Juval Aviv was the Israeli Agent upon whom the movie 'Munich' was
>based. He was Golda Meir's bodyguard, and she appointed him to track
>down and bring to justice the Palestinian terrorists who took the
>Israeli athletes hostage and killed them during the Munich Olympic
>Games.
>
>In a lecture in New York City he shared information that EVERY North
>American needs to know -- but that our government has not yet shared
>with us.
>
>He predicted the London subway bombing on the Bill O'Reilly show on
>Fox News stating publicly that it would happen within a week. At the
>time, O'Reilly laughed, and mocked him saying that in a week he wanted
>him back on the show. Unfortunately, within a week the terrorist
>attack had occurred.
>
>Juval Aviv gave intelligence (via what he had gathered in Israel and
>the Middle East) to the Bush Administration about 9/11, a month before
>it occurred. His report specifically said they would use planes as
>bombs and target high profile buildings and monuments. Congress has
>since hired him as a security consultant.
>
>Now for his future predictions. He predicts the next terrorist attack
>on the U.S. will occur within the next few months.
>
>Forget hijacking airplanes, because he says terrorists will NEVER try
>and hijack a plane again as they know the people onboard will never go
>down quietly again. Aviv believes our airport security is a joke --
>that we have been reactionary rather than proactive in developing
>strategies that are truly effective.
>
>For example:
>
>1) Our airport technology is outdated. We look for metal, and the new
>explosives are made of plastic.
>
>2) He talked about how some idiot tried to light his shoe on fire.
>Because of that, now everyone has to take off their shoes. A group of
>idiots tried to bring aboard liquid explosives. Now we can't bring
>liquids on board. He says he's waiting for some suicidal maniac to
>pour liquid explosive on his underwear; at which point, security will
>have us all traveling naked!
>Every strategy we have is reactionary.
>
>3) We only focus on security when people are heading to the gates.
>
>Aviv says that if a terrorist attack targets airports in the future,
>they will target busy times on the front end of the airport when/where
>people are checking in. It would be easy for someone to take two
>suitcases of explosives, walk up to a busy check-in line, ask a person
>next to them to watch their bags for a minute while they run to the
>restroom or get a drink, and then detonate the bags BEFORE security
>even gets involved. In Israel, security checks bags BEFORE people can
>even ENTER the airport.
>
>Aviv says the next terrorist attack here in America is imminent and
>will involve suicide bombers and non-suicide bombers in places where
>large groups of people congregate. (i.e., Disneyland, Las Vegas
>casinos, big cities (New York, San Francisco, Chicago, etc.) and that
>it will also include shopping malls, subways in rush hour, train
>stations, etc., as well as, rural America this time. The interlands
>(Wyoming, Montana, etc.).
>
>The attack will be characterized by simultaneous detonations around
>the country (terrorists like big impact), involving at least 5-8
>cities, including rural areas.
>
>Aviv says terrorists won't need to use suicide bombers in many of the
>larger cities, because at places like the MGM Grand in Las Vegas, they
>can simply valet park a car loaded with explosives and walk away.
>
>Aviv says all of the above is well known in intelligence circles, but
>that our U. S. Government does not want to 'alarm American citizens'
>with the facts. The world is quickly going to become 'a different
>place', and issues like 'global warming' and political correctness
>will become totally irrelevant.
>
>On an encouraging note, he says that Americans don't have to be
>concerned about being nuked. Aviv says the terrorists who want to
>destroy America will not use sophisticated weapons. They like to use
>suicide as a front-line approach. It's cheap, it's easy, it's
>effective; and they have an infinite abundance of young militants more
>than willing to 'meet their destiny'.
>
>He also says the next level of terrorists, over which America should
>be most concerned, will not be coming from abroad. But will be,
>instead, 'homegrown', having attended and been educated in our own
>schools and universities right here in the U.S. He says to look for
>'students' who frequently travel back and forth to the Middle East.
>These young terrorists will be most dangerous because they will know
>our language and will fully understand the habits of Americans; but
>that we Americans won't know/understand a thing about them.
>
>Aviv says that, as a people, Americans are unaware and uneducated
>about the terrorist threats we will inevitably face. America still has
>only a handful of Arabic and Farsi speaking people in our intelligence
>networks, and Aviv says it is critical that we change that fact SOON.
>
>So, what can America do to protect itself? From an intelligence
>perspective, Aviv says the U.S. needs to stop relying on satellites
>and technology for intelligence. We need to, instead, follow Israel's,
>Ireland's and England's hands-on examples of human intelligence, both
>from an infiltration perspective as well as to pay attention to, and
>trust 'aware' citizens to help. We need to engage and educate
>ourselves as citizens; however, our U. S. government continues to
>treat us, its citizens, 'like babies'. Our government thinks we 'can't
>handle the truth' and are concerned that we'll panic if we understand
>the realities of terrorism. Aviv says this is a deadly mistake.
>
>Aviv recently created/executed a security test for our Congress, by
>placing an empty briefcase in five well-traveled spots in five major
>cities. The results? Not one person called 911 or sought a policeman
>to check it out. In fact, in Chicago, someone tried to steal the
>briefcase!
>
>In comparison, Aviv says that citizens of Israel are so well 'trained'
>that an unattended bag or package would be reported in seconds by
>citizen(s) who know to publicly shout, 'Unattended Bag!' The area
>would be quickly &calmly cleared by the citizens themselves.
>
>Unfortunately, America hasn't been yet 'hurt enough' by terrorism for
>their government to fully understand the need to educate its citizens
>or for the government to understand that it's their citizens who are,
>inevitably, the best first-line of defense against terrorism.
>
>Aviv also was concerned about the high number of children here in
>America who were in preschool and kindergarten after 9/11, who were
>'lost' without parents being able to pick them up, and about our
>schools that had no plan in place to best care for the students until
>parents could get there. (In New York City, this was days, in some
>cases!)
>
>He stresses the importance of having a plan, that's agreed upon within
>your family, of how to respond in the event of a terrorist emergency.
>He urges parents to contact their children's schools and demand that
>the schools too, develop plans of actions, just as they do in Israel.
>
>Does your family know what to do if you can't contact one another by
>phone? Where would you gather in an emergency? He says we should all
>have a plan that is easy enough for even our youngest children to
>remember and follow.
>
>Aviv says that the U. S. government has in force a plan, that in the
>event of another terrorist attack, EVERY ONE's ability to use cell
>phones, blackberries, etc., will immediately be cut-off, as this is
>the preferred communication source used by terrorists and is often the
>way that their bombs are detonated.
>
>How will you communicate with your loved ones in the event you cannot
>speak to each other? You need to have a plan.
>
>If you understand, and believe what you have just read, then you must
>feel compelled to send this to every concerned parent, guardian,
>grandparents, uncles, aunts, whomever. Don't stop there. In addition
>to sharing this via e-mail, contact and discuss this information with
>whomever it makes sense to. Make contingency plans with those you care
>about. Better that you have plans in place, and never have to use
>them, then to have no plans in place, and find you needed them.
>