/ 1 January 2002

US shivers as al-Qaida regroups

Militants from the al-Qaida network, blamed for September 11 suicide attacks, may be preparing another massive strike against the United States, including US apartment buildings, US officials warned.

The announcement came as US intelligence analysts reported increased communications among al-Qaida cells around the world, which they said could be an indication that preparations for a new terrorist attack against the United States could be under way.

The Federal Bureau of Investigation has received information al-Qaida leaders had discussed a possible plan to rent apartment units in the United States and plant explosives there, said FBI representative Debra Weierman.

”We have no indication that this proposed plan went beyond the discussion stage,” she said. ”But in an abundance of caution, we notified our field offices and the Joint Terrorism Task Force last week.”

Weierman described the reports about al-Qaida’s possible plans to attack apartment complexes as unsubstantiated and uncorroborated and said they gave no clue where the targeted building were located.

While there are no known recent cases of terrorist bombings of apartment buildings in the United States, they are very well-known in Russia.

A total of about 300 people were killed in a spate of bomb blasts, blamed on Chechen separatists, that rocked multi-apartment housing projects in Moscow and the cities of Buinaksk and Volgodonsk in 1999.

At least in one of these incidents, explosives were moved into a Moscow apartment building in burlap sacks marked ”sugar.” Al-Qaida and the Chechen rebels maintain close ties, according to US officials, with the two group providing each other military assistance.

The US officials and counter terrorism experts denied the

administration of President George Bush planned to raise the national security alert level, which currently remains at ”yellow,” or elevated.

But they warned the suspected new attack could be even more devastating than September 11 suicide strikes with hijacked airliners against the twin towers of the World Trade Center in New York and the Pentagon building near here.

A fourth airliner crashed in Pennsylvania after passengers apparently thwarted the hijackers.

”There are serious threats that remain,” said White House

representative Anne Womack. ”We?re doing our best to collect the information.”

She said she could not comment on specific intelligence information from the Central Intelligence Agency about al-Qaida’s activities.

But intelligence specialists, speaking on condition of anonymity, said there has been an increase in message traffic among al-Qaida cells in recent weeks.

”That strongly suggests preparations for a new operation,” said one of them. ”There has been a lot of movement within al-Qaida recently.”

US intelligence analysts believe last month’s attack on a synagogue on the Tunisian resort island of Djerba, which killed 19 people, and a suicide bombing in Karachi, Pakistan, that killed 11 French naval engineers and three Pakistanis, were the work of al-Qaida.

”That, in conjunction with other factors, indicates al-Qaida has been able to reorganise itself” since the loss of its bases in Afghanistan, said one of the intelligence experts.

The increase signals traffic among al-Qaida cells was first reported by The New York Times, which described the intercepted messages as cryptic and ambiguous but with a pattern reminiscent of the period leading up to the September 11 attacks.

The Bush administration has accused al-Qaida and its leader, Saudi-born Islamist militant Osama bin Laden, of masterminding the September 11 attacks, and launched a massive military campaign to disrupt the group’s activities. – Sapa-AFP