WASHINGTON - The United States is bracing for possible terrorist attacks before the November presidential election, national security adviser Condoleezza Rice said Sunday.
The opportunity for terrorists to try to influence the election, as was the case last month in Spain, appears to be an opportunity that would "be too good to pass up for them," Rice said.
"I think that we do have to take very seriously the thought that the terrorists might have learned, we hope, the wrong lesson from Spain," Rice told Fox News Sunday.
"I think we also have to take seriously that they might try during the cycle leading up to the election to do something," she said.
"We are actively looking at that possibility, actively trying to see - to make certain that we are responding appropriately," she said.
Jose Maria Aznar, outgoing prime minister of Spain and a strong U.S. ally in the war in Iraq, says he has warned President Bush that he believes terrorists will try to affect the U.S. election as they did in Spain.
On March 11, terrorists blew up a rail line in Madrid, killing 191 and injuring 1,800 others. Aznar's Popular Party was favored to win the election until the four commuter trains were attacked.
"I told George Bush, and (British Prime Minister) Tony Blair and other political leaders to be extremely careful before elections ... and to be very vigilant," Aznar told Fox.