Monday, 14 December 2009




Homegrown Jihadists Have a Wide Range of 
WMD Weapons to Choose From


Dear Harold,

Information from declassified reports (see story below) reveals the wide range of weapons of mass destruction
jihadists have available to them.

We know there are dozens of Hezbollah, Hamas and al Qaeda terror cells on American soil.
What’s more, homegrown jihadism is clearly on the rise, as
reported today on Fox News—
especially the decentralized, single person or small group type of jihadism.
(We have been pointing this out for months.)

Decades ago, authorities battling the KKK understood the supremacist ideology of hate that was driving the KKK.

Until the haze of political correctness is sufficiently blown away, many in law enforcement and counterterrorism
today will be battling the acts of jihad without understanding their connection to the supremacist political ideology
of radical Islam. That’s like fighting with one hand tied behind the back.


http://www.examiner.com/x-2684-Law-Enforcement-Examiner~y2009m12d14-CIA-briefs-law-enforcement-on-possible-WMD-attacks

CIA briefs law enforcement on possible WMD attacks

December 14, 9:54 AM Law Enforcement Examiner Jim Kouri

[The Central Intelligence Agency released declassified reports to the National Association of Chiefs of Police regarding
CBRN threats to the United States. The following is a synopsis of the information contained in these disturbing reports.]


Al-Qaeda and associated extremist groups have a wide variety of potential agents and delivery means to choose from
for chemical, biological, radiological, or nuclear (CBRN) attacks. Al-Qaeda's end goal is the use of CBRN to cause mass casualties; however, most attacks by the group — and especially by associated extremists — probably will be small scale, incorporating relatively crude delivery means and easily produced or obtained chemicals, toxins, or radiological substances. The success of any al-Qaeda attack and the number of ensuing casualties would depend on many factors, including the technical expertise of those involved, but most scenarios could cause panic and disruption.

Several groups of mujahidin associated with al-Qaeda have attempted to carry out "poison plot" attacks in Europe with easily produced chemicals and toxins best suited to assassination and small-scale scenarios. These agents could cause hundreds of casualties and widespread panic if used in multiple simultaneous attacks.

Al-Qaeda is interested in radiological dispersal devices (RDDs) or "dirty bombs." Construction of an RDD is well
within its capabilities as radiological materials are relatively easy to acquire from industrial or medical sources.
Osama Bin Laden's operatives may try to launch conventional attacks against the nuclear industrial infrastructure
of the United States in a bid to cause contamination, disruption, and terror. A document recovered from an al-Qaeda
 facility in Afghanistan contained a sketch of a crude nuclear device.

Spray devices disseminating biological warfare (BW) agents have the highest potential impact. Both 11 September
 attack leader Mohammad Atta and Zacharias Moussaoui expressed interest in crop dusters, raising our concern
that al-Qaeda has considered using aircraft to disseminate BW agents.

Analysis of an al-Qaeda document recovered in Afghanistan in summer 2002 indicates the group has crude procedures
 for making mustard agent, sarin, and VX.

Chemical Agents

Terrorists have considered a wide range of toxic chemicals for attacks. Typical plots focus on poisoning foods or
spreading the agent on surfaces to poison via skin contact, but some also include broader dissemination techniques.

Terrorists have considered using a number of toxic cyanide compounds. Sodium or potassium cyanides are
white-to-pale yellow salts that can be easily used to poison food or drinks. Cyanide salts can be disseminated as a
contact poison when mixed with chemicals that enhance skin penetration, but may be detected since most people
will notice if they touch wet or greasy surfaces contaminated with the mixture.

Hydrogen cyanide (HCN) and cyanogen chloride (ClCN) are colorless-to-pale yellow liquids that will turn into a
gas near room temperature. HCN has a characteristic odor of bitter almonds, and ClCN has an acrid choking odor
and causes burning pain in the victim's eyes. These signs may provide enough warning to enable evacuation or
ventilation of the attack site before the agent reaches a lethal concentration.

Both HCN and ClCN need to be released at a high concentration—only practical in an enclosed area—to be effective, therefore, leaving the area or ventilating will significantly reduce the agent's lethality. Exposure to cyanide may
 produce nausea, vomiting, palpitations, confusion, hyperventilation, anxiety, and vertigo that may progress to
 agitation, stupor, coma, and death. At high doses, cyanides cause immediate collapse.
Medical treatments are available, but they need to be used immediately for severely exposed victims.

Mustard Agent is a blister agent that poses a contact and vapor hazard. Its color ranges from clear to
 dark brown depending on purity, and it has a characteristic garlic like odor. Mustard is a viscous liquid at room temperature.

Mustard is not commercially available, but its synthesis does not require significant expertise if a step-by-step
 procedure with diagrams is available. Initial skin contact with mustard causes mild skin irritation, which develops
into more severe yellow fluid-filled blisters. Inhalation of mustard damages the lungs, causes difficulty breathing,
and death by suffocation in severe cases due to water in the lungs. For both skin contact and inhalation, symptoms
 appear within six to 24 hours. There are only limited medical treatments available for victims of mustard-agent
poisoning.

Sarin, tabun, and VX are highly toxic military agents that disrupt a victim's nervous system by blocking the
transmission of nerve signals.

These agents are not commercially available, and their synthesis requires significant chemical expertise.
Exposure to nerve agents causes pinpoint pupils, salivation, and convulsions that can lead to death. Medical
 treatments are available, but they need to be used immediately for severely exposed victims.

There are a wide range of toxic industrial chemicals that—while not as toxic as cyanide, mustard, or nerve agents
—can be used in much larger quantities to compensate for their lower toxicity.

Chlorine and phosgene are industrial chemicals that are transported in multi-ton shipments by road and rail.
Rupturing the container can easily disseminate these gases. The effects of chlorine and phosgene are similar to
 those of mustard agent.

Organophosphate pesticides such as parathion are in the same chemical class as nerve agents. Although these
pesticides are much less toxic, their effects and medical treatments are the same as for military-grade nerve agents.

Biological Agents

Anthrax or Bacillus anthracis, the bacterium that causes anthrax, is capable of causing mass casualties.
Symptoms usually appear within one to six days after exposure and include fever, malaise, fatigue, and shortness
of breath. The disease is usually fatal unless antibiotic treatment is started within hours of inhaling anthrax spores;
 however, it is not contagious. Few people are vaccinated against anthrax. Anthrax can be disseminated in an aerosol
or used to contaminate food and water.

Cutaneous anthrax can be caused by skin contact with B. anthracis. This form of the disease, which is easily treated
with antibiotics, is rarely fatal.

Botulinum toxin is produced by the bacterium Clostridium botulinum, which occurs naturally in the soil.
Crude but viable methods to produce small quantities of this lethal toxin have been found in terrorist training
manuals. Symptoms usually occur 24 to 36 hours after exposure, but onset of illness may take several days if the
toxin is present in low doses. They include vomiting, abdominal pain, muscular weakness, and visual disturbance.

Botulinum toxin would be effective in small-scale poisonings or aerosol attacks in enclosed spaces, such as movie
 theaters. The toxin molecule is likely too large to penetrate intact skin.

Ricin is a plant toxin that is 30 times more potent than the nerve agent VX by weight and is readily obtainable by
extraction from common castor beans. There is no treatment for ricin poisoning after it has entered the bloodstream.
 Victims start to show symptoms within hours to days after exposure, depending on the dosage and route of
administration.

Terrorists have looked at delivering ricin in foods and as a contact poison, although we have no scientific data to
indicate that ricin can penetrate intact skin. Ricin will remain stable in foods as long as they are not heated, and it
will have few indicators because it does not have a strong taste and is off-white in color.

Radiological and Nuclear Devices

Radiological Dispersal Device or RDD is a conventional bomb not a yield-producing nuclear device. RDDs are
designed to disperse radioactive material to cause destruction, contamination, and injury from the radiation
produced by the material. An RDD can be almost any size, defined only by the amount of radioactive material and explosives. A passive RDD is a system in which unshielded radioactive material is dispersed or placed manually
 at the target.

An explosive RDD—often called a "dirty bomb"—is any system that uses the explosive force of detonation to disperse radioactive material. A simple explosive RDD consisting of a lead-shielded container—
commonly called a "pig"—and a kilogram of explosive attached could easily fit into a backpack.

An atmospheric RDD is any system in which radioactive material is converted into a form that is easily transported
by air currents. Use of an RDD by terrorists could result in health, environmental, and economic effects as well as
political and social effects. It will cause fear, injury, and possibly lead to levels of contamination requiring costly
and time-consuming cleanup efforts.

A variety of radioactive materials are commonly available and could be used in an RDD, including Cesium-137,
Strontium-90, and Cobalt-60. Hospitals, universities, factories, construction companies, and laboratories are possible
 sources for these radioactive materials.

Improvised Nuclear Device or IND is intended to cause a yield-producing nuclear explosion. An IND could consist of
diverted nuclear weapon components, a modified nuclear weapon, or indigenous-designed device. INDs can be
categorized into two types: implosion and gun assembled. Unlike RDDs that can be made with almost any radioactive material, INDs require fissile material—highly enriched uranium or plutonium—to produce nuclear yield.

Sources: Central Intelligence Agency, National Association of Chiefs of Police


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