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Weekly Security Brief - July 28th

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Weekly Security Brief - July 28th Empty Weekly Security Brief - July 28th

Post by Sabre 28/7/2014, 15:57

Weekly Security Brief - July 28th Dilita18







Dilitas Weekly Security Brief

This email has been compiled from current, open source data supplied through contacts within Diplomatic Posts, law enforcement agencies and UK intelligence services.
The information herein is to keep you informed of the current security situations within the UK and the rest of the world.

If you require more specific information on any other prevailing matters, please contact us at info@dilitas.com detailing what you require and we will respond to you.
Regards,
Christopher Cully
Managing Director


The threat to the UK from International Terrorism is SUBSTANTIAL
The threat to Great Britain from Irish Republican Terrorism is MODERATE


Domestic:

One of Fusilier Lee Rigby's killers has been given the right to appeal against his 45-year minimum sentence due to mental health problems. Michael Adebowale was transferred to Broadmoor Hospital in June after reportedly "hearing voices" and suffering "psychotic episodes." A full appeal hearing in front of three judges will take place at a later date.

A former London student living in Syria with her ISIL fighter husband is posting chilling images of her young son online and urging other British women to join them. Named Isa, the Arabic version of Jesus, the boy, who appears no older than three or four, is the son of a former London student who is among a growing number of British women travelling to Syria to live under the Islamic “caliphate” set up by the world’s most feared terrorist leader. Isa’s mother, who calls herself simply Umm Isa (Mother of Isa), has the image of her gun-toting son on her Twitter profile page. It reveals she is married to a fighter from Sweden. The Sunday Times says it has identified at least five British women who have signed up to the cause of the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant, and says an analysis of their social media postings review threats against Britain, girls as young as 15 being encouraged to join the jihad and female ISIL recruits being paid a wage and offered free housing if they marry a foreign fighter.
Government and security officials have greatly exaggerated the dangers of British men fighting in Syria and returning to stage terrorist attacks in the UK, a report claims. Most British "Jihadis" are motivated by wanting to topple the brutal dictatorship of Bashar Assad, says the report by Cage, a group critical of British government counterterrorism policy. The report says Britain's current policy is "confused and dangerous", and has created a climate of fear for Muslims. The report is in stark contrast with the warnings from the prime minister, police and security chiefs about the feared dangers of British Muslim men returning from fighting in Syria with the intent and increased know of how to stage terrorist attacks.

A report into extremist infiltration of Birmingham schools has uncovered evidence of "coordinated, deliberate and sustained action to introduce an intolerant and aggressive Islamist ethos into some schools in the city". The conclusion emerges from a leaked draft of a report. Peter Clarke, the former head of the Met police's counterterrorism command, wrote in which he said that there was a "sustained and coordinated agenda to impose upon children in a number of Birmingham schools the segregationist attitudes and practices of a hard-line and politicised strain of Sunni Islam". The report adds, "Left unchecked, it would confine schoolchildren within an intolerant, inward-looking monoculture that would severely inhibit their participation in the life of modern Britain."

Almost eight years after Alexander V. Litvinenko, a former KGB officer turned whistle-blower, was poisoned to death in London with a radioactive isotope, the British authorities have announced this week that a public inquiry would be held into his death, permitting investigators to explore whether Russian leaders ordered the killing.

Russia should lose the right to host the 2018 World Cup as part of tougher sanctions following the plane crash in eastern Ukraine, Nick Clegg has said. The UK deputy prime minister told the Sunday Times it was "unthinkable" that Russia should host the football event. Pro-Russian separatist rebels have been accused of shooting down the Malaysia Airlines jet. Russia has suggested it could have been the Ukraine military.
World football governing body Fifa has rejected calls to change the 2018 host.

Northern Ireland:

A father of two young children was left lying in a pool of his own blood in a [Londonderry] play park after being told to go there to be "shot by appointment". The 32-year old man was shot in both legs shortly after 11.30pm on Tuesday evening. It is believed that loyalist paramilitaries were behind the attack on the man who is now recovering from his injuries after emergency surgery.

Politicians have condemned two attacks on a north Belfast synagogue last weekend that the police are treating as religious hate crimes. Gerry Kelly, the Sinn Féin MLA for north Belfast, condemned the attacks saying, “There can be no place for attacks on any place of worship, regardless of the religion or denomination.”


International:

The Israeli military says it is resuming air, ground and naval raids on Gaza as Palestinian militants continue to fire rockets after rejecting a humanitarian truce.
Israel had accepted a UN request for a 24-hour ceasefire, but warned it would act if it was breached by Hamas. Hamas said it would not accept a truce unless Israeli troops left Gaza and the displaced were allowed to return home. More than 1,000 Palestinians and 46 Israelis have been killed. A majority of those killed in Gaza are civilians, Palestinian health officials say, while 43 soldiers and three civilians have died on the Israeli side. On Saturday, many Gaza residents used the truce to gather supplies and retrieve bodies buried under rubble. The extended ceasefire had been due to expire at midnight local time.
The UN Security Council has called for an "immediate and unconditional humanitarian ceasefire" in Gaza. An emergency session backed a statement calling for a truce over the Muslim holiday of Eid al-Fitr "and beyond". On Sunday Israel and Palestinian militants continued their offensives despite a 24-hour ceasefire announced by Hamas. More than 1,030 Palestinians, mostly civilians, and 43 Israeli soldiers and two Israeli civilians have been killed. A Thai national in Israel has also died. The Gaza health ministry on Sunday revised the number of dead down by 30 after some relatives found missing family members. The UN Security Council endorsed a statement from Rwanda, the current president of the council, calling for a "durable" truce based on an Egyptian initiative - under which a pause in hostilities would lead to substantive talks on the future of Gaza, including the opening of Gaza's border crossings. The statement also emphasised that "civilian and humanitarian facilities, including those of the UN, must be respected and protected". It further stressed the need for "immediate provision of humanitarian assistance to the Palestinian civilian population in the Gaza Strip". The Palestinian representative at the UN, Riyad Mansour, said the statement did not go far enough, saying a formal resolution was needed demanding that Israel withdraw its forces from Gaza. On Sunday Israel rejected a truce announced by Hamas, with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu saying: "Israel will do what it must do to defend its people." Hamas fired more rockets into Israel, accusing it of failing to abide by the ceasefire.

At least 38 people have been killed in clashes between troops loyal to the Libyan government and Islamist fighters in the city of Benghazi, officials say. The militants attacked troops in the centre of the city, in eastern Libya. A week of fighting in the capital Tripoli, near the airport, has left 97 people dead and 404 injured. Later it was reported that a fuel storage site in the area had been hit by a rocket and fires there could cause a disaster if not kept under control.
The US says it has temporarily evacuated its staff from the Libyan capital Tripoli over security concerns. Staff, including marine guards providing security to the embassy, have been transferred to Tunisia "due to the ongoing violence resulting from clashes between Libyan militias," it adds. Secretary of State John Kerry said there was a "real risk" to staff. It comes amid fierce clashes between rival militias in the capital, with intense fighting at Tripoli airport.

The Cameroonian military says members of the Nigerian militant group Boko Haram have abducted the wife of the country's deputy prime minister in the northern Cameroonian town of Kolofata. A local religious leader and mayor was also abducted from the same town. Separately, at least five people in northern Nigeria were killed in a blast - residents suspect Boko Haram.

Russia says new EU sanctions against it over the Ukraine crisis will jeopardise security co-operation against terror. The Russian foreign ministry said the EU would bear the blame for the move which sees 15 officials and 18 entities subject to asset freezes and visa bans. The EU and US accuse Russia of backing Ukraine's rebels. Moscow denies this.

Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte says sending out an international military force to secure the site of the downed Malaysian Airlines plane in eastern Ukraine is "unrealistic". The site is currently controlled by pro-Russia rebels who have been accused of shooting down flight MH17. All 298 people on board - most of them Dutch - died. In the latest fighting in the area, 13 people were killed as troops try to seize Horlivka from the rebels. Separately, the US has released images to back its claim of Russian firing into Ukraine. The images, showing marks on the ground and impact craters, suggest fire from multiple rocket launchers, the US state department says. The pictures also indicate the separatists are using heavy artillery supplied by Russia, it added. Russia denies supplying the rebels with heavy weaponry or firing across the frontier with Ukraine.
On 22 July, the FAA issued a Notice to Airmen (NOTAM) informing US airlines that they are prohibited from flying to or from Israel's Ben Gurion International Airport for a period of up to 24 hours. The notice was issued in response to a rocket strike which landed approximately one mile from Ben Gurion International Airport on the morning of 22 July. The NOTAM applied only to US operators, and had no authority over foreign airlines operating to or from the airport. The US aviation regulator has lifted its ban on US carriers flying to Tel Aviv's Ben Gurion airport. But it has warned that the situation with the conflict in Gaza remains "very fluid". The US Federal Aviation Administration first imposed the ban on Tuesday and extended it further on Wednesday citing the "potentially hazardous situation" in Israel and Gaza. The cancellations had drawn criticism in US and Israel.

Hundreds of daily flights transporting Brits to popular holiday destinations and resorts are flying over territories held by dangerous terrorist groups, raising fears another aircraft could be shot down. Carriers including British Airways, Virgin Atlantic, Lufthansa and Qantas use flight paths which pass over Libya, Sudan, Iraq, Syria and Mali, including a busy corridor directly over Mosul, the Iraqi city which has become a stronghold of jihadist group Isis. Many flights to Asia, including routes to popular holiday destination Dubai, also use the flight corridor over Mosul. Although the routes are currently considered safe by aviation authorities, fears have been raised after Malaysian Airlines flight MH17 was shot down last week, causing a number of carriers to divert their services from Ukraine. Fears that Isis ‒ a brutal terrorist group that has declared swathes of Iraq and Syria an 'Islamic State' ‒ has looted Iraqi army supplies including surface-to-air missiles capable of bringing down a passenger plane, were raised by intelligence officials
A top rebel commander in eastern Ukraine has reportedly said that the armed separatist movement had control of a Buk missile system, which Kiev and western countries say was used to shoot down a Malaysia Airlines plane on 17 July. US intelligence officials accused Moscow of "creating the conditions" that resulted in the death of 298 people aboard the Malaysian Airlines jet shot down last week over a part of Ukraine controlled by Russia-backed separatists. But in a partial declassification of US intelligence, officials stopped short of laying the blame for the disaster directly at the door of Russia. The assessment of the US intelligence community is that the separatists shot the plane down by accident. The newly declassified information largely reaffirmed an account given last Friday by Samantha Power, US Ambassador to the United Nations, saying that a missile from an SA-11 anti-aircraft battery in separatist territory shot down the plane.

A photo that allegedly proves Russia's most wanted terrorist is dead has been released by the head of the Chechen Republic. Pro-Vladimir Putin leader Ramzan Kadyrov uploaded the image of what is claimed to be Doku Umarov's body to the social-networking site Instagram. Alongside the photo, he wrote, 'For those who would like to believe that this rat is still alive, we can show him after his death.' Umarov has been the top terrorist leader in Russia, and took responsibility for several attacks on civilian targets since 2009, including the 2010 Moscow Metro bombings and the 2011 Domodedovo International Airport bombing.
Al-Qaeda published the first edition of a new online bulletin, "Al Nafir" (meaning "call to arms" or "call to mobilise"), on July 20. The organisation used its inaugural issue to publicly renew its oath of allegiance to Taliban emir Mullah Omar. Although Al Nafir was just released online by As Sahab, al-Qaeda's propaganda arm, the first edition's publication date indicates that it was produced in April or May. Its release at this time is undoubtedly connected to the Islamic State's declaration in late June that it now rules over a supposed caliphate. The Islamic State is an al-Qaeda offshoot that has been openly at odds with al-Qaeda for more than one year.

The foreign ministers of Germany, France and Italy have condemned the rise in anti-Semitic protests and violence over the conflict in Gaza, saying they will do everything possible to combat it in their countries. “Anti-Semitic rhetoric and hostility against Jews, attacks on people of Jewish belief and synagogues have no place in our societies,” the three nations said in a joint statement
issued in Brussels.

Fighters from the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (Isis) may be added to a list of war crimes suspects in Syria, the chief UN investigator says. "They are good candidates for the list," Paulo Pinheiro said, referring to public executions and crucifixions carried out by the militant group. The identities of war crimes suspects on the list drawn up by a UN commission remain confidential.
The Norwegian Security Police and the Intelligence Service have warned of possible concrete terrorist acts against Norway. Measures have been taken to meet this threat. This was announced by PST Chief at a press conference in Oslo this week. She said that the information they had received was very specific, and that they had therefore decided to inform the public.

A Norwegian citizen who trained with a master bomb maker in Yemen and recently was added to the State Department’s list of international terrorists has been linked to the increased security screening of flights coming to the US, according to congressional sources familiar with the intelligence. Anders Dale was believed to be trained by the master bomb maker Ibrahim al Asiri, who was responsible for the underwear device that nearly brought down a jet over Detroit on Christmas Day 2009, the sources said. Since he's a top target of the US drone campaign, al Asiri has trained other operatives to build the non-metallic bombs as a kind of backup insurance policy for al-Qaeda. The chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee told Fox News that al-Qaeda's desire to bring down a U.S. commercial jet is greater now than it was before 9/11, and the terrorist group has the capability and potential to do so, especially with the growing number of Western recruits fighting alongside the al-Qaeda affiliate in Syria known as the al Nusra front.
Australia has said that a man who killed himself and several other people in a suicide attack in Iraq on 17th July was an 18-year-old from Melbourne. The attack took place in a market near a Baghdad mosque. The man detonated explosives in a suicide vest, killing at least three other people and injuring dozens more. The Islamic State militant group, in an affiliated Twitter feed, said it was behind the attack and named the man as Abu Bakr al-Australi. Australia's Attorney-General said the news was a "disturbing development".

A police official has said that three more people were killed by unknown gunmen on the Kenyan coast where 94 people have so far perished in less than a month in attacks claimed by al-Qaeda- linked militants. The al-Qaeda linked al-Shabaab group from Somalia have claimed responsibility for most of the recent attacks and they have vowed to carry out further operations in Kenya to avenge the deployment of Kenyan troops to Somalia to fight the militants.

Bulgaria has identified a suicide bomber who blew up a bus containing Israeli tourists two years ago as a dual Lebanese-French citizen. The prosecutor's office and the national security agency said in a joint statement that the bomber was 23-year-old Mohamad Hassan El-Husseini, who was born in Lebanon. The July 2012 explosion outside an airport on Bulgaria's Black Sea coast killed five Israeli tourists, the Bulgarian bus driver and the bomber. Thirty-five people were wounded.

Marines are training for the "what-if" scenario that keeps counter-terrorism experts up at night - an attack on a major American city. They're at a facility nicknamed "The Disaster Disneyland," CBS News correspondent Mark Strassmnan reports. Imagine this: terrorists have detonated a 10- kiloton nuclear bomb in downtown Indianapolis. There are 17,000 casualties. Specially-trained Marines have pushed inside a five-mile "hot zone" of radiation that rings the city.

A 19-year-old man pulled over by Clayton, Calif., police for driving a car with expired registration was found with a pipe bomb in his pants pocket, authorities said Thursday.
Police stopped Joseph Nichols for expired registration at 11:55 p.m. A subsequent search of Nichols uncovered a pipe bomb in his pants pocket, police said. The Walnut Creek Police Department bomb squad, called to the scene by Clayton police, later rendered the device safe. Nichols, of Oakley, was booked on suspicion of felony possession of a destructive device, police said.

A San Francisco private-equity executive was arrested on 17th July on suspicion of drunkenly posing as a TSA agent at San Francisco International Airport and groping at least two women he pulled aside for further searching. The 53-year old man was arrested at the International Terminal's security checkpoint after he reportedly led at least two women into a private booth to pat them
down, a sheriff's spokesperson said.

A Sierra Leone woman who fled hospital after testing positive for the Ebola virus has died after turning herself in, health officials have told the BBC. Her family had forcibly removed her from a public hospital on Thursday. Saudatu Koroma's is the first case of Ebola to be confirmed in the country's capital Freetown, where there are no facilities to treat the virus. Since February, more than 660 people have died of Ebola in West Africa - the world's deadliest outbreak to date.

Seleka rebels in the Central African Republic have rejected a ceasefire deal and demanded the country be partitioned between Muslims and Christians. In an interview with the BBC's Andrew Harding, Seleka military chief Joseph Zoundeiko said his forces would ignore the ceasefire agreed on Thursday. He said the deal had been negotiated without proper input from the military wing of the former Seleka alliance.
Almost a quarter of the 4.6 million population have fled their homes.

An American reporter for the Washington Post and his wife have been detained in Tehran, an Iranian official confirmed. Jason Rezaian, a 38-year-old dual Iran-US citizen, and his Iranian wife Yeganeh Salehi, were taken into custody on Tuesday evening, the paper said. Two freelance photographers, also US citizens, were being held too. Western news organisations, including the BBC, have great difficulty operating in Iran, with journalists facing detention and surveillance.
 "We are deeply troubled by this news and are concerned for the welfare of Jason, Yeganeh and two others said to have been detained with them," Washington Post foreign editor Douglas Jehl said in a statement.
For the seventh time in a row, a Pakistani anti-terrorism court trying the seven accused in the 2008 Mumbai attacks case adjourned the hearing today until September 3, after the judge went on a summer vacation.

A high school girl has been arrested on suspicion of killing and dismembering a classmate, Japanese police say. The 15-year-old was arrested on Sunday in Sasebo city in Japan's southern Nagasaki prefecture. Police said the girl beat her friend and then strangled her on Saturday. She then severed the victim's head and cut off one of her hands, they said. The victim has been identified as a 15-year-old girl who attended the same high school as the suspect.

Top Venezuelan official Gen Hugo Carvajal has been released by the Dutch Caribbean island of Aruba, after being detained over US accusations of drug-trafficking activities. The US Treasury said he had been protecting drug shipments by Colombian Farc rebels. But a judge on the island said Gen Carvajal had a diplomatic passport and that his arrest was illegal. He had been appointed by Venezuela as its consul in Aruba.


Cyber News:

Two Romanian nationals, a male and a female, have been sentenced to eight and six years of prison time, respectively, as a result of running phishing scams from the UK on unsuspecting users. According to the Met Police, the duo, pleaded guilty last week to conspiracy to commit fraud, six counts of possession of fraudulent ID cards, and possessing equipment to make fraudulent ID and bank cards. They sent phishing emails to more than 150 victims – the messages sent purporting to be from Apple and informed that the victim’s account had been compromised, urging them to update their details through a link to the phishing website. The requested information also includes bank details, and once entered in the respective fields, the cyber crooks would receive it via email. They would then use it to extract large amounts of money.
UK police are warning LinkedIn users not to fall for another phishing scam designed to trick them into divulging log-in details for the professional social network. National fraud and internet crime reporting centre Action Fraud released an alert claiming that the scam emails, purporting to come from LinkedIn, stating that the recipient’s account has been blocked due to inactivity and require them to click a link to confirm email address and restore access. However, the link will actually take that user to a fake LinkedIn log-in page via which the scammers can harvest victims’ access credentials, according to Hoax Slayer – the site that first spotted the scam.

Scammers are using the MH17 disaster in east Ukraine to spread objectionable links, online security experts have warned. A link to a pornographic website disguised as a video of the Malaysia Airlines crash was posted on a Facebook page dedicated to one victim. Many tweets have been posted that appeared to report the disaster, but actually included spam links. One expert said the firms should take more responsibility for removing them. One online security specialist said that it was common for spammers to exploit anything being discussed by a lot of people online.

In the real world, you only have to worry about the criminals in your city. But in the online world, you have to worry about criminals who may be located anywhere on the planet. Many hotbeds of online criminal activity are located in cities whose police forces are already overextended fighting “real-world” crimes and who lack the resources and expertise to investigate online activity. And in the past decade, the criminals themselves have changed. In 2003, all the malware was still being written for fun by hobbyists, but now it’s being produced by professional criminals, hacktivists, and governments who can invest big money to craft attacks that deliver massive payoffs. Go to ‘Source’ for a list of the biggest threats?

America is still astoundingly vulnerable to terror attacks, a new study by the authors of 'The 9/11 Commission Report' warns. “The world has become more dangerous over the past few years,” says the report, released 22 July, 10 years after the original 9/11 Commission report. “The struggle against terrorism is far from over.” The study warns against terrorism’s “new and dangerous phase,” pointing out the perils of cyber-attacks. “Al-Qaeda-affiliated groups are now active in more countries than before 9/11,” the report says, and those organisations are increasingly turning to cyber terror. It quotes one former US agency official who said, “We are at Sept. 10 levels in terms of cyber preparedness.”

And Finally:
An explosive smuggled aboard a Northwest Airlines flight in 2009 failed to detonate because the bomber wore the same underwear for two weeks straight and soiled the device, TSA officials say. The explosive only caught fire in Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab’s pants when he tried to set it off on the descent to Detroit Metropolitan Airport aboard Northwest Airlines Flight 253 on Dec. 25. The device was “degraded,” TSA administrator John Pistole said at the Aspen Institute Thursday when he described why the Nigerian’s bomb failed to moderator Catherine Herridge.
 “Thank goodness for bad hygiene,” Herridge added.

And Finally, Finally:
A drunken passenger who missed his flight to Ibiza was able to evade airport security and sneak onto an empty plane just so he could “prove how bad airport security was”.
 Lee Jezard was able to sneak onto an airport luggage conveyor belt at Birmingham Airport last week, before running across the airfield and sneaking his way onto the empty Lufthansa plane – just hours before flight MH17 was downed in the over eastern Ukraine killing 298 people. Jezard, 22, from Worcester, had arrived late for a plane that was due to take him to Ibiza for a holiday with five male friends. He had rescheduled his flight for the morning after, but not having enough money to pay for a hotel room, he, instead, decided to spend the night “getting slaughtered” at an airport bar. Inebriated and with the airport deserted, Jezard then decided that he would sneak behind the check-in counter and force his way onto one of the luggage conveyor belts.


Significant Forthcoming Anniversaries:
28 July 2005 Largest ever mobilisation of British police officers since World War Two when the Met Police Service, the British Transport Police and City of London Police deploy officers at rail stations and transport hubs within the capital.
 28 July 2005 Provisional IRA calls on all its ‘units’ to dump their weapons and made a formal announcement of the end of their campaign of violence.
 31 July 2002 Nine students, including five US citizens, killed and 85 wounded by bomb at Hebrew University, Israel. HAMAS responsible, later apologizes for American deaths.
 31 July 1959 Founding day of the Basque terrorist group, ETA.
August 1, 1990 Iraqi troops invaded and occupied Kuwait.
August 2, 2003 Iraq: Car bomb explodes in front of Jordanian Embassy in Baghdad, killing 19 and injuring 50.
 August 2, 2001 Real IRA - Vehicle borne IED functions at Ealing Broadway, London injuring several people.
 August 5, 2003 Car bomb explodes in front of Marriott Hotel in Jakarta, Indonesia, killing 13 and injuring 149. The radical Jemaah Islamiya were blamed.
 August 6, 1945 Atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima and on 9th, on Nagasaki.
August 6, 1991 Former Iranian Prime Minister Shapur Bakhtiar and his assistant are assassinated in Paris.
 August 7, 1998 Near simultaneous bomb attacks on the American Embassy buildings in African cities of Nairobi and Dar es Salaam kills 224 people (12 U.S. citizens) and injures more than 5,000.
 August 9, 1971 Beginning of Internment in Northern Ireland.
August 10, 2006 Police foil a plot to sabotage civilian airliners departing from Heathrow Airport on trans-Atlantic flights – Known as ‘Operation Overt’
 August 10, 1987 The Greek domestic terrorist group, November 17, attack a bus carrying U.S. airmen injuring 10.
 August 11, 1988 According to some ‘experts’, this is the date on which Osama bin Laden founded al-Qaeda.
 August 14, 1994 ‘Carlos the Jackal’ is arrested in Sudan and extradited to France where he is sentenced for terrorism offences in December 1997 to life in prison.
 August 14, 1969 First deployment of British troops in Northern Ireland (Londonderry).
 August 14, 1945 VJ Day - Japan surrenders ending WW2.
August 14, 1947 Pakistan Independence Day,
August 15, 1998 Real IRA bomb attack in Omagh, Northern Ireland kills 29 people.
 August 17, 1988 Sabotage suspected in an air crash that killed Pakistan leader, General Zia ul-Haq, and the U.S. Ambassador to Pakistan.
 August 20, 1998 Afghanistan, Sudan: U.S. cruise missiles strike against terrorist locations in retaliation for African embassy bombings two weeks earlier.
 August 23, 1996 Osama bin Laden issues message entitled 'A declaration of war against the Americans occupying the land of the two holy places.
 August 24, 2004 Two Chechen female suicide bombers set off explosives on two Russian airliners. The subsequent crashes of the aircraft killed all 89 passengers on board the two planes.
 August 24, 1975 Turkish ambassador to France and driver killed in Paris; Armenian Secret Army for the Liberation of Armenia [ASALA] responsible.

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