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November 24, 2006 - 10:23

How Does the Iraq War Affect Me?

By John Cote MSSI, CPP

Many people watch the headlines and see all the carnage in Iraq, but do not make the association of how that war is affecting them. The radical Islamists in Iraq are learning how to fight the worlds most advanced and well equipped military. Each day they engage our troops over there they learn more about our fighting tactics and strategy. Iraq has become the world's largest terrorist training ground in the world.

Radical Islamists are traveling from all four corners of the earth in order to get battle tested against the US Military. Yes, we may have closed down the training camps in Afghanistan but we are providing for them the best training ever in Iraq. Oh and by the way, those training camps in Afghanistan are now in new parts of Afghanistan.

How are the terrorists learning? They have learned by setting off an explosion at the main entrance to a building they can cause enough disorientation to allow a second attacker to make their way even further into the compound by way of mingling with the chaos all around. With everyone running in all directions, they send in a second suicide bomber to penetrate even further into the protected facility. This scenario has played itself our on several occasions in Iraq.

This and other techniques, which the terrorists are perfecting in Iraq, can be very easily transplanted here in the US. This is my fear. Our home police organizations need to prepare for such contingencies. We need to ramp up our training of local police forces so that they are ready when the war comes to our shores. The police forces need to be trained all of them not just special weapons teams. Chances are your local police officer will be the one who will be the first person on the scene of a terrorist attack.

The answer to the question I posed in the title of this article is this, What is happening in Iraq will most likely affect us in the US by bringing a better trained terrorist force against our local police force when the time comes. We need to prepare ourselves now.



John Cote is a terrorism and security analyst currently living in the Czech Republic. Cote holds a master's degree in Strategic Intelligence from American Military University.

November 20, 2006 - 08:10

National Security Expert Amy Zegart: Terrorist Threat Not Going Away Any Time Soon

'California Connected' Talks to national security expert a UCLA associate professor of public affairs at school of public policy.

November 15, 2006 - 13:13

The Need for Better Human Intelligence

By John Cote MSSI, CPP

The problem with the United States intelligence system is that we have grown to dependant on technological assets. What started with the Church Committee hearings of the 1970’s and continued with the president Jimmy Carter believing the CIA was an organization out of control. Carter cut the capability by some 50 percent.

Preferring to rely on new forms of technology such as the high resolution satellites and new capabilities of the National Security Agency (NSA). President Carter felt this was the honorable way to fight an intelligence battle. The problem with this thinking is that a satellite can not tell you what a man has in his head. NSA can not tell you what the people they are listening to are thinking. The only way to get that kind of tactical intelligence is through human intelligence resources other wise known as HUMINT.

What we need are the good old spies. We need people who are not afraid to work on their own in hostile environments. These people need to be fluent in the languages of the countries where they are stationed. Unfortunately many of the CIA analysts who are responsible for the monitoring of a specific region can not even speak one of the languages practiced in their specific specialty region. I would like to know how you can provide accurate analysis of a region when you can’t even read one of the local daily papers. This is what is happening right now as you read this. Some of the United States best field agents were forced out of their jobs because they associated with the wrong kind of people. Both the FBI and the CIA in the late 90’s had formal policies which forbade agents form associating with individuals with a criminal past. How are you supposed to get close to terrorists if you can’t talk with their friends and you can’t talk to terrorists who might be turned?

The United States needs to begin training native speakers from various countries around the world who have now made the United States their home. We need to train them in the finer arts of human intelligence. The U.S. has been called the melting pot of the world, well it's time we start using some of the human capital we have built up over the past years. We need to use that which makes us great to our best benefit. If we don’t start right now we may loose our chance to take the high ground in the war on terrorism.

Our enemies know us all too well. We as a country know next to nothing about them. One only has to look as far as the 9/11 attacks to see how well our enemy knows us. Mohammad Atta had all his crew shave and trim their hair prior to executing their mission because he wanted his men to blend in with the other passengers on the plane. They all wore modest clothes. They knew security was lax at their prescribed airports because they cased them out several times and even flew on the specific flights prior to executing their attack. They knew exactly what they could get away with and exactly where they could do specific things. They knew that by paying for their training in cash it made it much harder to trace their actions.

We as a country need to learn from those men who carried out the 9/11 attacks. They infiltrated our country and learned our ways and then used them against us. We too must do the same to them so that we can take back what we lost on 9/11.

John Cote is a terrorism and security analyst currently living in the Czech Republic. Cote holds a master's degree in Strategic Intelligence from American Military University.

November 10, 2006 - 13:36

National Terror Alert Response Center Provides Array of Preparedness Guides for Emergency Response Situations

Take a look at the National Terror Alert Response Center's list of preparedness guides and facts sheets on everything from "How to Prepare for a Terroist Attack" to step-by-step instructions on putting together an emergency evacuation plan.

November 8, 2006 - 07:53

Instant Poll: Rumsfeld Resignation

Rumsfeld Resigns, Bush to Fill Opening with Gates


WASHINGTON (AP) -- After years of defending his secretary of defense, President Bush on Wednesday announced Donald H. Rumsfeld's resignation within hours of the Democrats' triumph in congressional elections. Bush reached back to his father's administration to tap a former CIA director to run the Pentagon.

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