- New World Disorder: In the Shadow of 9/11
- By Johnny Angel
-
LA Weekly Writer - November 01 08:00 - As the specter of
anthrax spread up the Eastern seaboard from Florida to New York,
Americans began an inevitable round of speculation on the source
of this other shoe. And while Osama bin Laden (news
- web sites) and his supposed allies were considered early on
as the likely suspects, government officials are backing off
that assumption. Increasingly, experts on terror and the radical
fringe say they expect to find the perpetrators here at home.
They contend that the very use of anthrax as terror weapon, whether
real or hoax, is a trademark of the American far right.
You cant look at this with blinders on and say
it has to be Islam, said Juliette Kayyem, executive director
of the Executive Session on Domestic Terrorism and Preparedness
study at Harvard, in a telephone interview with the Weekly.
Abortion clinics and left-leaning groups have been the
targets of American bio-terror enterprise for years. The events
of the 11th may have only opened the doors. As soon as I heard
the word anthrax, thats what I thought of. For most
Americans, of course, bin Laden was the first name to come to
mind.
Then the anthrax was deemed to be weapons grade,
which could come only from a state capable of such manufactures,
and V.P. Dick Cheney trundled out the name of Saddam Hussein.
But that assumption has been challenged on two fronts. According
to Scott Ritter, a former U.N. weapons inspector, Iraq is incapable
of brewing up high-grade batches of anthrax.
By 1998, we were able to establish in no uncertain terms that
Iraq had no capability of producing biological weapons,
Ritter recently told the BBC. We covered Iraq up and down
and all around, every square inch, and there was nothing there.
And experts dispute the idea that only a state-sponsored lab
would have the technology to manufacture easily delivered, weapons-grade
anthrax.
Writing in the October 17 New Republic, anthropologist Wendy
Orent, an expert on biological diseases, said the anthrax that
has shown up so far isnt made by amateurs,
but said, It is possible these are the actions of a group
using a small laboratory. Law-enforcement officials are
making the same point. Sandra Carroll, a special agent at the
FBI office in Newark, New Jersey, said last week, Tests
are showing that it could be locally produced given the right
circumstances. Added FBI Director Robert Mueller, There
is no evidence to support the presumption that the anthrax attacks
were the result of organized terrorism.
The FBI estimates more than five dozen labs have access to
anthrax nationwide. And while the idea of slipping toxic attack
letters into the mail may seem to bear the diabolical hallmark
of a bin Laden daydream, its becoming clear that hundreds
of Americans have entertained just such thoughts. U.S. postal
inspectors have logged an incredible 6,305 cases of anthrax threats
in the last two weeks, so far yielding 14 arrests.
The most bizarre of those involved L.A. Fire Department Captain
Christopher Cooper, 43, who served with a crisis-intervention
team at the World Trade Center. Captain Cooper, from Encino,
was charged in federal court last week with mailing a threatening
letter to a San Bernardino law firm that had represented his
ex-wife during their divorce. According to a criminal complaint,
the letter contained a check and a suspicious brown powder, and
was inscribed with the words Choke on it.
The law offices were evacuated while authorities made sure
the powder was not anthrax. Captain Cooper is free on $40,000
bail pending a court hearing on November 9, said Thom Mrozek,
a spokesman for the U.S. Attorneys Office. Some of the
threats have been more political, including hundreds mailed to
Planned Parenthood and the Feminist Majority Foundation. None
of the letters contained anthrax, said Anne Glazier, national
director of clinic security for Planned Parenthood.
The organization, she said, has experienced similar threats
in the past, but never on such a scale: We had 30 hoax
letters in all of 2000, and 171 since the 15th of October. The
text is basically There is anthrax in the letter, we are
going to kill you, signed Army of God, Virginia Dare
chapter, Glazier noted. It has to be a massive
operation. If its not al Qaeda behind the attacks,
the question arises, what kind of American would do this to a
fellow American?
Clinton Van Zandt, a retired agent from the FBIs Behavioral
Science Unit, who served as a government negotiator at Waco,
and who successfully profiled Timothy McVeigh within hours of
the Oklahoma City bombing, believes the authors of these anthrax-o-grams
could be bio-Unabombers that is, fringe activists. It
could very well be that in the wake of 9/11, an opportunistic
type or types think, Hey, if I go after that one person,
theyll know its me. So they send out a bunch
of anthrax letters with only one target in mind. In other
words, a nut with a grudge. Which leaves plenty of likely candidates.
Many supposedly patriotic types were figuratively dancing
in the streets in the wake of 9/11. The Southern Poverty Law
Center collated some of the more colorful observations from Web
pages and e-mail groups. Billy Roper, a coordinator with the
National Alliance, a large neo-Nazi group, had this to say: The
enemy of our enemy is, for now at least, our friends. We may
not want them marrying our daughters . . . But anyone who is
willing to drive a plane into a building to kill Jews is all
right by me. I wish our members had half as much testicular fortitude.
Martin Linstedt, director of political warfare for
the 7th Missouri Militia, ranted in the same vein:
Ive been wishing that the A-rabs had stolen a
couple hundred jumbo-jets full of Talmudic Khazar-mamzers, criminal
regimist ...., gooks, beaners, etc. and crashed them all into
the Supreme Kort, CON-gress-kapital J Edgar Hoover FBI Building,
all 50 state capitals [sic] A DAMNED GOOD START!
Someones lost that lovin feelin, I guess. The
fact is, the far right in America is consistently underestimated
as a potent force. David Neiwert, a former MSNBC analyst and
author of the 1999 book In Gods Country:
The Patriot Movement in the Pacific Northwest, believes the
Department of Justice and its head, John Ashcroft, simply dont
understand domestic terror, possibly because theyd prefer
not to know. When Ashcroft says the far right isnt
organized, it shows how little he knows about it, said
Neiwert. The fringe right look to William Pierce, the author
of The Turner Diaries, say, but not for leadership more
as an information clearinghouse. Besides, the right wing
has a historical fascination with bio-terror, and anthrax in
particular. Lancaster, Ohio, microbiologist Larry Wayne Harris
serves as a case in point. Harris was arrested in 1998 in Henderson,
Nevada, and charged with carrying enough anthrax to wipe
out Las Vegas.
Three years before that, Harris was arrested at his home with
three vials of freeze-dried Yersinia pestis, an organism that
causes bubonic plague. During that arrest, Ohio police discovered
a certificate stating that Harris was a lieutenant in the Aryan
Nations, a white-separatist organization founded in prisons and
based in Hayden Lake, Idaho. Terror expert Neiwert points out
that the small scale of the anthrax campaign so far seems tailored
to the leaderless resistance concept espoused by
many radical-right organizations. The concept of which
is not unlike [that of] al Qaeda the idea of individual
cells, Neiwert said.
There could be six or seven people in a terrorist cell
with the person who sent it not being the person that made and
milled the anthrax itself. If thats the case, then
the domestic war on terror could be headed down the same path
as the international search for bin Laden in the words
of Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, Its like
looking for a needle in a haystack. http://dailynews.yahoo.com/h/laweekly/20011101/lo/29657_1.html |