Posted on 07/30/2005 3:20:10 AM PDT by Eurotwit
I don't think they've begun to round up the ones responsible for the bombings.
One report said he was well aware of the tracking possibilities, but he actually thought that because they never published his name, they didn't know who he was. Dumber than a sack of rocks, he is.
Round one to technology. All that civil liberty concern about us in the UK having CCTV everywhere and the security services being able to access our cell phone providers systems has to be balanced by the FACT that these men were ultimatley brought down by these measures before they got their bomb wires the right way round.
If you've got a cell phone in Europe, you better not be a wanted man!
And given that the article points out that a Tunisian official was taken in for questioning in Rome, the Tunisian embassy might play a role in this operation--enquiring minds want to know!
"There is still a hidden controller/handler in England."
Maybe. Typically, the bomb master flies in to check the work, then flies out a day or two before the attack(s). The chemist caught in Egypt may have filled this role. The guy tased on Thursday apparantly talked, giving the addresses for the arrests on Friday. If true, then under a strict cellular structure, he must be the onsite supervisor, given that no-one at the bottom level should know anyone else at that level's personal information.
Not conclusive, but strong enough to offer possibilities for alternative structural arrangements not easily dismissed.
"And given that the article points out that a Tunisian official was taken in for questioning in Rome, the
Tunisian embassy might play a role in this operation--enquiring minds want to know!"
Brother, internet node, embassy official, these point to AQ's support operations, which are, according to AQ doctrine anyway, kept strictly separate from AQ's operational branch.
Most likely avenues for progress in rolling up additional levels of hierarchy, from this bunch, look to lie with taser boy, and if the London cell was following AQ doctrine, will probably point overseas.
My guess is that they actually had agents on him early on and wanted to see where he went along his route to his relatives.
Wasn't this the dude with the NY shirt? They had a picture of him AFTER he shedded the shirt. They were on him. Think about it.
Some of these people have criminal histories that would suggest that they were not jihadists but paid assassins.
I'm thinking 'Carnivore' or something like it.
According to Norwegian media, citing the La Stampa piece claims that he has admitted that he wanted to blow himself up.
I guess we will find out, but Southack, you would have to agree that the witness accounts of the guy lying down before "exploding" his bomb tends to indicate that he knew what was going on.
Cheers.
Al Qaeda is so weak that they have to depend upon Western technology. They ride Western trains, rent Western cars, use Western phones, internet, mail, etc.
In earlier times, they would have depended upon Chairman Mao's defense of "swimming with the fish in the sea" to avoid detection. That's not such a safe option any longer.
The closest that Al Qaeda has to its own "infrastructure" is its system of moving small cash payments through trusted intermediaries...outside of that, some radical mosques, and the madrassas, they have no infrastructure that they can call their own. They must depend upon their enemies' infrastructures then, a fundamental (pun intended) strategic weakness.
This is not to say that they can't inflict pain, but it does show that they can *not* by definition possess the resources to overwhelm the West.
Which is to say that they've picked a very foolish fight.
During late 2002 and early 2003, a number of tourists were kidnapped in the Sahara desert areas of southeastern Algeria, several of whom crossed into Algeria from Tunisia.
... al-Qaida terrorists used a truck bomb to attack a synagogue on the Tunisian island of Djerba on April 11, 2002, and many Western tourists were killed.
Absolutely. Presuming that's real and not just disinformation, yes, he knew.
I'm unconvinced that they all knew, however, because it makes no sense to leave 16 unexploded bombs in their car on 7/7 or for all 5 July 21 "suicide" bombers to surrender before death.
There is also the issue of timing. If you aren't using an automatic timer or a remote detonation signal (e.g. cell phone, proximity to a radio transmitter, altitude trigger, etc.), then it takes an increased level of human discipline (depending upon how many are involved) to get all of the volunteer suicide bombers to kick off at the same time.
Keep in mind that both the 7/7 and 7/21 attacks detonated simultaneously. That hints of an automatic timer or a remote detonation signal.
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