U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff said on
Thursday the threat to the United States from al Qaeda has
not returned to levels seen just before the September 11
attacks nearly six years ago.
Chertoff played down media reports that the militant network
was now as great a threat to U.S. soil as in the months
before the September 11 attacks on Washington and New York.
"I wouldn't put it at that level," he told ABC's "Good
Morning America." "I do think we've accomplished an awful
lot in dismantling their activities overseas and in building
our own defenses. But I do think the level of intent on the
part of the enemy remains very high."
U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said in an
interview with FOX News that she was also concerned about
the threat from al Qaeda but made clear there was nothing
that appeared "concrete or imminent" in terms of planned
attacks.
"It's a period of time in which there is a lot of
intelligence, a lot of chattering that would suggest that
there's an effort to plan an attack against the United
States," said Rice.
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The Washington Post reported the militant network has
significantly rebuilt itself and established a safe haven in
remote tribal areas of western Pakistan. It cited a new
intelligence report to be reviewed by Chertoff and other top
officials at a White House meeting later Thursday.
Top intelligence analysts also told Congress on Wednesday
that al Qaeda's training activities, funding and
communications have increased as the militant network has
settled into new bases in remote areas of Pakistan.
Chertoff told the Chicago Tribune this week that his "gut
feeling" was that the United States faced a heightened risk
of attack this summer.
But he told NBC on Thursday: "We don't have any specific
information about an imminent or near-term attack on the
homeland. We're looking at the strategic picture over the
next six months to a year. We're evaluating where that is."
He said his concern the United States could be entering a
period of heightened risk was based on greater al Qaeda
activity in Pakistan and Africa, an increase in public
messages from militant figures including Osama bin Laden's
second-in-command, Ayman al-Zawahri, and a history of summer
attacks.