Future attacks could be deadlier than Sept. 11, Rumsfeld says
Published 9:00 pm Wednesday, January 30, 2002
By Robert Burns
Associated Press
WASHINGTON – Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld said today the United States must prepare now for potential surprise attacks “vastly more deadly” than the Sept. 11 terrorist hijackings.
In a speech laying out the Bush administration’s justification for proposing a $48 billion increase in the 2003 defense budget, Rumsfeld said the nation is vulnerable to new forms of terrorism ranging from cyberattacks to attacks on U.S. military bases abroad to ballistic missile attacks on American cities.
“Our job is to close off as many of those avenues of potential attack as possible,” he said in remarks prepared for delivery at the National Defense University. A draft of his speech was made available in advance.
His remarks coincided with new indications that terrorists have considered a range of possible attacks. The FBI warned on Wednesday that al-Qaida terrorists may have been studying American dams and water-supply systems in preparation for new attacks. And in a report to Congress made public Wednesday, CIA Director George Tenet said rudimentary diagrams of nuclear weapons were found in a suspected al-Qaida safehouse in Kabul, Afghanistan. Other evidence uncovered in Afghanistan includes diagrams of American nuclear power plants, although it is unclear if an attack was planned.
Rumsfeld said there could be no doubt that in the years ahead the American people will be faced with an attacker as unconventional and unpredictable as the hijackers who killed more than 3,000 people by flying airliners into the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.
He warned of new adversaries who may strike in unexpected ways with weapons of increasing range and power. He appeared to be referring to ballistic missiles, a weapon the administration fears countries like North Korea, Iran and Iraq could either use against America or sell to terrorist groups.
“These attacks could grow vastly more deadly than those we suffered Sept. 11,” he said.
The speech made a case for spending more money on a wide range of weapons and other military programs, although Rumsfeld mentioned no specific amounts of spending for individual programs.
He said the war in Afghanistan has shown the effectiveness of some new military technologies that past administrations failed to develop in sufficient numbers. He cited the example of unmanned aircraft such as the Predator, which provides live TV images of the battlefield but is in short supply.
He also mentioned a shortage of manned reconnaissance and surveillance planes, command and control aircraft like the Air Force’s AWACS plane, chemical and biological defense equipment and certain types of special operations forces.
Rumsfeld cited six specific lessons learned from the Afghan campaign:
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