8A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, October 22, 2001 AMERICA AT WAR CIA covert actions, funding rise as results of war against terrorists The Washington Post WASHINGTON - President Bush last month signed an intelligence order directing the CIA to undertake its most sweeping and lethal covert action since the founding of the agency in 1947, explicitly calling for the destruction of Osama bin Laden and his worldwide al-Qaida network, according to senior government offi- cials. The president also added more than $1 billion to the agency's war on ter- rorism, most of it for the new covert action. The operation will include what officials said is "unprecedented" coordination between the CIA and commando and other military units. Officials said that the president, oper- ating through his "war.cabinet," has pledged to dispatch military units to take advantage of the CIA's latest and best intelligence. Bush's order, called an intelligence "finding," instructs the agency to attack bin Laden's communications, security apparatus and infrastructure, senior government officials said. U.S. intelligence has identified new and important specific weaknesses in the bin Laden organization that are not publicly known, and these vulnerabil- ities will be the focus of the lethal covert action, sources said. "The gloves are off," one senior official said. "The president has given the agency the green light to do what- ever is necessary. Lethal operations that were unthinkable pre-September 11 are now underway." The CIA's covert action is a key part of the president's offensive against terrorism, but the agency is also playing a critical role in the defense against future terrorist attacks. For example, each day a CIA docu- ment called the "Threat Matrix," which has the highest security classi- fication ("Top Secret/Codeword"), lands on the desks of the top national security and intelligence officials in the Bush administration. It presents the freshest and most sensitive raw intelligence on dozens of threatened bombings, hijackings or poisonings. Only threats deemed to have some credibility are included in the docu- ment. One day last week, the Threat Matrix contained 100 threats to U.S. facilities in the United States and around the world - shopping com- plexes, specific cities, places where thousands gather, embassies. Though nearly all the listed threats have passed without incident and 99 per- cent turned out to be groundless, dozens more take their place in the matrix each day. It was the matrix that generated the national alert of impending ter- rorist action issued by the FBI on Oct. 11. The goal of the matrix is simple: Look for patterns and spe- cific details that might prevent another Sept. 11. "I don't think there has been such risk to the country since the Cuban missile crisis," a senior official said. During an interview in his West Wing office Friday morning, Vice President Dick Cheney spoke of the new war on terrorism as much more problematic and protracted than the Persian Gulf War of 1991, when Cheney served as secretary of defense to Bush's father. The vice president bluntly said: "It is different than.the Gulf War was, in the sense that it may never end. At least, not in our lifetime." In issuing the finding that targets bin Laden, the president has said he wants the CIA to undertake high-risk operations. He has stated to his advis- ers that he is willing to risk failure in the pursuit of ultimate victory, even if the result are some embarrassing pub- lic setbacks in individual operations. The overall military and covert plan is intended to be massive and decisive, officials said. "If you are going to push the enve- lope some things will go wrong, and (President Bush) sees that and under- stands risk-taking," one senior offi- cial said. In the interview, Cheney said, "I think it's fair to say you can't predict a straight line to victory. You know, there'll be good days and bad days along the way." U.S. law enforcement and intelli- gence agencies recently received an important break in the effort to track down terrorist leaders overseas, according to officials. The FBI and CIA have been given limited access in the last several weeks to a top bin Laden lieutenant who was arrested after Sept. I1 and is being held in a foreign country. The person, whose various aliases include "Abu Ahmed," is "a significant play- er," in the words of one senior Bush official. Ahmed was arrested with five other members of al-Qaida. He is believed by several senior officials to be the highest-ranking member of al- Qaida ever held for systematic inter- rogation. Though Ahmed has not given information about future terrorist operations, he has provided some details about the October 2000 attack on the USS Cole in a Yemeni port, when 17 sailors were killed. One source said he also has infor- mation about the planned terrorist attacks in the United States that were disrupted before the millenni- um celebrations in December 1999. I B R T OVUNTAIN/Dily A United Airlines ticket agent helps a customer at Detroit Metropolitan Airport, where security has been tight since hijackers crashed United and American Airlines jetliners into the World Trade Center and the Pentagon Sept. 11. Air1poirt security remains on high alert, FBI says Attacks help unite U.S., with Russia SHANGHAI, China (AP)-President Bush and Russian President Vladimir Putin said yes- terday that terrorist attacks on America unified their nations like never before, raising hope for long-sought agreements on a U.S. missile defense system and cutting nuclear stockpiles. The negotiations for a new strategic frame- work were given a forceful nudge by Bush when he privately urged his Russian counterpart to quickly compromise or squander the opportunity to reduce nuclear arsenals. "The thing that's really bound us together most right now is our common desire to fight terrorism," Bush said after their third meeting in five months. Talks will resume when Putin visits the United States in three weeks. White House officials said later that Bush is prepared to go forward with missile shield plans without Russia unless a deal can be struck by January. Indeed, his advisers recommended that Bush impose the deadline during one-on-one talks with Putin, but the president decided at the last minute not to personally deliver the mes- sage. Though eager to build a missile shield, Bush does not want to push Putin too hard because the Russian is critical to the success of U.S. military assaults on terrorist-harboring Afghanistan. The meeting, a spicy mix of politics and promise, took place at the close of an Asia- Pacific economic summit. that focused on the U.S.-led war in Afghanistan. The 20 leaders approved a statement con- demning the "murderous deeds" of the Sept. 11 0 'U' graduate student feels he was unfairly detained, questioned "P' OP Russian President Vladimir Putin meets with U.S. President George W. Bush yesterday in Shanghai, China, to discuss arms limitations and the war on terrorism in Afghanistan. suicide hijackers. In a setback for Bush, they failed to mention Afghanistan or Osama bin Laden - suspected mastermind of the attacks on Washington and New York. Furthermore, several leaders, including Chi- nese President Jiang Zemin and the Russian president, urged Bush to end the war as soon as possible. Bush h'as said it could last two years. In a brief news conference, Bush said the Asian leaders defied terrorists merely by meet- ing under one roof and denied that their support of the United States was soft. "It was strong, it was steady, and it's real," he said. The president has ambitious but untested plans for a defense system that could protect the United States and its allies from missiles launched by Iraq, North Korea or other rogue states. Russia and several other nations fear developing an anti-missile shield would spark, another nuclear arms race. Bush and Putin agreed in July to pursue talks along two parallel tracks: Putin's desire to reduce costly nuclear stockpiles and Bush's wish to scuttle the 29-year-old Anti-Ballistic Missile treaty that forbids anti-missile tests. "The events of September 11 make it clearer than ever that a Cold War ABM treaty that pre- vents us from defending our people is outdated and, I believe, dangerous," the president said. KNOW OF NEWS? CALL US: 76-DAILY Food for Thought Manipulating Opinion Yung Krall, author of "A Thousand Tears Falling," personally described to this writer how the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese used Eastern-Bloc allies to spread misinformation in America. They especially played on the strained race relations at the timo avinn- "Pnnr Soldiers authorized to kill bin Laden According to recent surveys by Time Magazine, Newsweek and the University's Institute of Social Research, more than 60 percent of Americans are willing to give up some personal free- doms and civil liberties in order *to ensur yeso aland- national safety. One of thilikely results is that WAmericans persare eore likely, to be detained at airports, borders and other high-security areas. When University paleontology graduate student Iyad Zalmout went to Detroit Metropolitan Air- port early in the morning of Oct. 2 to catch a Delta Airlines flight to Cincinnati, he left his house early in anticipation of a longer wait. Zalmout, who is Jordanian and came to the United States three years ago, said he had no problems with airport security that morning. "Everything was OK - my shoes were metal-free just in case I got in trouble when I checked in," he said. As Zalmout was waiting for the plane to take off, the pilot approached him and asked him to get off the plane for questioning. Zalmout was escorted off the air- craft. "People started looking at me. I was embarrassed," he said. "I (wouldn't mind) being questioned, but not inside the airplane ... That was embarrassing to have to stand up in front of all these pas- sengers and go out of the air- plane." Zalmout's name was not on the Watch List, a document that "con- tains the names of individuals who may be able to provide us with some information regarding the terrorists attacks," said Dawn Clenney, FBI special agent in Detroit. The list was distributed to security agencies after the Sept. 11 attacks but is not accessible to the public, she said. Clenney said the Watch List might have been the reason some Muslims and Arab Americans have been complaining about harassment in public places, though she stressed that the Watch List is-not intended to point blame at any person, group or ethnicity for the attacks. "As far as the FBI, we do not tol- erate racial profiling," Clenney said. "Just because someone's name appears on the Watch List does not mean that they are suspected of ter- rorism." Clenney said that detaining peo- told Zalmout that he had been cho- sen for questioning because of sus- picious behavior and proceeded to ask him questions such as his name, where he was from, what nationality he was and where he was going. Clenney said that had Zalmout's name been on the Watch List, secu- rity personnel, and not airline employees, would have approached him. "My understanding is the law enforcement officials would be the ones to speak with the person and ask them the questions and deter- mine if their name is on the Watch List," she said. Although Zalmout said he doesn't mind being questioned under ordi- nary circumstances and for good reason, he said he doesn't think there was a lawful reason for the questioning. "I think that he did that because I'm a Mediterranean- looking guy and it's early, maybe six in the morning," Zalmout said. "I don't mind waiting three hours for the airplane and being questioned just before getting on the airplane, just to show the pas- sengers that you are doing your job ... This is not the right way to do your job." Since Sept. 12, the FBI, Michigan National Guard, Drug Enforcement Administration, Customs Service, the Federal Aviation Administration and Border Patrol have been present at Detroit Metro. In addition, parking is not allowed within 300 feet of the airport. Only ticketed passengers are allowed beyond security checkpoints. Pocket knives are not allowed in carry-on luggage. Passengers are randomly screened at checkpoints with hand wands. "I know that the airport has a lot of different security improve- ments in place," said Mary Mazur, a spokeswoman for the Wayne County Commission and the air- port. Clenney said she hopes citizens who are stopped for questioning because of the Watch List or the heightened security understand that they are not being stopped without reason. "We know and we understand that it can be an inconvenience but it is just a measure of security. The offi- cials at the airport are not trying to force or intimidate someone," she said. She added that if anyone feels that they have been unfairly harassed or questioned, they can contact the FBI, as a number of Muslims and Arab Americans already have. "We take those complaints very seriously. This is certainly not the time for Arab Americans to be harassed, or intimidated by other WASHINGTON (AP) - U.S. com- mandos are prepared to use .deadly force on Osama bin Laden, the nation's top general said yesterday, as the Pentagon pressed its bombing and covert ground campaign to hunt down America's No. 1 terrorist suspect. Opening a third week of air strikes, U.S. warplanes hit north of the capital, Kabul. And Afghan officials reported air attacks yesterday around the west- ern city of Herat, Kandahar in the south and the front line positions near the city of Mazar-e-Sharif. Secret missions by special opera- tions forces also were continuing, two defense officials said on condition of anonymity. They gave no details. Asked whether U.S. forces would kill bin Laden on sight, Gen. Richard B. Myers, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said it depends on what hap- pens when he's found. "If it's a defensive situation, then bullets will fly, but if we can capture. somebody, then we'll do that," he said on ABC's "This Week." Asked the same question, Secretary of State Colin Powell told CNN's 'Late Edition': "Our mission is-to bring him to justice or bring justice to him." The U.S.-led military campaign already has crippled terrorists' bases and their ability to train in Afghanistan, Myers said. "They won't be doing any training in the near future in Afghanistan," he said. Myers said the fight against the rul- ing Taliban regime and bin Laden's al- Qaida terrorist network is "a war we must win if we want to maintain our freedom." The aerial bombing began Oct. 7, followed by the first publicly acknowl- edged ground assaults Saturday. is currently ofering E .3 I U11 urn * b ... I