The Prepper Journal

Why Terrorists will Strike US Hospitals

Why Terrorists will Strike US Hospitals - The Prepper Journal

Hospitals in the U.S. are under direct threat from Islamist extremist attacks for a myriad of reasons. An examination of terrorist attacks on hospitals internationally – and the reasons why terrorists have targeted them – would shock most administrators, doctors, nurses and patients.

Suicide Bombers and Armed Assault

The most common attack against hospitals has been by suicide bomber, with the second most common being armed assault.

Hospitals are most often very open to the public and have multiple entrance doors, meaning that the identification and even the baggage of visitors is almost never checked or screened. This leaves hospitals very vulnerable to suicide bombers.

Most medical facilities typically have little or no reasonable means of protecting employees, visitors or patients from armed attack, and long hallways and passageways can mean that escape from armed assault is almost impossible.

In addition, the well-documented prevalence of female suicide bombers has greatly increased the threat of terrorism in industries with high numbers of female employees. As the number of female employees in hospitals is significant, this makes hospitals an inviting avenue for terrorist recruiters seeking to exploit the radicalization of females in the workplace who are sympathetic to Islamist extremist causes.

Not only are hospitals “soft targets,” they are part of the nation’s critical infrastructure. The combination of these two variables – along with the fact that they often contain hundreds or even thousands of employees, patients and visitors at any given time – makes an attack on a hospital an easy means to produce mass casualties.

Physician Terrorists

While it may be uncomfortable, we should acknowledge that about one-fourth of all American physicians are IMGs (International Medical Graduates) – many of whom received special visas to practice medicine in the U.S. – and we have seen a prevalence of both foreign and domestic physicians who have become “radicalized” by Islamist extremist ideologies.

Of course, this should not be viewed solely as a negative “profiling,” but rather a recognition that terrorists can – and have – taken advantage of the opportunity to recruit physicians and other health care professionals who are sympathetic to their cause (a tactic that terrorist have become very good at).

The prominence of supposed ‘do-no-harm’ physicians and healthcare workers in terrorist activities proves that Islamist extremists have no boundaries when it comes to planning attacks against innocent civilians. A brief list of some of the physicians who have engaged in terrorist attacks is shocking:

 

  • Dr. Ayman al-Zawahiri – Osama bin Laden’s second in command – who took over leadership of Al Qaeda upon bin Laden’s death – was an Egyptian pediatrician.
  • Dr. Mohammad Rabi Al-Zawahiri – Father of Ayman Al-Zawahiri (above) – and supporter of the Muslim Brotherhood – was a pharmacologist and professor at Air Shams Medical School.
  • Dr. Nidal Hasan – The U.S. Army Major who killed 13 and wounded 32 at the Ft. Hood military installation, was a psychiatrist.
  • Dr. Abu Hafiza – Physician, psychiatrist and commander of a terrorist cell in Morocco who helped provide logistics for the Twin Tower attacks.
  • Dr. Rafiq Sabir – A Boca Raton emergency room physician convicted in an Al Qaeda terror plot.
  • July 2007 – Forty five physicians issued statement threatening to use car bombs and rocket grenades to attack the U.S., including a navy base.
  • July 2007 – Seven male physicians and one female medical technician working within Britain’s National Health Service involved in terrorist attack on Britain’s Glasgow Airport, vehicle packed with explosives rammed airport entrance.

 

Radioactive Materials

According to the United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission (USNRC), about one-third of all patients admitted to a hospital in the U.S. are diagnosed or treated with radiation or radioactive materials. Still, many would be surprised to know the extent of the medical use of radioactive materials in hospitals for both diagnostic and therapeutic procedures, with what the industry calls “radiopharmaceuticals.”

While the use of pharmaceutical materials is complex, most procedures simply call for a small amount of radioactive material to be administered by mouth, injected or inhaled. These materials gather in an organ or area of the body and emit “photons” that are picked up by a gamma camera. The camera then provides an image of the organ and can help physicians identify tumors or other problems.

Some therapeutic (therapy) examples include materials used to “kill” cancerous tissue. These can include Cobalt-60, radioactive iodine, and others.

A concern for many in the intelligence community is that these materials can easily be used to make a “dirty bomb.”

Surprisingly, in Sept. 2012 the Government Accountability Office found that nearly 4 out of 5 hospitals across the country have failed to put in place safeguards to secure radiological material that could be used in a dirty bomb.

 

Liability

The courts have well established that patients have the “right” to receive health care in a safe environment and that hospitals are responsible for the physical and personal security of patients, staff and visitors.

The question is: Are terrorist attacks a foreseeable risk?

According to lawsuits in the wake of the Twin Towers attacks, the courts found that the Ports Authority and Twin Tower management and officials “knew or should have known” that the buildings were likely to be terrorist targets.

 

Actual terrorist attacks on hospitals

A list of some of the most recent and prominent attacks against hospitals should do well to prove the seriousness of this issue to administrators, doctors, nurses and patients.

  •  Apr. 24, 2014 (Afghanistan): Three American doctors killed. Afghan police officer opened fire at a Christian hospital.
  •  Apr. 15, 2014 (Nigeria): Nine killed. Terrorist group burns Christian worship center and hospital.
  • Feb. 20, 2014 (Afghanistan): Security guard killed. Suicide bomber attacked hospital in Kabul.
  • Dec. 12, 2013 (Yemen): Fifty six killed. Group of attackers rammed military complex with vehicle, then stormed hospital using guns and grenades targeting doctors, nurses and patients, taking security forces several hours to regain control of the hospital.
  • Oct. 18, 2013 (Syria): Fifth floor of Jaramana hospital bombed.
  • June 15, 2013 (Pakistan): Twenty five killed, 19 injured. In a complex, well-coordinated attack by Lashkar-al-Nusra, a Female suicide bomber detonated her explosives on a bus. When the injured began arriving at nearby hospital, a second suicide bomber detonated explosives at the emergency room entrance, then gunmen entered the hospital.
  • June 03, 2013 (Tikrit, Iraq): Eleven killed, more than 30 injured. In a sophisticated attack, one suicide bomber detonated his explosives at a mosque during prayers. When family and dignitaries began arriving at a nearby hospital a second suicide bomber blew himself up near the emergency room.
  • Dec. 2003 (Chicago): Joe Applebaum died after waiting 12 hours in the Rush North Shore Medical Center emergency room because chief resident Muslim Dr. Osama Ahmed Ibrahim refused to treat him because he was Jewish.
  • Aug. 01, 2003 (Russia): Fifty six killed, over 80 injured. Suicide bomber in explosives-laden truck drove past security, detonating explosives near reception office. Parts of the hospital collapsed.
  • June 14-19, 1995 (Russia): One hundred forty killed, 415 injured. Some 50 Chechen rebels in a column of trucks stormed police station, then retreated to nearby hospital taking about 2,000 hostages.

 

 

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