Terror alert level
raised to orange
By JENNIFER C. KERR, Associated Press –
www.fresnobee.com
(Published Monday, December 22, 2003, 9:11 AM)
WASHINGTON (AP) - The head of the Department of
Homeland Security on Monday urged people to "just
go about your business" despite the decision to
raise the nation's terror-attack warning to its
second-highest level.
At the same time, however, Secretary Tom Ridge
said the Bush administration wants people to "be
vigilant and have a good communications plan under
way."
And, he stressed the intelligence community
considered the new threat "the most significant
threat" to the country since the terror attacks of
Sept. 11, 2001.
"We've never quite seen it at this level before,"
Ridge told reporters after briefing the president
at the White House.
The Transportation Security Administration,
meanwhile, said vehicle inspections, parking
restrictions and bomb-sniffing canine patrols have
all been increased at the nation's airports.
Ridge sought to reassure the public that tightened
security measures were in place and they should
not alter their holiday travel plans.
"If you've got holiday plans, go," Ridge said.
The dual message - that Americans shouldn't alter
plans but should stay on their guard - was echoed
by White House Press Secretary Scott McClellan
during his news briefing.
"Americans should go about living their lives, but
they should remain vigilant," McClellan said.
"Americans can take steps just like the government
is taking steps to prevent an attack from
happening in the first place. They can report
suspicious packages, unattended briefcases or
other unusual materials immediately to law
enforcement authorities."
McClellan said Americans can "make a plan for what
they and their family would do in an emergency"
following suggestions at the Homeland Security
Department's Web site at
http://www.ready.gov.
He added that "the best away to prevent an attack
from happening in the first place is to take the
fight to the enemy and that's exactly what we have
been doing since Sept. 11."
The comments came a day after Ridge announced that
the government was elevating the national terror
alert warning to "Code Orange." The upgrade from
"Code Yellow," or "elevated" status, followed
warnings that the terrorist organization al-Qaida
may be plotting attacks against the United States
during the holidays. The new designation indicates
a high risk.
"The information we have indicates that extremists
abroad are anticipating near-term attacks that
they believe will either rival or exceed" the
Sept. 11, 2001 attacks, Ridge had said in
announcing the upgraded alert status on Sunday.
Appearing on ABC's "Good Morning America," Ridge
was asked if the host of warnings and changes in
warning status over the past two years had made
the public somewhat nonchalant about such alerts.
He replied that it has
been six months since the terror alert was
changed, saying "I don't think we've got to worry
about threat fatigue. We need to be on the alert
and America needs to know that those who need to
do things are doing them, that their government is
working 24-7 to protect them against terrorist
attack."
Some of the intelligence information gathered
indicates that Osama bin Laden's terrorist
network, al-Qaida, is seeking again to use planes
as weapons, he said. Ridge said the terrorists are
"constantly evaluating procedures ... to find gaps
in our security posture that could be exploited."
The country's alert level had stood at yellow, an
elevated risk and in the middle of the five-color
scale, since May. On Monday, Ridge said the change
in the alert status was the result of information
from "many sources," but said he could not be more
specific.
An official speaking on condition of anonymity had
said Sunday that some of the intercepted
communications and other intelligence mentioned
New York, Washington and unspecified cities on the
West Coast. Authorities also are concerned about
dams, bridges, nuclear plants, chemical facilities
and other public works.
Thousands of state and local law enforcement
agencies have received an FBI advisory urging
special notice of sites that could be a
conceivable target and potential security
upgrades, the official said. And Ridge has
contacted counterparts in Canada and Mexico about
increasing border security.
A senior Pentagon official said Monday the Defense
Department is helping beef up security, but
declined to give details. In past times of high
threat, officials have increased combat air
patrols by military jets over U.S. cities and
deployed missile launchers outside the Pentagon
and at other locations in the capital.
The State Department issued a worldwide caution
warning U.S. citizens overseas that they may be
terrorist targets.
Ridge said officials did not see a connection
between the recent capture of ousted Iraqi leader
Saddam Hussein and the heightened security alert,
and L. Paul Bremer, the U.S. administrator in
Iraq, backed that up Monday, telling NBC he saw no
connection.
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