Security Weekly

Security Weekly

An attack against the food supply is unlikely to create a significant death toll, but the panic such an attack may evoke can cause repercussions that are far greater than the death toll itself.

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Security Weekly

The San Francisco Olympic torch relay April 9 revealed the organizational capabilities of the Chinese government and its intelligence collection apparatus inside the United States.

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Security Weekly

The trial of eight men accused in connection with the 2006 plot to bomb a series of airline flights originating from London’s Heathrow Airport is providing insight into the involvement of the core al Qaeda leadership. Most notably, however, the trial serves as a reminder that al Qaeda remains fixated on aircraft as targets and that, in spite of changes in security procedures since 9/11, aircraft remain vulnerable to attack.

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Security Weekly

Russia has seen an upsurge in high-profile killings in recent years despite the reining in of organized crime by the Kremlin.

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Security Weekly

Conventional wisdom holds that Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama, as an African-American, is under a greater threat than either his Democratic opponent Hillary Clinton or Republican candidate John McCain. But a close look at the rhetoric on many radical white racist Web sites suggests that all three candidates are at risk.

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Security Weekly

The Chinese government’s March 18 report that a China Southern Airlines crew thwarted an attempted terrorist attack in mid-flight March 7 has been met with skepticism in some Western circles. Regardless of Beijing’s reasons to invent such a plot, we are not so quick to dismiss this incident.

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Security Weekly

Several unsolved small-scale attacks in New York City since 1997 bear certain similarities. This could be coincidence, or it could be that the perpetrators are connected to the loosely organized black bloc movement.

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Security Weekly

Militants are more apt to use weapons they know.

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