While U.S. officials say publicly there
is no specific threat of a terror attack, behind the scenes law enforcement
officials tell ABC News there are plans for a major security surge at airports
and transportation hubs in advance of next week's anniversary of Osama bin
Laden's death.
The precautions are based on
intelligence reports that al Qaeda is determined to avenge the death of bin
Laden, killed by Navy SEALs last May, with a focus on aviation targets.
Of greatest concern to U.S. officials is al Qaeda's Yemeni affiliate,
al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), and its master bombmaker, Ibrahim
al-Asiri, who has survived repeated U.S. efforts to kill him.
It was al-Asiri, according to U.S. officials, who designed the so-called
"underwear bomb" worn by Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, who tried to
bring down Northwest flight 253 from Amsterdam
to Detroit on
Christmas Day 2009. Abdulmutallab got the bomb past airport security but failed
to detonate it successfully aboard the plane.
Officials say al-Asiri also
designed the bombs hidden in printers that were shipped from Yemen to Chicago.
The bombs were intercepted in Dubai and the U.K. after
they'd been placed aboard cargo planes.
In a joint intelligence bulletin
issued overnight, the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security said the Yemen group
"intends to advance plots along multiple fronts, including renewed efforts
to target Western aviation."
"It doesn't take a great
number of people to do the kind of attack that we had on September 11,"
said Richard Clarke, an ABC News consultant and former White House
counterterrorism official. "That was less than two dozen people and it's
clear that they have that number available in places like Yemen
today."
Threats of a revenge attack have
been monitored by the U.S.
ever since last year's raid on bin Laden's compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan.
Among the papers found in his
home were repeated references to the importance of attacks timed to coincide
with anniversaries.
Said Clarke, "I think the
major issue for al Qaeda is to do something, to prove that they're still alive,
to do some fairly major event or series of attacks that prove that they're not
down, they're not out."
As a result, American law
enforcement and White House officials say travelers at airports in the U.S. and Europe
should expect to see enhanced security over the next several days.
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