US | underwear bomber Why Underwear Bomber Flew to Detroit: Cheap Fares Shows break from bin Laden's love of symbolic targets By Polly Davis Doig Posted Mar 24, 2011 6:49 AM CDT Copied The Detroit metropolitan airport terminal is seen in Romulus, Mich., Friday, Dec. 25, 2009. (AP Photo/Carlos Osorio) With 25% of its own residents fleeing Detroit, it might seem like the would-be underwear bomber could have picked a more devastating US target than Motor City. But, as the AP has learned, airplane tickets to considered destinations Chicago or Houston were just too darn expensive, so Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab plunked down a more modest $2,831 on a round-trip to Detroit. The mentality shows al-Qaeda in Yemen's philosophical break from Osama bin Laden's penchant for striking symbolic targets—it's not so much what is hit, as the fact that a hit is carried out. Last year's attempted cargo plane attack, in which the target cities also didn't matter, underscored that strategy, and it's helped al-Qaeda in Yemen become a top threat to the US. Click for more details. Read These Next Tara Reid taken out of Chicago-area hotel on a stretcher. Man was planning cremation for his sister, who turned out to be alive. Mark Kelly says he won't be 'silenced by bullies.' Man allegedly posed as dead mom, until someone noticed his beard. Report an error