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Patterns
of Global Terrorism
Released by the Office of the Coordinator
for Counterterrorism
May 21, 2002
September 11 and Review of Terrorism
in 2001
September 11
The worst international terrorist attack
ever—involving four separate but coordinated aircraft hijackings—occurred
in the United States on September 11, 2001. The 19 hijackers belonged to
the al-Qaida terrorist network. According to investigators and records
of cellular phone calls made by passengers aboard the planes, the hijackers
used knives and boxcutters to kill or wound passengers and the pilots,
and then commandeer the aircraft, which the hijackers used to destroy preselected
targets.
Five terrorists hijacked American
Airlines flight 11, which departed Boston for Los Angeles at 7:45 a.m.
An hour later it was deliberately piloted into the North Tower of the World
Trade Center in New York City.
Five terrorists hijacked United Airlines
flight 175, which departed Boston for Los Angeles at 7:58 a.m. At 9:05
the plane crashed into the South Tower of the World Trade Center. Both
towers collapsed shortly thereafter, killing approximately 3000 persons,
including hundreds of firefighters and rescue personnel who were helping
to evacuate the buildings.
Four terrorists hijacked United Airlines
flight 93, which departed Newark for San Francisco at 8:01 a.m. At 10:10
the plane crashed in Stony Creek Township, Pennsylvania killing all 45
persons on board. The intended target of this hijacked plane is not known,
but it is believed that passengers overpowered the terrorists, thus preventing
the aircraft from being used as a missile.
Five terrorists hijacked American
Airlines flight 77, which departed Washington Dulles Airport for Los Angeles
at 8:10 a.m. At 9:39 the plane was flown directly into the Pentagon in
Arlington, Virginia, near Washington, D.C. A total of 189 persons were
killed, including all who were onboard the plane.
More than 3000 persons were killed in
these four attacks. Citizens of 78 countries perished at the World Trade
Center site. "Freedom and democracy are under attack," said President Bush
the following day. Leaders from around the world called the events of September
11 an attack on civilization itself.
The coordinated attack was an act of
war against the United States. President Bush said in a 20 September 2001
address to a joint session of Congress: "Our war on terror begins with
al-Qaida, but it does not end there. It will not end until every terrorist
group of global reach has been found, stopped, and defeated."
Virtually every nation condemned the
attack and joined the US-led Coalition to fight terror on several fronts:
diplomatic, economic, intelligence, law enforcement, and military. Operation
Enduring Freedom, the military component of the Coalition, began on 7 October.
The first targets were the al-Qaida training camps and military installations
of the Taliban regime in Afghanistan. Islamic extremists from around the
world—including North America, Europe, Africa, the Middle East, and Central,
South, and Southeast Asia—had used Afghanistan as a training ground and
base of operations for worldwide terrorist activities.
Within months, the Taliban was driven
from power, and nearly 1000 al-Qaida operatives were arrested in over 60
countries.
At year’s end, the war continued to
be waged on all fronts and was certain to last well into the future.
Review of Terrorism in 2001
Despite the horrific events of September
11, the number of international terrorist attacks in 2001 declined to 346,
down from 426 the previous year. One hundred seventy-eight of the attacks
were bombings against a multinational oil pipeline in Colombia—constituting
51 percent of the year’s total number of attacks. In the year 2000, there
were 152 pipeline bombings in Colombia, which accounted for 40 percent
of the total.
A
total of 3,547 persons were killed in international terrorist attacks
in 20011, the highest annual death toll from terrorism ever
recorded. Ninety percent of the fatalities occurred in the September 11
attacks. In 2000, 409 persons died in terrorist attacks. The number of
persons wounded in terrorist attacks in 2001 was 1080, up from 796 wounded
the previous year. Violence in the Middle East and South Asia also accounted
for the increase in casualty totals for 2001.
In addition to the US citizens killed
and injured on September 11, eight other US citizens were killed and 15
were wounded in acts of terrorism last year.
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Ronald Sander, one of the five American
oil workers kidnapped in Ecuador in October 2000, was killed by his captors—an
armed gang led by former members of a Colombian terrorist group.
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On 9 May, two teenagers were stoned to
death in Wadi Haritun cave near Teqoa (Israeli settlement) in the West
Bank. Yaakov Nathan Mandell was one of the youths killed. A claim of responsibility
for this attack was made in the name of "Palestinian Hizballah."
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Guillermo Sobero, one of three US citizens
in a group of 20 persons kidnapped on 27 May from a resort on Palawan Island
in the southern Philippines by the Abu Sayyaf Group, was subsequently murdered
by his captors.
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On 29 May in the West Bank, militants
fired on a passing vehicle, killing two persons, including US citizen Sara
Blaustein. Two other US citizens were injured in the ambush. The Al-Aqsa
Martyrs Brigade claimed responsibility.
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On 9 August in Jerusalem, a suicide bomber
walked into a busy downtown restaurant and detonated a 10-pound bomb that
he was wearing, killing 15 persons and wounding 130 others. Among the fatalities
were US citizens Judith Greenbaum and Malka Roth. Four other US citizens
were injured in the explosion. HAMAS claimed responsibility for the attack.
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On 6 October in al-Khobar, Saudi Arabia,
a terrorist threw a parcel bomb into a busy shopping area, killing Michael
Jerrald Martin, Jr., and wounding five other persons, among them two US
citizens.
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On 4 November, Shoshana Ben Yashai was
killed in a shooting attack in east Jerusalem near French Hill. The assailant
was also killed in the attack, which was claimed by Palestine Islamic Jihad.
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1 In
the absence of a final official total from New York City authorities, we
are using 3,000 as the number of persons killed in the World Trade Center
attacks.
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