From the Los Angeles Times
FBI warns of revenge attacks by Hezbollah
State
and local law enforcement receive an intelligence bulletin to watch for
potential retaliation by the Lebanese militia group, which has vowed to
avenge the death of its leader.
By Josh Meyer
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
February 16, 2008
WASHINGTON —
The FBI and Department of Homeland Security sent a bulletin today to
state and local law enforcement authorities advising them to watch for
potential retaliatory strikes by Hezbollah, one day after the Lebanese
militia group vowed to avenge the death of a top commander by attacking
Israeli and Jewish targets around the world.
"While
retaliation in the U.S. homeland is unlikely, Hezbollah has
demonstrated a capability to respond outside the Middle East to similar
events in the past," according to the "intelligence bulletin" that was
sent to about 18,000 state and local law enforcement officials late
this afternoon.
FBI officials also said they were ramping up
their own domestic intelligence-gathering efforts to identify and
neutralize any potential Hezbollah threats in the United States in the
aftermath of Tuesday's car-bomb assassination of Imad Mugniyah in Syria.
On
Wednesday, the FBI quietly sent a confidential internal bulletin to its
101 Joint Terrorism Task Forces across the country warning of the
possible domestic consequences of Mugniyah's killing. As part of that
effort, FBI officials at headquarters told the bureau's field offices
and multiagency task forces to increase monitoring and surveillance of
suspected Hezbollah operatives and to conduct fresh interviews with
sources and informants about the U.S.-designated terrorist group,
according to two FBI officials.
U.S. authorities have long
described Hezbollah as the "A Team" of terrorism, with far more
discipline than Al Qaeda, vast financing from the government of Iran
and a global network of sleeper operatives that could be called upon to
launch an attack at any time. Various federal investigations and
prosecutions have uncovered dozens of Hezbollah fundraisers and other
supporters in the United States, but few people are believed to be
actual "bomb-throwers," according to a senior FBI counter-terrorism
official who focuses on Hezbollah.
So far, the FBI and DHS have
found no specific threats to targets in the United States, according to
the intelligence bulletin. But the FBI officials said that such
precautionary measures were warranted because of Mugniyah's stature
within Hezbollah, and because the organization and its Iranian
supporters had publicly blamed his death on Israel and "Zionist forces."
Mugniyah,
the former Hezbollah security chief and military commander, was one of
world's most wanted fugitives, accused by the United States and other
nations of masterminding attacks that killed hundreds of Americans in
Lebanon in the 1980s and hundreds of other victims elsewhere in the
Middle East and in Argentina. Mugniyah also was in charge of
international operations for Hezbollah, and in that capacity was
believed to have inspired tremendous loyalty from a large number of
operatives, fundraisers and supporters in Europe, the United States,
Southeast Asia, West Africa and South America.
On Thursday,
Hezbollah leader Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah told thousands of fist-waving
mourners in a videotaped eulogy in Beirut that the killing of Mugniyah
merited a violent response because it occurred outside the "natural
battlefield" of Israel and Lebanon.
The FBI and DHS did not give
local and state law enforcement agencies specific instructions in the
bulletin, and the FBI officials said that was because each local
jurisdiction should respond in ways that it thought were appropriate to
step up security in and around government buildings, Jewish
institutions and other potential targets.
In the past, Hezbollah
has not launched any attacks in the United States, and the two FBI
officials and other experts said today that they believed that was
because the organization raised so much money here from supporters of
its political and social services efforts in Lebanon that it did not
want to risk stepped-up enforcement actions.
But the calls for
retribution by Nasrallah and other prominent supporters of Hezbollah
have been unusually strident, if not unprecedented, according to
current and former FBI officials who have followed the organization
over the years.
"My understanding has always been that Hezbollah
would never strike in the United States unless they believed that we
participated in an operation against them," said Bob Pertuso, a former
FBI special agent assigned to the Detroit Joint Terrorism Task Force
from 2000 to 2004, specializing in Hezbollah investigations. "So if
they believed we assisted in the operation against Mugniyah, I would
say they would strike in the United States."
Copyright 2008 Los Angeles Times