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- Putin Closes Border After School Massacre
- 'More than 340 people, including 155 children, were killed in the violence that ended a hostage standoff with militants at a southern Russian school, a prosecutor said Saturday.'
Fox News
- When the Killers Come For the Kids
- 'The attack in Beslan wasn't about Russia's brutal incompetence in Chechnya as counter-productive as Moscow's grim heavy-handedness may have been. It was about religious bigotry so profound that the believer can hold a gun to a child's head, pull the trigger and term the act 'divine justice.''
Ralph Peters, Common Sense & Wonder
- All of Gotham in Cross Hairs
- 'Two men charged with plotting to blow up the Herald Square subway station were also planning a 'holy war' rampage against seven other crucial targets around the city including at least two other stations, three police precincts and the Verrazano Narrows Bridge, officials said yesterday.'
Patrick Gallahue, Larry Celona and Aly Sujo, NY Post
- Effort Intensifies to Secure Penn Station
- ' Officers will be aboard every one of the more than 1,000 subway and commuter trains that roll daily into the labyrinth of platforms and tunnels beneath Madison Square Garden.'
Michael Weissenstein, Yahoo News AP
- Frequent Fliers Sign Up At Airport
- 'When the program is operating, a special lane at security checkpoints will be reserved for them where they can be identified by looking into a "registered traveler kiosk" for a few seconds. A scanner behind a round hole on the kiosk will probe their eyes for unique characteristics that can be converted to a computer code. If a computer database recognizes their irises and if metal detectors do not identify prohibited items, they can pass through the checkpoints without secondary screening.'
Tom Ramstack, Washington Times
- Iran...And Its War With the U.S.
- 'The Khomeinist revolutionary clique that has seized control of the Iranian state is determined to use its power to reshape the Middle East in accordance with its own radical strategy. The rest of the world, including the Europeans, has the choice of either accepting Tehran's agenda or resisting it by all means, including force if and when necessary.'
Amir Taheri, NY Post
- China Breaks Vow on Halting Arms Transfers
- 'A Chinese company recently supplied missile-related technology to Iran in violation of Beijing's promises to curb arms-proliferation activities, U.S. intelligence officials say. The missile-related transfers, which in the past have included materials used in making missile shells and missile-guidance systems, took place after China's government issued a report in December pledging not to transfer weapons of mass destruction and missile-delivery systems.'
Bill Gertz, Washington Times
- Non-Arab recruits scout for al-Qaeda
- 'The FBI has counterterrorism investigations in virtually all 56 of its field offices but has not broken up a known surveillance cell, either because agents are tailing suspects who have not committed crimes or because they have descriptions but not identities.'
John Diamond and Toni Locy, USA TODAY
- Moving troops
- 'On Monday, President Bush formally unveiled plans to withdraw 60,000 to 70,000 American troops from obsolete battle stations. Some are to come home. Others are to be redeployed to Eastern Europe, the Middle East and Southeast Asia to smaller, more flexible bases closer to the new front of the new war, the war on terror. The move is long overdue. The U.S. military presence in Germany was meant to anchor an American commitment to defend Europe against Soviet invasion. The Soviet Union disappeared 13 years ago. What in God's name are two heavy divisions still doing there?'
Charles Krauthammer, TownHall
- What is this Man Plotting?
- 'Ever since Sept. 11, 2001, government officials in Alaska have feared that terrorists might strike the Alaskan pipeline, which runs from Valdez to Prudhoe Bay. 'It's a national security issue,' Romey said. 'So they want to track the trucks that go over that highway, near the pipeline. If someone hijacks them, they can send a signal over the Iridium satellite network and disable the truck, and stop the attack.' Truckers who are moving goods through Alaska must stop at a weigh station upon entering the state and be outfitted, at the state's expense, with the satellite phone-based technology, which is linked to a network with about 14 levels of security and encryption, Romey said. 'The state Department of Transportation in Alaska is doing this,' Romey said. 'They can track the trucks in real time, using the Iridium network.''
Elaine Shannon Washington and Tim McGirk, Time
- What is this Man Plotting?
- 'The March 2004 terrorist summit in the lawless province of Waziristan, described to TIME by Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf last week and expounded on by U.S. officials, has become a subject of obsession for authorities in both countries.'
Elaine Shannon Washington and Tim McGirk, Time
- Crackdown by Pakistan nets five al-Qaida suspects
- 'The arrests are the latest in a monthlong terror crackdown that has netted about 30 fugitives, including a Pakistani computer expert for al-Qaida and a Tanzanian indicted in the deadly 1998 attacks on U.S. embassies in East Africa. These successes have boosted the credentials of President Gen. Pervez Musharraf as an ally of the United States in the war on terror -- a cause given added urgency at home by recent attacks on Musharraf and prime minister-designate Shaukat Aziz.'
Matthew Pennington, Oakland Tribune
- Bin Laden hints major assassination
- 'U.S. intelligence officials say a high-profile political assassination, triggered by the public release of a new message from Osama bin Laden, will lead off the next major al Qaeda terrorist attack'
Bill Gertz, Washington Times
- Pakistani Man In Videotape Tangle
- 'A Pakistani citizen who allegedly took videotapes of skyscrapers in six U.S. cities, a Texas dam, and various public transportation systems has been charged with a immigration violations and jailed in North Carolina.'
The Smoking Gun
- The Goss nomination
- 'Another charge that Mr. Goss is too partisan for the post must be met with skepticism when coming from partisans like Sen. Jay Rockefeller. Those who know Capitol Hill well and who are willing to set aside their talking points readily will admit that Mr. Goss is one of the least partisan legislators.'
Washington Times
- Goss picked to head CIA
- 'The CIA nomination could put Mr. Goss in line to become the nations first national intelligence director, if Congress follows the September 11 commission's recommendations to create that position, administration and congressional officials said.'
James G. Lakely and Brian DeBose, Washington Times
- U.S. visa policy
- 'The people most likely to be refused under 214(b) are those most likely to be terrorists: young, single, unattached males. Which is exactly what happened before September 11 but for the most part only to non-Saudis.'
Joel Mowbray, Washington Times
- Time Magazine Details Evidence of Possible Al-Qaeda Attack on U.S.
- 'A U.S. law-enforcement official told TIME that a recent Pakistani intelligence report made available to senior U.S. intelligence and security officials offers details of alleged al-Qaeda plans to use speedboats and divers for attacks in New York harbor before the November 2004 elections.'
Drudge Report
- SA maps found in al-Qaeda raid
- 'Hussain said authorities found several maps of South African cities among the items seized after the raid, which also netted Ahmed Khalfan Ghailani, a Tanzanian with a $25-million bounty on his head for the 1998 twin US embassy bombings in East Africa.'
Mail & Guardian
- British Raids Net a Leader Of Al Qaeda
- 'A key al Qaeda figure who had access to the surveillance data that led authorities to increase the terror alert level was among those arrested in raids in Britain on Tuesday,'
Dana Priest, Washington Post
- Officials: Drones producing results
- 'Two Hermes 450 drones, which were launched over Arizona on June 25, use thermal and night-vision equipment to spot illegal immigrants trying to cross the desert into the United States. They can detect movement from 15 miles up, read a license plate, view a vehicle's occupants and even detect weapons. The drone program, which is financed by the Department of Homeland Security, is part of stepped-up surveillance officials hope will stem the tide of illegal immigrants who have made Arizona the busiest illegal entry point along the 2,000-mile border with Mexico.'
Amanda Lee Myers, Sierra Vista Herald
- Gen. Franks: Iraq Had WMDs in 2003
- 'Although ETA has killed some eight hundred people, it has developed a reputation for targeting, almost exclusively, politicians, security officials, and journalists. Over the years, the terrorists and the Spanish police have come to a rough understanding about the rules of engagement. They don't commit attacks on the working class, and they always call us before an explosion, telling us where the bomb is situated, an intelligence official in the Spanish National Police told me recently in Madrid. If they place a bomb in a backpack on a train, there will be a cassette tape saying, This bag is going to explode. Please leave the train. And so on March 11th, when the first reports arrived of mass casualties resulting from explosions on commuter trains, Spanish intelligence officials assumed that ETA had made an appalling mistake.'
Carl Limbacher, NewsMax
- The Terror Web
- 'Although ETA has killed some eight hundred people, it has developed a reputation for targeting, almost exclusively, politicians, security officials, and journalists. Over the years, the terrorists and the Spanish police have come to a rough understanding about the rules of engagement. They don't commit attacks on the working class, and they always call us before an explosion, telling us where the bomb is situated, an intelligence official in the Spanish National Police told me recently in Madrid. If they place a bomb in a backpack on a train, there will be a cassette tape saying, This bag is going to explode. Please leave the train. And so on March 11th, when the first reports arrived of mass casualties resulting from explosions on commuter trains, Spanish intelligence officials assumed that ETA had made an appalling mistake.'
Lawrence Wright, The New Yorker
- Bush's Good Day in Court
- ' But in fact, when all these [Supreme Court] cases are read together -- they mark a significant reaffirmation of the president's constitutional authority as commander in chief in time of war.'
David B. Rivkin Jr. and Lee A. Casey, Washington Post
- Police Break Up Indonesia Suicide Squad
- 'Pakistan has arrested two 'high-level' al Qaeda terrorists, one with a multimillion dollar U.S. bounty on his head, widening a sweep against the group's vast web of operatives that has netted at least six suspects, officials said yesterday.'
Michael Casey, Washington Times AP
- Pakistan grabs terror suspects
- 'Six Muslim militants arrested last month in Indonesia were members of a suicide squad that was awaiting attack orders from leaders of the Jemaah Islamiyah terror group'
Paul Haven, Washington Times
- Terror attack to be in early September
- 'The operative, described as "credible" by British intelligence, told his debriefers that the attack would take place '60 days before the presidential election' on Nov. 2, according to a former senior National Security Council official. On Sept. 2 President George W. Bush is expected to address the Republican National Convention at Madison Square Garden.'
Knut Royce, Newsday
- Intel That Sparked Alert Dates to 2000
- 'The FBI is analyzing the information about the surveillance of these five buildings, obtained after Khan's capture, to try to determine when it may have occurred, so that investigators can review building logs or videos during that same period, said one senior law enforcement official, speaking only on condition of anonymity because of the continuing investigation. Investigators hope that logs or video might help identify some of the individuals involved, which would help agents understand the breadth of the terror plot.'
Katherine Pfleger Shrader, My Way News
- Fresh Details Back Threats
- 'Some of the surveillance files that triggered the nation's latest terrorism alert were reviewed and updated by Al Qaeda just months ago and dovetail with other, fresh intelligence that indicates the terrorism network remains intent on launching a major U.S. attack during the presidential election campaign, U.S. authorities said Monday.'
Josh Meyer and Greg Miller, Yahoo News
- New N. Korean Missiles Said to Threaten U.S.
- 'U.S. officials have said the recent discovery that Pakistani nuclear scientist Abdul Qadeer Khan provided Chinese-language warhead design documents to Libya as part of a nuclear-weapons and missile program has raised new worries that North Korea soon will have nuclear arms small enough to be fitted on missiles.'
Mark Trevelyan, My Way News
- North Korea pumps money into military
- 'North Korea is deploying new land- and sea-based ballistic missiles that can carry nuclear warheads and may have sufficient range to hit the United States, according to the authoritative Jane's Defense Weekly. North Korea had acquired the know-how during the 1990s from Russian missile specialists and by buying 12 former Soviet submarines which had been sold for scrap metal but retained key elements of their missile launch systems.'
Bill Gertz, Washington Times
- Street Closing Irks D.C. Leaders
- 'Police officers carrying automatic weapons patrolled streets around the Capitol last night as they prepared to close a major thoroughfare on Capitol Hill and to set up 14 vehicle checkpoints, creating a huge security perimeter around powerful symbols of American democracy.'
Lyndsey Layton and Manny Fernandez, Washington Post
- Pakistani-U.S. Raid Uncovered Terrorist Cell's Surveillance Data
- 'Officials from several U.S. intelligence and law enforcement agencies huddled virtually round-the-clock Friday, Saturday and Sunday to discuss the fast-emerging information, government sources said, assembling intelligence from the arrested al Qaeda operatives and translating and culling through the documents. The news also highlighted a victory for the CIA, which for several months has mounted campaigns, in coordination with allied foreign security agencies and U.S. Special Forces, to attack suspected al Qaeda strongholds in Pakistan, Afghanistan, Yemen, Somalia, and elsewhere in northern Africa.'
Walter Pincus and John Mintz, Washington Post
- Show of Force
- 'Officially, it's the first test of the Navy's new strategy, the Fleet Response Plan (FRP). Unofficially, it puts America's potential foes on notice: The U.S. Army may be stretched pretty thin at the moment but the U.S. Navy isn't. Each carrier strike group (CSG) includes one carrier with 75 aircraft, 4 combat ships, a submarine, cruise missiles and 6,500 sailors. No other nation can put to sea anywhere on earth such an incredible display of military might.'
Peter Brookes, NY Post
- Back to Reality
- 'If we're the enemy or, rather, if George W. Bush is the enemy all we need do is turn the guy out of office and we'll be safe. The inconveniences and discomforts caused by increased security and the Patriot Act are really due to an administration that supposedly wants Americans to remain afraid because then they'll be easily controlled. If the dangers facing our troops abroad are due to poor planning by the Bush administration, then all we need do is change secretaries of defense or CIA directors to make them safe. How much worse, how much more frightening, how much more horrible it is to have to face the truth.'
John Podhoretz, NY Post
- Transcript: Detailed Background Briefing by Senior Intelligence Officials on New Terror Threats
- 'There is detail now available regarding the types of security procedures at some specific buildings; the security checks that are required; the types of security personal at different posts; whether or not these individuals are armed or not; the presence of security officers at these posts at different times of the day; the types of uniforms that they wear; the number of pedestrians in the area, the number of employees in buildings; information regarding potential escape routes for perpetrators of attacks; different points of reconnaissance in order to ensure that they have the full breadth of information regarding the targets; different types of shops that are near by.'
Drudge Report
- Captured Qaeda Figure Led Way to Information Behind Warning
- 'The Qaeda communications system that Mr. Khan used and helped operate relied on Web sites and e-mail addresses in Turkey, Nigeria and the northwestern tribal areas of Pakistan, according to the information provided by a Pakistani intelligence official. The official said Mr. Khan had told investigators that couriers carried handwritten messages or computer disks from senior Qaeda leaders hiding in isolated border areas to hard-line religious schools in Pakistan's Northwest Frontier Province. Other couriers then ferried them to Mr. Khan on the other side of the country in the eastern city of Lahore, and the computer expert then posted the messages in code on Web sites or relayed them electronically, the Pakistani official said.'
Douglas Jehl and David Rohde, NY Times
- Pakistan Bags Top Al-Qaeda Plotter
- 'Pakistan arrested a senior al Qaeda figure who had a $25 million bounty on his head because of his role in two U.S. embassy bombings amid fears he was preparing a major terrorist attack in the United States this summer, authorities said yesterday.'
Niles Lathem and Andy Soltis, NY Post
- Al-Qaeda using SA passports
- 'Federal authorities are investigating a South African woman whom they say tried to board a flight near the US-Mexico border with an altered passport, amid reports that South African passports have ended up in the hands of terrorists.'
The Star
- Afghanistan's gamble
- 'Demilitarization of Afghanistan will hinge upon economic development and the jobs it delivers. That will be the country's primary militia-busting force, as Afghanistan and its allies build on the marginal stability Mr. Karzai has secured.'
Washington Times
- Changing the guard on missile defense
- 'North Korea is deploying new intermediate-range ballistic missiles with a range of up to 2,500 miles, and is testing a new main engine for its Taepodong-2 missile, which may be capable of reaching the U.S. mainland.'
James T. Hackett, Washington Times
- Syrians Flew With Expired Visas
- 'When the pilot announced the landing and to fasten safety belts, seven of the men jumped up in unison and went to the bathroom. Upon returning to his seat, one man mouthed the word "no" as he ran his finger across his throat.'
Audrey Hudson, Washington Times
- Covering up?
- 'Investigators are trying to determine why Mr. Berger improperly removed a highly classified after-action report by Richard A. Clarke... Officials said the investigation into the removal of the Clarke memorandum is expected to lead to the declassification and publication of the document. This could expose the duplicity of Mr. Clarke, who had little criticism of the Clinton administration in public.'
Bill Gertz and Rowan Scarborough, Washington Times
- Defendant Acquitted in Iran Reporter Death
Ali Akbar Dareini, Washington Times AP
- Pakistan Battle Leads to 12 Terror Arrests
Asif Shahzad, Washington Times AP
- North Korea rejects nuclear disarmament
Sang-hun Choe, Washington Times
- Sandy Berger Probed Over Terror Memos
Fox News
- Clinton Adviser Probed in Terror Memos
John Solomon, Yahoo News
- Bush hits Iran for aid to al Qaeda
Joseph Curl, Washington Times
- Intelligence 'czar' not needed, CIA chief says
Guy Taylor, Washington Times
- BitDefender sees Al-Qaeda link in new Atak worm
Munir Kotadia, ZD Net UK
- Iran Gave 9/11 Plot Key Boost
Clemente Lisi, NY Post
- Terror in the Skies, Again?
Annie Jacobsen, Womens' Wall Street
- Tribunals set for Guantanamo detainees
Guy Taylor, Washington Times
- Messy Elections Still Count
Amir Taheri, NY Post
- Interviews Of Muslims To Broaden: FBI Hopes to Avert A Terrorist Attack
Mary Beth Sheridan, Washington Post
- 9/11 Panel Is Said to Urge New Post for Intelligence
Philip Shenon, NY Times
- U.S. Nuclear Lab Temporarily Halts Secret Work
Adam Tanner, My Way News
- House Votes to Block Aid for Saudi Arabia
Anna Willard, My Way News
- U.K. Report: Zarqawi Set Up Sleeper Cells
Ed Johnson, Washington Times AP
- The U.S. says secrecy has enabled it to collect vital intelligence from enemy combatants
E.A. Torriero, Sun-Sentinel
- Plan to collect flier data canceled Color-coded system seen as privacy threat
Mimi Hall and Barbara DeLollis, USA Today
- Let's Go Crazy
Neil Cavuto, Fox News
- Al Qaeda's Growing Sanctuary
Douglas Farah and Richard Shultz, Washington Post
- FBI Takes a Dive on Terror
Debbie Schlussel, NY Post
- U.S. Seeks to Protect Afghan Elections
Stephen Graham, Washington Times AP
- CDC Ships 'Chem-Packs' for Preparation
Lauran Neergaard, My Way News
- Grand Opening of City's New Bio-Terror Defense Lab
Dave Evans, ABC Eyewitness News
- Zarqawi's Savagery
NY Post
- The mollycoddling milksops of Manila
Michelle Malkin, TownHall
- Key bin Laden aide surrenders
Abdullah Al-Shihri, Washington Times
- Europe's Islamist Alliance
Amir Taheri, FrontPage Magazine
- Blunkett's ban will fan the flames
Mark Steyn, Opinion Telegraph
- Army tents plug into solar power
Megan Fromm, Washington Times
- Daschle concerned about 'sobering' terror briefing
Donna Smith, Black Hills Pioneer
- Boston, NY Rail Lines Vulnerable
Bill Gertz and Audrey Hudson, Washington Times
- Air Marshalls' Secrecy Ruined by Dress Code
Audrey Hudson, Washington Times
- House Refuses to Curb Patriot Act
Alan Fram, Yahoo News
- Ridge Warns of 'Credible' al-Qaida Plot
Katherine Pfleger Shrader, MyWay News
- Bin Laden Is Said to Be Organizing for a U.S. Attack
David Johnston and David Stout, NY Times
- Friend or foe?
Curt Weldon, Washington Times
- China's militarists humiliated by President Bush's resolve
Peter Zhang, Brookes News
- Iran in bombsights?
Arnaud de Borchgrave, Washington Times
- Butt-out signal from Chirac
Arnaud de Borchgrave, Washington Times
- Iran's Clerics Fear Rise of Democratic Iraq
Parisa Hafezi, Washington Times
- Al-Qaeda spells out Iraq attack strategy in handbook
Yahoo News
- Suspected al-Qaeda member planned to blow up Panama Canal
Drudge Report
- Police foil three-man plane hijack [Munich-Istanbul flight]
Reuters
- Mexican Official Wants Border Eliminated
Fox News
- Old Soldiers to Be Called to Action
Fox News
- 2 'Tape' Worms Booted
Murray Weiss and Niles Lathem, NY Post
- Saudi Pipelines Could Be Next Terror Targets
Liza Porteus, Fox News
- Islamic Sites Debate Beheading of Muslims
Nadia Abou El-Magd, Washington Times AP
- U.S. Tightens Security for July 4 Holiday
Deborah Charles, My Way News
- NATO's spy planes, ships and WMD unit to guard Olympics
World Tribune
- Bush Can Hold Citizens Without Charges
Anne Gearan, My Way News
- Tehran to resume building centrifuges
Ali Akbar Dareini, Washington Times
- Intelligence backs claim Iraq tried to buy uranium
Mark Huband, Financial Times of London
- Will the West survive?
Walter E. Williams, TownHall
- Show it! All of it!
Neil Cavuto, TownHall
- Iran has always dreamt of dominating the Middle East
John Keegan, Telegraph
- View From The Eye Of The Storm
Haim Harari, Muslim World Today
- The Revolution Within the Revolution
Wretchard, Belmont Club
- Euros Don't Understand U.S. Anti-Terror Resolve
John Gibson, Fox News
- Out of Sight, Afghans Register Women to Vote
Carlotta Gall, NY Times
- Terrorism Witness Charged With Lying
Susan Schmidt, Washington Post
- Severe and prolonged harm
Eugene Kontorovich, Washington Times
- A warning about WMD
Washington Times
- Clinton first linked al Qaeda to Saddam
Rowan Scarborough, Washington Times
- 8 Detained Servicemen in British Custody
Ali Akbar Dareini, My Way News
- Tenet furious over scathing CIA report
CNN
- Panel Faults CIA's Spying
Bob Drogin and Greg Miller, Yahoo News
- U.S. Says Many Foreigners Must Leave to Renew Visas
My Way News
- Iranian Gambit
Ralph Peters, NY Post
- Head in sand saw no evil
Arnaud de Borchgrave, Washington Times
- U.S. Strikes Another Zarqawi Safehouse
Fox News
- Barnier Says NATO Forces Must Not Be Sent to Iraq
Abdul Jalil Mustafa, Arab News
- Concern about canal security
CNN
- 'Values' guided Bush torture ban
James G. Lakely, Washington Times
- U.S. threatens to abandon Saudis and their oil
World Tribune
- Heavy casualties in Russia raids
CNN
- Iran Confiscates U.K. Military Vessels
Ali Akbar Dareini, My Way News
- Killers with Cameras
Ralph Peters, NY Post
- Al Qaeda's Saudi Agenda: Arabian Brain Drain
Nicole Gelinas, NY Post
- S. Korea troop cuts tied to restructuring
Bill Gertz, Washington Times
- Evil 12 Bagged in Body Hunt
William J. Gorta and Hasani Gittens, NY Post
- Trouble in Southeast Asian waters
Washington Times
- 9/11 Tapes Reveal Ground Personnel Muffled Attacks
Melanie Phillips, Telegraph
- There was a link between Saddam and al-Qa'eda
Gail Sheehy, New York Observer
- U.N. Agency Rebukes Iran on Nuclear Activity
Peter Slevin and Dafna Linzer, Washington Post
- Push the Princes
Stephen Schwartz, NY Post
- A Necessary Response to the Enemy's Savagery
NY Post
- al-Qaida Leader Killed in Saudi Raid
My Way News
- U.S. at War With Beijing, Reports Cite China as No. 1 Threat
Charles R. Smith, News Max
- Bin Laden overruled Taliban leader to order assault
Edward Alden, Financial Times
- Bin Laden Portrayed as a Hands-On Leader
David Von Drehle, Washington Post
- In war on terror, Geneva Convention doesn't apply
Jonah Goldberg, TownHall
- Karzai lauds U.S. war on terror
Stephen Dinan, Washington Times
- Navy Tests New Combat System
Cmdr. Joe Murphy, Navy News
- Rattling Riyadh
Erick Stakelbeck, NY Post
- Europe Seeks Iran Nuclear Reprimand
Andrea Dudikova, Washington Times AP
- Somali charged in al Qaeda mall bombing plot
CNN
- Fast-Tracking Flyers
Sally B. Donnelly, Time Magazine
- Pakistan Detains Ex-Qaeda Head's Nephew and 9 With Terror Ties
Salman Masood, NY Times
- Mutilation of victims and Muslim law
Jeff Jacoby, Boston Globe
- The Crisis Within In Saudi Arabia, Rebellion and Reform Seize Center Stage
Thomas W. Lippman, Washington Post
- Group says it kidnapped American in Saudi capital
CNN
- 80 Militants Dead After Siege of Taliban Stronghold
Fox News
- Iran Wants to Be Part of 'Nuclear Club'
- 'Iran has a high technical capability and has to be recognized by the international community as a member of the nuclear club. This is an irreversible path.'
Fox News
- A Muslim sect turns vice into a tool against Western enemies
- 'Outwardly, members appear to be excommunicated
from Islam, conforming to Western ways and even Western vices. But inwardly, they are devout Muslims in exile in a strange land.'
Gene Edward Veith, World Magazine
- Big Brother really is watching
- 'It is an odd sensation to find comfort in the knowledge that your government is watching, but so it goes in the age of terrorism.'
Kathleen Parker, TownHall
- The Nigerian Threat
- 'What is different about the rise of Islam in Nigeria than in other countries in Africa or the Middle East is that it all happened in a rather unusual period of "democracy"- perhaps better described as chaotic, free-for-all politics.'
Michael Radu, FrontPage Magazine
- Saudi "Culture of Death" Indoctrination
- 'What is different about the rise of Islam in Nigeria than in other countries in Africa or the Middle East is that it all happened in a rather unusual period of "democracy"- perhaps better described as chaotic, free-for-all politics.'
MEMRI, FrontPage Magazine
- Syrians Present At the Ryongchon Explosion Site
- 'Syrians were there because Syria ordered a large number of Scud missiles tipped with bio/chem warheads.'
Future Korea via Free Republic
- European nations tighten laws to oust extremists
- 'Is there not a right of self-defense against terrorists who plan mass murder?'
Jennifer Joan Lee, Washington Times
- Don't Worry, We Don't Kill Muslims
Daniel Pipes, FrontPage Magazine
- Wahabi vs. Wahabi
Walid Phares, FrontPage Magazine
- Terror in the Sahara
Michael Radu, FrontPage Magazine
- 'Key Figure' Among Madrid Bombing Arrests
Fox News
- U.S. Plans Major Cut Of Forces In Korea
Anthony Faiola and Bradley Graham, Washington Post
- We can never take our guard down
Washington Times
- Port Security Ramped Up
Fox News
- Taliban Told U.S. It Would Give Up Osama: Middleman
Tehran Times
- Iranian President: 'The Root of All Terrorist Activity is the Violence of the Superpowers'
MEMRI
- CIA Chief's Surprise Exit: His Only Chance
John Podhoretz, NY Post
- Resignation Takes the Heat Off Dubya
Deborah Orin, NY Post
- What's Behind Pulling Our Troops Out of South Korea?
Lt. Col. Gordon Cucullu, FrontPage Magazine
- Move It Along
Peter Brookes, NY Post
- From al Qaeda's terror playbook
Claude Salhani, Washington Times
- Terrorism and the courts
Washington Times
- CIA Director George Tenet Resigns
Pete Yost, Yahoo AP
- Iran Taking Aim?
MEMRI, FrontPage Magazine
- The Real Roots of Muslim Hatred
Andrew G. Bostom, FrontPage Magazine
- Oversee the PATRIOT Act
Paul M. Weyrich and David Keene, American Spectator
- Preying On Saudi Arabia
Jim Hoagland, Washington Post
- Risk of radioactive "dirty bomb" growing
New Scientist
- We will take no risks
Jennifer Joan Lee, Washington Times
- Stealth Islamist: Khaled Abou El Fadl
Daniel Pipes
- Saudi: Gunmen allowed to escape
CNN
- Nuclear report casts doubt on Iran's centrifuges
CNN
- U.S. Details Case Against Terror Suspect
Dan Eggen, Washington Post
- Pure evil in Sudan
Joseph Farah, WorldNetDaily
- Islamism's Campus Club
Jonathan Dowd-Gailey, FrontPage magazine
- China rethinking military strategy
Robert Burns, Seattle Post Intelligencer AP
- Analysis: al-Qaida's big mistake
Martin Walker, Washington Times UPI
- Trial of 69 alleged terrorists halted
Washington Times AP
- Saudi Hostage Siege Ends
Fox News
- 'Smart bullet' reports back wirelessly
NewScientist
- A Menace - Even When They're Caged
Michelle Malkin, NY Post
- Breeding Terror
Michelle Malkin, NY Post
- Concerns over Najaf deal as police leave
CNN
- Pakistan: Key Islamic scholar shot
CNN
- Libyan Nuclear Devices Missing
Joby Warrick, Washington Post
- Senior suspect in nuke trafficking arrested
Washington Times
- Dirty Diaper Dad
Heidi Singer, NY Post
- Saudi Forces Hunt Militants After Attack
Donna Abu-Nasr, Washington Times AP
- Many Arab leaders prefer Bush victory
David R. Sands, Washington Times
- The Connection: The collaboration of Iraq and al Qaeda
Stephen F. Hayes, Weekly Standard
- Suicide U.: Iran registers volunteers for martyrdom
World Tribune
- 2 suspected al-Qaeda agents dropped in for meal, says Denny's manager in Avon
Jim Kirksey, Denver Post
- Plotter in Pearl Murder Linked to Bombing
Munir Ahmad, Washington Times AP
- Beantown Lockdown
Howie Carr, NY Post
- NYPD Hero Helps Brits Hook the Evil Preacher Creature
Heidi Singer and Marsha Kranes, NY Post
- In the Scrapyards of Jordan, Signs of a Looted Iraq
James Glanz, NY Times
- South Africa nabs Al-Qaeda operatives
Channel News Asia
- Japan makes first al-Qaeda arrests in dawn raids
Richard Lloyd Parry, Times Online
- American Sought Had '97 Arrest, 'Extreme' Ideas
Fox News
- Al-Qaida wants to 'hit the United States hard'
MSNBC
- Let's Catch Them Now
Peggy Noonan, WSJ Opinion Journal
- Most Ports Don't Comply With Security
Yeoh En-Lai, Yahoo AP
- The World's Firefighter
Dick Morris, NY Post
- No Way Out
Michael Ledeen, National Review
- U.S. Seeks to Rid World of'Dirty Bombs'
Susanna Loof, Washington Times AP
- Anthrax case judge tilts to plaintiffs
Susanna Loof, Washington Times AP
- Radar sale to China stopped
Bill Gertz, Washington Times
- U.S. Officials Concerned About Summer Security
Fox News
- Diplomats Look to Cold War Tactics for Help in Arab World
Peter Brownfeld, Fox News
- Qaeda Has 18,000 Militants for Raids - Think Tank
Paul Majendie, Yahoo AP
- Threat to the West is European import with Islamic accent
Daniel Pipes, Jewish World Review
- Tehran's Tentacles of Terror
Aaron Mannes
- The High Ground
John J. Miller, National Review
- Project Bioshield
Washington Post
- Upsize the Army
NY Post
- Cooking the books
Peter Huessy, Washington Times
- U.S. hardball with Syria
Ilan Berman, Washington Times
- North Korea Accused of Supplying Uranium
George Jahn, Washington Times AP
- Evidence Is Cited Linking Koreans to Libya Uranium
David E. Snager and William J. Broad, NY Times
- Train Probe
ABC
- Remembering Why We Fight
William J. Bennett, Claremont Institute
- ADD Nation?
Gary Aldrich, TownHall
- The Enemy is Not Just Al-Qaeda
Robert Spencer, FrontPage Magazine
- Islam is Incompatible with Democracy
Amir Taheri, Benador Associates
- Official: al-Qaida Seeks Chemical Strike
Katherine Pfleger Shrader, My Way
- Sources: Terrorists Planning Iraq Attack (Jan 15 '04)
Brit Hume Interview with Mansoor Ijaz, Fox News
- Stop Navel Gazing
Caroline Glick, FrontPage Magazine
- This is War: Stop the Moral Equivalence
Garry Kasparov, WSJ Opinion Journal
- German forces advised not to take Afghan prisoners
Expatica
- Terror accused was `ready for sacrifice'
Vivien Oakley, The Advertiser (AU)
- At the Nervous Center of Homeland Security
Sari Horwitz, Washington Post
- Europe's Threat to the West
Daniel Pipes, FrontPage Magazine
- Oil Prices Fuel Rise in Strategic Reserves
Quicken
- Saudi's Don't Need Kid Gloves
Sue Kelly, NY Post
- Security With Liberty
William Safire, NY Times
- Drifting Apart
Robert J. Samuelson, FrontPage Magazine
- Drifting Apart
Robert J. Samuelson, FrontPage Magazine
- The Clash of Civilizatons and the Great Caliphate -- Apocalypse Now!
Larry Abraham, Iconoclast
- Cell phone block eyed
Troy Anderson, Los Angeles Daily News
- Report: Syrians, 'equipment' were in N. Korea train blast
World Tribune
- U.S. Nearing Deal on Way to Track Foreign Visitors
Eric Lichtblau and John Markoff, NY Times
- Getting Tough on Syria
Nir Boms, FrontPage Magazine
- Who Is Abu Zarqawi?
Robert S. Leiken & Steven Brooke, Weekly Standard
- Europe 'target and a base' for al Qaeda
David R. Sands, Washington Times
- Ashcroft touts data-sharing plan
Jerry Seper, Washington Times
- The Edge of the Razor
George Friedman, Stratfor
- Self-flagellation
Oliver North, TownHall
- Heresy and History
Angelo M. Codevilla, American Spectator
- All Around the Capital, Preparing for an Emergency
Sari Horwitz, Washington Post
- The War that Dare Not Speak Its Name
Andrew C. McCarthy, National Review
- Kingdom Comes to North America
Steven Stalinsky, National Review
- The Alternatives
David Frum, National Review
- The Sacred Muslim Practice of Beheading
Andrew G. Bostom, FrontPage Magazine
- Our Internal Islamist Enemies
Stephen Schwartz, FrontPage Magazine
- Sometimes a War Saves People
Jose Ramos-Horta, WSJ Opinion Journal
- Bada Bing? Bada Boom. Tony Soprano worries about terrorism. So do I.
Peggy Noonan, WSJ Opinion Journal
- Harsh C.I.A. Methods Cited in Top Qaeda Interrogations
James Risen, David Johnston and Neil A. Lewis, NY Times
- U.S. Sanctions May Hurt Syria Politically
Sam F. Ghattas, Washington Times AP
- 'Chechenization' Is Failing
Masha Lipman, Washington Post
- 'The Spirit of Liberty': Before attacking the Patriot Act, try reading it
Michael B. Mukasey, Wall Street Journal
- A missed opportunity?
Dan K. Thomasson, Washington Times
- Chechen President Killed in Explosion
Musa Sadulayev, Washington Times AP
- Liberals for Pre-Emption
Peter Huessy, FrontPage Magazine
- Terror Illusions
Erick Stakelbeck, FrontPage Magazine
- Our Weird Way of War
Victor Davis Hanson, National Review
- Security Clearance Backlog Threatens U.S.
Fox News
- Likely 'Dirty Bomb' Material Seized in Ukraine
Fox News
- 'Bin Laden' Statement Offers Reward for Killings
Fox News
- Oregon Man Arrested in Spain Bombings Probe
Fox News
- Why They Hate Us
Robert Spencer, FrontPage Magazine
- Terror Suspects Charged in NATO Bomb Plot
Suzan Fraser, Yahoo AP
- Pakistani Arrested in Hijack Plot
Munir Ahmad, NY Newsday
- Mayor's jets will be missile-smart
Dan Janison and Tom Incantalupo, NY Newsday
- The Psychoanalytic Roots of Islamic Terrorism
Phyllis Chesler, FrontPage Magazine
- CIA Independence Day
Jed Babbin, American Spectator
- The Syrian Connection
James S. Robbins, National Review
- Dumb, Dumbest
William F. Buckley, TownHall
- Videotapes of a Qaeda Informer Offer Glimpse Into a Secret Life
Benjamin Weiser, NY Times
- Counter-Terrorism That Works
Bill West, FrontPage Magazine
- The Life and Times of Jose Padilla
Debra J. Saunders, FrontPage Magazine
- Defending against Pyongyang's nukes
Washington Times
- Madrid suspect indicted over 9/11
CNN
- Gadhafi urges end to all WMD
CNN
- Interest Growing in 'Security' Blimps
Elliott Minor, Newsday
- General Touts U.S. Missile Defense Plan
John J. Lumpkin, Yahoo AP
- The Foreseeable Past
Jonathan V. Last, Weekly Standard
- Fight or Flight?
Glen Feder, National Review
- Computer Student on Trial for Aid to Muslim Web Sites
Timothy Egan, NY Times
- Congressional Oversight of Intelligence Criticized
Dana Priest, Washington Post
- When Terror Comes Home
Amir Taheri, NY Post
- Poison Gas Plot
Andy Geller, NY Post
- Sudan Orders Syrian WMD Out of Country
Middle East Newsline
- Militants in Europe Openly Call for Jihad and the Rule of Islam
Patrick E. Tyler and Don Van Natta Jr., NY Times
- Arlington to ignore law aimed at illegals
S.A. Miller, Washington Times
- Killings May Make Hamas More Formidable
Molly Moore, Washington Post
- The Scent of Democracy
Amir Taheri, NY Post
- Pakistan pardons tribal militants
Washington Times
- ID card trials to start next week
BBC News
- The Wrong Debate on Terrorism
Ellis Shuman, Israeli Insider
- Richard Clarke, NY Times
Ellis Shuman, Israeli Insider
- Canada working on ways to block cellphone bombs
Sarah Staples, Canada.com
- Al-Qaida revealed Spain strategy last year
World Net Daily
- Agents Raid Terror Cells in Global Sweep
NewsMax.com
- Sharon Says Pledge to Spare Arafat Is Lifted
John Ward Anderson, Washington Post
- Iran Amok with Terror on 2 Fronts
Uri Dan, NY Post
- Muslim and American patriot
Washington Times
- Former NFL Player Killed in Afghanistan
John J. Lumpkin, My Way
- Privileged to Serve
Peggy Noonan, Wall Street Journal
- The Hunt For Bin Laden
Jamie Glazov, Front Page Magazine
- Rumsfeld Era at Pentagon May Be Prolonged
Michael R. Gordon, NY Times
- Terror Case Is Cleared For Trial
Jerry Markon, Washington Post
- Iran Amok with Terror on 2 Fronts
Uri Dan, NY Post
- Terror Scareports
Marsha Kranes, NY Post
- Airport screeners perform 'poorly'
Tom Ramstack, Washington Times
- What if terrorists kill 100 congressmen?
Sarah Foster, World Net Daily
- Time to Slap Syria
Peter Brookes, NY Post
- AK-47s Were Bound For Vermont
Murray Weiss, NY Post
- Pressuring Syria
Washington Times
- Saudis in 'total war' on terror
CNN
- State, Homeland Sec chiefs argue for extension
Chris Strohm, GovExec.com
- Veil of Tears
Andrew Stuttaford, National Review
- A Nightline Fantasia
Rob Long, National Review
- Mexico's fake i.d. - and its terrorist implications
James A. Cooley, National Review
- Western resolve against terror
Editorial, Washington Times
- Border fence plan runs into a barrier
Valerie Alvord, USA Today
- What We Don't Know Can Hurt Us
Heather Mac Donald, City Journal
- FBI: Terrorists May Be Using Medical Visa Loophole
Jon E. Dougherty, NewsMax.com
- Holy Turf Wars
Ralph Peters, NY Post
- Manchester Union suicide bomb plot
Philip Cardy and Andy Russell, The Sun
- Al Qaeda's Saudi War
Amir Taheri, NY Post
- Richard Clarke's Delusions of Grandeur
Kenneth R. Timmerman, Front Page Magazine
- Mega chemical attack foiled in Jordan
Itamar Inbari, MAARIV Int.
- Fund Project Bioshield
Editorial, Washington Times
- 'Bin Laden' Offers Europe Truce
Fox News
- Holy War in Europe
Reuel Marc Gerecht, FrontPage Mag
- Wider War
Ralph Peters, NY Post
- How Local Mob Goon Unlocked Terrorist's Dark Plots
Al Guart, NY Post
- Khadr mother, brother arrive in Canada
CBC News
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