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Then there are the thorny questions surrounding personal privacy, which inevitably surface when the administration talks about making it easier to put people on terrorism watch lists or no-fly lists. Authorities say Abdulmutallab was affiliated with an al-Qaida branch in Yemen. Intelligence officials failed to recognize the threat posed by the troubled Arab country, which had been previously regarded as a menace only to U.S. targets abroad. Now, that threat has reached U.S. borders. The House Armed Services Committee was to question military officials about how they're responding to that threat and whether they can do so without losing pace in Afghanistan and Iraq.
[Associated
Press;
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