PARIS SHOOTING CASES DEMONSTRATE SPY AGENCIES' LIMITS
The clues that the agencies had prior to the terrorists attacks were
not assembled into a pattern until after the attacks were launched.
The deadly attacks in FRANCE by
Islamist gunmen showed the limits of spy and anti-terrorist agencies, which
often have information about perpetrators in advance but are only able to
assemble all the clues after the bloodletting has taken place.
Background Information:
WHY DOES AMERICA'S and
EUROPEAN $50 BILLION INTELLIGENCE COMMUNITIES KEEP GETTING TAKEN BY SURPRISE?
From the Sept. 11 attacks in the UNITED
STATES in 2001 through a series of outrages in EUROPE and other parts of the
world, US and EUROPEAN security and intelligence officials say a key problem
has been making connections from a mass of data.
"Whenever something goes
bad, one of the first things you do is check all the data bases," said
retired Gen. MICHAEL HAYDEN, a former director of both the CIA and the US NATIONAL
SECURITY AGENCY. "Invariably, you do have something. It's
inevitable."
BRUCE RIEDEL, a former top CIA
analyst, said: "The problem for the FRENCH intelligence and security
services is that there are so many FRENCH citizens who have gone to SYRIA or IRAQ
or elsewhere to join the jihad and then come home that they cannot monitor all
of them 24 hours a day."
"If they have not broken any
laws, intelligence services in the democratic world cannot arrest you or follow
you constantly just because you are a fanatic jihadist," RIEDEL said.
"Intelligence is not going
to predict when a fanatic goes from being a radical thinker to a violent
terrorist in most cases," commented Riedel.
FRENCH and US spy agencies
several years ago classified SAID and CHERIF KOUACHI, the brothers believed to
have attacked the satirical weekly CHARLIE HEBDO in Paris, as very high
priority terrorism suspects, EUROPEAN and US officials said.
INTELLIGENCE-GATHERING AND INTELLIGENCE-ANALYSIS ARE ERRONEOUSLY CONSIDERED VERY SEPARATE THINGS
Their names were entered into
TIDE, a classified database of 1.2 million individuals the UNITED STATES considers
terrorism suspects, and the smaller "no fly" list barring them from
boarding flights to or in AMERICA, two US officials said.
They had been designated
high-priority targets for surveillance after CHERIF was implicated in a group
recruiting FRENCH fighters for an AL-QAIDA affiliate in IRAQ, and SAID went to
train with AL-QAIDA in YEMEN in 2011, officials said.
But the US and EUROPEAN
officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said FRENCH authorities scaled
back monitoring of the KOUACHIS when they kept a low profile during the last
few years.
LONG TERM PLANS?
The officials said that after SAID
returned from YEMEN, the KOUACHIS appear to have consciously avoided contact
with others they knew to be under surveillance. The officials said this
suggested in hindsight that they might have been planning to mount an attack
for years.
Agencies have to assign as many
as 30 personnel each day to watch a single suspect and follow any suspicious
contacts he or she might meet.
The challenge has been
complicated by thousands of foreigners who have gone to join SYRIA-based
militant Islamic groups such as ISLAMIC STATE and NUSRAH, many of whom are now
returning to their homeland with battlefield experience.
SPY AGENCIES DO HAVE ADVANCE INFORMATION
Investigations following actual
or attempted attacks by militants regularly show that spy agencies had advance
information that would have indicated the suspects posed an imminent threat if
the bits of data had been properly connected.
Background Information:
INTELLIGENCE-GATHERING AND
INTELLIGENCE-ANALYSIS ARE ERRONEOUSLY CONSIDERED VERY SEPARATE THINGS
After the Sept. 11 attacks,
investigations established that the CIA and FBI both had early clues to the
identities of some of the men who hijacked the planes and flew them into the
World Trade center and the Pentagon.
But the information, including
that they had militant connections, was not properly shared.
Parliamentary investigations
showed that BRITISH agencies had collected intelligence on two of the four men
who bombed LONDON'S underground system in July 2005 in an earlier
counter-terrorism investigation. But before the bombings, spy agencies never
deemed the suspects high-priority targets for monitoring.
There were similar circumstances
surrounding two other men who plotted against the UNITED STATES - an Army
psychiatrist who killed 13 in a mass shootings at FT. HOOD army base in 2009
and a NIGERIAN who narrowly failed to bring down an airliner headed for DETROIT
with a bomb in his underwear.
Source: Jerusalem Post
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