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Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Al-Qaeda seeks weapons of mass destruction to use against the US

A report issued by a former senior CIA official indicates that al-Qaeda is still seeking weapons of mass destruction to use against the United States, some seven years after they had supposedly been stopped.
The report, by a former senior CIA official who led the agency's hunt for weapons of mass destruction, portrays al-Qaeda's leaders as determined and patient, willing to wait for years to acquire the kind of weapons that could inflict widespread casualties.

The former official, Rolf Mowatt-Larssen, draws on his knowledge of classified case files to argue that al-Qaeda has been far more sophisticated in its pursuit of weapons of mass destruction than is commonly believed, pursuing parallel paths to acquiring weapons and forging alliances with groups that can offer resources and expertise.

"If Osama bin Laden and his lieutenants had been interested in . . . small-scale attacks, there is little doubt they could have done so now," Mowatt-Larssen writes in a report released Monday by the Harvard Kennedy School of Government's Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs.

The report comes as a panel on weapons of mass destruction appointed by Congress prepares to release a new assessment of the federal government's preparedness for such an attack. The review by the bipartisan Commission on the Prevention of Weapons of Mass Destruction Proliferation and Terrorism is particularly critical of the Obama administration's actions so far in hardening the country's defenses against bioterrorism, according to two former government officials who have seen drafts of the report.
The Lieberman - Collins letter I cited in an earlier post said that President Obama has "said repeatedly that we are at war." Unfortunately, it is going to take a 9/11 or a Pearl Harbor to make the President act as if that is a reality.

What could go wrong?

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