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Azerbaijan Foils U.S. Embassy Attack By Islamic Group

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  • Azerbaijan Foils U.S. Embassy Attack By Islamic Group

    AZERBAIJAN FOILS U.S. EMBASSY ATTACK BY ISLAMIC GROUP
    By Henry Meyer

    Bloomberg
    Oct 29 2007

    Oct. 29 (Bloomberg) -- Security forces in oil-rich Azerbaijan
    prevented a planned terrorist attack on the U.S. embassy in the
    capital Baku by fundamentalist Islamic militants, officials said. An
    Azerbaijani terrorist group aimed to attack government buildings and
    the U.S. Embassy in Baku, National Security Ministry spokesman Arif
    Babayev said in a telephone interview today.

    Law enforcement officers killed one of suspected militants when he
    resisted arrest and detained others during an early morning operation
    outside the capital on Oct. 27, Babayev said. The United States and
    the U.K. today closed their embassies in Baku in response to "security
    concerns." The mainly Muslim Caspian Sea nation has sought closer ties
    with the U.S., helping complete a U.S.-supported oil pipeline from the
    Caspian to Turkey and sending troops to support military operations
    in Iraq and Afghanistan. The militants included an army officer who
    deserted from his unit a few days ago, taking a store of automatic
    weapons and grenades with him, the security official said. Authorities
    are searching for the officer, Babayev added. He provided no further
    details about the group. U.S. officials in Baku late yesterday sent
    a statement to Americans living there to be on guard and to bolster
    their personal security. `Vigilance' "While there is no information
    at this time that other American or Western interests in Azerbaijan
    are being targeted, the U.S. Embassy encourages Americans to maintain
    a high level of vigilance and take appropriate steps to bolster their
    own personal security," the message said. In Washington, U.S. State
    Department spokesman Sean McCormack said the embassy had scaled back
    operations while it works with Azerbaijani authorities on "threat
    information" it received.

    He gave no specifics of the threat. "I think we're in a good posture
    now," McCormack told reporters. "I would expect that they will
    resume normal operations in the days to come." U.S. Embassy spokesman
    Jonathan Henick said by telephone from Baku that only a few of the
    400 U.S. and local staff at the embassy were working today. A British
    Foreign Office spokeswoman said by telephone from London that, owing
    to "local security concerns," the U.K. closed its embassy in Baku to
    the public. The spokeswoman declined to be identified in line with
    Foreign Office rules. BP Plc is a major foreign investor in Azerbaijan,
    which has 0.58 percent of the world's proven oil reserves and 47.7
    trillion cubic feet of natural gas reserves, according to the BP
    Statistical Review. Azerbaijan gained independence from the Soviet
    Union in 1991. It borders Iran, Turkey and Russia as well as Armenia
    and Georgia.
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