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June 14, 2006 Wednesday Jumadi-ul-Awwal 17, 1427


Suicide attacks biggest threat to US: experts


WASHINGTON: Suicide bombs rather than chemical, biological or nuclear weapons are the most serious threat to the United States, according to a survey of top American foreign policy and terrorism experts. The pace of suicide strikes around the world accelerated sharply since the Sept 11, 2001, attacks in New York and Washington, with hundreds of people killed in Indonesia, Jordan, Israel, Madrid and London. Suicide bombs, strapped to people or hidden in cars, are a weapon of choice for guerillas in Iraq.

In a survey of 117 foreign policy and terrorism experts, Foreign Policy magazine and the Center for American Progress, a Washington think-tank, found that suicide bombs were rated the most likely method of attack by 67 per cent of those surveyed.

Radiological weapons followed in second place with 20 per cent. Chemical weapons (10 per cent), biological weapons (nine per cent) and nuclear weapons (six per cent) ranked much lower on the experts’ threat list.

“Americans have never feared a suicide bombing the way the people of Amman and Jerusalem have,” the survey says. “But the odds that America can elude the world’s most popular form of terrorism may be fading fast.”

Those surveyed included academics, retired military officers, think-tank analysts and former administration, foreign service and intelligence officers.

Organisers describe the survey as the first of an annual series to establish a ‘terrorism index’.

Eighty-four per cent of those surveyed think an attack on the scale of the 2005 London or 2004 Madrid bombings - 56 and 192 people killed respectively - will take place in the United States within the next five years. Seventy-nine per cent think an attack on the scale of the Sept 11 attacks is likely.

In recent months, fear of terrorism has dropped among ordinary Americans. According to a CBS poll last month, only five per cent saw terrorism as the most important problem facing the US, behind the occupation of Iraq, the economy, immigration and gasoline prices. Other polls had similar results.

The survey, to be published online on Wednesday (www.ForeignPolicy.com), showed a wide gap on key issues between public perceptions and the views of experts.

Only 13 per cent of the experts think America is winning the ‘war on terror’, compared with 56 per cent of the public. While 87 per cent of the experts think the occupation of Iraq had a negative impact on the ‘war on terror’, only 44 per cent of the public share that view.

The pessimism of the experts stems from their belief that the US national security establishment is in disrepair.

Asked to grade US government departments which deal with terrorism and foreign policy on a scale of 1 to 10, the experts rated the Department of Homeland Security at 2.9, the of National Intelligence at 3.9 and the State Department at 4.4.

The only government agency awarded a score of more than 5 was the National Security Agency, currently the centre of controversy over a program to collect the records of telephone calls of millions of Americans without court orders.—Reuters






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