Security Weekly

Security Weekly

Recent setbacks for high-level al Qaeda figures in Pakistan underscore the emergence of the threat from grassroots terrorists.

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Security Weekly

Islamist Uighur militants, who China says pose the biggest threat to the upcoming Olympic Games, have in recent years expanded their connection to the wider jihadist movement.

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Security Weekly

Despite testimony given July 22 by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s top medical officer that a biological attack on the United States would result in the deaths of hundreds of thousands of victims, such attacks -- especially with anthrax -- are much more difficult to execute than most people realize.

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Security Weekly

A decision two weeks ago by the Denver Water Board to close a road running over Dillion Dam provides an opening to examine the factors and feasibility involved in a potential threat to contaminate the water supply there or elsewhere.

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Security Weekly

The flap caused by the closure of a road over a dam in Colorado due to security concerns provides an opportunity to revisit jihadist militants' ability to operate inside the United States and the type of targets they might attack.

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Security Weekly

An attack July 7 on the Indian Embassy in the Afghan capital of Kabul that killed two high-level diplomats has all the signs of a targeted assassination versus a strike aimed at the building itself with the aim of incurring a high body count.

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Security Weekly

An assault in Phoenix by Mexican cartel hit men should signal to U.S. law enforcement that additional attacks of a similar nature are likely to continue to extend onto American soil, particularly as violence in Mexico escalates.

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Security Weekly

Recent diplomatic wrangling between Colombia and Nicaragua over the country’s decision to grant asylum to Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia members provides an opportunity to examine how militants have been harbored there for decades.

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