Jan. 4, 2007
Terrorism Experts Predict Future Attacks in U.S.
By Jim Kouri
Special to Huntington News Network
Terrorism is the most significant threat to our national security. In
the
international terrorism arena, over the next five years, it's believed
that
the number of state-sponsored terrorist organizations will continue to
decline, but privately sponsored terrorist groups will increase in
number.
However, the terrorist groups will increasingly cooperate with one
another
to achieve desired ends against common enemies. These alliances will be
of
limited duration, but such “loose associations” will challenge our
ability
to identify specific threats. Al-Qaeda, and Hezbollah, and their
affiliates
will remain the most significant threat over the next five years.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation forecasts that sub-national and
non-governmental entities will play an increasing role in world affairs
for
years to come, presenting new “symmetric” threats to the United States,
according to a report submitted to the National Association of Chiefs
of
Police and other law enforcement and security organizations.
Although the United States will continue to occupy a position of
economic
and political leadership -- and although other governments will also
continue to be important actors on the world stage -- terrorist groups,
criminal enterprises, and other non-state actors will assume an
increasing
role in international affairs. Nation states and their governments will
exercise decreasing control over the flow of information, resources,
technology, services, and people.
The most significant domestic terrorism threat over the next five years
will
be the lone actor, or “lone wolf” terrorist. They typically draw
ideological
inspiration from formal terrorist organizations, but operate on the
fringes
of those movements.
Despite their ad hoc nature and generally limited resources, they can
mount
high-profile, extremely destructive attacks, and their operational
planning
is often difficult to detect. An excellent example of this is the lone
gunman -- a Muslim -- who entered a Jewish community center in Seattle
and
killed one woman while wounding five others.
Globalization and the trend of an increasingly networked world economy
will
become more pronounced within the next five years. The global economy
will
stabilize some regions, but widening economic divides are likely to
make
areas, groups, and nations that are left behind breeding grounds for
unrest,
violence, and terrorism.
As corporate, financial, and nationality definitions and structures
become
more complex and global, the distinction between foreign and domestic
entities will increasingly blur. This will lead to further
globalization and
networking of criminal elements, directly threatening the security of
the
United States.
Most experts believe that technological innovation will have the most
profound impact on the collective ability of the federal, state, and
local
governments to protect the United States. Advances in information
technology, as well as other scientific and technical areas, have
created
the most significant global transformation since the Industrial
Revolution.
These advances allow terrorists, disaffected states, weapons
proliferators,
criminal enterprises, drug traffickers, and other threat enterprises
easier
and cheaper access to weapons technology.
Technological advances will also provide terrorists and others with the
potential to stay ahead of law enforcement countermeasures. For
example, it
will be easier and cheaper for small groups or individuals to acquire
designer chemical or biological warfare agents, and correspondingly
more
difficult for forensic experts to trace an agent to a specific country,
company, or group.
In the 21st Century, with the ready availability of international
travel and
telecommunications, neither crime nor terrorism confines itself
territorially. Nor do criminals or terrorists restrict themselves, in
conformance with the structure of our laws, wholly to one bad act or
the
other. Instead, they enter into alliances of opportunity as they arise;
terrorists commit crimes and, for the right price or reason, criminals
assist terrorists. Today's threats cross geographic and political
boundaries
with impunity; and do not fall solely into a single category of our
law.
To meet these threats, we need an even more tightly integrated
intelligence
cycle. We must have extraordinary receptors for changes in threats and
the
ability to make immediate corrections in our priorities and focus to
address
those changes. And, we must recognize that alliances with others in law
enforcement, at home and abroad, are absolutely essential.
The global Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD) threat to the United
States and
its interests is expected to increase significantly in the near term.
We
expect terrorists to exploit criminal organizations to develop and
procure
WMD capabilities. Globalization will make it easier to transfer both
WMD
materiel and expertise throughout the world. The basic science and
technologies necessary to produce WMD will be more easily understood.
Similarly, raw materials will be more available and easier to obtain.
Violence by domestic terrorists will continue to present a threat to
the
United States over the next five years. The number of traditional
left-wing
terrorist groups, typically advocating the overthrow of the US
Government
because of the perceived growth of capitalism and imperialism, have
diminished in recent years. However, new groups have emerged that may
pose
an increasing threat. Right-wing extremists, espousing antigovernment
or
racist sentiment, will pose a threat because of their continuing
collection
of weapons and explosives coupled with their propensity for violence.
The threat from countries which consider the United States their
primary
intelligence target, adversary or threat either will continue at
present
levels or likely increase. The most desirable US targets will be
political
and military plans and intentions; technology; and economic
institutions,
both governmental and non-governmental. Foreign intelligence services
increasingly will target and recruit US travelers abroad and will use
nonofficial collection platforms, including increasing numbers of
students,
visitors, delegations, and émigrés within the United States.
Foreign intelligence activities are likely to be increasingly
characterized
by the use of sophisticated and secure communication technology to
handle
recruited agents and to be more likely than in the past to occur almost
anywhere in the United States.
(This article is based on a lengthy FBI report received by the National
Association of Chiefs of Police. Only parts pertaining exclusively to
law
enforcement personnel and strategies were omitted.)