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DATE=12/22/1999 TYPE=U-S OPINION ROUNDUP TITLE=TERRORISM THREAT CLOUDS U-S HOLIDAYS NUMBER=6-11606 BYLINE=ANDREW GUTHRIE DATELINE=WASHINGTON EDITOR=ASSIGNMENTS TELEPHONE=619-3335 CONTENT= INTRO: Following the arrest of an Algerian man at the U-S-Canadian border with a history of terrorist connections, this country is facing the Christmas and New Year's holiday with more apprehension than usual. Security at airports and border crossings with Canada and Mexico has been increased. The government has asked Americans at home and abroad to be especially watchful as they celebrate. Because of these warnings, the U-S press is lamenting that the threat of terrorism is clouding what would normally be a festive and happy time in the United States. ________________ joins us now with a sampling in today's Editorial Digest. TEXT: At midweek, the U-S government sharply increased security measures at the nation's airports, while sending about 350 additional customs agents to remote border crossings to monitor those entering the country. The steps came after an Algerian citizen with a false passport was arrested at a remote border crossing in Washington State last week. His car was loaded with bomb-making ingredients, but security officials feel he was only transporting the equipment and may have planned to link up with a bomb-maker once inside the United States. The arrest a few days later of another Algerian man, also with falsified documents, trying to cross the border from Canada into Vermont, only intensified fears that an organized plot of some kind was underway. The White House has been walking a fine line between urging Americans to be unusually observant of their surroundings as they celebrate, while refraining from any statements that could induce panic. As it is, many lavish millennium celebrations planned around the country have been scaled back or cancelled for lack of interest as people decide to stay close to home. We begin our sampling in the state of Ohio, where The [Cleveland] Plain Dealer says the United States is now "commendably alert," and praises the agents in Washington State for their arrest of the Algerian suspect. VOICE: Even as Americans' fears of a Y-2-K (computer) meltdown recede, the State Department has done its best to impress on them that the world remains a dangerous place. But just as we were trying to figure out where on the planet imminent danger might lurk, confirmation that a terrorist threat might be real enough was detected on our own soil. . the suspicious conduct of the arrested man . and the contents of his car trunk are reason to conclude the customs officials did their job well. . The target and whatever his accomplices had in mind for it are not known. It is not alarmist to speculate, however, that at the very least, a big building could have been devastated. .. It is difficult to see what, without resorting to extravagant precautions, Americans, going about their daily lives can do to defend themselves against determined terrorists who manage to evade the kind of diligent watch that trapped [Ahmed] Ressam. . Ordinary folks must depend on the intelligence services to stay informed of likely threats, at home and abroad. . And they will be well served if their guardians are as vigilant as the Port Angeles customs agent who almost certainly averted disaster. TEXT: In Boston, The Globe tries to be both prudent and philosophical about the threat. VOICE: As always, there is philosophical wisdom in the advice from government officials that Americans should not hand terrorists a victory by ceding to anxiety about recent warnings of terrorist attacks. Nonetheless, the capture of an Algerian transporting bomb-making materials into the United States from British Columbia last week has properly set off alarm bells among intelligence and law-enforcement professionals. They have reason to take very seriously the menace from the materials found in the trunk of Ahmed Ressam's rented car: almost 59 kilos of urea and sulfate, two jars of nitroglycerine, four black boxes, each containing a circuit board, a Casio watch, and a nine-volt battery. . The Casio watches suggest to counter-intelligence specialists bomb- making procedures that followers of [Saudi extremist Osama] bin Laden teach in their camps in Afghanistan. . Since [Mr.] Ressam appears to be merely a "mule" delivering bomb-making materials, the F-B-I and the C-I-A are in a race to locate his accomplices before they can carry out a terrorist act. Americans cannot let a terrorist threat change their way of life, but they also need as much good intelligence as possible about that threat. TEXT: "Caution, Not Panic" is the headline in Tuesday's [12/21] Los Angeles Times, as it urges the middle road for the American public. VOICE: Government warnings of potential anti-American terrorist operations coinciding with the end of the century were given chilling emphasis with last week's arrest of Ahmed Ressam, an Algerian . trying to enter the United States from Canada with . bomb-making materials hidden in his car. Meanwhile, in Jordan and Pakistan, authorities have jailed scores of people suspected of having links to the exiled Saudi Arabian militant Osama bin Laden, whose followers are accused of bombing two U-S embassies in Africa last year ... Until recently the F-B-I had focused on the potential threat of terrorist violence by Americans - anti- government activists and religious cultists energized by planned millennial observances. More recently, noting the coincidence of the Muslim holy months of Ramadan and the end of the century, and using intelligence gathered overseas, the F-B-I has expanded its scrutiny of Middle Eastern extremists, but it has become increasingly difficult to penetrate the close- knit structure of many terrorist groups. Heightened vigilance is surely required. . [However] As a free society we have no choice but to live with an inevitable measure of exposure to terrorism. The alternative . would mean an end to our civil liberties. TEXT: In mid-America, Nebraska's Omaha World-Herald is also trying to balance the threat with common sense advice for readers. VOICE: Is the average American, at home or abroad, in serious danger from any such agents? No. Should that average American be deterred from celebrating appropriately in the coming holidays as the 1900s draw to a close? Again, no. But note that these sentences contain the word "average," twice. Most of us will be quite safe, but that leaves open the possibility that some small number could be subject to attack with little or no warning. A couple of weeks ago, Neil Gallagher, head of the F-B-I's national security division, said his agency wanted the public to be "aware but not scared," which probably gets it just about right. ... Of course, everyone could just stay home, safe and scared. But that feels like handing any evil-doers, real or imagined, a victory by forfeiture. This is the height of the holiday season, just like any other year only more so. Part of the idea is to have fun, within reasonable and sane limits. Let's do so, while at the same time watching our backs. TEXT: Finally, some thoughts from U-S-A Today, the national daily published in a Washington, D-C suburb. VOICE: From the White House to law enforcement, officials are tight-lipped about specifics. But behind the scenes, the recent chain of events has ratcheted counter-terrorism officials' concern to extraordinarily high levels. "There probably hasn't been a comparable level of concern" says Vincent Cannistraro, former chief of counter-terrorist operations at the Central Intelligence Agency. Warning the public in more direct terms than "Americans should be vigilant," as National Security Adviser Sandy Berger put it Sunday, could spread fear. And such panic would constitute a victory for terrorists. But saying too little could leave people at risk. Reflecting the difficulty of the decision, the F-B-I planned, then postponed, a counter-terrorism news conference Tuesday. But the right choice is clear: Err on the side of disclosure, so that regular Americans can judge for themselves what constitutes self-preservation on this already-jittery New Year's. TEXT: That concludes this sampling of editorial comment on the heightened terrorist threat against the United States. NEB/ANG/JP 22-Dec-1999 16:35 PM EDT (22-Dec-1999 2135 UTC) NNNN Source: Voice of America .