• Most Popular
  • Most Shared

U.S. airports warned of possible attack "dry runs"

WASHINGTON
Wed Jul 25, 2007 12:53pm EDT

Related Video

Video

Dry run on terror?

Tue, Jul 24 2007
A policeman watches drivers at a checkpoint at New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport, July 1, 2007. Terrorists may be conducting ''dry runs'' at U.S. airports to test security before a possible attack, according to a Transportation Security Administration warning to airport screeners. REUTERS/Meredith Davenport

A policeman watches drivers at a checkpoint at New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport, July 1, 2007. Terrorists may be conducting ''dry runs'' at U.S. airports to test security before a possible attack, according to a Transportation Security Administration warning to airport screeners.

Credit: Reuters/Meredith Davenport

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Terrorists may be conducting "dry runs" at U.S. airports to test security before a possible attack, according to a Transportation Security Administration warning to airport screeners.

U.S.

In at least four incidents over the past year, security screeners have found items in carry-on luggage -- blocks of cheese taped to electrical components, for example -- that resembled homemade bombs, according to the TSA's July 20 memo.

"Past terrorist attacks and plots show that such testing generally indicates attacks will soon follow," said the internal memo, which was posted on the Internet by NBC News on Tuesday.

None of the passengers in question has been linked with criminal or terrorist organizations so far, the memo said.

The United States has tightened airport security since the September 11 suicide attacks by al Qaeda militants in 2001 using hijacked passenger planes. Passengers are now commonly required to remove shoes and belts and may not carry more than a small amount of toiletries or cosmetics on board.

The TSA described its unclassified warning as one of 90 released this year and said it had no specific information of a pending attack.

"We constantly feed intelligence and training information to our officers and the law enforcement community and this is one example of such information sharing," the TSA said in a statement late on Tuesday.



More from Reuters

Photo

Obama to tap Yellen for Fed vice chair: source

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Barack Obama plans to nominate San Francisco Federal Reserve Bank President Janet Yellen, a respected policy dove, to be vice chairman of the central bank, a source familiar with the process said on Thursday.

Trader John Boehm works in the 5-year US Treasury Bond Options Pit at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange September 16, 2008.  REUTERS/John Gress

The big guns fire back

The Wall Street behemoths that came close to collapse in the financial crisis are back and pushing aside the boutiques that made a killing during the turmoil.   Full Article 

A migrant worker carries his belongings as he waits for his train inside Shanghai Railway Station February 8, 2010. REUTERS/Nir Elias

"Aliens" in urban China

They build the skyscrapers and lay the highways, but China's "hukou" system means 200 million migrant workers still can't live like their urban counterparts.  Full Article