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- <text id=93TT1998>
- <link 93TO0133>
- <title>
- July 05, 1993: The Terror Within
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- July 05, 1993 Hitting Back At Terrorists
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER, Page 22
- The Terror Within
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The low-rent, loosely organized plot to bomb New York City demonstrates
- a deadly new threat to America's public safety
- </p>
- <p>By GEORGE J. CHURCH--With reporting by Richard Behar/New York, Dean Fischer/Cairo, James
- O. Jackson/Bonn and Elaine Shannon/Washington, with other bureaus
- </p>
- <p> The visions were apocalyptic: bomb blasts spreading fire and
- smoke through United Nations headquarters and a lower Manhattan
- skyscraper that houses, of all things, the New York offices
- of the FBI. Other explosions the same day in the Holland and
- Lincoln tunnels under the Hudson River, crushing motorists inside
- cars turned to twisted junk, killing many more by spreading
- intense heat, smoke and noxious fumes throughout the enclosed
- space of the tubes. Thousands dead, thousands more injured,
- the nation's biggest city in a wild panic.
- </p>
- <p> It was supposed to happen this week, stunning America with a
- new and ghoulish kind of pre-Fourth of July fireworks display.
- It won't, though. A SWAT team of FBI agents and New York City
- police burst into a garage in the borough of Queens at 1:30
- last Thursday morning, catching five men hunched over 55-gal.
- barrels, swirling wooden spoons to mix fertilizer and diesel
- fuel into an explosive paste. The alleged bombmakers were hauled
- into court, some still wearing overalls splotched with what
- the local FBI chief called a "witches' brew." They and three
- others nabbed in raids on apartments, all described as Muslim
- fundamentalists, were charged with conspiracy to carry out the
- bombings and held without bail. Several other suspected members
- of the ring are still at large while authorities look for more
- evidence against them, but are not regarded as dangerous.
- </p>
- <p> If the plotters had succeeded, their handiwork would have traumatized
- the entire U.S. as well. In Washington, President Clinton said
- the American people should feel "an enormous sense of pride"
- that the terrorist plot had been foiled. In New York City, U.S.
- Attorney Mary Jo White noted that Siddig Ibrahim Siddig Ali,
- accused ringleader of the bombmakers, had been quoted as boasting,
- "We can get you anytime!" (He uttered these words after the
- Feb. 26 bombing of the World Trade Center.) Said White: "Law
- enforcement's answer is, `No, you cannot'...We will not
- permit the likes of these defendants to terrorize our city."
- </p>
- <p> Well, not so fast. The World Trade Center bombers, for all their
- ineptitude--one expert on terrorism likens them to the Three
- Stooges--did set off a blast that killed six people and injured
- more than 1,000. Their would-be imitators failed mostly because
- a confidential informant inside the ring helped the FBI keep
- his comrades under close surveillance. FBI men dubbed him "the
- Colonel"; he was later identified as Emad Salem, 43, a former
- Egyptian military officer.
- </p>
- <p> Salem was part of the inner circle around Sheik Omar Abdel Rahman,
- the blind, fiery Egyptian cleric who has been spiritual mentor
- both to the accused World Trade Center bombers and to members
- of the new ring. In fact Salem served for a time as Abdel Rahman's
- bodyguard. He is said to have turned informant partly for money
- (the FBI reportedly has recommended that he be given a $250,000
- bonus for his help), but largely because he thought terrorist
- killings were betraying, not furthering, the cause of Islam
- and were likely to prompt a worldwide backlash against Muslims.
- </p>
- <p> Salem's position close to Abdel Rahman apparently enabled him
- to win the conspirators' confidence completely. They gave him
- prime responsibility for making the bombs and for finding and
- renting (with $300 given him by Siddig Ali) a safe house that
- could serve as an explosives factory. When the plotters became
- worried that they were being watched, it was Salem they asked
- to sweep the safe house for electronic bugs. Next time the feds
- may not be lucky enough to find an informant, at least one so
- trusted by his comrades.
- </p>
- <p> There is almost sure to be a next time--and then another and
- another. The end of the cold war and the disintegration of the
- Soviet-bloc governments that often abetted terrorism have not
- done away with the phenomenon. Quite the opposite: terrorism
- of new varieties seems to be on the rise around the world. As
- the World Trade Center plot and last week's arrests illustrate,
- the U.S. is not safe any longer. The sole superpower, it is
- now the focus of many of the world's resentments as well as
- much of the world's hope. Terrorism, says Bruce Hoffman, an
- expert at Rand Corp., "is going to join the omnipresence of
- crime as one of the things we have to worry about in American
- cities."
- </p>
- <p> The cruise-missile attack early Sunday morning in Baghdad may
- do little to allay such fears. Yet it was a swift and powerful
- response to one of the world's boldest practitioners of state
- terrorism. The raid came after the CIA and FBI had concluded
- that Saddam's government had tried to kill George Bush with
- a car bomb during the former President's visit to Kuwait last
- April. The Egyptian government was less fortunate in combating
- terror: six days before the U.S. bust, a bomb filled with nails
- exploded outside a subway entrance in Cairo, killing seven and
- wounding 20. That was the fourth blast in or near the Egyptian
- capital since February--the first went off hours after the
- World Trade Center bomb--and brought the cumulative toll to
- 21 dead, 76 injured.
- </p>
- <p> On the very day of the New York City arrests, Kurdish militants
- attacked Turkish institutions--embassies, consulates, businesses,
- banks--in 29 cities throughout Europe. Some of the assailants
- only trashed stores and offices, but one Kurd was killed outside
- the Turkish embassy in the Swiss capital of Bern, while raiders
- in Munich and Marseilles took and then released a total of 31
- hostages. The Kurds were extending to Europe a guerrilla war
- that has raged for nine years in southeastern Turkey between
- Kurdish rebels and the Ankara government.
- </p>
- <p> In the U.S. the same day, a Yale professor was seriously injured
- when he opened a package containing a bomb--apparently the
- latest attack of a bomber who has struck university and high-tech
- targets on and off since 1978 while successfully concealing
- his identity and motives.
- </p>
- <p> As these assaults show, terrorism spans a spectrum from state-sponsored
- attacks to individual acts (like the exploits of the university
- and high-tech bomber) that straddle an ill-defined border between
- terrorism and plain ordinary crime. The mix, however, has been
- changing. The traditional tightly organized, centrally directed,
- usually left-wing and often state-financed networks of highly
- trained terrorists are in decline. The end of the cold war has
- deprived them of the money, weapons and safe havens that used
- to be provided by Moscow and Eastern Europe. Syria and Libya,
- traditional sources of training, direction and money, have been
- lying low lately, partly because they know they can no longer
- get backing in any confrontation with the U.S. from a Soviet
- bloc that no longer exists. Effective police work has largely
- neutralized such groups as the Red Brigades in Italy and the
- Red Army Faction in Germany.
- </p>
- <p> While old-style terrorism (narrowly defined as politically motivated
- violence involving the citizens or territory of more than one
- country) has decreased since the 1970s, homegrown, ad hoc and,
- especially, ethnically or religiously inspired violence has
- increased. For example, terrorism and organized crime are blurring,
- especially in such places as Italy and Colombia. Using a much
- broader definition of terrorism--which counts violence committed
- inside a country by its own citizens--Pinkerton Risk Assessment
- Services concludes that terrorist attacks worldwide increased
- to a record 5,404 in 1992, up 11% from 1991, and the number
- of people killed rose above 10,000 for the first time. Just
- since the World Trade Center bombing, at least 36 car bombs
- have exploded around the world, killing more than 300 people
- and wounding more than 800, according to Brian Jenkins, one
- of the world's leading terrorism experts.
- </p>
- <p> Which indicates that the new terrorism could be even deadlier
- than the old. Harder to combat too, precisely because its perpetrators
- are less organized than their forebears and thus more difficult
- to spot, track and intercept. To fight the rise of decentralized
- terror, the U.S. must respond with more sophisticated intelligence
- gathering. Says a top Pentagon official: "We need to improve
- our capabilities, to try to outthink them, to outimagine them."
- </p>
- <p> The new attackers are sometimes called free-lance terrorists,
- and some truly are. Examples are the Palestinians with no history
- of political activity or affiliation with any organization who
- randomly stab or ax Israelis on the streets, and some of the
- German rightists who assault and kill Turks and other foreigners.
- Their depredations are "unorganized, unstructured, spontaneous
- acts with a political motivation," says Ernst Uhrlau, director
- of the Hamburg branch of an agency equivalent to the FBI. Police
- can never predict where or whom they will strike because, says
- Uhrlau, the offenders themselves "don't know in the morning
- what they will be doing that night."
- </p>
- <p> Mostly, though, the new terrorists are a collection of groups
- that form, change and regroup, operating with some coordination
- and perhaps prompted or even financed by a state--Iran and
- Sudan are the leading suspects currently--but not really controlled
- or directed by anyone. "Inspiration may play the same role as
- instruction. A state can issue a mandate to carry out an act,"
- says Jenkins, and leave the rest "up to local initiative." That
- poses a severe problem for counterterrorists who are used to
- searching for, say, an organization run from Tripoli and coordinated
- by alleged diplomats operating out of Libyan "people's bureaus"
- (embassies) around the world. "We're always looking for a central
- headquarters," says Jenkins. But the new terrorists, he says,
- comparing them with their predecessors of the 1970s and '80s,
- are "more religious, more ecumenical, more implacable, less
- organized, less structured, more unyielding, more difficult
- to predict and to penetrate."
- </p>
- <p> All of which gives the New York plot more than local importance;
- the group that planned it in many ways typifies the new terrorism.
- </p>
- <p> It had some connections to the World Trade Center bombers. According
- to court papers, two members, ringleader Siddig Ali and Clement
- Rodney Hampton-El, a black American convert to Islam, told FBI
- informant Salem they had helped that group test-fire a bomb.
- Several members of both groups had also fought with the Islamic
- fundamentalist guerrillas harassing the Soviet invaders of Afghanistan--a resistance movement supported, ironically, by the U.S.,
- which is now the terrorists' target.
- </p>
- <p> Otherwise, though, the two groups seemed to be connected only
- tangentially, through Sheik Abdel Rahman. Members of both groups
- worshipped at the Jersey City, New Jersey, mosque where Abdel
- Rahman preaches fiery sermons. Mahmud Abouhalima, an alleged
- member of the World Trade Center gang, once served as Abdel
- Rahman's driver. Siddig Ali was Abdel Rahman's interpreter.
- </p>
- <p> No one, however, has yet alleged that Abdel Rahman gave either
- group any actual directions. The FBI did get a court order allowing
- it to record some conversations between Abdel Rahman and members
- of the ring broken up last week. Some agents then wanted to
- arrest the sheik, and prepared an affidavit in support. The
- debate on whether to order the arrest went all the way to Attorney
- General Janet Reno. The consensus of superiors who reviewed
- the document and the evidence it contained, however, was that
- the agency just did not have enough to link Abdel Rahman to
- the plot in anything but a marginal way. FBI agents did raid
- Abdel Rahman's apartment in Jersey City and carted away boxes
- of documents and tapes--said to have been left there by Siddig
- Ali for safekeeping--but no other action immediately followed.
- </p>
- <p> Besides the bombings, the terrorist group is alleged to have
- plotted four assassinations, all of people Abdel Rahman has
- something against: Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, whose secular
- government the sheik preaches must be overthrown; U.N. Secretary-General
- Boutros Boutros-Ghali, an Egyptian regarded as a traitor by
- Islamic fundamentalists because he helped negotiate peace with
- Israel; Republican Senator Alfonse D'Amato, who has urged that
- Abdel Rahman be imprisoned; and Dov Hikind, a New York State
- legislator who has questioned whether Abdel Rahman's followers
- were involved in the 1990 murder of Meir Kahane, a Zionist zealot.
- Abdel Rahman professes abhorrence of terrorism, but he is widely
- considered adept at phrasing religious messages in ways that
- sound innocent to outsiders but that some Muslims understand
- as coded incitements to violence.
- </p>
- <p> Foreign connections are somewhat the same story: there seem
- to have been some, but vague and indirect. Five members of the
- gang were described by the FBI as Sudanese who had become legal
- permanent residents of the U.S. (Another was said to be a Palestinian
- born in Jordan, and the other two native-born U.S. citizens--one apparently Hampton-El, the other a Puerto Rican named
- Victor Alvarez.) According to diplomats in Cairo, three of the
- supposed Sudanese may really be Egyptians who passed through
- Sudan and acquired Sudanese passports. Sudan is now second to
- Iran in the financing and training of Muslim terrorist groups,
- and it shelters P.L.O. terrorists from Lebanon and Tunisia as
- well as Egyptian fundamentalists fleeing from a crackdown by
- Mubarak. But though they may have been given or promised some
- help by Sudan, Iran or both, the bombers appear to have drawn
- their plans on their own.
- </p>
- <p> Those plans allegedly were quite specific. According to a federal
- affidavit, Siddig Ali told the FBI's informant Salem on May
- 7 that he had "connections" who would help him drive a vehicle
- laden with explosives into a parking garage of the U.N. building
- and leave it there to be detonated. (Actually, that would be
- no great trick. Dozens of cars with diplomatic plates allowing
- entry to the U.N. complex are parked all over Manhattan; a terrorist
- could easily steal one and drive it past U.N. guards, who rarely
- check to see if the person at the wheel has any identification.)
- Later in May, Siddig Ali allegedly told Salem that he had carried
- out pre-bombing surveillance of the federal building housing
- the FBI's New York offices and made sketches of its entrance.
- He allegedly remarked that some guards would have to be killed
- for the bombers to get inside.
- </p>
- <p> At the end of May, Siddig Ali added the tunnels to the list.
- While driving through one of them with Salem and "Amir Last
- Name Unknown"--as he is identified in the affidavit--Siddig
- Ali said the tunnels should be bombed after the U.N. but before
- the federal building. He "discussed where a bomb would best
- be placed and where a fire should be set as a diversion."
- </p>
- <p> Finally, the gang proceeded to actual assembly of the bombs.
- Last Wednesday two men brought to the Queens safe house diesel
- fuel from a gas station in Yonkers, a northern suburb, operated
- by one of the suspects, Mohammad Saleh. Some of the gang also
- reportedly made specific preparations to flee the country within
- a few days. The FBI and city police, who had been watching the
- assembly through concealed television cameras (which later pictured
- their own raid on the factory) and listening through monitoring
- devices, decided they had better move immediately. Said FBI
- special agent in charge James Fox: "We entered so fast, some
- of the subjects said they didn't realize strangers were in the
- bomb factory until they had the handcuffs being put on them."
- </p>
- <p> The defendants were charged immediately with conspiracy and
- attempting to damage and destroy buildings by use of explosives.
- If convicted they could be sentenced to 15 years in prison.
- U.S. Attorney White, however, said additional charges are likely
- to be filed. Said Fox: "These people are going to do many years
- of hard time."
- </p>
- <p> Perhaps, but will that deter further attacks? The case might
- never have been cracked without the help of Salem. FBI agents
- insist he did not drop into their lap: they were led to him
- by contacts carefully cultivated in the Muslim community. "There
- was some damn good police work involved," says one. But it seems
- unlikely that a similarly highly placed informant could be located
- in every incipient terrorist group. And, says former FBI director
- William Webster, there are "dozens and dozens" of similar groups
- around the country; their very lack of central organization
- or direction makes them difficult to crack.
- </p>
- <p> The U.S. has long been a major terrorist target, but most of
- the assaults on Americans and their organizations have taken
- place overseas. Terrorist attacks inside the U.S. have been
- extremely rare. There are many reasons, though, to think that
- may change. As the only remaining superpower, the U.S. already
- is the Great Satan to Islamic fundamentalists--the protector
- of Israel, supporter of the perceived infidel Mubarak, prime
- enemy of theocratic Iran. But there could well be many other
- groups with grievances: Bosnian Muslims who think the U.S. has
- abandoned them to slaughter; Kurds who think Washington has
- left them to the cruelties of Saddam Hussein, the Turkish government
- or both. Indeed, the U.S. could be a target for just about any
- group that feels itself aggrieved and believes the one superpower
- has caused its troubles or could stop them but won't bestir
- itself.
- </p>
- <p> There is also the copycat factor. Blundering though they were,
- the World Trade Center bombers still hit what for terrorists
- is the jackpot: headlines. Big, bold, worldwide headlines, which
- might well tempt other groups to think they could achieve the
- same results, call attention to their cause--and, if they
- operated with a modicum more intelligence than those bombers,
- even escape uncaught.
- </p>
- <p> Finally there is the open nature of American society. Borders
- are porous; potential terrorists can slip in easily. Many kinds
- of explosives can be bought easily, legally and without arousing
- suspicion. Diesel fuel is available at almost any gas station,
- and fertilizer of the right kind at most garden shops and hardware
- stores. The alleged bombers arrested last week are said to have
- bought their supplies in 10-lb. sacks from a hardware store
- on Canal Street in Lower Manhattan. Such supplies are even cheap.
- The World Trade Center bomb is said to have been assembled from
- materials bought for about $400.
- </p>
- <p> Most of all, there is the legal code. Wiretaps and bugging can
- be ordered only if there is evidence or probable cause to believe
- that a crime has been or is about to be committed. Mere suspicion,
- however well founded, is not enough to make an arrest stick;
- there has to be hard evidence. Freedom-of-speech laws protect
- fiery oratory that in many other countries would get an aspiring
- terrorist leader jailed or deported long before he attracted
- a coterie of followers willing to bomb and kill.
- </p>
- <p> Democratic values can be a protection too: many immigrants hold
- American freedoms so dear that they report their more radical
- countrymen to the FBI or police. In any case, turning the U.S.
- into a police state in order to prevent terrorism would be not
- only morally repugnant but probably ineffective; in many countries
- dictatorial repression has bred, not stifled, terrorism. So
- the nation essentially will have to watch carefully, improve
- its intelligence work--and hope.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-