Osotogari said:
I guess there's a lot of underestimating of the impact any attack would have on the national economy as a whole, not to mention the envirionmental impact that would happen if any thought at all would be put into it.
That's a good point - in spite of our doing heavy lifting in AFG, what do you think the US's response would be if there's even one terrorist attack in Canada? Unless we jump all over it, it would be too easy for them to say, "ya know, we don't want them coming over here, too", and shut down the border to trade. Not so much skin off America's nose, but
lots off ours.
Apart from wanting to protect Canadians in general,
I'm guessing that's one reason why The Honourable Stockwell Day (and others) seem to be taking this seriously:
Toronto Star: Prime Minister Stephen Harper's government said it takes seriously an Al Qaeda faction's call for attacks on oil production facilities in Canada and other Western Hemisphere countries to stop the flow of petroleum to the United States. "We've always said that Canada is not immune to threats. We take this threat seriously," Public Safety Minister Stockwell Day said yesterday outside the Commons. Day said it is possible to protect "all of our assets, both human and structural." He said government and private industry were keeping a watch on oil pipelines to prevent terrorist actions. But he declined to say exactly what security measures were being mounted ....
Ottawa Citizen: The federal government is taking seriously a terror group's call for jihadists to attack Canada's oil and natural gas facilities to starve the United States of energy, Public Safety Minister Stockwell Day said yesterday. "We've always said that Canada is not immune to threats. We take this threat seriously," he told reporters outside the Commons, adding "it's possible to protect all of our assets, both human and structural." He did not elaborate on what new measures the government might take to protect the energy facilities, most of which are owned by private industry and located in Alberta. What is clear is that the economic, political and human costs of a successful attack could be staggering. In terms of lives lost and damage, a strike would almost certainly have to occur in a city, notably Edmonton and Montreal, key points in Canada's massive oil and gas pipeline system, says a threat assessment of Canada's oil and gas infrastructure ....
Reuters: Canada's oil and gas industry and regulators responsible for overseeing the bulk of production were taking a threat by al Qaeda seriously on Wednesday, but had not raised security levels as a result. Industry regulators, including the National Energy Board and Alberta Energy and Utilities Board, said they are in a state of heightened awareness following a Web posting by a Saudi wing of al Qaeda, which called for attacks on oil suppliers to the United States. "Given the nature of the threat, there is really no direct evidence that Alberta infrastructure is being targeted and clearly, the information we get from intelligence agencies is what we base our decisions on," Alberta EUB spokesman Darin Barter said. The board oversees oil, gas and oil sands facilities within Alberta, the country's biggest producing province ....