CIA's Tenet Warns of More Planned Al Qaeda Attacks
February 06, 2002
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - CIA Director George Tenet, in his first public appearance before Congress since the Sept. 11 attacks, said on Wednesday Osama bin Laden's al Qaeda network and other groups had further plans to attack America.
He said operations against U.S. targets could also be launched by al Qaeda cells already in place in major cities in Europe and the Middle East and that the network could exploit its connections to other groups in countries such as Somalia, Yemen, Indonesia and the Philippines.
"Al Qaeda also has plans to strike against U.S. and allied targets in Europe, the Middle East, Africa and Southeast Asia," Tenet said in testimony prepared for the Senate Intelligence Committee.
"American diplomatic and military installations are at high risk -- especially in Israel, Saudi Arabia and Turkey but across the rest of the world as well," he said.
He said the Sept. 11 attacks suggested that al Qaeda and other terrorist groups would continue to use conventional weapons. But he said al Qaeda was working to acquire some of the "most dangerous" chemical agents and toxins and documents recovered from Afghanistan showed that bin Laden was pursuing "a sophisticated biological weapons research program."
CIA: About 1,000 Al-Qaida Arrested
By John J. Lumpkin
Associated Press Writer
Wednesday, February 6, 2002; 4:13 PM
WASHINGTON -- CIA Director George Tenet told Congress on Wednesday that Osama bin Laden's al-Qaida terror group remains the most immediate and serious threat facing the United States, interested in striking any "high-profile" target including possibly the upcoming Olympics.
The U.S.-led war on terrorism has resulted in the arrests of nearly 1,000 al-Qaida operatives in more than 60 countries worldwide. But "I must repeat, al-Qaida has not yet been destroyed," Tenet told a Senate committee.
Terrorists have considered attacks in the U.S. against high-profile government or private facilities, famous landmarks and U.S. airports, bridges, harbors and dams, Tenet said.
The CIA director said "high-profile events such as the Olympics or last weekend's Super Bowl also fit the terrorists' interests in striking another blow within the United States that would command worldwide media attention."
Security officials at the Olympics have said they are not aware of any specific threat to the games.
Tenet, in his first public testimony since the Sept. 11 attacks, faced tough questions from members of the Senate Intelligence Committee about the agency's inability to foresee those attacks.
"Why were we utterly unaware of the planning and execution of the Sept. 11 attacks? In other words, what went wrong?" asked Sen. Richard Shelby, R-Ala.
Bristling at the suggestion of failure, Tenet said the U.S. intelligence team has "a record of discipline, strategy, focus and action. We're proud of that record. We've been at war with al-Qaida for over five years."
The CIA had known that terrorists might be planning attacks against U.S. interests last summer, and knew "in broad terms" that bin Laden might attack targets inside the United States, Tenet said. But the CIA had no specific knowledge pointing to the Sept. 11 attacks against the World Trade Center or Pentagon before they happened, he said.
The CIA did thwart attacks on three or four U.S. facilities overseas last summer, Tenet said - and has disrupted "numerous terrorist attacks since Sept. 11, and we will continue to do so."
But he said, "There will be nothing we do that will guarantee 100 percent certainty. It will never happen."
Sen. Pat Roberts, R-Kan., told Tenet that Americans, as they sit chatting in cafes, want to know why, if American Taliban John Walker Lindh could meet bin Laden, the CIA couldn't get an agent near him.
Tenet shot back tautly: "You'd better tell everybody at the cafe that it's not true." He declined to elaborate.
The CIA director refused to say, in the public committee session, what the CIA knows about bin Laden's whereabouts.
He said documents recovered by U.S. forces inside Afghanistan since the fall of the Taliban show that bin Laden was pursuing "a sophisticated biological weapons research program," and the terrorist organization also has shown an interest in chemical, nuclear and radiological weapons.
The United States also faces a threat from the connection between terrorists and other enemies of the United States who have or are pursuing weapons of mass destruction - what President Bush outlined in his State of the Union as "the axis of evil."
And, Tenet said, the United States would "overlook at our own peril the impact of crisis in remote parts of the world," such as Somalia, Indonesia and Colombia.
Iran remains "a serious concern because of its across the board pursuit of weapons of mass destruction and missile capabilities," Tenet said.
And the United States believes Iraq is still trying to develop nuclear weapons. "We believe Saddam Hussein never abandoned his nuclear weapons program," Tenet said.
North Korea also continues to sell to nations including Iran, Libya and Syria, Tenet said.
Russia appears to be "the first choice of nations seeking nuclear technology and training," Tenet said, continuing to provide Iran, for example, with assistance in developing a nuclear reactor for commercial use.
Nevertheless, Tenet called "promising" Russia's recent warming of relations with the United States.
China also remains a key supplier of nuclear technology and missiles, he said.
Tenet was joined by senior intelligence and counterterrorism officials from the FBI, Pentagon and State Department for his testimony.
U.S. intelligence routinely tracks Russia, China and North Korea's efforts to sell missile and other weapons technology to countries that present a potential threat to the United States.
Some of these are overt weapons technology transfers, but some assistance comes in "dual-use" forms - equipment that has a benign purpose but can also be used to create weapons.
Tenet pointed to Russia's assistance with an Iranian nuclear reactor as an example of this. Officials have said this aid can ultimately improve Iran's prospects to develop a nuclear weapon.
Yahoo news
Thursday February 7, 3:42 AM
Chance of war between India, Pakistan at highest point since 1971: CIA Central Intelligence Agency director George Tenet said the possibility of war breaking out between India and Pakistan had reached a high point, warning such a conflict could erupt into nuclear war.
"The chance of war between these two nuclear-armed states is higher that at any point since 1971," Tenet told a Senate Intelligence committee.
"Both India and Pakistan are publicly downplaying the risks of nuclear conflict in the current crisis. We are deeply concerned, however, that a conventional war -- once begun -- could escalate into a nuclear confrontation."
The nuclear-armed neighbors were toiling to develop more advanced weapons, produce fissile material and increase their nuclear stockpiles.
"We have continuing concerns that both sides may not be done with nuclear testing," he added.
India in January tested a new short-range version of its intermediate, nuclear-capable Agni missile, prompting angry condemnation from Pakistan and raising concerns of a fresh escalation in military tensions between the South Asian rivals.
India and Pakistan have been readied for war -- with an estimated 800,000 troops massed on their common border -- since New Delhi blamed two Pakistan-based militant groups for the deadly December 13 attack on its parliament.
The Agni series of missiles, which can be fired from mobile launchers, was initially developed to provide a credible nuclear deterrent to China. The Agni II, last tested in January 2001, has a maximum range of 2,500 kilometers (1,560 miles).
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