Tuesday, March 17, 2009

The Latest from National Terror Alert Response Center









U.S. Zeros In On Chitral Pakistan In Hunt For bin Laden


Posted: 16 Mar 2009 11:09 PM PDT



Where’s Osama? Try Chitral, once a trekkers’ paradise in Pakistan

that has been sealed off to outsiders and is now regularly buzzed by

American spy drones.


The U.S. won’t say it officially, but an exhaustive Daily News
investigation finds the
world’s biggest manhunt for the monster who

murdered nearly 3,000 people on 9/11 has zeroed in on Chitral’s

tunning peaks and deep valleys.


Six U.S. and foreign officials confirmed to The News that northwestern

Pakistan’s impenetrable Hindu Kush mountains - which boast some of

the world’s tallest climbs - in the Chitral region have been eyed as Bin

Laden’s hideout since 2006 by Osama hunters aiming for the big kill.


A lengthy review of evidence, including recent Predator fly-bys, Bin

Laden’s tapes since 9/11 and interviews with three dozen experts on

Al Qaeda, Pakistan and special operations, point to these vast mountains

as the terror chief’s most likely haven.


Captured Al Qaeda leaders have given up as his hideout. “Debriefings of

Al Qaeda leaders arrested confirmed this,” said Rohan Gunaratna, author

of “Inside Al Qaeda.”


Two senior foreign officials said the nearby town of Kalam also is suspect.


Source



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Homeland Security - Study Finds Serious Vulnerabilities in U.S. Passport
Process


Posted: 16 Mar 2009 10:55 PM PDT




An investigation conducted by the U.S. Government Accountability

Office found serious weak spots in the process of issuing of passports,

raising concern over terrorists’ access to American identities.


According to the report, “terrorists or criminals could steal an American citizen’s identity, use basic counterfeiting skills to create fraudulent

documentation for that identity, and obtain a genuine U.S. passport.”


The GAO used counterfeit methods to successfully obtain passports in

four different tests. In one case, the GAO investigator used the identity

of a man who died in 1965.


The investigator was also able to purchase an airline ticket and bypass

airport security using fraudulent identification.


According to the report, U.S. Department of State officials said fraud

detection efforts are “hampered by limitations to its information sharing

and data access with other federal and state agencies.”


View the full report


Highlights



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