Posted on 08/12/2006 8:51:30 PM PDT by GMMAC
Terror message prompted authorities to act fast
Ian MacLeod and Steven Shukor
CanWest News Service; Ottawa Citizen
Saturday, August 12, 2006
LONDON -- A message intercepted from Pakistan this week -- "Do your attacks now" convinced British officials to urgently arrest 24 Britons allegedly planning suicide bombing missions aboard up to 10 U.S.-bound airliners, say security intelligence and British government officials.
The message, intercepted and decoded by U.S. intelligence, is one of several pieces of information that indicate a deepening Pakistani connection to the suspected plot.
The Pakistan government on Friday named Rashid Rauf, a Briton of Pakistani origin arrested near the Afghan border last week, as a "key person" in the alleged plot and said there were indications of an "Afghanistan-based al-Qaida connection."
"He is an al-Qaida operative with linkages in Afghanistan," Interior Minister Aftab Ahmed Khan Sherpao said Friday.
Another Briton and six Pakistani men were also arrested. In custody, the two Britons provided information on the alleged terror operation, another senior Pakistan government official said.
Soon after, the four-word attack message was sent to Britain instructing the alleged plotters to commence the final stage of the operation.
British Home Secretary John Reid said Britain was grateful for Pakistan's co-operation and that officials believed the main suspects were in custody.
However, he called for solidarity "across all sections of the community" in the face of the "immense" terrorist threat facing the country.
Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott, in charge while British Prime Minister Tony Blair is on holiday, urged people to stay alert. "The threat level is critical, so people should remain vigilant," he said in a televised statement.
The terrorist threat level in Britain remains at "critical," the highest level and the U.S. is at its maximum aviation alert level for flights arriving from Britain.
Hundreds more flights were cancelled or delayed in Britain Friday, but airlines said there were far fewer problems than Thursday as passengers complied with new security measures. They warned of continued delays and disruption amid heightened security measures, including severe restrictions on the contents of carry-on luggage that officials said could be in place for months or indefinitely.
In Canada, delays at Canadian airports were down to a minimum by Friday, despite stiff new security measures. And they won't be lifted anytime soon.
"These measures are in place to stay for now," Canadian Air Transport Security Authority president Jacques Duchesneau told a news conference Friday.
Duchesneau said Canadian authorities did not over-react to the alleged bomb plot, which led to banning liquids and gels from carry-on baggage. The plot allegedly involved liquid explosives.
Duchesneau said there is currently no direct threat to people boarding planes in Canada.
Nineteen of the individuals arrested in and around London and Birmingham early Thursday were identified Friday when the Bank of England announced it was freezing their financial assets.
Most are Muslim men, aged 17 to 35. At least one is a woman, the wife of another suspect, with a small child; two or three others are said to be recent converts to Islam. Another is believed to have worked at London's Heathrow airport, where the targeted U.S. airliners were to depart.
Investigators, describing a plot on the scale of the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks, said the alleged planners sought to use common electronic devices to detonate liquid explosives concealed in drink cans to bring down as many as 10 planes.
The bombs were to be assembled on the aircraft, apparently with peroxide-based solution and everyday carry-on items that could be used as detonators, such as disposable cameras and music players, two U.S. law enforcement officials confirmed Friday.
They spoke on condition of anonymity because Britain asked that no information be released because of continuing operational considerations and legal concerns.
The planes were to be destroyed over cities that were "primary tourist attractions," including cities such as New York, Washington, Los Angeles, Boston and Chicago.
The targeted U.S. carriers have been identified as United Airlines, American Airlines and Continental. United Airline tickets dated next Wednesday, Aug. 16, were found by police at the home of one of the raided addresses.
U.S. intelligence officials said authorities moved quickly after learning of the intercepted message and that the alleged plotters hoped to stage a practice run within two days, with the actual attack expected just days after that.
The test run was designed to see whether the plotters would be able to smuggle the needed materials aboard the planes.
Another U.S. law enforcement official in Washington also confirmed at least one martyrdom tape was found during Thursday's arrest raids. Such a tape, as well as the scheme to strike a range of targets at roughly the same time, is a hallmark of al-Qaida.
Last month al-Qaida urged Muslims to fight those backing Israel's strikes on Lebanon and warned of attacks unless U.S. and British forces left Iraq and Afghanistan.
Meanwhile, the Washington Post reported Friday that up to 50 plotters and accomplices were involved in the alleged plan, which the security services discovered from a tip-off after last summer's London subway and bus bombings.
U.S. security officials said the operation to counter the threat expanded to involve several hundred investigators on three continents. The investigators kept dozens of suspects under close surveillance for months, even as some of the alleged plotters travelled between Britain and Pakistan to raise money, find recruits and refine their scheme, the paper said.
Islamic leaders say the arrests could widen a gulf between authorities and Britain's 1.7 million Muslims. "There is a siege mentality," said Abu Mumin, manager of an east London youth organization. "We have to continually justify things that come on the news. We just want to get on with our lives and live peacefully."
There was a strong police presence Friday outside mosques during Friday prayers in the neighbourhoods in London's east end, Birmingham and High Wycombe, where the 24 suspects lived.
Police said they were on hand to protect worshippers against potential reprisals, but their main tasks involved providing a clear path for those who did not want to speak to a crush of reporters.
Most of those questioned condemned the use of violence as "terrible," while others were concerned the raids were orchestrated to turn attention away from the Middle East conflict.
At the Finsbury Park Mosque in north London, once synonymous with Islamic extremism, several Muslims said the alleged conspiracy to kill thousands of innocent people had nothing to do with Islam.
"As a normal Muslim our religion, Islam, says peace," said businessman Farook Oomer, 40. "At the end of the day, I'm a family man and I want peace myself. I think it is wrong to kill an innocent person for religion, or personal or political gain."
Graphic designer Shamsul Khan, 33, said: "It is a bit horrific really. It is not right, it gives us a bad name. When they [the alleged plotters] die, they will be punished."
The imam of Walthamstow mosque, where many of the suspects live, urged the Muslim community to remain calm and assist the police in their inquiries.
In Italy, meanwhile, police have arrested 40 people in raids on Muslim gathering places in a security crackdown launched after Britain's thwarted plot.
Anti-terrorism police agents also searched homes of Pakistani immigrants as part of a joint probe with Belgian probe into suspected financing of terrorism, the Italy's interior ministry said Friday.
The Italian arrests were made in Rome, Milan, Venice, Florence, Naples and other cities on Thursday and Friday "aspart of an extraordinary operation that followed the British anti-terrorist operation," the ministry said in a statement. The raids were made on "Islamic gathering places, including call centres, Internet points and money transfer" offices, the ministry said.
Twenty-eight people were arrested for violating rules on residence permits and 12 were arrested for property crimes, the statement said. The raids resulted in 114 expulsion orders and found numerous irregularities at call centres, the Internet points and the money transfer offices.
Ottawa Citizen
© CanWest News Service 2006
PING!
and the Democrats say?????????
boy do they look stupid...but then again ...
bttt
Liar. islam means 'submission'.
L
Is it from the National Post or from the Ottawa Citizen???
Democrats applaud any act which weakens the US.
Whoa! Stop that this minute. We can't be listening willy nilly to people's phone calls around the world.
And WHY does the public or the enemy need to know any of this?
And if they hadn't already had the terrorists under surveillance, they would not have been able to prevent the attacks.
I heard today that the intelligence was pieced together from intercepted phone calls, emails and financial transactions. Now what is it that these three things have in common? The lefty Dems want to stop all three. The RNC better make this very clear starting in October.
Works for me. They should walk or ride the bus. If they don't like it, they're free to go back where they came from.
They spoke on condition of anonymity because Britain asked that no information be released because of continuing operational considerations and legal concerns
No wonder UK didn't want to alert our law enforcement beforehand. Just spit.
Who knows who was alerted and when? Tony Blair was supposedly aware of something going on last week when he appeared with Bush, and I am sure Bush knew about it. The problem was that most people thought the attack was going to be later on in the year. The investigation started many months ago, but in the meantime, thanks to our courts, the US lost the capability to perform the type of surveillance that had enabled us to give the Brits the initial tips to begin with.
Furthermore, I am sure that every intelligence service in the world is afraid to turn any info over to the US, because the info will either be leaked or later used against that country in a US court of law.
But not by air.
Dean Finds Timing of Terrorist Plot Suspicious
Howard Dean, chairman of the Democratic National Committee has assailed the poor timing of the recently thwarted al-Qaeda plot to blow up multiple trans-Atlantic flights from the United Kingdom to the United States. We had the Republicans on the ropes, Dean complained. All the polls showed us picking up dozens of seats in Congressenough to take back the majority and ensure the impeachment of President Bush, now this. Are these terrorists idiots? Couldnt they wait until after November?
Dean didnt confine his wrath to what he dubbed those bumbling Muslim nincompoops. He offered an alternative take on events that was more conspiratorial in nature. How do we know its not a put up job? Dean mused. Its easy to arrest people and claim they were going to launch an attack. Maybe there was no planned attack.
Dean asserted that the trigger-happy duo of Bush and Blairthe killer Bs as he called themwere, at best, escalating the violence against the U.S. and U.K. These two act as if a pluralistic society is the only acceptable way to govern, Dean said. Bush and Blair are risking our lives by foolishly espousing an abstract concept of liberty. Well, every suicide attack against us is a powerful vote for a different culture of governance. We need to take heed of these votes instead of blindly lashing out at this different point of view. The belligerence of Bush and Blair is escalating the conflict.
Dean said he still remains hopeful that memories of the alleged narrow escape from this latest terrorist attack will fade by November. Football season will be starting, therell be the World Series, a new TV seasonplenty of things to distract voters from the alleged success of Bushs war on terror, Dean said. Im confident our u-turn for America theme will convince a majority to place their trust in our party.
In related news, the ACLU expressed dismay that a key tactic in the U.K.s foiling of the plot to blow up airliners was a so-called sneak-and-peek program where British intelligence experts covertly broke into suspects homes and implanted listening devices. This was an outrageous trampling of civil rights, said ACLU spokesman, Bertram Petty. Some may find comfort in the lives saved, but we see a greater danger in the privacy lost. We must do everything we can to ensure that this kind of intrusion doesnt happen here.
read more...
http://www.azconservative.org/Semmens1.htm
I swear, they'd see mushroom clouds in all the major U.S. cities and the Dhimmocrats will do two things: blame Bush and surrender.
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