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Attempted Breach of NSA HQ Checkpoint; One Shot Dead 308

seven of five writes One man is dead and another severely injured after a shootout at one of the main gates of the National Security Agency located at Fort Meade, Maryland. Two men dressed as women attempted to 'penetrate' the entry point with their vehicle when a shootout occurred, officials said. The FBI said they do not believe the incident is related to terrorism.
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Attempted Breach of NSA HQ Checkpoint; One Shot Dead

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  • by omnichad ( 1198475 ) on Monday March 30, 2015 @11:11AM (#49371153) Homepage

    Being dressed as women has nothing to do with putting 'penetration' in quotes, unless there is some sort of joke I'm missing. Why is it in quotes?

    • It is quoting what the officials said.
      • What's the point of quoting a single word? Is their word choice relevant?

        • well as means of attack "penetration" means something more precise than your typical large scale terror attrack. So maybe the security official are playing down it's connection to any 9/11-style terroism? It might well still turn out to be a terrorist incident but something that's relatively minor in the national security threat scale.
          • That really doesn't mean it needs quoted.

            • by tomhath ( 637240 )
              It's more precise to attribute the word to the officials by putting quotes around it, rather than have it look like an assumption made by the person reporting it. In other words, does NSA think there was an attempt to penetrate their campus? Or does the reporter think it was a deliberate attempt rather than a drink driver?
            • That really doesn't mean it needs quoted.

              To be, or not to be. That is the ques... no, it's not even a question in this case.

              • by Sun ( 104778 )

                "To be or not to be", or, in it's C style syntax: "2b || !2b", is not a question at all. It is a tautology. It is true regardless of what semantic value you assign to 2b.

                Shachar

                P.s.
                Yes, I know, C identifiers cannot begin with a digit.

                • "To be or not to be", or, in it's C style syntax: "2b || !2b", is not a question at all. It is a tautology. It is true regardless of what semantic value you assign to 2b.

                  I gather you've never read the source material?
                  That particular soliloquy was Hamlet's musings on suicide as a solution to his problems....

    • Possibly because it's the operative word of a quote.

  • by gstoddart ( 321705 ) on Monday March 30, 2015 @11:14AM (#49371187) Homepage

    So in some abstract sense I can see why the NSA could be considered a valid target in some contexts.

    But, honestly, trying to gate crash an Army base and then getting into a shooting match with the guards ... well, that's a special kind of stupid.

    • by timholman ( 71886 ) on Monday March 30, 2015 @11:38AM (#49371555)

      But, honestly, trying to gate crash an Army base and then getting into a shooting match with the guards ... well, that's a special kind of stupid.

      Having visited the NSA facility myself many years ago, it is incredibly stupid. The military guards at the NSA are extremely alert, extremely competent, and very well armed. They will not hesitate to point a gun in your direction, or open fire if you fail to immediately comply with their orders.

      They are not your typical security guards or your typical police. They are a level above that, and you do not want to mess with them.

  • by tool462 ( 677306 ) on Monday March 30, 2015 @11:18AM (#49371259)

    Pretty sure this is just "The Americans" fan fiction...

  • by AlCapwn ( 1536173 ) on Monday March 30, 2015 @11:29AM (#49371439)
    You'd think they would have seen this coming.
  • Attacking the government in such a fashion gives them an excuse to seize more power.
    • Re:stupid (Score:5, Insightful)

      by gstoddart ( 321705 ) on Monday March 30, 2015 @12:34PM (#49372321) Homepage

      You know, I'm a pretty heavy user of tinfoil with an inherent distrust of government.

      But even I don't need to look at this as an abuse of power by the government.

      The rights of US military personnel to shoot your stupid self for trying to ram through a gated checkpoint with big giant signs saying "we can and will stop you, by force if necessary" has been established for an incredibly long time.

      Most of the last century, I should think. Probably MUCH longer.

      Sorry, but this falls entirely in the domain of "if you didn't see this one coming you're an idiot".

  • "The FBI said they do not believe the incident is related to terrorism."

    WOW! Seriously. This is great news. I just figured EVERYTHING was ALWAYS called "terrorism" now. Is someone finally figuring out that if everything is terrorism, then nothing is terrorism? Do we no longer need to invoke the boogeyman every time something bad happens? Oh happy day.

    • by Tailhook ( 98486 ) on Monday March 30, 2015 @12:54PM (#49372511)

      I just figured EVERYTHING was ALWAYS called "terrorism" now

      No one at Lufthansa or the German government have called the Lufthansa mass murder `terrorism.' The '09 Ft. Hood shootings are still officially classified as `workplace violence' despite all evidence to the contrary, and Nidal Hasan was not charged or convicted has a terrorist. Obama has never gone further than the generalization that "anytime bombs are used ... it's terror" regarding the Boston marathon bombings, and Tsarnaev isn't charged under any terror statutes.

      Is someone finally figuring out that if everything is terrorism, then nothing is terrorism?

      They've figured it out just fine, as the specific cases I cite prove. The authorities are clearly being conservative with the use of the term `terror' and erroring on the side of `not terror' in their prosecution of violent acts. The problem isn't our authorities labeling `everything' terrorism. The problem is the fictional world filled with hysterical terror-mongers you've nurtured inside your head. It's not real. There is something wrong in there.

  • Then just tell the MPs that they will want civilians jobs as well.
  • The FBI said they do not believe the incident is related to terrorism.

    In other words, it's only terrorism when it suits our political agenda to call it that.

    • by pz ( 113803 )

      The FBI said they do not believe the incident is related to terrorism.

      In other words, it's only terrorism when it suits our political agenda to call it that.

      I'd more expect it to be an instance of espionage, not terrorism. Why do you expect every attempt to breach a government facility to be called terrorism?

    • Generally, terrorism is targeted at civilians or civilian infrastructure. An attack on uniformed soldiers at a government/military installation is not terrorism.

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Or it just means that they're white.

      Most acts of terrorism perpetrated in the US are by white, native born US citizens. It's just not politically expedient to call abortion clinic bombers, church/mosque/synagogue burners, or treehuggers that sabotage logging operations 'terrorists'

      Terrorist is, in the public eye, means foreign brown person that practices some pagan religion (Yes, I'm aware the irony of that in light of what religions are an arent considered Abrahamic.)

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Hmm, last time I saw this it was drunk soldiers coming back to the wrong gate after a night on the town in the 80s.
  • Um, Yeah... (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Greyfox ( 87712 ) on Monday March 30, 2015 @01:18PM (#49372755) Homepage Journal
    Crashing through a gate where there's a guy armed with a machine gun is a really good way to get shot, a lot. It annoys the guy with the machine gun, and he has a tendency to shoot things that annoy him. And he's not using the cheap Wal*Mart bullets, either. The last thing to go through your head, I mean, before bullets, would probably be "Wow, those are really some high quality bullets that guy is shooting me with!" I seem to recall that this sort of thing was fairly common back in the 70's and 80's with the hippies trying to disrupt the SAC air force bases. We seem to be having a spike in the crazy/stupid lately, where people seem to think that if you go crashing through a gate with a guy with a machine gun, they'll be nice to you or something. Nope. Not the case at all.
  • Exiting (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Dan East ( 318230 ) on Monday March 30, 2015 @01:41PM (#49372993) Journal

    According to a CNN article, they were leaving the secure area, not entering. A quote from an official said they failed to follow proper safe EXITING procedures. Another major news site said that a gun and cocaine were found in the vehicle. It's a large complex and a lot of people live in it. Sounds like drugs were being ferried in or out, and it didn't have anything to do with the NSA or secrets.

  • by LifesABeach ( 234436 ) on Monday March 30, 2015 @05:00PM (#49374821) Homepage
    One has to do something pretty messed up to piss those people off.

    And another thing, with all the target practice; NSA missed? Or was the other cross dresser that stunning?

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