This item is available on the Militant Islam Monitor website, at http://www.militantislammonitor.org/article/id/2667
January 12, 2007
When you start fortifying your embassies it becomes very attractive--the Americans have made themselves very attractive targets. Probably [bin Laden] would try to mobilize friends--ex-Afghan fighters from Arab countries--and try to hit back against the Americans. Anywhere."
--Hassan al-Turabi responding to the Clinton administration's decision to destroy a Sudanese factory, as quoted in "For This Islamic Tactician, Battle With U.S. Has Begun," the New York Times, August 24, 1998
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/6254399.stm
Blast rocks US embassy in Athens | ||
Police said a small rocket-propelled grenade or similar device was fired into the front of the embassy. Fire engines and police cordoned off the area around the fortified building. The US State Department said there were no injuries. The BBC correspondent in Athens says the US embassy is often the target of small-scale attacks by radical groups. Many of the attacks are carried out by small groups following in the footsteps of the disbanded November 17 leftist group, says the BBC's Malcolm Brabant. 'Windows shattered' Emergency services rushed to the embassy, which is on one of Athens' main boulevards, after reports of an explosion shortly before 0600 (0400 GMT).
According to eyewitnesses, it penetrated the building and caused a small fire. Television pictures showed a mass of emergency vehicles and stationary traffic outside the embassy as the area was sealed off. Greek police said a shell was fired from street level through the front of the building and landed in a toilet. "This is an act of terrorism. We don't know where from," Attica Police Chief Asimakis Golfis told the Associated Press. The blast was powerful enough to break windows in nearby buildings, reports said. |
This item is available on the Militant Islam Monitor website, at http://www.militantislammonitor.org/article/id/2667