Tuesday, February 12, 2002

FBI issues warning of immediate terrorist plot
By JOHN SOLOMON
Associated Press

WASHINGTON — The FBI issued an extraordinary terrorist alert Monday night, asking law enforcement and the American public to be on the lookout for a Yemeni man and several associates who might be plotting a terrorist attack as early as Tuesday.

The FBI scrambled to put the warning out after information emerged that one or more people were involved. Officials said the intelligence, while deemed credible, was not specific about possible targets.

The alert identified one possible attacker as Fawaz Yahya al-Rabeei, a Yemeni national born in Saudi Arabia in 1979. It listed about a dozen associates of al-Rabeei, most from Saudia Arabia and Yemen. One associate was listed as possibly coming from Tunisia.

The bureau at mid-evening posted the alert on its public Web site, www.fbi.gov, to help Americans identify the possible perpetrators. The Associated Press obtained the initial alert from government sources.

“Recent information indicates a planned attack may occur in the United States or against U.S. interests on or around Feb.12, 2002. One or more operatives may be involved in the attack,” the alert to 18,000 law enforcement agencies said.

The alert asked police “to stop and detain” any of the named individuals in alert and that all “should be considered extremely dangerous.”

Although the alert was issued on the fourth night of the Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, officials said there was no intelligence suggesting the games were a possible target. Instead, they urged that all locations in the United States and abroad with Americans to be on guard.

Law enforcement officials said there was no evidence that al-Rabeei had entered the United States. The alert did not say whether the attack was planned by or involved Osama bin Laden's al Qaeda network.

Law enforcement officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the alert was prompted by recent information from interviews of detainees in Afghanistan and Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, where several al Qaeda operatives are being held.

Officials said the information was specific enough to be deemed credible but had come in so recently that it could not be corroborated yet. The warning was nonetheless issued out of an abundance of caution and because Tuesday was near, they said.


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