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![]() April 30, 2005, 11:31PM Terrorist threats on U.S. at lowest level since 9/11 Officials think focus has turned to troops in Iraq Washington Post WASHINGTON - Reports of credible terrorist threats against the United States are at their lowest level since the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, according to U.S. intelligence officials and federal and state law enforcement authorities. The intelligence community's daily threat assessment, developed after the terrorist attacks to keep policymakers informed, lists, on average, 25 to 50 percent fewer threats against domestic targets than it typically did during the past two years, said one senior counterterrorism official. Many counterterrorism officials think al-Qaida and like-minded groups are focusing on Americans deployed in Iraq, where they operate with relative impunity, and on Europe. Though some are expressing caution and even skepticism, interviews last week with 25 current or recently retired officials also cited progress in counterterrorism operations abroad and a more experienced homeland-security apparatus for a general feeling that it is more difficult for terrorists to operate undetected. The officials represent federal intelligence and law enforcement agencies, state and local homeland-security departments and the private sector. "We are breathing easier," said U.S. Capitol Police Chief Terrance Gainer, whose officers guard one of al-Qaida's expressed targets and who is regularly briefed by the FBI and CIA. "The imminence of a threat seems to have diminished. We're just not as worried as we were a year ago, but we certainly are as vigilant." "I agree," said John Brennan, acting director of the National Counterterrorism Center, told of Gainer's assessment. "Progress has been made." Brennan also said the initial post-Sept. 11 belief that there were large numbers of sleeper cells in the United States turned out to be "a lot of hyperbole." Some thought "there was a terrorist under every rock." But some intelligence analysts caution that the drop-off in terrorist-related planning, communication and movement could be a tactical pause. Brennan and others fear most what they are not hearing or seeing, especially the possibility that al-Qaida has acquired chemical or biological weapons and adapted in ways that have evaded detection. Analysts also say a flood of new terrorists motivated by the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq may try to travel here and reverse the relative calm of today's environment. |
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