TerrorismPreparing for Olympic terrorism

Published 20 June 2012

Three previous Olympiads — Munich 1972, Atlanta 1996, Athens 2004 — were targets of terrorists or extremists; there is no specific information to indicate that terrorists have targeted the forthcoming London games, but a terrorism experts says the 2012 Summer Games offer terrorists an attractive target

Ioannis Galatas, MD, the former head of Department of Asymmetric Threats at the Joint Military Intelligence Division of Hellenic National Defense General Staff, in Athens, Greece – he is now the editor-in-chief of the CBRNE-Terrorism Newsletter — suggests that the 2012 Olympic Games, which will open in London in late July, represent a potential terrorist threat as the successor to Osama bin Laden and a medical doctor himself, struggles to regain “face” amongst extremists opposing the West.

There have been numerous terrorist attacks since 9/11, but none quite matching its scale and impact. One might imagine that terrorist networks have not launched a subsequent attack with equally devastating effects and perhaps this has been a matter of disruption, deterrence, and, most disturbingly, patience.

An Inderscience Publishers release reports that Galatas suggests, however, that such attacks have been thwarted by national security measures and intelligence. The threat of a CBRN (chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear) attack, however, is ever present and it might also be the wild card that the terrorist networks, and al Qaeda in particular, are holding back.

“It is possible that al Qaeda’s success with the September 11 attacks has set the bar too high for its current CBRN capabilities. Al Qaeda may be concerned that a CBRN attack that ‘only’ kills dozens of people would be perceived as a relative failure and demonstrate its weakened position relative to its pre-9/11 stature,” he explains. Galatas adds that there is no indication that al Qaeda has abandoned its pursuit of CBRN weapons, including dirty bombs. “The possibility of a patient al Qaeda is a disturbing possibility worth remembering,” he adds.

Galatas’ assessment of the terrorist threat during the forthcoming Olympic Games will be published in a forthcoming issue of the International Journal of Emergency Management. He suggests that such an attack might potentially be directed against London, other Olympic cities, or unconnected locations.

The latter possibility would come with the inherently loud message “we do not care about your people at all.” An attack might also be covert or overt, be timed to occur before, during, or after the Games for maximum terrorist propaganda effect.

Three previous Olympiads — Munich 1972, Atlanta 1996, Athens 2004 — have been the target of terrorists or extremists. There is no reason to assume that London is a planned target based on current intelligence and activities. Galatas suggests, however, that preparedness is vital before and after the Games. There are perhaps lessons to be learned about preparedness from the recent 3-pronged 2011 natural disaster in Japan. “Who could imagine a mega earthquake, a nuclear reactor meltdown and a tsunami in the same package? In that respect why should we consider a CBRN attack as science fiction?” Galatas points out.

— Read more in “2012 Olympic Games — terrorist CBRE threat estimate and medical response,” International Journal of Emergency Management 8 (2012): 228-44 (forthcoming)