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Chertoff: Plot 'suggestive' of al-Qaida

 
 
Miller
 
Reply Thu 10 Aug, 2006 08:15 am
Chertoff: Plot 'suggestive' of al-Qaida

By Lara Jakes Jordan, Associated Press Writer | August 10, 2006

WASHINGTON --Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff said the terror plot disrupted in Britain is "suggestive of an al-Qaida plot," but noted the investigation was ongoing and no final conclusion could be made.

"There is currently no indication of any plotting in the United States," Chertoff said, but the government issued its highest terrorism alert ever Thursday for commercial flights from Britain to the United States as a precaution.

A terror plot was disrupted in London, with a specific concern for tourist-filled flights to major U.S. cities, in which would-be bombers attempted to smuggle explosives disguised as common liquids and detonators made to look like electronic devices on board in carryon luggage.

Terrorists had targeted United, American and Continental airlines, two U.S. counterterrorism officials said.

"The plot was to board international flights, potentially headed to the U.S., with bombs fashioned in a way that they would be in carry-ons, and blow them up in midair," one intelligence official said. This official said the terrorists had hoped to target flights to major airports in New York, Washington and California, all major summer tourist destinations.

In addition to the highest alert for flights from Britain, the alert for all flights coming or going from the United States was also raised slightly, to orange. The government banned beverages, hair gels and lotions from flights, explaining only that liquids emerged as an explosive risk from the investigation in Britain. Hastily printed signs were posted at major airports warning passengers in red capital letters, "No liquid or gels permitted beyond security."

Multiple flights to multiple American cities were put on alert. Specifically, these airlines included United Airlines, American Airlines and Continental Airlines Inc., the two counterterrorism officials said. American and United flights were turned into terrorist weapons on Sept. 11, 2001, when they were hijacked and crashed.

It is the first time the red alert level in the Homeland Security warning system has been invoked, although there have been brief periods in the past when the orange level was applied. Homeland Security defines the red alert as designating a "severe risk of terrorist attacks."

One intelligence official said the first-ever red alert signaled extreme concern within the government. "We are concerned enough to put the highest wall up we can," this official said.

Officials said the government has been aware of the nature of the threat for several days, and President Bush was fully briefed.

Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff issued a statement overnight.

"We believe that these arrests (in London) have significantly disrupted the threat, but we cannot be sure that the threat has been entirely eliminated or the plot completely thwarted," Chertoff said in announcing that the threat level for flights from Britain to the United States has been raised to the highest "severe or red" level.

A statement issued by Chertoff said "currently, there is no indication ... of plotting within the United States."

A U.S. law enforcement official said there have been no arrests in the United States connected to the plot.

A senior U.S. counterterrorism official said authorities believe dozens of people were involved or connected to the overseas plot that was unraveled Wednesday evening. The plan "had a footprint to al-Qaida back to it," said the official, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the situation.

It was not believed to be connected to the Egyptian students who disappeared in the United States more than a week ago before reaching a college they were supposed to attend in Montana. Three of the 11 have since been found and the FBI has said neither they nor the still-missing eight are believed to be a threat.

The plan involved airline passengers hiding masked explosives in carry-on luggage, the official said. "They were not yet sitting on an airplane," but were very close to traveling, the official said, calling the plot "the real deal."

U.S. intelligence has been working closely with the British on the investigation, which has been ongoing for months, the second official said.

The metal detector and X-ray machines at airport security checkpoints cannot detect explosives. At many, but not all airport checkpoints, the TSA has deployed walkthrough "sniffer" or "puffer" machines that can detect explosives residue.

As part of the foiled Bojinka Plot to blow up 12 Western airliners simultaneously over the Pacific Ocean in the mid-1990s, terrorist mastermind Ramzi Youssef planned to put together an improvised bomb using liquid in a contact lens solution container.

At U.S. Northern Command, the military headquarters established in response to the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks to improve coordination of the defense of U.S. territory, spokesman Sean Kelly said it would be inappropriate to discuss military operations.

Prime Minister Tony Blair's office said in London that the prime minister, vacationing in the Caribbean, had briefed Bush on the situation overnight.

The Homeland Security Department devised the alert system after the Sept. 11 attacks. The last time the U.S. government raised the terrorist risk here to orange, or high, was in July 2005 after the subway bombings in London. It was lowered to yellow a month later, the elevated risk status that has been the norm since the system was created.

In London, Britain's Home Secretary John Reid said the alleged plot was "significant" and that terrorists aimed to "bring down a number of aircraft through mid-flight explosions, causing a considerable loss of life."

Police arrested a number of people overnight in London after a major covert counterterrorism operation that had lasted several months, but did not immediately say how many. Heathrow airport in London was closed for most European flights.

New York Times
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farmerman
 
  1  
Reply Thu 10 Aug, 2006 08:53 am
most liquid explosives are military and are two part (binary) compounds, kinda like epoxy glues. Remember the movie "Die HArd III" where this explosive was mixed as a cherry colored liquid? most of these compounds are like that. They are VERY unstable when mixed..

Somebody has a source from military or chemical industry sources from some first world nation.


UK is about as big as New England , theres a lot more space to hide terrorists in this country and I wonder whats on their minds over here. Im concerned about a nuclear device in some urban area.
Dropping airliners from the sky will certainly kill people and wreck planes, but its mostly a symbolic act, and one of desperation. I think that the bad guys would like to crash our economies instead.
0 Replies
 
littlek
 
  1  
Reply Thu 10 Aug, 2006 09:02 am
Quote:

Somebody has a source from military or chemical industry sources from some first world nation.


Seriously?
0 Replies
 
okie
 
  1  
Reply Thu 10 Aug, 2006 09:20 am
Whats the big worry here? I thought the terrorism threat was a bogeyman invented by Bush? After all, global warming is a bigger threat, from what I've learned from the intelligentsia on this forum.
0 Replies
 
SierraSong
 
  1  
Reply Thu 10 Aug, 2006 11:25 am
okie wrote:
Whats the big worry here? I thought the terrorism threat was a bogeyman invented by Bush? After all, global warming is a bigger threat, from what I've learned from the intelligentsia on this forum.


Okie - they've calmed down. Seems a few of their compatriots (read moonbats) here have been along to reassure them that it was all just a plot by BusHitlerHalliburton to make the peaceniks look bad in their moment of victory in Connecticut. :wink:

Looky
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