Cyberstrike James Barrington (book recommendations for teens TXT) š
- Author: James Barrington
Book online Ā«Cyberstrike James Barrington (book recommendations for teens TXT) šĀ». Author James Barrington
āThat Arabic word is both specific and broad ranging,ā Morgan clarified. āAs you said, it translates as ādestructionā, but it can also mean ādemolitionā, ādevastationā, āruinā, āwreckā and, potentially the nastiest of all, āannihilationā. You really donāt want him loose on your streets.ā
āThe trouble is,ā Rogers said, āI have a feeling heās already here. Okay, the circumstances of the meeting at Tysons werenāt ideal from a surveillance point of view. The targets were sitting at a table outside a busy coffee shop in an area with heavy pedestrian traffic. We got some people on the roof of the building with a shotgun mic and another team in a car with a camera and a microphone, but the recordings weāve gotāā he tapped the pages in front of him āāand that weāve now had transcribed are full of gaps and broken sentences caused by people walking past or standing in front of the mics.
āIāve listened to the tapes as well as read the transcription and when you said the name AbÅ« Tadmir it rang a kind of distant bell with me. Quite early in the meeting Ganem responds to something that Sadir asked him, something that neither of our mics picked up, but we have got part of what Ganem replied. He said āthree of the locationsā ā which could mean anything but might be a reference to three separate targets if these people are planning some kind of a terror campaign ā and then we got a partial name before the mic was blocked again. The transcribers thought that might be Abd or Abdul but itās underlined in the transcript because they werenāt sure. When I heard it, it sounded to me like āAbootā, which obviously isnāt an Arab name, but if he was actually saying āAbÅ« Tadmirā and we just heard the āAbÅ« Tā that would seem to fit.ā
āCan I take a look at that transcript?ā Morgan asked.
Rogers slid the stapled sheets of paper across the table. āThatās a combination of the feeds from the shotgun mic on the roof of the shopping centre near the cafe and the device used in the car. As you can see, the feeds were blocked a lot more often than weād hoped.ā
In Morganās opinion, that was something of an understatement. Underneath the FBI logo and other stuff at the top of the first page was a rough diagram comprising a square to represent the cafe table and then the letters G, H, S and W positioned around it. The locations of the two shotgun mics were indicated simply as MIC 1 and MIC 2 together with their approximate distances from the targets. And below that was a decode of the lettering system, obviously based on the later identification of the three new suspects: G was Karim Ganem, H was Jamal Halabi, S was Mahdi Sadir and W was Talat Wasem.
āAs you can see from the diagram,ā William Clark said, leaning forward over the table and pointing, āGanem is facing the shotgun mic on the building roof, Halabi and Wasem are side-on to the mic and Sadir has his back to it. And thatās unfortunate, because I think heās the most important of the four men.ā
āWhy?ā Morgan asked.
āItās just my opinion, but I watched almost the entire meeting apart from the first five minutes or so when we were getting into position. I couldnāt hear what was being said because we couldnāt get a live feed from the shotgun mic on the roof without it being fairly obvious, but I did watch the four men and to me their body language was interesting. When they were in normal conversation they would interrupt each other or make comments and remarks of their own, just like any small group of people talking together. But whenever Sadir spoke, as far as I could tell the other three men stayed silent until heād finished speaking. To me that suggests that heās the leader of that particular group, and if Grant is right about the AbÅ« Tadmir link Sadir could be the mastermind behind the London attack and the puppet-master for whatever is being planned over here in the States.ā
Morgan nodded and looked back at the transcript. It was laid out in three columns, the left-hand one being the time any piece of speech began, the second the identity of the person talking and the third, and by far the biggest column, the transcribed text. The page in front of him was the one Rogers had picked out, and Morgan saw the four words uttered by Ganem about halfway down the sheet.
āThereās no point in me listening to the audio,ā Morgan said. āIf your techie experts canāt identify it for certain, thereās no way that Iād be able to be definitive. I think youāre making a bit of a jump, and assumptions are always dangerous, but you could well be right. If Sadir is this āfather of destructionā that does at least tie in with him flying out of Heathrow after the Thames attack. And if you are going to make an assumption, it always makes sense to assume the worst, and having AbÅ« Tadmir loose on the streets of Washington is definitely a worst-case scenario. So whatās your plan? And how do I fit in?ā
Rogers glanced at Clark before he replied. āThatās two separate questions and right now Iām not sure theyāre related. Our planāā and Rogers unmistakably emphasised the word āourā āāis to increase surveillance of Sadir and the other three men. Up to now weāve been
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