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For decades, terrorists
have waged war against U.S. interests. Now America is waging war against terrorists.
As President Bush has said, "Free people will set the course of history." We have
promoted freedom over the past two years while protecting civil liberties and
protecting people here and around the world from further terrorist attacks.
- The United States of America is winning the war on terrorism with unrelenting
focus and unprecedented cooperation. Prevention of terrorist attacks is one
of our highest priorities. With the President's lead, information sharing and
cooperation has vastly increased. Today, we are better able to "connect the dots."
- The Department of Justice has acted thoughtfully, carefully, and within
the framework of the Constitution of the United States. Survival and success
in this long war on terrorism demands that the Department continuously adapt and
improve its capabilities to protect Americans from a fanatical, ruthless enemy,
even as terrorists adapt their tactics to attack us.
HOW
WE ARE WAGING THE WAR ON TERRORISM: First, we are disrupting terrorist
threats, and capturing the terrorists that would carry them out. Since 9/11:
- Our intelligence and law enforcement communities, and our partners, both here
and abroad, have identified and disrupted over 150 terrorist threats and cells;
-
Worldwide, nearly two-thirds of al Qaida's known senior leadership has been captured
or killed -- including a mastermind of the September 11th attacks;
- Worldwide,
more than 3,000 operatives have been incapacitated;
- Five terrorist cells
in Buffalo, Detroit, Seattle, Portland (Oregon), and Northern Virginia have been
broken up;
- 401 individuals have been criminally charged in the United States in terrorism-related investigations;
- Already, 212 individuals have been convicted or have pleaded guilty in the United States, including shoe-bomber Richard Reid and "American Taliban" John Walker Lindh; and
- Over 515 individuals
linked to the September 11th investigation have been removed from the
United States.
Second, we are gathering and cultivating detailed
knowledge on terrorism in the United States: - Hundreds of suspected
terrorists have been identified and tracked throughout the United States;
-
Our human sources of intelligence related to international terrorism have increased
63% since 9/11, and our human sources of intelligence related to domestic terrorism
have increased by 30% since 9/11, with the quality of this human intelligence
having improved significantly; and
- Our counterterrorism investigations
have more than doubled since 9/11.
Third, we are gathering information
by leveraging criminal charges and long prison sentences. When individuals
realize that they face a long prison term, they often try to lessen their prison
time by pleading guilty and cooperating with the government. - These
individuals have provided critical intelligence about al-Qaida and other terrorist
groups, safehouses, training camps, recruitment, and tactics in the United States,
and the operations of those terrorists who mean to do Americans harm.
-
One individual has given us intelligence on weapons stored here in the United
States..
- Another individual has identified locations in the United States
being scouted or cased for potential attacks by al-Qaida.
Fourth,
we are dismantling the terrorist financial network. Already the United States
Government has: - Designated 40 terrorist organizations;
-
Frozen $136 million in assets around the world;
- Charged 113 individuals
in 25 judicial districts with terrorist financing-related crimes, with 57 convictions
or guilty pleas to date; and
- Established an FBI Terrorist Financing Operations
Section (TFOS) and utilized the Joint Terrorism Task Forces to identify, investigate,
prosecute, disrupt, and dismantle terrorist-related financial and fundraising
activities.
Fifth, we are using new legal tools to detect, disrupt,
and prevent potential terrorist plots. Congress has provided better tools
to make sure we are doing all we can, legally and within the bounds of the Constitution,
to detect, disrupt, and prevent acts of terror. The PATRIOT Act passed with overwhelming
bipartisan majorities, in the Senate by 98-1, and in the House of Representatives
by 357-66. - The PATRIOT Act allows investigators to use the tools
that were already available to investigate organized crime and drug trafficking.
These tools have been used for decades and have been reviewed and approved by
the courts.
- The PATRIOT Act facilitates information sharing and cooperation
among government agencies so that they can better "connect the dots."
In the past, different agencies and departments were collecting data but not sharing
it with each other. Now we are able to share that data to prevent future attacks.
- The PATRIOT Act updated the law to reflect new technologies and new
threats. The Act brought the law up to date with current technology, so we
no longer have to fight a digital-age battle with legal authorities left over
from the era of rotary telephones.
- The PATRIOT Act increased the penalties
for those who commit terrorist crimes. Americans are threatened as much by
the terrorist who pays for a bomb as by the one who detonates it. That's why the
Act imposed tough new penalties on those who commit and support terrorist operations,
both at home and abroad.
Sixth, the Department of Justice is building
its long-term counter-terrorism capacity since September 11th:
- A nearly three-fold increase in counter-terrorism funds;
- Approximately
1,000 new and redirected FBI agents dedicated to counterterrorism and counterintelligence;
- 200
new Assistant U.S. Attorneys;
- 100 Joint Terrorism Task Forces;
- More
than 300% increase in Joint Terrorism Task Force staffing; and
- FBI Flying
Squads developed for rapid deployment to hot spots worldwide.
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