Secret Service Plans Convention Security
Both Political Conventions Present Challenges For Agency
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Denver Mounted Police officers talks with a man on Thursday, Aug. 14, 2008, as they patrol Civic Center Park in Denver. As many as 200 mounted police officers will be used for crowd control during the Democratic National Convention in Denver August 25-28. (AP Photo/Ed Andrieski)
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That's the sober mind-set going into the presidential conventions - both of which present special security challenges for this legendary agency in the throes of the longest political campaign in history.
This will be the second set of conventions since the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. But, perhaps surprisingly to outsiders, al Qaeda is not the leading concern.
Not that the terrorism potential is being overlooked. But the Secret Service and FBI are giving special attention to the possibility of action by other extremists - radicals from the left or right, anarchists, lone wolf crazies - who might be attracted to the conventions because of the significance and high visibility.
This year, the significance of Obama's race is not lost on anyone either.
There has been only low-level chatter on white supremacist blogs and nothing aimed at the convention, according to Mark Potok, who regularly monitors these blogs for the Southern Poverty Law Center in Montgomery, Ala. And the Secret Service and FBI say they do not have any specific threats with racist overtones.
Still, says Potok, "I think that officials have every right to be worried."
In advance of the conventions, November's election and the new president's inauguration, the FBI set up a special cell that brings together officials from other federal agencies to look at all potential threats, said Ed Dickson, FBI's acting deputy assistant director for counterterrorism.
Going into the conventions, Dickson said the bureau is looking at intelligence about anarchist groups to prevent violent disruptions and attacks. He would not name the groups.
Dickson would not comment on potential disruptions from radical Islamic groups, but said, "We're always concerned about al Qaeda and like-minded groups."
According to an April federal intelligence assessment, hardened structures, like the convention stadiums, are unlikely targets for al Qaeda. The assessment said security officers and barriers are a deterrent as far as al Qaeda is concerned.
The Secret Service budgeted more than $15 million for both conventions, but it will cost a couple of million more because of Democratic candidate Barack Obama's decision to accept his party's nomination at an open-air stadium in Denver. Each convention city was also given $50 million from the federal government for security efforts.
Security at the Denver and St. Paul, Minn., sites ranges from routine magnetometers - the kind you would find at airports - to countersnipers, undercover officers and air patrols. The Secret Service also has assigned trained officials to identify and prevent cyber security risks. And the service, as it does at every convention, has mapped out escape routes for the candidates and president.
"As you look at these type of events, they are a very attractive target," Secret Service Director Mark Sullivan said.
Many of the agency's roughly 4,400 agents and officers will be working the conventions. There will be help, too, from thousands of other federal, state and local officials - including police, airport screeners, nuclear weapons experts and intelligence analysts.
Tens of thousands of delegates, reporters, protesters and other interested folks will flock to Denver Aug. 25-28 and St. Paul Sept. 1-4. These conventions are attractive platforms for terrorists and other groups that want to cause disruptions.
The timing poses a unique challenge for the Secret Service as well. Coming off protection details in China where U.S. dignitaries traveled for the Olympics, the agents and officers go straight to Denver.
"It's a tremendous pull of resources," said Nick Trotta, assistant director of the Secret Service's Protective Division.
It costs the Secret Service about $45,000 a day to protect each candidate. The agency has already asked for more money to cover unexpected costs - an extra $9.5 million on top of the $85.25 million that was budgeted for the 2008 campaign. Obama received Secret Service protection almost a year earlier than officials expected and has had a detail since May 2007. And as soon as each candidate announces his vice presidential pick, new protective details are deployed for the second-in-command hopefuls.
"We just always have to assume that there's someone out there, you know, looking to come after us, looking to come after the people we protect," Sullivan said. "Today could be the day, and you need to be ready."
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- Don''''t support Barrack Hussein Obama, support his brother George Hussein Onyango Obama - True Story!
The youngest of Barack Obama%u2019s half siblings has told of his shame about living in a shack and existing on a dollar a month whilst his brother plans to become the most powerful man in the world.
With the Democratic Convention in Denver just days away, Italian Vanity Fair magazine tracked George Hussein Onyango Obama to a 6ft by 9ft wooden shed in Kenya.
The difference in the men''''s lifestyles could not be more dramatic. Mr Obama, 47, travels the world with an army of bodyguards, whilst his brother defends himself with his own bare hands on the rough streets of Haruma, a Nairobi shanty town.
%u201CIf anyone says something about my surname, I say we are not related. I am ashamed,%u201D George told the magazine.
"No-one knows who I am. I live here on less than a dollar a month.
"I live like a recluse, no-one knows I exist."
George, at 25 the youngest of Obama%u2019s father%u2019s seven children, has met his famous big brother just twice.
He was just five when Mr Obama visited Kenya for the first time in 1988 and made a special trip out to his mother Jael%u2019s shanty home.
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iscovered-Kenya-living-dollar-month.html - Reply to this comment
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