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Terrorists more likely to strike Europe than America this year

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  • Terrorists more likely to strike Europe than America this year

    Insurance Day
    January 24, 2005

    Terrorists more likely to strike Europe than America this year


    A SIGNIFICANT terrorist attack is more likely to take place in the UK
    than in the US during 2005 but the commercial impact and loss of life
    from any incident is likely to be far less than the World Trade
    Center attack in 2001.

    Strategic intelligence company Exclusive Analysis said it expects to
    see Sunni extremist attacks in both the UK and the US this year. It
    added that the governments of both countries would respond to a major
    terrorist attack by imposing "ever-wider, and in our view less and
    less relevant", security measures.

    "We feel content that our forecast is that small things are likely to
    happen in the UK rather than big events," said Exclusive Analysis
    managing director Simon Sole at an International Underwriting
    Association briefing in London. "The basic threat is not from
    al-Qaeda we have new Sunni extremist movements to deal with."

    Mr Sole said the company anticipates some deaths in the UK as a
    result of such an attack this year possibly at a similar level to the
    Madrid train bombing in 2004. "We do not foresee thousands of deaths,
    and we don't see billions of pounds of damage," Mr Sole said.

    Mr Sole also warned of continuing concerns over the "chaotic"
    situation in Iraq. "I know some underwriting is taking place to a
    limited extent in Iraq. We tend to have a negative view about that,"
    he said. "The key point is that the US's so-called 'nation-building
    effort' is very flawed, as the US military does not have the skill
    set within it to do that sort of work. We are also quite sure the
    elections which are coming up very soon would make matters
    significantly worse rather than better." Mr Sole said US president
    George Bush's policies in the Middle East have shown few signs of
    creating any long-term progress, although 2005 is unlikely to see
    more overt confrontation. The US is unlikely to bring things to a
    head in countries such as Iran, North Korea and Syria until at least
    2006, he said.

    "Invading Iran is an outrageous proposition," Mr Sole said,
    explaining that the Iranian nuclear programme is dispersed over
    around 70 sites, with the important ones very much protected and
    often under ground.

    He added that more economic and political activity is expected
    against Syria than elsewhere, and if sanctions were extended against
    Syria this would be a "significant matter" for underwriters.

    Risks remain present in the Americas, Mr Sole said. "Political risks
    in Brazil have probably receded, while civil unrest risks in Brazil
    have probably increased." Colombia faces risks as fiscal deficit is
    expected to widen against an uncertain political backdrop. "It is
    somewhere you need a lot of information to underwrite safely," he
    said.

    "Political risks in Venezuela have gone up and underwriting is
    primarily affected by shifts in the legal environment," Mr Sole
    explained, with a land distribution programme that shows "echoes of
    Zimbabwe" likely to prove a significant problem.

    Elsewhere, Azerbaijan and Russia are areas facing notable political
    risk. Relationships between Azerbaijan and Armenia are "potentially
    explosive" and Mr Sole said political risks in Azerbaijan are likely
    to be higher this year than last. Russia is expected to engage in
    intensive counterterrorism efforts, which will involve incursions
    into the Caucasus to eliminate renegade Chechens, antagonising
    neighbouring states, particularly Georgia. Exclusive Analysis expects
    Chechens to manage at least one significant attack in 2005, although
    not on the scale of Beslan.
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