WAR ON TERRORISM Officials issue warning, but cite no specific threat



The FBI director called for greater cooperation to thwart attacks.
WASHINGTON (AP) -- A constant stream of intelligence indicating that Al-Qaida wants to strike the United States this summer or fall has led federal officials to urge increased vigilance during Independence Day weekend, but there is no specific threat of an attack timed to the holiday.
In a bulletin sent to law-enforcement agencies nationwide Thursday, the FBI said police should step up patrols and watch for signs of terrorist activity, including surveillance of potential targets. The FBI also listed advice on how to spot possible suicide bombers.
"We know the U.S. homeland remains a top Al-Qaida target," the FBI said in the bulletin, sent weekly to 18,000 state and local law-enforcement agencies.
Key events
Fourth of July celebrations are among the symbolic events that U.S. officials say could present an inviting target to Al-Qaida, which intelligence reports indicate will attempt an attack during summer or fall. An attack also could be timed to coincide with the national political conventions or the November elections, plus the Olympics in August in Athens, Greece.
The FBI said police should increase patrols this holiday weekend; vary the timing, size and routes of the patrols; and make sure all vehicles illegally parked in key areas are approached and their drivers questioned.
The Homeland Security Department had no plans to raise the nation's color-coded terror alert level above its current midpoint status of yellow, or elevated. Last week, the agency sent a bulletin urging tighter security to state and local officials and those that operate power and chemical plants and key transportation facilities.
The government's approach to this major U.S. holiday was muted in comparison to that for Memorial Day, when the FBI and Attorney General John Ashcroft issued high-profile warnings that terrorists were nearly ready to strike. In Florida this week, Ashcroft repeated his contention that Al-Qaida was between 75 percent and 90 percent ready to attack again.
Need for cooperation
FBI Director Robert Mueller told reporters Thursday in Seattle that local, state and federal officials must cooperate to prevent a new terrorist attack. The lack of such cooperation, from the federal government on down, has been cited by congressional and independent investigators as a key reason the Sept. 11, 2001, plot was not detected.
"We try to use our imagination to determine where the next threat might come from," Mueller said.
The FBI bulletin cited recent intelligence that continues to show Al-Qaida interest in attacking a range of facilities, including gasoline stations and refineries; financial and government institutions; civil aviation; nuclear plants and dams, and subways and freight trains.
Terrorists could seek to replicate attacks overseas that have used bombs in vehicles, assault teams armed with light weapons and suicide bombers, the FBI said.
Around the country, state and local officials echoed the federal government's approach to the Fourth.
"We're encouraging New Yorkers to enjoy the holiday but to remain vigilant and aware of their surroundings," said Lynn Rasic, spokeswoman for New York Gov. George Pataki.