
How seriously should the FBI take a bunch of hard-drinking wannabe blue-collar terrorists who ask cops for maps of military installations, have trouble finding lethal weapons, practice jihadist attacks by playing paintball in the Pocono Mountains, go to a Kinko’s to have a videotape made of their training sessions made into a DVD, are infiltrated by not one but two informants and include a brainiac who knows their eventual target, a wide-open Army base in their own back yard, “like the back of his hand” because he once delivered pizzas there for his family’s restaurant?
Very seriously.
Having noted that, it appears that the arrest of six Philadelphia area men identified as Islamic radicals who were planning to attack soldiers at Ft. Dix, New Jersey, with rifles (of which they had a few) and a rocket launcher (no gots) probably will not go down as one of the great saves in the War on Terror.
In fact, these clowns appear to have more in common with the nimrods from Miami who were going to take a bus to Chicago and blow up the Sears Tower.
Having noted that, I repeat that the FBI was right to go after the Ft. Dix Six. To me, what matters almost as much is how the arrests were presented by the government to a public alternately apathetic and numb about homeland security in large part because of politically driven changes in terror threat levels. You know, those color thingies.
The Justice Department made a collective fool of itself in the Miami case because it pulled out all of the public-relations stops and equated those suspects with the foulest of the al Qaeda foul. That was plain silly.
This time the response was more measured.
Christopher Christie, the U.S. Attorney for New Jersey, took pains to say that the men were not linked to any international organization, although he did make what seemed to be a gratutitously irrelevant reference to Virginia Tech killer Seung-Hui Cho in saying that the men had the same potential for destruction.
But the lack of any terror ties was not a big relief because the conspirators, as amateurish and bumbling as they seemed to be, represent a new brand of free lancers who are inspired by Al Qaeda and other groups even if they are not part of them.
“Terror attacks are not always going to be on the scale of 9/11,” Christie said. “This is the model for the post Sept. 11 era.”
Three of the men are ethnic Albanian brothers who owned a roofing business and were in the country illegally. The others include natives of Jordan, Turkey and the former Yugoslavia who were legal residents.
Court papers documented a series of conversations recorded by the federal informants as the six men reconnoitered targets. They eventually settled on Ft. Dix because there was less security there than high-profile targets like Dover Air Force Base in Delaware. In fact, Ft. Dix is a virtually wide open installation that includes a small low-security federal prison, among other facilities with relatively easy public access.
“In the end, when it comes to defending your religion, when someone attacks your religion, your way of life, you go jihad,” Eljvir Duka, one of the conspirators, allegedly told one informant. “My intent is to hit a heavy concentration of soldiers. “This is going to be easier to hit specially if you have eight or nine shooting with machine guns and they are good shooters.”
In April, one of the informants arranged a gun buy, and on Monday night FBI agents posing as the seller showed up at the brothers’ home with an inoperable AK-47. The deal was consummated and arrests were made.
More here.
Yes, the only thing separating nimrods like these guys from becoming Icons of Martyrdom is one good (or bad, depending on POV) day.
After all, the 9-11 hijackers had at least one such nimrod among them. As the V-Tech killings revealed (or the 9-11 investigation for that matter), the key thing mass murderers need is for all the breaks to all go their way.
Then absurd stumblebum idiots become transformed into iconic figures of evil, with people largely forgetting how improvised their attack plans invariably are (anyone recall the bizarre “shoe bombing” strategy – Richard Reid was a loon who was repeatedly refused access to his flight in Paris because he acted so crazy – but if the breaks had gone ALL his way, he might have become an iconic martyr a la Mohammed Atta).
Very true, AQ is a religious/political/inspirational movement. One good day is all you need. There is no overall control for the most part. Don’t need it when the doctrine is “create as much mayhem†as possible.
Relax all victims of the overblown fear mongering, has anyone ever tried to enter an Armed Forces base. I live near Selfridge ANG and spent weeks at Anniston Army Depot, if your not expected you don’t get past the front gate. The Aryan Nation and militias trained with more than paint guns, why aren’t all Germanic males locked up in Malkin camps?
or US president.
Intent is all you need to be dangerous. Who would have thought 18 guys with boxcutters could pull of the worst terrorist attack in our history? Those guys may be stupid, but they a dangerous stupid. I hope the FBI prosecutes them to the full extent of the law. The old law, you know, the kind with trials and lawyers.