Feds fight threat of small-boat terror strikes
WASHINGTON (AP) -- As boating season approaches, the Bush administration wants to enlist the country's 80 million recreational boaters to help reduce the chances that a small boat could deliver a nuclear or radiological bomb somewhere along the country's 95,000 miles of coastline and inland waterways.
According to an April 23 intelligence assessment obtained by The Associated Press, 'The use of a small boat as a weapon is likely to remain al Qaeda's weapon of choice in the maritime environment, given its ease in arming and deploying, low cost, and record of success.'
While the United States has so far been spared this type of strike in its own waters, terrorists have used small boats to attack in other countries.
The millions of humble dinghies, fishing boats and smaller cargo ships that ply America's waterways are not nationally regulated as they buzz around ports, oil tankers, power plants and other potential terrorist targets.
This could allow terrorists in small boats to carry out an attack similar to the USS Cole bombing, says Coast Guard Commandant Adm. Thad Allen. That 2000 attack killed 17 American sailors in Yemen when terrorists rammed a dinghy packed with explosives into the destroyer. 'There is no intelligence right now that there's a credible risk' of this type of attack, Allen says. 'But the vulnerability is there.'
The only way to police the waterfront, says maritime security expert Stephen Flynn, 'is to get as many of the participants who are part of that community to be essentially on your side.' Flynn, a fellow with the Council on Foreign Relations, says treating boaters as allies rather than as a threat will go a long way.
http://www.cnn.com/2008/US/04/27/small.boat.terror.ap/index.html?iref=newssearch
HAHAHAHA!!! That's awesome!
joeyslaptop 4 months ago
are you guys serious?
shawnjkmoorhead 7 months ago
Rednecks indeed.
robertozube 1 year ago
thats how we idahoans do
badass421 2 years ago
Rednecks
h2007 3 years ago
good job
ahmed100001 3 years ago