
Israel, US sign homeland security pactMichael Chertoff - An Israeli Family Background*********************************************************************
Chertoff Says Change in Presidency Fuels Terror ..Vulnerability'
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Bloomberg News
October 21, 2008
By Jeff Bliss
http://www. bloomberg. com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=auIWPps4p...Oct. 21 (Bloomberg) -- Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff said the U.S.
may be vulnerable to a terrorist attack during the next six months, with violent groups more likely to try to take advantage of a new president and administration
....Any period of transition creates a greater vulnerability, meaning there's more likelihood of distraction,'' Chertoff said in an interview. ....You have to be concerned it will create an operational opportunity for terrorists''
He said that would be true whether Democrat Barack Obama or Republican John McCain is elected president on Nov. 4. That comment undercuts McCain's argument that the U.S.
would be more in danger of an attack if Obama, 47, wins
McCain, 72, has been citing remarks by Democratic vice presidential nominee Joe Biden on Oct. 19 that ....it will not be six months before the world tests Barack Obama like they did John Kennedy,'' should Obama win the White House
....We don't want a president who invites testing from the world at a time when our economy is in crisis and Americans are already fighting in two wars,'' McCain said today at a rally in Bensalem, Pennsylvania
Chertoff, 54, stressed he didn't know of any specific threat to the country tied to the election or transition, and said terrorist groups are likeliest to attack when their preparations are complete
....The general experience has been that they strike when they're operationally ready to strike,'' Chertoff said.
The Bush administration has been making security preparations for the transition for more than 18 months, he said
Worrisome Tone
Still, he said, he's concerned about the effect of rhetoric from some hate groups or individuals during the campaign
....There's a general level of intemperateness in the discussion as we approach the election,'' he said. ....Do I worry that it could trigger in a disturbed individual a desire to do something? Absolutely, I worry about it''
On March 11, 2004, an al-Qaeda cell set off 10 bombs targeting passenger trains in Madrid, killing more than 190 and injuring more than 1,400.
The attack came three days before Spain's general elections
Former CIA Director George Tenet said in his memoir that his intelligence agency went on higher alert that year, with the U.S. presidential election taking place in November. ....We believed that bin Laden has himself assessed that a logical time to attack the United States was just before the U.S.
election,'' Tenet wrote
Chertoff, who has overseen responses to hurricanes and cooperated in uncovering plots to blow up airliners during his three and a half years as Homeland Security chief, said the country is safer than it was after the Sept.
11 attacks
More Secure Ports
He cited the nation's ports, among other areas, which are ....a hell of a lot more secure than they were seven years ago''
Chertoff said he remained concerned about ....ungoverned space'' in Somalia, Yemen and tribal regions of Pakistan that could provide safe havens for militant organizations
....These are spaces where terrorists can insert themselves,'' he said
The Department of Homeland Security and other law- enforcement agencies are also monitoring cells of terrorist sympathizers already on U.S.
soil, he said
....We do have sleepers or people here who are connected back to terrorists,'' he said
Chertoff said not all threats the U.S. faces are physical. As head of the administration's effort to secure the government's computer networks, Chertoff said technicians are upgrading the so-called Einstein protection system to detect and disrupt cyber attacks.
Currently, the system can detect hacking only after it has occurred
Illegal Immigrants
He also said his department had clamped down on illegal immigration to the point of deterring people from crossing the Mexican border
Chertoff said the faltering U.S.
economy has slowed illegal immigration, as well
Fewer jobs also may make it more difficult for the next administration to push an immigration measure through Congress that allows temporary workers from other countries
....My hunch is it's going to make it harder to get comprehensive immigration reform,'' said Chertoff, who led the administration's failed effort to pass legislation that included a temporary-worker program
To contact the reporter on this story: Jeff Bliss in Washington jbliss@bloomberg.net
Last Updated: October 21, 2008 14:16 EDT