New York Daily News

Bam’s new terror plan: BE AFRAID

Issues travel warning: Nowhere is safe Alert ripped for ‘letting terrorists win’

- BY KERRY BURKE, TOBIAS SALINGER and GINGER ADAMS OTIS With News Wire Services

A WORLDWIDE travel alert issued by the State Department Monday warned that “possible risks of travel due to terrorist threats” now face every American on a global scale. While no specific threat was mentioned, the blanket notice also warned against “crowded places” — a bit difficult for most New Yorkers.

TRAVEL AT your own risk.

Just in time for the holidays, the State Department issued a global travel alert to U.S. citizens warning of the increased likelihood of terror attacks by legions of terrorists — including the murderous Islamic State.

The terse warning, posted on the State Department website Monday, said American travelers should use “particular caution” in the coming weeks and through Feb. 24.

“Current informatio­n suggests that (ISIS), Al Qaeda, Boko Haram and other terrorist groups continue to plan terrorist attacks in multiple regions,” the State Department wrote.

The possible attacks could include “a wide variety of tactics . . . targeting both official and private interests,” the State Department added.

The alert was sparked by concerns from authoritie­s that members of ISIS who went to Syria and Iraq to train will now be returning to Europe and the U.S. with a thirst for blood. Their reentries could be timed to coincide with the busiest travel season of the year and large gatherings related to Christmas or Thanksgivi­ng.

There are also warnings about “unaffiliat­ed” groups planning copycat attacks inspired by the recent coordinate­d attacks in Paris that killed 130 people and injured more than 350 others.

“Extremists have targeted large sporting events, theaters, open markets and aviation services,” the alert said.

“U.S. citizens should . . . exercise particular caution during the holiday season and at holiday festivals or events,” the State Department warned.

New Yorkers set to travel abroad from Kennedy Airport didn’t seem fazed.

Rifka Gudlevski, a stay-athome mother of three from Borough Park, Brooklyn, was traveling with her daughters to London late Monday.

“Whatever is meant to be, is meant to be,” Gudlevski said. “You can’t worry. If you have to travel, you have to travel. It doesn’t pay to fear.”

Gil Miller, 61, of Washington Heights, was headed to Germany on Monday night.

“These attacks, by their nature, are hard to pull off, thank God,” he said. “I’m not overly concerned.”

Retired NYPD Sgt. Pete Marsalisi, 48, said he was ready for anything.

“I don’t have a problem with the alert. I carry a gun wherever I go,” said the former cop, en route to the Dominican Republic.

But not everyone was as sanguine — at least on Twitter.

“Doesn’t this just let the terrorists win?” tweeted a user named Jo, who said she was in the tourism business.

“Translatio­n: Terrorists are everywhere. We have no idea when/where they’ll strike next. Good luck,” tweeted Christophe­r Stack, with a link to the State Department posting.

Monday’s global terror alert came as French authoritie­s stumbled onto an explosives vest close to where fugitive terrorist Salah Abdeslam used his cell phone the day of the deadly attacks in Paris. A street cleaner in the Montrouge neighborho­od discovered the explosives — without a detonator — in a pile of trash, police officials said.

The vest contained bolts and the same type of explosives that seven of the murderers used in suicide bombings on Nov. 13, police told The Telegraph.

Investigat­ors believe Abdeslam may have decided at the last moment not to carry out a fourth suicide bombing planned for the City of Light. Abdeslam, 26, remained at large Monday.

An unidentifi­ed friend of the

fugitive told Belgian news sources that Abdeslam was “overwhelme­d” and “told me he had gone too far” during the killings. The jittery jihadi also reportedly fears other Islamic State terrorists will kill him because he didn’t “complete his task” by committing suicide after the attacks.

Abdeslam was briefly stopped by French authoritie­s the day after the Paris tragedy but then allowed to continue into Belgium.

The frenzied manhunt for Abdeslam and other possible conspirato­rs put the city of Brussels on a tense, three-day lockdown over the weekend, officials said. Citing a “serious and imminent” threat of attack, Belgium’s prime minister on Monday said the city will stay at the highest alert level for several days. City schools and subways will be closed until Wednesday, Belgian Prime Minister Charles Michel said.

He said officials are doing “everything in our power to keep the situation under control.”

Authoritie­s have been tight-lipped about the details of possible threats to the city — but they have conducted several raids that resulted in arrests. French President Francois Hollande paid a visit Monday to the Bataclan concert hall, which bore the brunt of the synchroniz­ed slaughter unleashed on Paris. Four ISIS gunmen stormed into the Bataclan and killed 89 people there.

Hollande was accompanie­d on his solemn visit by British Prime Minister David Cameron, who said he wants the U.K. to join the U.S., France, Russia and other nations in bombing Islamic State stronghold­s in Syria.

On Tuesday, Hollande will visit the White House to meet with President Obama about strengthen­ing the internatio­nal coalition against ISIS extremists.

Hollande also plans to head to Germany afterward to talk to German Chancellor Angela Merkel, then to Moscow Thursday for a sit-down with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

 ?? GETTY ?? As Americans gear up for the holiday travel season, the State Department issued an alert (r.) urging caution, which did not reassure posters on Twitter (below l.). President Obama (l.) will meet with French President Francois Hollande at the White...
GETTY As Americans gear up for the holiday travel season, the State Department issued an alert (r.) urging caution, which did not reassure posters on Twitter (below l.). President Obama (l.) will meet with French President Francois Hollande at the White...
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President Obama is slated to speak to leader of France today about strengthen­ing the coalition against ISIS.
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