You are browsing the archive for CIA - HSN.

Avatar of rony

by rony

Is there a U.S. cybersecurity disaster on the horizon?

February 7, 2012 in 2012, America, CIA, FBI, Homeland Security, Security

Share
Eric Engleman and Chris Strohm
Bloomberg News

WASHINGTON – Companies including utilities, banks and phone carriers would have to spend almost nine times more on cybersecurity to prevent a digital Pearl Harbor from plunging millions into darkness, paralyzing the financial system or cutting communications, a Bloomberg Government study found.

Spies, criminals and hacker-activists are stepping up assaults on U.S. government and corporate systems, spurring efforts by Congress and President Obama to shield infrastructure essential to U.S. national and economic security, such as power grids and water-treatment plants.

Hardening those systems would require a significant investment given the increasing stealth and sophistication of hackers, according to Lawrence Ponemon, chairman of the Ponemon Institute, a research firm that collaborated with Bloomberg on the study released last week in Washington.

“The consequences of a successful attack against critical infrastructure makes these cost increases look like chump change,” Ponemon said in an interview. “It would put people into the Dark Ages.”

The study, described by Ponemon as the first to place a price tag on cybersecurity, is based on interviews with technology managers from 172 U.S. organizations in six industries and the government. Survey respondents were granted anonymity owing to the sensitivity of discussing cybersecurity weaknesses.

To achieve security capable of stopping 95 percent of attacks – considered by the Traverse City, Mich.-based Ponemon Institute to be the highest attainable level – those surveyed said they would have to boost spending to a group total of $46.6 billion from the current $5.3 billion.

The findings add to debate in Washington over how to compel operators of vital infrastructure to bolster their network defenses. House and Senate lawmakers are considering a series of measures aimed at thwarting hackers, spurred by high-profile assaults at companies including Sony and Citigroup.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, a Nevada Democrat, said in late January he would bring a comprehensive cybersecurity bill to the floor of the chamber for debate by Feb. 17.

The bill would mirror elements of an Obama administration proposal in May that calls for the Homeland Security Department to identify critical infrastructure and set cybersecurity standards for operators of such systems.

Obama cited the need for far-reaching legislation “to stay one step ahead of our adversaries” in his Jan. 24 State of the Union speech to Congress.

A government report in November named China and Russia as the leading perpetrators of cyber espionage.

In the House, Republicans including Dan Lungren of California are pursuing several narrower bills rather than a single comprehensive measure.

They favor incentives to spur companies to share cyber-threat information and better protect their networks.

Share
Avatar of rony

by rony

CSI Cell Phone

February 2, 2012 in 2012, America, CIA, FBI, First Responder

Share

Mobile device forensics forecast: continued oscillation, chance of cloud computing.

Detectives arriving at the scene of a fatal shooting at a Miami night club find a young woman slumped on a couch in the lady’s room, dead, shot in the head, an open cell phone clutched in her hand. The detectives wonder what clues the phone contains but do not disturb it. Evidence could be altered or destroyed. Cell phones contain histories of text messages, calls made and received, address books, schedules, calendars, images, and GPS waypoints—all potentially useful forensically. The phone is collected and left to be processed by the forensic lab, where any information it contains can be extracted properly, preserving the data and its admissibility in court.

The first issue, though, is whether to turn the phone off or leave it on.

If it’s turned off, forensic technicians later may have to deal with a password/PIN prompt when the phone is restarted. An estimated 60% of phones are password/PIN protected, according to a 2009 study. iPhones can be set so the phone is locked after three unsuccessful PIN tries. Other phones erase data after 10 failed PIN attempts.

“That’s a convincing argument for leaving the device switched on,” said Darren Hayes, a Pace University computer forensic scientist.

If the phone is left on, however, it could receive calls and text messages during transport to the lab and data could be overwritten or erased. Using an app called Protect, it’s even possible for someone to remotely delete all data from a seized Blackberry.

“Detectives should treat the cell phone as they would any computer evidence,” said Tod Burke, a professor of Criminal Justice, Radford University. Burke said it would be unwise for detectives to attempt information retrieval at the crime scene, since this may overlay potential forensic evidence, such as caller ID entries, call logs, and voice mails.

Burke also does not recommend turning the phone off. “Placing the evidence in a Faraday bag is probably the best means of securing the evidence until the information can be retrieved in the lab,” he said. Arson cans may also be used. These shields remove the device from the cell network and prevent someone connected to the crime from hitting the phone with a text or email ‘bomb’ that floods the phone’s memory with messages that crowd out all other previous calls from the log.

But, these bags are not foolproof. There’s a danger that placing the phone in such a container can jeopardize location information stored by certain phones because the phone will continue searching for a signal. Once it fails, it zeros out the register that holds location data. Bagging the phone also tends to drain the battery faster, because the phone will boost its honing mechanism to maximum power. Plus, shield bags aren’t completely impervious to signals, especially within a few yards of a cell phone tower.

For Whom the Cell Tolls
Forensic issues with imaging cell phone contents don’t end at the crime scene. Indeed, one question is whether police have a right to perform warrantless searches of cell phones or whether the extensive amount of digital information on these devices gives owners an expectation of privacy. Until the U.S. Supreme Court rules on this, the answer currently depends on which state you are in. California’s Supreme Court this year held in People v. Diaz that a warrantless search of text messages on a suspected drug dealer’s cell phone was constitutional. In 2009, however, the Ohio high court held in Ohio v. Smith that unless an officer’s safety is at stake or there’s an emergency, the Fourth Amendment prohibits warrantless searches of cell phones seized during lawful arrests.

Once the phone is in the lab, forensic examiners must contend with a bewildering number of makes and models. Charging cables and adapters necessary to access phone contents are not standardized. As staggering as the task may be, forensic experts have no option but to try to keep pace. Mobile phone sales just in the first quarter of 2010 were 314.7 million units, according to Gartner. Smartphones are proliferating three times faster than babies; meaning about 700 smartphones are activated every minute. Nearly all crimes have a digital component, so all of those devices contain data that may be forensically valuable.

Unlike personal computers, however, where analysts generally deal only with Windows, Macintosh, and Linux operating systems, cell phones have a multitude of operating systems: Windows, Android, Mac OS X, RIM OS, Palm OS, and Linux, plus all the proprietary operating systems that currently exist.

A number of commercial packages are available to help examiners image mobile device data, including XRY (Micro Systemation), Universal Forensic Extraction Device (Cellebrite), MobileEdit Forensic (Compelson Laboratories), Aceso (Radio Tactics), and Device Siezure (Paraben). These systems can cost as much as $1,800.

“The costs tend to be high because vendors have to supply new cables every quarter for new phones,” Hayes said. On average, a new cell phone model appears on the market every three days.

Forensic labs without adequate budgets may find free tools useful. Mac Marshal’s Mac OS X forensic imaging tool is available free to law enforcement
(http://macmarshal.atc-nycorp.com/), as is Oxygen Software’s Forensic Suite (http://www.oxygen-forensic.com/en/). Scientist and hacker Jonathan Zdziarski provides an iPhone imaging procedure free to police investigators (http://www.iphoneinsecurity.com). Other free resources include investigator Ryan Kubasiak’s Web site (http://AppleExaminer.com) that offers a variety of useful Mac tools for evidence collection. SANS (http://www.sans.org) and DFI News (http://www.DFInews.com) are helpful resources for mobile forensics news, tips, and trends.

Thinking outside the box helps. Hayes said iPhones are frequently synchronized to computers. “There is typically more historical evidence found on a synced computer than on the mobile device itself,” he said.

Phone Phorensics
There are indications that within five years cloud computing will add a new twist to mobile device forensics. A system called CloneCloud uses a smartphone’s high-speed Internet connection to communicate with a clone that lives in a cloud-computing environment on remote servers, enabling more intense processing than the local device allows. How much local data will also reside in the cloud remains to be seen, but device imaging is sure to change again.

Meanwhile, the Miami night club detectives may soon have an onscene cell phone triage tool so they won’t have to risk transporting the device or wait for forensics to finish imaging—whether the data is in the hand or in the cloud.

One solution is already emerging at Purdue University.

Researchers in the Cyber Forensic Lab there have developed a universal forensic tool for mobile devices, called Purdue Phone Phorensics, or P3. This system, currently being field tested, provides immediate on-scene analytics for nearly all phones. P3 literally takes the confusion and guesswork out of imaging mobile devices. Even if you don’t know what hardware and software to use, P3 can guide you.

“P3 is first responder friendly,” said one of the developers, Richard Mislan, a Purdue cyber forensics professor and a member of the FBI’s Indianapolis Cyber Crimes Task Force. Users merely have to enter the brand and model. P3 then provides all the necessary details needed to examine the device. If the device brand and model is unknown (many model names are hidden under the battery), P3 has a ‘Phone Phinder’ feature that helps identify the unit in question.

Share
Avatar of rony

by rony

U.S. intelligence community’s threat assessment cites strides, threats

January 31, 2012 in 2012, 9/11, Al Qaeda, America, Bin Laden, CIA, FBI, First Responder, Homeland Security, Jihad, Law Enforcement, Law Enforcement / Terrorism, Military, Obama, Security, Terrorism

Share

The al Qaeda terror network is weakening and the embattled Afghan government is making modest strides, but cyber security threats are on the rise and Iranian nuclear aspirations remain a major peril.

These are among the main themes in the annual U.S. intelligence community’s threat assessment, a sweeping 31-page document released Tuesday that touches on a range of issues across the globe.

“The United States no longer faces – as in the Cold War – one dominant threat,” Director of National Intelligence James Clapper said in prepared testimony to the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, which will meet on Tuesday to discuss the report.

He said “counterterrorism, counter-proliferation, cyber security and counter-intelligence are at the immediate forefront of our security concerns” and that the “multiplicity and interconnectedness of potential threats – and the actors behind them … constitute our biggest challenge.”

Al Qaeda – the terror network that attacked the United States on September 11, 2001 – “will continue to be a dangerous transnational force,” but there have been strides, the report concludes.

The deaths of al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden and top lieutenants under its new leader Ayman al-Zawahiri has made a dent in the Pakistan-based core of the group, the report said.

“These losses, combined with the long list of earlier losses since CT (counter-terror) operations intensified in 2008, lead us to assess that core al Qaeda ability to perform a variety of functions – including preserving leadership and conducting external operations – has weakened significantly,” the report said.

“We judge that al Qaeda’s losses are so substantial and its operating environment so restricted that a new group of leaders, even if they could be found, would have difficulty integrating into the organization and compensating for mounting losses.”

They expect the leadership to have “sustained degradation, diminished cohesion and decreasing influence in the coming year.” Al Qaeda will try to “execute smaller, simpler plots to demonstrate relevance.”

The death of bin Laden and other leaders has affected their influence in the Arab uprisings, the report says.

“They probably will struggle to keep pace with events,” the report said. “Rhetoric from Ayman al-Zawahiri, bin Laden’s successor, has not resonated with the populations of countries experiencing protests.”

“Prolonged instability” in the Arab world could work in al Qaeda’s favor.

But, “if over the longer term, governments take real steps to address public demands for political participation and democratic institutions – and remain committed to CT (counter-terror) efforts, we judge that core al Qaeda and the global jihadist movement will experience a strategic setback,” the report said.

The report cites al Qaeda affiliates al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, based in Yemen, al Qaeda in Iraq, al Qaeda in the Islamic Mahgreb in northern Africa, and Al-Shabaab in Somalia as dangers. They “will remain committed to the group’s ideology, and in terms of threats to U.S. interests will surpass the remnants of core al Qaeda in Pakistan.”

It says that despite the death of Anwar al-Awlaki, the AQAP “transnational operations chief” last year, AQAP “remains the node most likely to attempt transnational attacks.” However, the death “probably reduces” its “ability to plan attacks.”

The report also says al Qaeda’s impact on the insurgency in war-torn Afghanistan is “limited.”

“Al Qaeda is committed to the Afghan jihad, and the propaganda gains from participating in insurgent attacks outweigh their limited battlefield impact,” the document says.

As for the government, it “will continue to make incremental, fragile progress in governance, security and development.”

The Taliban-led insurgents have “lost ground in some areas,” but mainly where NATO-led “surge forces are concentrated.” Insurgents remain “resilient” and senior Taliban leaders “enjoy safe haven in Pakistan.”

There have been improvements in “extending rule of law” and most provinces have established basic governance structure.” President Hamid Karzai’s government “did achieve some successes” last year, citing security transition to Afghan leadership.

Only brief references were made to Pakistan, despite its importance in the war against terror and the deep U.S. rift with the government, accentuated after Navy Seals assassinated bin Laden in Abbottabad. It cites al Qaeda’s increasing reliance on “ideological and operational alliances with Pakistani militant facts to accomplish its goals within Pakistan and to conduct transnational attacks.” It said the country’s leaders have had “limited success against the group’s operatives.” It also said the country’s “economic recovery” is at risk for various factors.

As for Iran, the report said it will attempt to “undermine any strategic partnership between the United States and Afghanistan” and it continues to play a destabilizing role across the globe. The report cites the plot last year to kill the Saudi ambassador to the United States and concern about “Iranian plotting against U.S. or allied interests.”

It isn’t known if Iran will build a nuclear weapon, but “we assess Iran is keeping open the option to develop nuclear weapons.”

It would most likely use missiles to deliver nuclear weapons, saying that the country has “the largest inventory of ballistic missiles in the Middle East.”

“It is expanding the scale, reach, and sophistication of its ballistic missile forces, many of which are inherently capable of carrying a nuclear payload,” it said.

“Iran’s technical advancement, particularly in uranium enrichment, strengthens our assessment that Iran has the scientific, technical and industrial capacity to eventually produce nuclear weapons, making the central issue its political will to do so. These advancements contribute to our judgment that Iran is technically capable of producing enough highly enriched uranium for a weapon, if it so chooses.”

The report cities Iran’s economic problems and notes the international sanctions against the regime because of its nuclear aspirations.

“Despite this, Iran’s economic difficulties probably will not jeopardize the regime, absent a sudden and sustained fall in oil prices or a sudden domestic crisis that disrupts oil exports,” the report said.

Iran was cited in the report’s section about the “evolving and strategic concern” of cyber threats. The country’s increasing intelligence operations against the United States include “cyber capabilities.” It said Russia, and China, as well as Iran, will be top espionage threats in “coming years.”

Entities in China and Russia “are responsible for extensive illicit intrusions into U.S. computer networks and theft of U.S. intellectual property.”

Foreign intelligence services have launched operations targeting U.S. entities and “we assess many intrusions into U.S. networks are not being detected.” It also cites “insider threats” to classified information, saying “trusted” people are using access to computer networks for “malicious intent.”

The report says strides in information technology are “increasing exponentially” and “emerging technologies are developed and implemented faster than governments can keep pace.”

It cites the “failed efforts” to censor social media during the Arab Spring and denial of service attacks and website defacements by hackers against governments and corporations.

“The well-publicized intrusions into NASDAQ and International Monetary Fund networks underscore the vulnerability of key sectors of the U.S. and global economy,” the report says.

It says the U.S. government and the private sector must work together to counter the threat.

The report touched on other places: India, Pakistan, North Korea, China, Cuba, Haiti, Mexico, Venezuela, Central Asia, Sudan, South Sudan, Somalia, Central Africa’s Great Lakes region, Russia, the Caucasus, the Balkans, Ukraine, Belarus, and Turkey and the Kurds.

It also dealt with the subjects of space, energy, world financial markets, water security, health threats, and mass atrocities.

Share
Avatar of Henry

by Henry

Political correctness wins again

December 1, 2011 in CIA, Homeland Security, Iran, Muslims, Terrorism

Share

First base: Appoint a well-known voice of hate and member of the Muslim Brotherhood to the Department of Homeland Security and give him a secret clearance ; Second base: See all your undercover people in Lebanon identified; Third base: Refuse to say that Hamas is a terrorist organization.

Result: Political correctness scores another massive win over common sense and counter terrorism! Mohammed Elibiary was appointed by Janet Napolitano to the DHS Advisory council, given a secret clearance and generally admitted to the inner sanctum of US Homeland Security.

Elibiary has marketed himself as a “moderate” Muslim. But Elibiary has committed some highly dubious acts before. In 2004, he spoke at a conference honoring Iran’s Ayatollah Khomeini, calling him a “great Islamic visionary,” and has praised former Muslim Brotherhood leader Sayyid Qutb. He has publicly condemned the prosecution of Hamas Fundraisers in the USA. In a disturbing 2006 email exchange with a Dallas Morning News editor, Elibiary wrote: “Treat people as inferiors and you can expect someone to put a banana in your exhaust pipe or something.”

Nevertheless, In 2010, he was named to a working group that helped shape the Obama administration’s counterterrorism strategy. Homeland Security Director Janet Napolitano later swore in Elibiary as part of her advisory council. “You read his writings, he is defending Sayyid Qutb…a guy that Osama bin Laden referred to and studied to give him a basis for his acts of violence,” Republican Congressman Louis Gohmert said. “And (Napolitano) puts the guy on the Homeland Security Advisory Committee, gives him a secret clearance?” Gohmert, who grilled Napolitano about Elibary at an October congressional hearing, is now calling for an investigation into the leak case. Gohmert told the news agency that by allowing someone like Elibiary into its inner-sanctum, the U.S. government is allowing radical Islamists an intimate look into U.S. counterterrorism operations. “They‘re bringing in the Muslim Brotherhood to the inner sanctum and saying ’Look, they like us! This means peace in our time!‘ And what they’re doing is subjecting this nation to real danger,” he said.

Coincidentally, (or maybe not) The CIA operations in Lebanon have been badly damaged after Hezbollah “identified” and captured a number of US Spies. The State Department last year described Hezbollah as “the most technically capable terrorist group in the world,” and the Defense Department estimates it receives between $100 million and $200 million per year in funding from Iran.

Backed by Iran, Hezbollah has built a professional counterintelligence apparatus that Nasrallah – whom the U.S. government designated an international terrorist a decade ago – proudly describes as the “spy combat unit.” U.S. intelligence officials believe the unit, which is considered formidable and ruthless, went operational in about 2004. Could it have friends here. Hezbollah and Hamas certainly do have.

Both Hezbollah and Hamas are Iran backed as is CAIR in the USA, the legal wing of Hamas. Do we really want these characters in the inner sanctum of our government. It seems that the door is now also open to Hamas. This week, the US government’s spokesman was asked by a reporter at the State Department’s daily news briefing if the United States supports the Palestinian Authority decision to hold new legislative elections, spokesman Mark Toner replied, “ It’s an internal matter. We have made clear what we believe Hamas needs to do to be a part of the political process.”

Toner then shied away from predicting the outcome of the vote, scheduled for May, although he noted that in the first and only parliamentary elections Hamas surprised the American government with a solid victory.

Declining to predict the outcome, Toner added, “What’s important here is that Hamas, to engage in the political process, needs to do the things we always talk about, which is give up violence, recognize past agreements, and pledge to be part of the democratic process and to not engage in terrorism.”

Another journalist did not let him get away without a clearer answer and pointedly asked, “Just so we’re clear… Hamas, from your point of view, is totally free to stand in these elections. They don’t have to meet those three criteria to stand in their own domestic elections; that’s just for them to take part in the peace process or the political – correct?”

Toner left the question hanging with a somewhat contradictory reply:

“We believe for them to be a credible political interlocutor, yes, they need to meet those three criteria,” he said. “So yes, I mean, this is an internal matter, but for them to be a credible part of the broader process, they need to.”

So it goes on: the US bowing to political correctness even when it comes to the bloody hands of Hamas. When Iran bites at its sanctions who will take responsibility for allowing these people right into our system of government to weaken it from the inside.

Visit our site: www.homelandsecuritynet.com

 

Share
Avatar of TVR

by TVR

New Terrorist Tactic or Ticking Time Bomb?

December 1, 2011 in Bomb, CIA, Explosive, Terrorism

Share

By: TVR – a 28 year veteran First Responder

“Lone offender” or “Lone Wolf” terrorism poses a particular problem for officials, as it is considerably more difficult to gather intelligence on lone wolves, compared to conventional threats. The reason for this is because the individual commits violent and/or non-violent acts in support of some group, movement, or ideology, but does so alone, outside of any command structure. While the lone wolf’s actions are motivated to advance the group’s goal, the tactics and methods are conceived and directed solely by the lone wolf, without any outside command or direction.

Be aware that there have been many recent examples of extremist organizations reaching out to disaffected young men and women in the U.S., making the threat from terrorism to the U.S. homeland arguably more acute now than at any time since September 11, 2001. In his book “Leaderless Jihad”, Dr. Marc Sageman, a former CIA officer, argued that, “the present threat has evolved from a structured group of masterminds controlling vast resources and issuing commands to a multitude of informal groups conceiving and executing operations from the bottom up forming a scattered global network, or “leaderless jihad.” Additionally, Bruce Hoffman, a professor at Georgetown University and author of “Inside Terrorism,” has said “In determining the true nature of the crime, the US must consider al-Qaeda’s “organized endeavor to radicalize individuals.” In retrospect, the warning signs of the lone suspects growing anger over the U.S. wars in Iraq and Afghanistan seem unmistakable.

Consider that the threat posed by, “Home Grown”, terrorism has increased significantly. Decentralized recruitment and inducement efforts seek to take advantage of perceived, or real, social, economic or political injustices to sway individuals not previously associated with any known terrorist movements, residing in their home or host country, to engage in terrorist behavior.

Although there is no evidence of the existence of additional plots, the best way to deal with this and other potential threats is not to wait for it to happen but to prevent it. With first responders on the front lines in the battle against terror we must be vigilant, strictly following established Department policies regarding potential terrorist activity observed.

Be aware that although al-Qaeda’s chief propagandist Anwar al-Awlaki is dead what is clear is that it’s a lot easier to kill a person like Awlaki than it is to kill his ideology. He used his fluent English and Internet savvy the cleric preached jihad to vulnerable individuals susceptible to radicalization through his use of the media, which recordings remain and could allow serve as a voice from the grave inspiring additional violent acts.

Read more stories at: www.homelandsecuritynet.com/HSN

 

Share
Avatar of TVR

by TVR

Is Al-Qaeda Still A Threat, And How Can Responders Help?

November 2, 2011 in Al Qaeda, CIA, Jihad, Terrorism

Share

By: TVR – a 28 year veteran First Responder

A Rasmussen Reports national telephone poll taken just prior to the 10th anniversary of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks indicated that 61% of American’s polled thought another attack was likely. Compare these results with a similar 2009 survey, which found that that just 16% of Americans believed there would be a significant terrorist attack in the United States.

Remember that the brass ring” to which terrorist organizations aspire is to attack the U.S. homeland. Although it is true that military and intelligence efforts have reduced al-Qaeda’s operational safe havens, and their leadership structure has been seriously damaged, the organization remains as committed as ever to attacking the U.S. homeland. It is dangerous to dismiss al-Qaeda as a spent force. The terrorist network is said to operate in over 60 countries around the world.  Their core group is disciplined, relentless, and fanatical. Osama bin Laden may be dead, but experts believe that his organization remains fully capable of, and determined to kill large numbers of Westerners and disrupt the global economy by orchestrating attacks worldwide, possibly using local groups they have recruited to do their dirty work.

In his book “Leaderless Jihad”, Dr. Marc Sageman, a former CIA officer, argued that, “the present threat has evolved from a structured group of al-Qaeda masterminds controlling vast resources and issuing commands to a multitude of informal groups trying to emulate their predecessors by conceiving and executing operations from the bottom up. According to Dr. Sageman, these “homegrown wannabes” form a scattered global network, a “leaderless jihad.” Once they have been recruited, indoctrinated and prepared, their lust for “martyrdom” makes them difficult to deter.

Consider that al-Qaeda or its off shoots will undoubtedly continue to attempt to launch their attacks until they are killed, captured, and decisively defeated. Up to this point our national counterterrorist strategy has failed to incorporate hundreds of thousands of first responders (firefighters, local law enforcement, and emergency medical personnel). They are the first to arrive at catastrophes and have an everyday presence in the communities they are sworn to protect. They traverse these areas daily, and are more likely to notice even subtle changes in the neighborhoods that they patrol. In my opinion these “first responders” should also be viewed as potential “first preventers” of terrorism, utilized as the eyes and ears of the intelligence community.

Share

High Alert on 9/11 By – Joshua Jacobs

September 9, 2011 in 9/11, Al Qaeda, Bin Laden, CIA, FBI, Law Enforcement / Terrorism, Muslims

Share

It was inevitable and the timing couldn’t be closer to the anniversary of that fateful day 10 years ago. Nearing 9/11 on Sunday, officials in New York working closely with the CIA announced publicly on Thursday night that credible evidence of a coordinated attack by three men with close ties to Al Qaeda was of high possibility. As if we couldn’t see this coming from miles away, the announcement had to be made.

First responders, law enforcement agencies and city officials are on high alert while New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg is telling citizens to be vigilant, cautious of suspicious activity but to of course remain calm and to go about daily business.

Details are sketchy at best as the general public is not privileged to knowing the exact details of what, who and where is the exact target. Understandable given what can transpire if too much information is released. What we do know is that intelligence officials have uncovered information spanning back from Operation Neptune Spear or the raid and death of Osama Ben Laden on May 2, 2011. By piecing together months of information it’s believed that Al Qaeda’s new No. 1 leader, Ayman al-Zawahiri is believed to have recruited three terrorists. These three are to travel into the United States with the mission of setting off an undisclosed number of car-bombs anywhere from Washington D.C. to New York. Obviously it’s assumed that these attacks are to be executed on or near the anniversary of 9/11.

The significance of Sunday will also put many U.S. citizens at risk that may be away from the metropolitan areas mentioned as thousands of ceremonies will span the country from East to West. And we’re also talking about the opening week of the National Football League. Minus the two teams (Green Bay and New Orleans) who played on Thursday night, 15 games will be played in 15 major cities (including one in Miami on Monday night). We’re talking about an average of 68,240 fans attending each game on Sunday plus another 30,338 fans in 15 Major League Baseball stadiums as well*. The point being; it’s not just D.C. and NYC that will be on high alert with an abundance of people gathered in one high volume area.

As Sunday approaches let’s put everything into perspective. Have we faced warning like this before? Yes. Should we always be on the lookout whether it’s a day to commemorate 9/11 or just another Sunday? Of course. And do we panic? No. But there’s no doubting that in light of what Sunday signifies the information that the intelligence community has uncovered in the last 48 to 72 hours and the thousands of people that will gather at sporting events and ceremonies across the county we all must be on extra alert. We can’t be forced into living in fear but to help prevent a future attack on the same magnitude as the towers and pentagon attacks then we all must remain cognizant of anything out of the ordinary. So while you take part in any of the planned 9/11 ceremonies on Sunday, just remember to go about your business while remaining observant as well. Have a safe weekend and never forget those lost on September 11, 2001.

*Statistics supplied by the NFL and MLB during 2009 and 2010

Share