Whoa. Now, I don't care where you are, but when you arrest 113 would-be terrorists over a few months, that's a haul!
From the article at The Jerusalem Post:
It is actually pretty amazing, with this number of terrorists entering Saudi Arabia, that the Saudis have dodged the bullet so far.
From the article at The Jerusalem Post:
Saudi Arabia has arrested 113 suspected al-Qaida members accused of planning attacks on oil facilities inside the kingdom, the Interior Ministry said Wednesday.Many of those arrested had come to Saudi Arabia on visas to visit holy sites or by sneaking across its borders, but wanted to join and organize attacks with al-Qaida.Saudi Arabia has aggressively pursued militants since a series of attacks inside the country that began in May 2003. The country is the birthplace of al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden and home to 15 of the 19 Sept. 11 hijackers.The arrests were the first to be announced since August, when Saudi authorities said they had rounded up 44 al-Qaida-linked militants in a yearlong sweep.The ministry statement said the arrests were carried out over a period of five months. Those detained included 47 Saudis, 51 Yemenis, a Somali, an Eritrean and a Bangladeshi, the announcement said.I'd like to point out the number of Yemenis arrested - the most of the entire group and point out that Yemen has been a magnet now for al Qaeda for more than 2 years when things started going bad in Iraq for the terror group. Obviously, the terror plotting going on in Yemen is probably about 10 times worse than we had suspected.
It is actually pretty amazing, with this number of terrorists entering Saudi Arabia, that the Saudis have dodged the bullet so far.
Saudis arrest 113 al-Qaida suspects
RIYADH, Saudi Arabia — Saudi Arabia has arrested 113 suspected al-Qaida members accused of planning attacks on oil facilities inside the kingdom, the Interior Ministry said Wednesday.
Many of those arrested had come to Saudi Arabia on visas to visit holy sites or by sneaking across its borders, but wanted to join and organize attacks with al-Qaida.
Saudi Arabia has aggressively pursued militants since a series of attacks inside the country that began in May 2003. The country is the birthplace of al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden and home to 15 of the 19 Sept. 11 hijackers.
The arrests were the first to be announced since August, when Saudi authorities said they had rounded up 44 al-Qaida-linked militants in a yearlong sweep.
The ministry statement said the arrests were carried out over a period of five months. Those detained included 47 Saudis, 51 Yemenis, a Somali, an Eritrean and a Bangladeshi, the announcement said.
Separately, authorities arrested 12 people from two al-Qaida cells originating across the border in Yemen, where a local branch of the terrorist network has established a significant base of operations over the past year. Those two cells were also in the preliminary stages of planning attacks on oil facilities, the statement said.
In the last major attempt on such a facility, suicide bombers tried but failed to attack the Abqaiq oil complex in eastern Saudi Arabia in February 2006. The complex is the world's largest oil processing facility.
In a more recent setback, a suicide bomber lightly wounded the Saudi prince in charge of the country's anti-terrorism program in an August assassination attempt.
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