Westerners In Saudi Face Attack Threat: U.S. Embassy By REUTERS RIYADH (Reuters) - The U.S. Embassy in Saudi Arabia said Westerners face possible attack from unidentified extremists in the central province of al-Qassim, in the first warning of its kind this year."We have received credible information that an unidentified extremist (s) in Saudi Arabia may be planning to attack Westerners working and living in al-Qassim, Saudi Arabia," the embassy said in a statement posted on its website."The timing and method of potential attacks are currently unknown," said the statement dated August 4, urging U.S. citizens to "exercise prudence and enhanced security awareness at all times."Qassim is among the most conservative regions in the kingdom. The key U.S. ally is ruled by the Al Saud family in alliance with clerics from the austere Wahhabi school of Islam.A Saudi foreign ministry spokesman declined to comment on the alleged threat by saying the statement "concerns only the U.S. embassy.""The kingdom continues its effort to confront terrorism and terrorist operations. Thanks to God, the kingdom has achieved and still achieves great successes in this endeavor," Osama al-Noghali told Reuters.Militants carried out attacks against Western targets, government symbols and oil facilities between 2003 and 2006. The attacks included suicide bombs at Western housing compounds, the interior ministry's headquarters in Riyadh and oil and petrochemical companies, plus an attempt to storm the world's biggest oil processing plant at Abqaiq in 2006.A large-scale security crackdown and a rehabilitation program of militants sponsored by pro-government clerics have helped Saudi security services to stay ahead of plots to destabilize the country's absolute monarchy in recent years.But concerns over the security situation in the kingdom resurfaced after its top anti-terrorism official, Prince Mohammed bin Nayef, was hurt in a suicide attack in his house in September by a Saudi posing as…
Nicholas Roberts for The New York TimesGlenn Beck was credited with forcing a White House adviser to resign. The White House has limited administration members’ appearances on the network in recent weeks. In mid-September, when the White House booked Mr. Obama on a round robin of Sunday morning talk shows, it skipped Fox and called it an “ideological outlet,” leading the “Fox News Sunday” anchor Chris Wallace to appear on Bill O’Reilly’s prime-time show and call the administration “the biggest bunch of crybabies I have dealt with in my 30 years in Washington.”
Tiger Woods: Hip-hop golf is now par for the course President Obama is in the vanguard of a revolution – and it's all because of one man, says Oliver Brown. Read Article
Former Alaska governor Sarah Palin has started an intense publicity campaign for her memoir, Going Rogue, already a bestseller before official publication