Pentagon warns of Africa terror threat
Posted: Fri Jun 20, 2003 1:06 pm
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- The Pentagon's Defense Intelligence Agency has received specific information of a possible imminent terrorist threat to U.S. interests in Kenya, intelligence sources told CNN Friday.
The DIA Thursday issued a "defense terrorism warning report" to government agencies and officials in the region, notifying them of the threat and detailing the intelligence information that prompted the warning, sources said. That information is classified.
In response to the threat, the State Department closed the U.S. Embassy in Nairobi and a spokesman said it would probably remain closed through Tuesday.
Kenya and the Horn of Africa region have long been a center of al Qaeda terrorist activity. U.S. authorities blame al Qaeda for the August 1998 bombing of the U.S. embassy in Nairobi. That attack, and an almost simultaneous bombing at the U.S. embassy in Tanzania killed 224 people.
"East Africa has been an area of terrorist threats and indeed terrorist attacks in the past," said State Department spokesman Philip Reeker. "Those threats are still out there."
In May, British Airways and Israel's El Al suspended flights into Kenya because of terrorist threats. Intelligence sources told CNN that Thursday's warning was not an extension of those earlier threats but was based on fresh information.
Last month, the State Department issued a travel warning urging Americans to defer all non-essential travel to Kenya. Non-essential U.S. personnel in the country were also urged to leave.
The DIA Thursday issued a "defense terrorism warning report" to government agencies and officials in the region, notifying them of the threat and detailing the intelligence information that prompted the warning, sources said. That information is classified.
In response to the threat, the State Department closed the U.S. Embassy in Nairobi and a spokesman said it would probably remain closed through Tuesday.
Kenya and the Horn of Africa region have long been a center of al Qaeda terrorist activity. U.S. authorities blame al Qaeda for the August 1998 bombing of the U.S. embassy in Nairobi. That attack, and an almost simultaneous bombing at the U.S. embassy in Tanzania killed 224 people.
"East Africa has been an area of terrorist threats and indeed terrorist attacks in the past," said State Department spokesman Philip Reeker. "Those threats are still out there."
In May, British Airways and Israel's El Al suspended flights into Kenya because of terrorist threats. Intelligence sources told CNN that Thursday's warning was not an extension of those earlier threats but was based on fresh information.
Last month, the State Department issued a travel warning urging Americans to defer all non-essential travel to Kenya. Non-essential U.S. personnel in the country were also urged to leave.