The department has also carefully compiled information from past terrorist activity and captured terrorist training manuals and passed that information on to its members. Understanding the mindset and actions of the terrorist has become one of the primary goals of the bureau. And everyone involved stresses that it is the terrorists' behavior, not their appearance, that is the focus of much of the recognition training.
O'Neil believes terrorism has no recognizable face. "The 9/11 hijackers, did they look like fanatical terrorists? They are trained not to be radical, to blend in, and to look like me and you. We cannot target appearance, just target behavior. If we target appearance we are not an effective operation because then they will get right by us," he says.
Once terrorist behavior is better understood and systems are in place for agencies to share information, O'Neil believes the good guys will get the upper hand.
"We can actually stand up and be a threat to the terrorists right now if we are trained on their means and methods and know how to stop them," O'Neil says. "And we are passionate about that, from myself, to our trainers, to the cops who are taking our classes. It will have a real effect against terrorists if they come into this country knowing we are knowledgeable in their means and methods."
And accordingly the work at the NYPD's new counter-terrorism bureau proceeds. Television screens monitor stations throughout the world, detectives answer hotline calls from the public, maps are pinned to show any trends that may be of interest, aerial views of the city are analyzed, and the situation room is maintained...just in case.