New York ‘lone wolf’ was one hour away from finishing his bomb
She also praised the New York Police Department, saying, “I think they handled it well.”
Officials with the NYPD, which conducted the undercover investigation using a confidential informant and a bugged apartment, said the department had to move quickly because Pimentel was about to test a pipe bomb made out of match heads, nails and other ingredients bought at neighborhood hardware and discount stores.
Two law enforcement officials said Monday that the NYPD’s Intelligence Division had sought to get the FBI involved at least twice as the investigation unfolded. Both times, the FBI concluded that Pimentel lacked the mental capacity to act on his own, they said.
The FBI thought Pimentel “didn’t have the predisposition or the ability to do anything on his own,” one of the officials said.
The officials were not authorized to speak about the case and spoke on condition of anonymity. The FBI’s New York office and the U.S. attorney’s office in Manhattan both declined to comment on Monday.
Pimentel’s lawyer, Joseph Zablocki, said his client was never a true threat.
“If the goal here is to be stopping terror … I’m not sure that this is where we should be spending our resources,” he said.
Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly defended the handling of the case Monday, saying the NYPD kept federal authorities in the loop “all along” before circumstances forced investigators to take swift measures using state charges.
“No question in my mind that we had to take this case down,” Kelly said. “There was an imminent threat.”
Added Kelly: “This is a classic case of what we’ve been talking about �� the lone wolf, an individual, self-radicalized. This is the needle in the haystack problem we face as a country and as a city.”
Authorities described Pimentel as an unemployed U.S. citizen and “al-Qaida sympathizer” who was born in the Dominican Republic. He had lived most of his life in Manhattan, aside from about five years in the upstate city of Schenectady, where authorities say he had an arrested for credit card fraud.
His mother said he was raised Roman Catholic. But he converted to Islam in 2004 and went by the name Muhammad Yusuf, authorities said.
Using a tip from police in Albany, the NYPD had been watching Pimentel using a confidential informant for the past year. Investigators learned that he was energized and motivated to carry out his plan by the Sept. 30 killing of al-Qaida’s U.S.-born cleric Anwar al-Awlaki, police said.
Pimentel was under constant surveillance as he shopped for the pipe bombmaterials. He also was overheard talking about attacking police patrol cars and postal facilities, killing soldiers returning home from abroad andbombing a police station in Bayonne, N.J., authorizes said.
Four meg nuke was one switch away from exploding over the US in 1961…...
-
If you’re interested in this kind of stuff, I’d highly recommend reading this:
http://www.amazon.ca/15-Minutes-General-Countdown-Annihilation/dp/B009NPJ0EK
Very detail heavy. Fascinating, well-researched. Pretty sure it goes into detail about the incident in the article, but it’s been a year or so since I read it.
Yrs.,
R. -
Bloody Hell Malachi!
260 times more powerful than Hiroshima. That is a scary thought. As mentioned in the article, it would have changed history.
Thank you. -
It wasn’t the first and the last incident on Americas side, also on the Russian side.
Sometimes it looks like little kids playing with toys, Dad def. told 'em not to play with and they do it just for fun!Question is ,is it better to just don’t know everything??
-
Seriously, we have 6,000 years of human history without nuclear weapons
I’m pretty sure humans AND the world have been around a bit longer than 6, 000 years……
-
Seriously, we have 6,000 years of human history without nuclear weapons
I’m pretty sure humans AND the world have been around a bit longer than 6, 000 years……
NOPE actually a lil less then the 6,000… :wink:
-
@Guerrilla:
You have to wonder why they didn’t take the arming devices completely out of the bomb. Perhaps my ignorance of how atomic weaponry is manufactured comes into play, but that would seem to be the most logical action when transporting ordinances across your own country, you would think taking the most precautions to prevent any such mishaps.Â
When I ran into that item in a newspaper a couple of days ago, the story (as it appeared in the media’s telling of it) struck me as being both sensationalistic in tone and extremely vague on the technical details – something which isn’t uncommon in media reports. Â So I appreciate the link which MalachiCrunch provided, since it eventually led me to the original two-page declassified document which was published by The Guardian. Â That document itself is a bit problematic. Â On the first page, the discussion by Lapp on the left side is (like the newspaper articles it inspired) both vague and dramatic, while the analysis by Jones on the right side is telegraphic in style and sarcastic in tone…so it’s hard to know how seriously to take both components. Â The second page (also an analysis by Jones) is more informative and written in a more serious way – but I’m still puzzled by the suggestion that an H-bomb can arm itself by the simple action of being dropped from a plane. Â I don’t have any expertise in this area, but it was always my understanding that nuclear bombs can’t function unless they’ve been specifically armed by the bomber crew, following a very precise activation sequence. Â I was under the impression that, unless these arming steps are followed by the crew, the worse that can happen in an accident involving an H-bomb is for its conventional explosive charge (which will initiate the nuclear explosion if the bomb is properly armed) to detonate, with the result that the plutonium in the warhead will be scattered into the environment. Â This happened to two of the H-bombs that fell on Palomares in 1966: they produced radioactive contamination, but there was no nuclear explosion.
-
NOPE actually a lil less then the 6,000…
Oh I see where I made my math mistake, I forgot to ‘borrow’ one from the right hand column. Hence a bit more becomes a bit less…… :-D
but I’m still puzzled by the suggestion that an H-bomb can arm itself by the simple action of being dropped from a plane.
I don’t like that one either as it would mean anytime a plane crashed or engaged in sever violent maneuvers the nukes could go off.
-
@rjpeters70:
That’s largely right. For a weapon to detonate, you have to have the conventional fire triggers detonate simultaneously. Otherwise, you get at best a fissile (a sub-kiloton detonation, that’s basically like a large conventional explosion), or far more likely, the conventional explosives go off and you’ve got some spreading of fissile material over a finite piece of geography. Most nuclear powers have “lost” some nuclear weapons, mostly during the cold war. None of them have ever “accidently” detonated. There’s more than a bit of sensationalism to this story.
Yes. A more restrained – but still adequately attention-grabbing – way for the papers to have told the story would have been for them to point out that a non-nuclear detonation of the conventional explosive charge of the two bombs would have produced radioactive contamination. In essence, this would have been the equivalent of the detonation on American soil of two radiological dispersion weapons, a.k.a. a dirty bombs. They apparently landed close to the small town of Faro, about a dozen miles from Goldsboro, N.C.
-
During the cold war, America had live nukes in the air at ALL times.
Part of “Strategic Air Command”.
Basically it was a strategic deterrent against the Russians. The russians knew that even if they got ALL of the missles on the ground that there were still bombers already in the air and ready to make nuclear runs on russia.
This also drastically cut down on american response time, as the bombers were always ready to go over the arctic circle at a moments notice.
It was quite an ingenious strategy really.
-
The USAF and the RCAF/CFAC also had some nuclear-tipped air-to-air weapons in their inventories, such as the AIR-2 Genie. Canada had them as late as 1984; they were carried by CF-101 Voodoo interceptors. They were officially under US control, but they could be released for use by Canada as circumstances warranted.
In addition to the two big components of the nuclear triad that have already been mentioned – the land-based ballistic missiles and the manned SAC bombers – there was also the third component, the US Navy’s ballistic missile subs. At the opposite end of the scale, the US nuclear inventory includes – if I’m not mistaken – man-portable nuclear demolition charges, designed for things like special commando-type operations. I think a weapon of this type is featured in the 1977 motion picture thriller Twilight’s Last Gleaming.