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Hello Summer!
- Joined
- Nov 1, 2005
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I'm taking this seriously, I really am. But am I the only one who feels like this reads a bit like a Bevis and Butthead cartoon?:
I'm not saying this wasn't a very serious thing...but as a writer I have to wonder...didn't any of these guys stop and say, "You know, as plans to bring down the U.S. go, this is really kinda stupid..."?
So, let me see if I understand this...a guy who delivers pizza decided that the best way to make a statement and terrorize the U.S. would be to attack...a Military base? To get ready for this, he and his buddies bought all kinds of weapons and engaged in paintball. And as the icing on the cake, they asked that a video clerk to transfer video of men shooting and screaming for Jihad to DVD.Prosecutors say a video store clerk's tip was key to foiling Fort Dix terror plot
FORT DIX, New Jersey - A video store clerk is being credited with tipping off authorities to six foreign-born Muslims accused of planning to assault the Fort Dix Army base and slaughter U.S. soldiers with automatic weapons and rocket-propelled grenades.
The unidentified clerk alerted authorities in January 2006 after one of the suspects asked him to transfer a video to DVD that showed 10 men shooting weapons at a firing range and calling for jihad, prosecutors said.
"If we didn't get that tip," said U.S. Attorney Christopher Christie on Tuesday, "I couldn't be sure what would happen." FBI agent J.P. Weis called the clerk the "unsung hero" of the case.
Authorities said there was no direct evidence connecting the men to any international terror organizations such as al-Qaida. But several of them said they were ready to kill and die "in the name of Allah," prosecutors said in court papers.
Weis said the U.S. is seeing a "brand-new form of terrorism," involving smaller, more loosely defined groups that may not be connected to al-Qaida but are inspired by its ideology. "These homegrown terrorists can prove to be as dangerous as any known group, if not more so. They operate under the radar," Weis said.
Four of the arrested men were ethnic Albanians born in the former Yugoslavia, one was born in Jordan and one came from Turkey, authorities said. Three were in the United States illegally; two had green cards allowing them to stay in this country permanently; and the sixth is a U.S. citizen.
...One of the suspects, Tatar, worked at his father's pizzeria - Super Mario's Restaurant - in Cookstown and made deliveries to the base, using the opportunity to scout out Fort Dix for an attack, authorities said. "Clearly, one of the guys had an intimate knowledge of the base from having been there delivering pizzas," Christie said.
Tatar's father, Muslim Tatar, 54, said the accusations against his son were hard to accept. "He is not a terrorist. I am not a terrorist," he told The Star-Ledger of Newark.
The elder Tatar told ABC News he had gotten no indication his son harbored a deep hatred of the United States. "I came here from Turkey in 1992, and this is my country. I love this country," Muslim Tatar told ABC.
The group often watched terror training videos, clips featuring Osama bin Laden, a tape containing the last will and testament of some of the Sept. 11 hijackers, and tapes of armed attacks on U.S. military personnel, authorities said.
The men trained by playing paintball in the woods in New Jersey and taking target practice at a firing range in Pennsylvania's Pocono Mountains, where they had rented a house, authorities said.
"We believe they are their own cell," said Christie. "They are inspired by international terror organizations. I believe they saw themselves as part of that."
...In addition to plotting the attack on Fort Dix, the defendants spoke of assaulting a Navy installation in Philadelphia during the annual Army-Navy football game and conducted surveillance at other military installations in the region, prosecutors said.
After the video clerk's tip, investigators said they infiltrated the group with two informants and bided their time while they secretly recorded the defendants. The six were arrested Monday night trying to buy AK-47 assault weapons, M-16s and other weapons from an FBI informant, authorities said. It was not clear when the alleged attack was to take place.
"We had a group that was forming a platoon to take on an army. They identified their target, they did their reconnaissance. They had maps. And they were in the process of buying weapons. Luckily, we were able to stop that," said Weis.
I'm not saying this wasn't a very serious thing...but as a writer I have to wonder...didn't any of these guys stop and say, "You know, as plans to bring down the U.S. go, this is really kinda stupid..."?