of people considered by McCarthy to be “communists” was long and it was wrong in many notable instances. In the 1960s, J. Edgar Hoover secretly wiretapped the communications of the leader of the civil rights movement, the Reverend Martin Luther King Jr., under the guise of national security. Before FISA was passed, President Nixon personally approved wiretaps of cabinet members, government employees, journalists and other Americans he didn’t like or didn’t trust. These and other revelations led to the passage of FISA to protect Americans’ Fourth Amendment right to privacy in their conversations from this ever happening again, by requiring judicial oversight of all US wiretaps including those in the name of national security.

Without a court review, there is no way to protect innocent Americans from having their every conversation recorded. And, unfortunately, the Bush Administration has a track record of pursuing ineffective anti-terrorist dragnets that intrude on innocent Americans’ rights. Examples include certain airline passenger identity screening programs and the now-outlawed Total Information Awareness data-mining program. Other examples include recent disclosures that FBI or Defense Department agents are spying on Quakers and other pacifists, environmentalists, and vegetarians, all in the name of national security. Without a judicial check, the powerful electronic surveillance tools of the NSA can be trained on anyone.

The administration has repeatedly stated that the president is “mindful” of Americans’ civil liberties, but our system of government requires checks on power, not deference to those in power. The illegal NSA program of spying on Americans gives unlimited power to the President, whoever he or she may be, without constitutionally required checks on that power.

18 Final Report of the Senate Select Committee (Church Committee), Book II, April 26, 1976. 4

MYTH: This illegal program could have prevented the 9/11 attacks.

REALITY: This is utter manipulation. Before 9/11, the federal government had gathered intelligence, without illegal NSA spying, about the looming attacks and at least two of the terrorists who perpetrated them, but failed to act. As we know from the 9/11 Commission report, the main problem was not gathering information, but translating it, interpreting it, sharing it and acting on it in a timely fashion.

Intelligence agencies were already overwhelmed by information – they had many thousands of hours of un-translated intercepts on bona fide terror suspects. There were at least a dozen intelligence reports or Presidential Daily Briefings that Osama bin Laden planned to use aircrafts as weapons to crash into buildings. The CIA missed opportunities to put the hijackers on a watch list, and even when the terrorism threat peaked level in the summer of 2001, the FBI, CIA and State Department failed to give vital information to the airlines or customers. The CIA, FBI, and INS failed to communicate threat information fully with each other or fully investigate suspected terrorists. Given the evidence of turf wars and bureaucratic dysfunction, the last thing the intelligence agencies needed before 9/11 was a volume of information about ordinary law abiding Americans to analyze on top of information gathered from suspected terrorists.

And the same is true today. The New York Times has reported that the FBI has been swamped by information provided by the NSA under Bush’s directive, and that the information led to countless dead ends. One source stated: “It affected the FBI in the sense that they had to devote so many resources to tracking every single one of these leads, and, in my experience, they were all dry leads.”19 FBI agents have said that information from this program was useless and led to an enormous waste of resources and of the time of trained FBI investigators. Rank-and-file agents reportedly started to joke that the intelligence gleaned from the NSA spying was so unreliable that a new batch of tips meant more “calls to Pizza Hut.”20

MYTH: This illegal program has saved thousands of lives.

REALITY: Because the program is secret the administration can assert anything it wants and then claim the need for secrecy excuses its failure to document these claims, let alone reveal all the times the program distracted intelligence agents with dead ends that wasted resources and trampled individual rights. Moreover, according to investigative reports, “The law enforcement and counterterrorism officials said the program had uncovered no active Qaeda networks inside the United States planning attacks.‘ There were no imminent plots – not inside the United States,’ the former F.B.I. official said.’”21 Unfortunately, the Bush Administration has too often made claims that prey on Americans’ fears but are contradicted by the facts. To take just one example, the President claimed the Patriot Act led to charges against more than 400 terrorism suspects and 200 convictions on terrorism charges, a claim the Washington Post noted was “misleading at best.”22 In fact, the Justice Department’s own data revealed that 39 people had been convicted of national security related crimes since September 11th but “[m]ost of the others were convicted of relatively minor crimes… that had nothing to do with terrorism.”23 And many others where never convicted of doing anything wrong after being swept into terrorism investigations.

The only specific examples the administration has cited are inconclusive. First, it claimed that NSA surveillance led to plans by terrorists to set up a training camp on the West Coast, but it offered no evidence that its illegal spy program was necessary to uncover those plans and that it could not use court authorized surveillance to investigate them. Second, it claimed that the NSA

19 Lowell Bergman, Eric Lichtblau, Scott Shane and Don Van Natta Jr., “Spy Agency Data After Sept. 11 Led F.B.I. to Dead Ends,” New York Times, January 17, 2006.

20 Id.

21 Eric Lichtblau and James Risen, “Domestic Surveillance: The Program; Spy Agency Mined Vast Date Trove, Officials Report,” New York Times, December 24, 2005.

22 Dan Eggen and Julie Tate, “U.S. Campaign Produces Few Convictions on Terrorism Charges,” Washington Post, June 12, 2005.

23 Id. 5

surveillance helped prevent a plot to bring down the Brooklyn Bridge with a blowtorch, even though the administration previously claimed the Patriot Act prevented this.

Again, the Administration has offered no evidence that it would have failed to get a court order based on information linking the man to al Qaeda. The FISA court has declined only four out of the nearly 20,000 applications for search orders, and the government prevailed the only time it ever appealed to the FISA court of review.

MYTH: FISA takes too long.

REALITY: FISA allows wiretaps to begin immediately in emergencies, with three days afterward to go to court. Even without an emergency, FISA orders can be approved very quickly and FISA judges are available at all hours. The administration has argued about the need to move quickly to wiretap suspected terrorists, but the truth is that in any emergency, electronic surveillance of any suspected terrorist in the US can be started without getting advance approval from the FISA Court.

Originally, Congress provided the executive branch with one day of delay after such an emergency, to send someone to court to ask for approval but in 2001, at the administration’s request, Congress extended the delay to three days.24 This provision of FISA obviously provides the administration with speed and agility, but it does require an after-the-fact check from the court. This procedure comports with the long-standing interpretation of the Fourth Amendment’s requirements. The FISA court, like every federal court in the country, also has emergency procedures and practices that allow it to be accessed for orders day and night by federal agents. In fact, in the most recent statistics, the FISA Court approved 1,758 surveillance applications in 2004, an all-time high–without denying a single application. If the court needed more judges to handle more applications for surveillance orders, the solution would be for Congress to expand the courts’ budget, not for the president to bypass the courts and this independent oversight.

MYTH: Only liberals disagree with the president about the program.

REALITY: The serious concerns that have been raised transcend party labels and reflect genuine and widespread worries about the lack of checks on the president’s claim of unlimited power to illegally spy on Americans without any independent oversight. Even some people involved in administering the program were troubled enough to try to inform Congress about it and, failing that, to tell the New York Times.

And numerous Republican Senators have expressed strong concerns about the program including Senators Chuck Hagel (R-NE), Olympia Snowe (R-ME), Arlen Specter (R-PA), Richard Lugar (R-IN), Susan Collins (R-ME), John Sununu (R-NH), Larry Craig (R-ID), Lindsey Graham (R-SC), and John McCain (R-AZ). Numerous conservative leaders like former Congressman Bob Barr, Grover Norquist, David Keene, Paul Weyrich and other principals in Patriots to Restore Checks and Balances, along with former officials like Judge William Sessions—who served as the Director of the FBI under President Reagan—Bruce Fein and former Nixon White House Counsel John Dean, have spoken out against the program. Conservative or libertarian scholars have expressed strong concerns, such as the American Enterprise Institute’s Norm Ornstein, CATO’s Robert Levy, and Chicago’s Professor Richard Epstein, as well as noted columnists like William Safire, George Will, and Steve Chapman. These voices join a chorus of concern from progressive leaders.

Unfortunately, the president’s State of the Union address sets up a false choice: accept this illegal spy program or sit back and wait to be hit again. As some in the FBI have noted, this program has wasted time and precious resources on dead ends. The law already permits the government to obtain a court issued wiretapping order that allows it to eavesdrop on those suspected of aiding al Qaeda. These court procedures are intended to protect against eavesdropping on innocent Americans. Every dollar spent on wild goose chases takes away resources from focusing on al Qaeda operatives. In short, this program makes us less safe and less free. And the program plainly violates the clear language and intent of FISA, and it is inconsistent with Americans’ fundamental First and Fourth Amendment rights.

24 50 U.S.C. § 1805. 6

(copied from aclu website)

executive privilege, again.(can i claim that too? everyone does it.)

WASHINGTON (CNN) — The top aide to White House political adviser Karl Rove refused to answer at least a dozen questions from a Senate committee Thursday about the firings of eight U.S. attorneys last year, asserting — as expected — a claim of executive privilege by President Bush.

art.jennings.consult.pool.jpg

Jennings, right, consults with attorney Mark Paoletta before declining to answer a question.

Scott Jennings, who also is a special assistant to Bush, arrived at the Senate Judiciary Committee hearing with his attorney, Mark Paoletta, to avoid a contempt citation.

The panel had subpoenaed both Jennings and Rove, but Rove refused to show up, angering Chairman Patrick Leahy, D-Vermont.

“I consider that blanket claim (of executive privilege) to be unsubstantiated,” Leahy said he told Jennings before the meeting.

White House Counsel Fred Fielding had informed the Judiciary Committee on Wednesday that Rove, “as an immediate adviser to the president,” can’t be ordered to testify and was told not to attend.

Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Illinois, asked Jennings, “Where is Karl Rove? Why is he hiding? Why does he throw a young staffer like you into the line of fire while he hides behind the White House curtains?”

The White House says it is trying to protect the president’s ability to receive candid advice and offered to let top aides discuss the firings only if they were not placed under oath and no transcript was taken.

The senators sought answers about e-mail sent by dozens of White House staff using e-mail accounts provided through a Republican National Committee Internet address.

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In March, congressional investigators found evidence that White House staffers had used those e-mail accounts to discuss government business — including the firings of the U.S. attorneys — in violation of the Presidential Records Act. The law is aimed at keeping government business separate from partisan political activities.

Last month, the House Judiciary Committee expanded its executive privilege fight with the White House to the RNC, formally demanding information from the RNC e-mail accounts.

Leahy asked Jennings why he had used his RNC e-mail account to set up a conference call to discuss U.S. Attorney Tim Griffin.

In June 2006, the Justice Department informed Bud Cummins, then-U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Arkansas, that he would be replaced by Tim Griffin, a former lieutenant of Rove who had recently returned from service as a military lawyer. Griffin began the job in December as an interim federal attorney. He resigned in June as the controversy increased.

Jennings replied: “Senator, pursuant to the president’s assertion of executive privilege over consideration, deliberations or communications related to the U.S. attorneys matter, I must respectfully decline to answer your question at this time,” an answer that he gave on many times during his testimony. Video As Jennings repeatedly refuses to answer, he’s accused of getting paid to ‘stonewall’ »

Jennings also was asked whether he had sent an e-mail to Monica Goodling, then-counsel to Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, about New Mexico U.S. Attorney David Iglesias, who was fired late in 2006.

Jennings worked for the president’s re-election campaign in New Mexico in 2004.

“Were you in contact in that capacity with Monica Goodling at the Department of Justice?” Durbin, D asked.

Jennings: “No, not that I recall.”

Durbin: “Were you aware of any conversations by members of Congress or members of the White House staff with Mr. Iglesias about the conduct of his office in New Mexico?

Jennings: “No, I’m not aware of any conversations that were taking place.”

When Jennings was quizzed about whether he had communicated with Goodling via e-mail about New Mexico politics after he had worked in that state, he said he couldn’t recall.

Durbin then pulled out an e-mail exchanged between Jennings and Goodling in June 2006, and asked Jennings to explain it. Jennings declined, invoking executive privilege.

According to Gonzales, Republican Sen. Pete Domenici, New Mexico’s senior senator, complained to Gonzales about Iglesias in the fall of 2005, saying the U.S. attorney “was in over his head.” Iglesias contends Domenici wanted him to push harder on a corruption probe of state Democrats before last November’s midterm elections.

Jennings said he began using the RNC e-mail system because it was always available to him. Eventually, he added, it became a kind of “default” e-mail address.

Sen. Arlen Specter, the committee’s ranking Republican, who has sharply criticized Gonzales and repeated his desire to “end his tenure,” pushed to have Leahy agree to join Specter and other congressional leaders who seek a meeting with Bush in an effort to resolve the controversy over the firings.

But Leahy replied to the suggestion of resolving the impasse with, “If I thought that there was any willingness to work it out instead of stonewalling, I would feel a lot better about this.”

The privilege claim can be challenged in court. But Specter has said the courts would be unlikely to resolve any challenge before Bush leaves office.

Vice President Dick Cheney dismissed the congressional investigation of the attorney firings as a “witch hunt” during a CNN interview Tuesday. Democratic congressional leaders, however, say administration officials have been unable to answer their most basic questions — who compiled the list of prosecutors to be dismissed, and why were they selected?

“It is regretted that the committee has forced this action, as the president’s offer of accommodation to you and to the House Judiciary Committee could have provided information being sought in a manner respectful of presidential prerogatives and consistent with a spirit of comity,” Fielding wrote.

But Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vermont, accused the White House of trying to cover up Rove’s role in the firings. He questioned why Rove discussed the matter publicly when the issue first made news, but now “is suddenly unable to talk it about when he is under oath.”

“Mr. Rove has given reasons for the firings that have now been shown to be inaccurate, after-the-fact fabrications,” Leahy said in a statement issued Wednesday evening. “Yet he now refuses to tell this committee the truth about his role in targeting well-respected U.S. attorneys for firing and in seeking to cover up his role and that of his staff in the scandal.”

Mark Paoletta, a lawyer for Jennings, told CNN his client will appear before the Judiciary Committee but would refuse to answer questions he feels are covered by executive privilege. Former White House political director Sara Taylor testified under similar circumstances in July.

The White House already has invoked executive privilege to block previous testimony by Taylor and former White House counsel Harriet Miers, who skipped a hearing in the House two weeks ago, and to keep Chief of Staff Josh Bolten from turning over documents subpoenaed as part of the inquiry.

The panel voted to cite Miers and Bolten for contempt of Congress for failing to comply with subpoenas. The decision on whether to pursue any action on those citations lies with the Justice Department.

The privilege claim can be challenged in court. But Sen. Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania, the ranking Republican on the Judiciary Committee, has said the courts would be unlikely to resolve any challenge before Bush leaves office.

Vice President Dick Cheney dismissed the congressional investigation of the attorney firings as a “witch hunt” during a CNN interview Tuesday. Democratic congressional leaders, however, say administration officials have been unable to answer their most basic questions — who compiled the list of prosecutors to be dismissed, and why were they selected?

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While the Bush administration has maintained that the prosecutors’ firings were handled properly, the controversy has led to the resignations of at least three top Justice Department officials and triggered widespread criticism of Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, who repeatedly told a Senate committee in April that he did not recall details of the firings.

Critics say the attorneys were forced out for political reasons, such as for failing to bring voter fraud cases pushed by Republican activists, and administration officials have acknowledged that one was fired to allow a Rove protege to take a post in Arkansas.

not sure about this article…

(from wake up from your slumber.com)  

Chertoff Predicts “Simultaneous LA/San Francisco Dirty Bombs”

Someone I know attended a talk which Homeland Security Head Michael Chertoff gave at the University of Southern California on July 20th on port and supply-chain security and public infrastructure protection.

My contact reported to me today by email that Chertoff spoke about more “gut feelings” that he (Chertoff) has about a simultaneous Los Angeles / San Francisco dirty bomb attack that “our enemy is surely planning”.

I’ve had a hunch for a long time that the next false flag attack will be on the West Coast, so that it seems that the whole country is under attack, and not just the East Coast.

My own opinion? I was raised in the L.A. Harbor area and know from first hand accounts that huge amounts of shipments have been being diverted to Ensenada, Mexico harbor, and other small harbors south of the border, for over a year now. Especially oil tanker shipments. This hints that this is being done because the next 9-11 could be a “dirty bomb” nuke in the L.A. or Long Beach harbors.

This hunch was only fortified when I recalled the drills on just such an ship dirty bomb attack drill in a South Carolina harbor in late 2005. Adding to the suspicions, a 4 star general, Kevin Byrnes, who was set to oversee this “drill”, would have nothing to do with it. Instead he was soon fired.

As reported at the time…

“News is flying in regard to the nuclear terror drill set for this month. It is feared by informed researchers that an actual nuclear detonation may be piggybacked on the drill, as was the modus operandi in the 9/11 and 7/7 inside jobs. As reported at this site,(www.total411.info) the drill, involving a nuclear warhead being smuggled into Charleston, South Carolina is to involve the Atlanta-area FEMA office and be run out of Fort Monroe, Virginia.Today, the four-star general in charge of Fort Monroe was fired. Anonymously-sourced and speculative reports on the leading alternative media websites posited General Kevin Byrnes was fired for attempting to prevent the drill from going live.”http://www.arcticbeacon.com/articles/article/1518131/31291.htm
http://prisonplanet.com/articles/august2005/100805fourstargeneral.htm
http://cloakanddagger.de/media/S_284_S/Overthrow%20series/Overthrow%20_7…

Now a Washington Times report, also anonymously-sourced, highlights the flimsy basis on which he was fired — adultery. Not the Jeff Gannon kind of military adultery popular that same year with Gannon/Guckert’s over 200 unaccounted for visits to the White House, but involvement, while separated from his wife, with a woman in a separate command.

It also turns out Rumsfeld tried to chase him out of the military three years ago. Looks like he finally found a pretext.

From WashTimes August 10, 2005 :

“An official announcement yesterday did not specify why Gen. Kevin P. Byrnes, 52, was removed from his command of all soldier training and doctrine development, but two retired Army officers said it was for having an extramarital affair. Adultery is illegal in the military, constituting conduct unbecoming an officer. The sources said they think the woman was not a subordinate of Gen. Byrnes at U.S. Army Training and Doctrine Command, Fort Monroe, Va. It is rare in modern times for the Army to relieve a four-star general. … Gen. Byrnes, one of only 11 four-star Army generals, was nearing the end of a three-year term at U.S. Army Training and Doctrine Command when Gen. Peter Schoomaker, the Army chief of staff, relieved him of command yesterday.”http://www.huffingtonpost.com/arianna-huffington/at-rummys-bizarro-penta… http://www.arcticbeacon.citymaker.com/articles/article/1518131/31291.htm http://www.whatdoesitmean.com/index796.htm

Rumsfeld’s reason? Gen. Byrnes had been under investigation for some time and had been in the throes of a divorce. A number of officers went to bat [for Byrnes] in 2002 when Mr. Rumsfeld threatened to end his career as lieutenant general. Mr. Rumsfeld was upset at Gen. Byrnes for fighting proposed troop cuts being outlined by the defense secretary’s aide, Stephen Cambone. Then-Army Secretary Thomas White and top generals interceded and convinced Mr. Rumsfeld to keep him. Shortly thereafter, Gen. Byrnes won nomination to a fourth star and the TRADOC command.

And, like the several drills occuring on 9/11, the Fort Monroe Casemate for August 5 reports a series of terror drills at the base on August 17.:

“An anti-terrorism exercise to test the effectiveness of installation plans and procedures in response to a terrorist attack will take place here Aug. 17. A series of live emergency response drills are scheduled throughout the day, according to Bill Moisant, Fort Monroe’s anti-terrorism officer. …Impacts could include extremely thorough security checks at gates, restricted movement near emergency response drill sites and temporary closure of some customer service activities. Moisant explained that the Fort Monroe Crisis Action Team, first responders, supporting agencies, and assigned and tenant organizations will be evaluated on their ability to respond to a simulated terrorist incident. He said the exercise could involve City of Hampton police and fire officials, as well as other off-post agencies.[,..] Exact times and locations of exercise site events are not indicated due to OPSEC requirements. Cooperation by personnel and agencies affected by the exercise is greatly appreciated. The exercise is not open to the general public or local news media.”http://www.total411.info/2005/08/key-general-fired-as-nuke-terror-drill.html<

What I find the strangest of all, is the fact that this Chertoff warning, given at a talk to a USC DHS think tank named CREATE, wasn’t reported at all. I watched the networks, kept an eye on the local papers and websites for a whole week, and nothing mentioned. I think this is odd considering the neocons and their partners in the media have been in overdrive in recent months with the fear mongering. Why leave this out?

I did a little more digging, and took a good look at the CREATE website. I find it very telling that the “team” that makes up CREATE are all ex-employees of some nefarious group and most seemed educated in either Israel or cold war East Germany. i.e. STASI.

Here’s a sample of some of the players involved..

DETLOF VON WINTERFELDT
Director of Create

Who just happened to be educated in Hamburg, Germany. Von Winterfeldt has also worked or consulted for…

Battelle-Pacific Northwest Laboratories,

Nuclear Research Facility, Juelich, Germany
U.S. Department of Energy, Washington, DC
Argonne National Laboratory, Argonne, IL
Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos, NM
Science Applications International Corporation, Abingdon, MD

“A Risk and Economic Analysis of Dirty Bomb Attacks on the Ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach,” submitted to Risk Analysis.

2000 Member, Panel on the EPA/NSF Program for Environmental Statistics, National Science Foundation and Environmental Protection Agency
2000-2001 Member, Committee for the Impact of Low-Level Radioactive Waste Management Policy on Biomedical Research in the United States, National Research.

Isaac Maya – Director of Research
Dr. Maya is a Fellow in NASA’s Center for Program/Project Management, and was an Astronaut Candidate Finalist in 1992. He has 10 inventions in the chemical engineering, electronics, medical, nuclear fields, and over 100 total publications, including over 50 refereed journal and conference publications

Lawrence C. Bank- Case Studies Team

Being we’ve now had TWO strange bridge collapses in the past 7 months, I find it a bit coincidental that Mr. Bank specializes in bridges. And let’s not forget his education….

“Dr. Bank received his BSc degree cum?laude from the Technion in Israel in 1980, and his MS and PhD degrees from Columbia University in New York City in 1982 and 1985, respectively. Prior to studying at the Technion, Dr. Bank studied in the Schools of Architecture and Civil Engineering at the University of Cape Town in South Africa before emigrating from South Africa in 1976.”

In 1994?1995 Dr. Bank was a Visiting Associate Professor at the Technion in Israel, and in 2003-2004 he was the UPS Foundation Visiting Professor at Stanford University.

http://www.engr.wisc.edu/cee/faculty/bank_lawrence.html

Kelly Gribbben
Associate Director for External Relations

Kelly Gribbben, Prior to joining CREATE, Kelly consulted for a biomedical company in Irvine.

For the previous six years, Kelly was Director of Corporate Communications for an NYSE-traded international pharmaceuticals company, ICN Pharmaceuticals

Vicki M. Bier- Case Studies Team
Professor

Who wrote an interesting white paper called ” Balancing Terrorism and Natural Disasters; Defensive Strategy with Endogenous Attacker Effort,” in press, Operations Research and happened to received a Women’s Achievement Award from the American Nuclear Society, 1993

There are many more interesting characters you can take a look at at CREATE’s website
http://www.usc.edu/dept/create/create-team/

I think this is something that needs to be paid attention to and passed along the net as widely as possible. We all know the Mossad planned to blow up a bridge or two on 9-11 and were stopped. Could that plan still be in the works?
If a dirty bomb did detonate, it would cause mass evacuation and there just happens to be 3 or 4 bridges in the immediate vicinity…. Pass it on amigos!

terrorist attack imminent.

U.S. Terror Attack — ‘Ninety Days at Most’

Fox News | August 2, 2007

Counterterrorism expert Juval Aviv spoke with FOX Fan Central about what Americans can do to protect themselves in case of a terror attack.

Do you believe another terrorist attack is likely on American soil?

I predict, based primarily on information that is floating in Europe and the Middle East, that an event is imminent and around the corner here in the United States. It could happen as soon as tomorrow, or it could happen in the next few months. Ninety days at the most.

What advice do you have for individuals that have the misfortune of finding themselves in the middle of a terror attack?

Since mass transportation is the next attack, when you travel to work have with you, a bottle of water , a small towel and a flashlight . What happened in London is exactly a point to look at. Those people who were close to the bombs died, then others were injured or died from inhaling the toxic fumes or getting trampled. The reason you take a bottle of water and a towel is that if you wet the towel and put it over your face, you can protect yourself against the fumes and get yourself out of there.

Don’t be bashful . If your gut feeling tells you when you walk onto a bus there is something unusual or suspicious, get out and walk away. You may do it 10 times for no reason, but there will be one time that saves your life. Let your sixth sense direct you.

Try to break your routine . If you travel during rush hour every day, try to get up a little earlier and drive to work or take the train when it’s still not full. Don’t find yourself every day in the midst of rush hour. Terrorists are not going to waste a bomb on a half-empty train.

What portion of the American infrastructure do you believe is at the greatest risk for a terror attack?

We have put all of our emphasis, right or wrong, on the aviation area. What has happened, in the last two to three years, based on information we have, is the terrorists have realized that they cannot hijack a plane in America soon because the passengers are going to fight back. So they realize what they have been very successful with over the last 50 years in Madrid, London, Iraq, Israel: demoralizing the public when they go to work and when they come back from work.

What they’re going to do is hit six, seven or eight cities simultaneously to show sophistication and really hit the public. This time, which is the message of the day, it will not only be big cities. They’re going to try to hit rural America. They want to send a message to rural America: “You’re not protected. If you figured out that if you just move out of New York and move to Montana or to Pittsburgh, you’re not immune. We’re going [to] get you wherever we can and it’s easier there than in New York.”

What more do you think the government can do to protect the public?

Number one, and this is the beef I’ve had with Homeland Security for the last four years, is educating the public on how to deal with those types of events. There’s no education. We’re raising the color code alert and that means nothing to anyone. Whether it’s green, yellow, pink, no one ever educated the public how to identify suspicious items or people. In Israel, so many of them [terrorists] have been apprehended just because people have phoned in. We don’t have that training on campuses, schools or kindergarten.

In Israel, it’s very popular right now [amongst terrorists] to put one device to explode and time another one for five minutes later when it’s all calm, people are getting up and the rescue teams have responded. You need to know all those things and think about those things. The government must pursue that. Law enforcement will never have enough people on the street to detect things. We don’t have that kind of manpower. That’s why the government must enlist the public.
Juval Aviv is a former Israeli Counterterrorism Intelligence Officer and President and CEO of Interfor, Inc. Mr. Aviv has also served as a special consultant to the U.S. Congress on issues of terrorism and security and is the author of “ Staying Safe : The Complete Guide to Protecting Yourself, Your Family, and Your Business.”

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