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To: piasa; backhoe; Godzilla; nwctwx; All

stepping back in time with piasa and taking a look at this thread again.
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Note: The following post is a quote:
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http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/830327/posts


Poison warfare suits found in mosque raid
Herald Sun ^ | January 27, 2003 | LEO SCHLINK in London

Posted on 01/27/2003 6:11:52 AM PST by conservativecorner

BRITISH police investigating a terror plot by Islamic saboteurs have found chemical warfare protection suits in a north London mosque.

The discovery has shocked detectives, who believe the find confirms supporters of Osama bin Laden were planning a poison attack on civilian targets in Britain. Scotland Yard and MI5 detectives had kept the discovery of the nuclear, biological and chemical (NBC) suits secret.

They feared disclosing it would spark panic.

Government ministers have warned any suggestion that the Finsbury Park mosque had been involved would have worrying racist overtones.

Police initially revealed they had seized a cache of weapons, including a stun gun, an imitation rifle and a gas canister.

Detectives last night confirmed that the protective suits were being tested to establish if there was any trace of ricin or any other poison.

The Finsbury Park mosque has a notorious reputation because of its use by radical Muslim clerical Abu Hamza to preach holy war against Britain and the US.

Two of Hamza's devotees include failed suicide bombers Richard Reid - who tried to detonate a shoe bomb while flying from Paris to the US - and Zacrias Moussaoui, who the FBI claims was to have been the 20th hijacker in the September 11 attacks on New York and Washington in 2001.


1,347 posted on 08/15/2006 4:20:15 AM PDT by Cindy
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To: piasa; Godzilla; backhoe; nwctwx; Gucho; All

Note: The following text is a quote:
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http://www.terrortracker.co.uk/modules.php?op=modload&name=News&file=article&sid=406&mode=thread&order=0&thold=0

Posted by: Neil on Friday, August 11, 2006 - 03:19 PM
It seems that Home Secretary John Reid was trying to send a message that something was in the air when he made a speech on Wednesday warning that the UK was facing the greatest sustained threat to national security since the Second World War. Some questioned whether there were political motives behind the announcement, but now we know different.

Bringing down airliners with bombs has long been a goal of British al-Qaida supporters. The two British would-be shoe-bombers, Richard Reid and Sajid Badat, are the two best known cases. Less well-known is the case of an Algerian, Abbas Boutrab, who was convicted late last year in Northern Ireland.

His story may well provide insights into yesterday's events which paralysed the air industry. He was working on a new generation of bombs being developed by militants that are designed to evade airport scanning equipment. Boutrab was apparently caught, by chance, in the midst of constructing a bomb that could be concealed inside an electrical device such as a personal music player.

One of the documents he was found in possession of was a guide produced by British al-Qaida supporters, which described how to make a wide variety of innovative devices. The document was encrypted and password-protected, but further examination showed that it had been produced by a group of British militants connected to the radical Islamic cleric Abu Hamza.

Boutrab never cracked under questioning and it remains a mystery as to whether he was working alone, or with others. Experience would suggest that he would have been working with a wider network of support cells and probably other would-be bombers on a plot to simultaneously destroy more than one aircraft.

Multiple co-ordinated attacks is an al-Qaida trademark. Since 9/11, and in the face of increased security measures adopted by airlines and airports following the Lockerbie disaster of 1988, which was caused when a bomb exploded in an unaccompanied piece of luggage on the Pan-Am flight, the network's explosives specialists have been working to produce plans for new types of bombs that can evade these measures. Hence the decision to prevent passengers carrying hand luggage on to planes which many people criticised yesterday as a draconian step.

Several different plans have been worked on, though all share similarities, in that the new bombs are constructed from several different components that are designed to be assembled inside an aircraft toilet and detonated.

In June, I obtained several documents which contained actual construction plans for these new kinds of devices. One of the advantages for the bombers is that only a small explosion is needed to destroy an aircraft. All that is required is that the charge be powerful enough to pierce the pressurised hull of an aircraft. In theory, only a few grammes of explosive is needed.

The documents show how that can be concealed inside seemingly innocent items, such as medicine capsules. It also spells out ways to disguise the smell of the explosive to evade scanners and sniffer dogs, by adding a compound that acts as a masking agent. There have also been experiments with liquid explosives.

One line read: "Detonate inside the plane's toilet and do not make the mistake of the shoe-bomber."

The details of the plot bear all the hallmarks of an updated version of a plan hatched by al-Qaida in 1995. Called Project Bojinka, it was a plot to destroy a dozen airliners mid-flight, en route from the Far East to the USA.

It was devised by Khalid Sheikh Mohammad, who would later go on to mastermind the September 11 attacks in the USA.

The plan centred on using "micro-bombs" composed of an undetectable liquid explosive, which would be carried in hand luggage. The bombs would be detonated with timers.

The plan failed after terrorists involved in the plan were arrested during the planning phase, otherwise a massive death toll would have resulted.

The big question now is whether there are other cells still at large – either inside or outside the UK. In recent years, there are indications that al-Qaida planners want to launch a series of simultaneous attacks in different countries, to go a step further than 9/11. What we've seen may be part of a wider plan involving perhaps other European countries.

Police sources have said that the attacks were not planned for yesterday, so the threat looks set to remain for several days.

Neil Doyle
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1,348 posted on 08/15/2006 4:24:07 AM PDT by Cindy
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