Police Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly said that the goal of the NYPD is to stay ahead of the terrorists. “That’s what this report does,” Kelly told a news conference. “It puts it in perspective, and it actually gives a framework to the radicalization process. Before you can disrupt, I think it is important to have a brighter line, so to speak, as to how the radicalization process takes place.”
Mitchell D. Silber, a senior intelligence analyst who co-authored the 90-page report, told the New York Times that the report highlights how the “threat has evolved since 9/11 and that many of these plots and cases that we perceived as being sort of an outside threat, really actually are more of an inside threat in the sense that radicalization drove them.”
Commissioner Kelly said that he worried about both homegrown and overseas terrorists. “The world in which we live presents to us threats from both overseas and right here at home. We can’t take our eye off the ball as a country or as a city from either one.”
The NYPD met with federal officials to discuss the report earlier this week.
“We’re doing everything that we reasonably can do, as a city, to protect the city,” Kelly said. “We take each case, each situation on its own merits. There is no cookie-cutter, there is no exact template. But this report helps us put together our ideas and our tactics and our strategies to address the challenge.”