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Planned Parenthood Clinic Attacked With Molotov Cocktail | A spokesperson for Planned Parenthood confirmed today that one of their Dallas-area clinics was the target of a violent attack last night. Holly Morgan, director of media relations and communications for Planned Parenthood in Dallas said that at around 11 pm last night, the attacker(s) threw a Molotov cocktail, consisting of diesel fuel in a glass bottle with a lit rag, at the building. “It didn’t penetrate the health center office and none of the staff or patients were there, which is great,” Morgan said. “It scorched the outside of the door and I believe there was a little scorching to the retail locations on either side of it.” Fire crews “confirmed that an incendiary device was used in the attack.” (HT: @EricMartin24)

Update

Dallas-Ft. Worth’s WFAA news has a report:

NEWS FLASH

World Jewish Congress: Bar Iranians From The Olympics | The World Jewish Congress (WJC) asked the International Olympic Committee to bar Iranian athletes from participating in the 2012 Olympic games in London. The WJC, an international federation of Jewish communities, cited Iran’s record of not participating in events that also featured Israeli athletes. “Iran’s behavior is unsportmanlike and smacks of anti-Semitism,” said WJC president Ronald Lauder. Last week, an Iranian swimmer backed out of a race against an Israeli saying he was “tired and drowsy.” Iranian sports officials have said athletes should not compete in events alongside Israelis.

NEWS FLASH

Iraq And Afghanistan Veterans Health Care Could Cost Up to $55 Billion | Health care for returning veterans from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan could cost anywhere from $40 to $55 billion dollars over the next 10 years, according to testimony submitted to the Senate Committee on Veteran’s Affairs by the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) today. The CBO noted that health care costs for other veterans tend to be higher because those returning from ongoing conflicts are generally younger and in better health, but that could change as today’s veterans age.
Sean Savett

After Right-Wing Pressure, DHS Now Has ‘Just One Person’ Dealing With Domestic Terrorism

Former DHS Domestic Terrorism Analyst Daryl Johnson

CNN reports this week that terrorism experts are warning that the “threat of domestic terrorist attacks in the United States similar to last week’s fatal bombing and assault in Norway is significant and growing”:

The greatest threat of large-scale attacks come from individuals and small groups of extremists who subscribe to radical Islamic or far right-wing ideologies, said Gary LaFree, director of the National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism, or START. [...]

Ackerman said nationally, law enforcement has been focused since the attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon in 2001 on the threat of Islamic terrorism, even as the threat from domestic anti-government groups has been growing.

Some people believe we have taken our eye off the ball when it comes to domestic right-wing extremists,” he said.

Sadly, the Department of Homeland Security reportedly isn’t taking these threats too seriously. Daryl Johnson, a former senior Department of Homeland Security domestic terror analyst, told the Southern Poverty Law Center last month that “there is just one person” at DHS who is focused on these issues. Why? Shortly after President Obama took office, DHS produced a report warning of the rise of right-wing extremism in the United States and that domestic extremists were looking to recruit Iraq and Afghanistan veterans.

However, the report was leaked and right-wing media figures and Republicans in Congress were outraged. “The person who drafted the outrageous homeland security memo smearing veterans and conservatives should be fired,” Newt Gingrich said at the time. Michelle Malkin called it a “DHS hit job on conservatives.” Bowing to the right-wing hysteria, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano eventually ordered the report withdrawn.

Johnson, who describes himself a Republican, said that after the controversy, DHS gutted his unit:

When the right-wing report was leaked and people politicized it, my management got scared and thought DHS would be scaled back. It created an environment where my analysts and I couldn’t get our work done. DHS stopped all of our work and instituted restrictive policies. Eventually, they ended up gutting my unit. [...] Since our report was leaked, DHS has not released a single report of its own on this topic. Not anything dealing with non-Islamic domestic extremism—whether it’s anti-abortion extremists, white supremacists, “sovereign citizens,” eco-terrorists, the whole gamut.

“Sad to say, we were right on this one. History has shown that,” Johnson said, referring to the murder of abortion provider George Tiller and neo-Nazi James von Brunn who killed a security guard at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum.

Update

Johnson said the militia movement has “exploded” over the last two years. “A Norway incident could definitely happen here; the same things that played into the Norway suspect’s mindset are here in this country,” he said.

NEWS FLASH

U.N.: Claim That Muslims Attacked Norway Provide ‘An Embarrassing Example Of The Powerful Impact Of Prejudices’ | The horrendous Norway terror attacks spurred many in the right-wing (and mainstream) media to immediately claim that it was obviously the work of Muslim terrorists. Now that anti-Muslim, Christian extremist Anders Breivik has been charged and admitted to the attacks, those same figures are either arguing that Breivik had a point about Muslims or trying to brush their prejudicial error under the rug. However, Heiner Beilfeldt, a United Nations special rapporteur on freedom of religion, released a statement condemning the media for gleefully jumping to the wrong conclusion. “The way in which some public commentators immediately associated the horrifying mass murder in Norway last Friday with Islamist terrorism is revealing and indeed an embarrassing example of the powerful impact of prejudices and their capacity to enshrine stereotypes,” said Bielefeldt in a statement. “Proper respect for the victims and their families should have precluded the drawing of conclusions based on pure conjecture.”

NEWS FLASH

Iraq’s Foreign Minister Says Iraq Needs U.S. Help To Train Military | The AP reports that Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari said today that Iraq needs U.S. help to train its military past 2011. Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki said last week that he’s considering bypassing parliamentary approval for a continued U.S. military presence by asking for non-military “trainers.” The AP adds that Zebari and Maliki “seem to be preparing the public for some type of American military presence in Iraq past 2011.”

Update

“I believe that things are heading to an agreement on having trainers and experts not military forces with combat troops,” Zebari said. And in an interview with the AP, he said the trainers would be active-duty military personnel, as opposed to private contractors, but would not specify how many.

NEWS FLASH

Rep. Peter King Denies Rep. Keith Ellison’s Request To Testify At Radicalization Hearing | Today, Rep. Peter King (R-NY) will hold another in a series of hearings looking at Muslim radicalization. Despite the fact that today’s hearing focuses on Somali-Americans joining Al Shabab, a Somalia-based militant group, King denied Rep. Keith Ellison’s (D-MN) request to testify before the committee. Ellison represents Minneapolis, Minnesota, which has a major Somali-American population. Ellison’s powerful and effective testimony before King’s first hearing about Muslim radicalization may be part of the reason he was turned down to testify before this one.

National Security Brief: July 27, 2011

– U.S. counterterrorism officials “are increasingly convinced that the killing of Osama bin Laden and the toll of seven years of CIA drone strikes have pushed al Qaeda to the brink of collapse.” Meanwhile, al-Qaeda in Iraq yesterday made an online appeal for new fundraising ideas, “saying they are in dire need of money to help thousands of widows and children of slain fighters.”

– Secretary of State Hillary Clinton urged a veto if a House bill imposing strict new requirements on U.S. aid to countries including Egypt, Lebanon, Pakistan and Yemen, reaches the President’s desk. Clinton also criticized the “severe curtailing” of dues owed to international organizations, including a cutoff of U.S. dues for the Organization of American States

– The UK will recognize the Libyan rebel council as the country’s “sole governmental authority” and expel Qaddafi-era diplomats, said U.K. Foreign Secretary William Hague.

– The New York Times reports that “one unwelcome consequence of the war in Libya has been the escape from Libyan state custody of untold numbers of portable antiaircraft missiles.”

– The Iraqi navy took over security from U.S. forces at a southern oil export port in Basra, though some U.S. troops will stay at the port for training purposes.

– The U.S.-Russian “reset” may be in jeopardy after Russia threatened to end cooperation on Iran and prevent the transfer to U.S. military supplies to Afghanistan if Congress passes a law criticizing Russian human rights practices.

– The International Monetary Fund praised Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s months-old economic reforms where cutting government subsidies could shave some $60 billion from the budget.

– The U.S. Millennium Challenge Corporation, a government aid agency, said it will halt a $350 million energy-related project in Malawi after the government killed 19 people in a violent crackdown against protesters.

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