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Britain: New terror warnings issued to justify policies of
war and repression
Statement of the Socialist Equality Party (Britain)
15 November 2006
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The overwhelming popular opposition to the Iraq war manifested
in the US elections and the resulting weakening of the Bush administration
have raised concerns in Britains ruling circles. There is
fear that the anti-war and anti-Bush vote in America might become
a catalyst for popular opposition in Britain to the crisis-ridden
Blair government and its policies of war abroad and attacks on
working class living standards and democratic rights at home.
This is the background against which Dame Eliza Manningham-Buller,
director-general of MI5, the British domestic intelligence service,
last week issued an apocalyptic warning, without presenting any
substantiation, of imminent terrorist attacks. Her remarks were
designed to whip up fear and legitimise the war on terror.
The security services, she claimed, will be unable to stop
an attack because, despite increased funding and manpower, they
are overwhelmed by the vast scale of the problem. She said there
were now 30 Priority 1 ongoing mass casualty
terror plots in Britain. The Security Service had identified 200
terrorist networks involving at least 1,600 people, and MI5s
caseload had risen by 80 percent since January.
More and more people are moving from passive sympathy
towards active terrorism through being radicalised or indoctrinated
by friends, families, in organised training events here and overseas,
she declared. Young teenagers are being groomed to be suicide
bombers.
She continued, Today we see the use of home-made explosive
devices. Tomorrows threat may, and I suggest will, include
the use of chemical, bacteriological agents, radioactive materials
and even nuclear technology.
Opinion polls show that over 100,000 of our citizens
consider that the July bomb attacks in London were justified,
she added.
Manningham-Bullers warning dominated the headlines for
several days. She had the prime slot on the BBCs Today
programme, which sets the news agenda for the day. Her words were
voiced by an actor because the speech had been given to a selected
audience and no cameras or recording had been allowed. She herself
was not available for interview.
The speech did more than merely add to the atmosphere of Islamophobia
which British politicians have been stoking up in recent months.
Warnings of a horrific attack that is both imminent and inevitable
raise the distinct possibility that a major provocation is being
considered by Britains secret police. And even if such a
crime does not materialise, the speech portends a renewed offensive
on the civil liberties of the British people.
To this end, Manningham-Bullers speech was given the
go-ahead by Home Secretary John Reid, and her claims were immediately
backed up by Prime Minister Tony Blair.
Nevertheless, it should be noted that her remarks contradicted
the governments insistence that terror bombings have no
connection with the invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan. Manningham-Buller
made clear that Blairs foreign policy was indeed contributing
to terrorist opposition in Britain.
There is a belief amongst significant sections of the ruling
elite, expressed recently by Britains chief of the general
staff, General Sir Richard Dannatt, that Blairs government
is mired in disaster in Iraq, and is fighting a losing war in
Afghanistan.
The Democrats gains in the mid-term elections will deepen
the conviction of some that Britain must distance itself from
Bush and attempt to develop a new approach to asserting its interests
in the Middle East and Central Asia. However, Britains ability
to do so is severely limited, given the strategic importance of
its alliance with the US.
In any event, no section of the ruling class is ready to contemplate
an end to the war in Iraq or any retreat from militarism. Manningham-Bullers
speech came a day after assurances by Foreign Secretary Margaret
Beckett that there will be no precipitate moves to
withdraw British troops from Iraq or Afghanistan.
Despite the overwhelming rejection by the American people of
Bushs invasion of Iraq, and despite widespread opposition
in Britain, the UK government is making clear that imperialist
military operations will continue under the guise of the fight
against terror.
Britain, Blair said, faced a long and deep struggle
against terrorism, and it was important to stand up and
be counted and to tackle the poisonous propaganda
that warped young peoples minds.
Manningham-Buller speaks for the British political elite even
more certainly than does Blair. She was bred for her present job.
Her father was Sir Reginald Manningham-Buller, a minister in Winston
Churchills government before becoming attorney general and
then lord chancellor during the Macmillan era.
Her record is one of total reliability where the interests
of the British state are concerned. She became one of the few
MI5 agents in the Cold War period trusted with the information
that Oleg Gordievsky was a double agent, and she was involved
in analysing the material he supplied. She was posted in Washington
during the first Gulf War, returning in 1992 to head anti-IRA
operations and becoming deputy director-general of MI5 in 1997
under the Blair Labour government.
In 2003, she submitted a statement to the Law Lords praising
the uncovering of the ricin terror plot. Police claimed
they had found an Al Qaeda cell and what was described as a poisons
laboratory in a London flat where a terrorist attack was
being prepared. The case against eight men subsequently collapsed
in April 2006. No ricin or poisons were found. The one man who
was imprisoned was convicted for killing a policeman during the
raid, not for terrorist offences.
The case was based on allegations made by one Mohmammad Meguerba
to the authorities in Algeria. His statements were widely believed
to have been obtained under torture.
Manningham-Buller justified the use of the evidence, saying
that questioning of Algerian liaison about their methods
of questioning detainees would almost certainly have been rebuffed
and at the same time would have damaged the relationship to the
detriment of our ability to counter international terrorism.
This case was used to justify and push through anti-terror
legislation, including provisions allowing the detention without
charge or trial of foreign nationals. For three years a group
of men were detained virtually in complete isolation. Many of
them suffered mental illness as a result.
When this practice was over-ruled by the Law Lords in 2005,
the government passed new legislation that enabled them to issue
control ordersa form of house arrest in which
free speech is severely curtailed.
In 2005, the July 7 London bombings, in which 52 people died,
raised more questions about the way in which the threat of terrorism
is being used to justify government policies. At least two of
those involved in the London bombings were known to the intelligence
agencies before the event. They had been under surveillance for
two years. What is more, security in the capital had actually
been downgraded despite the fact that the G8 summit was taking
place in Britain at the time.
Many unanswered questions remain about the London bombings.
Survivors and relatives of the dead have called for a public inquiry,
but the government has rejected all such calls.
Some of the issues involved have been raised by the writer
and academic Nafeez Mosaddeq Ahmed, who teaches international
relations at the University of Sussex, Brighton. In his book The
London Bombings, he concludes that the states
version of events systematically suppresses evidence that the
bombings are linked to the activities of Islamic groups long tolerated
in this country. He points out that those who inspired,
recruited and trained the bombers themselves have a troubling
identity as provisional allies of the British state.
Nafeez Mosaddeq Ahmed describes how, In all these areas
[Afghanistan and the Balkans] militant Islamic networks have operated
in collaboration with the military and intelligence institutions
of Britain, the US and European countries, and are linked
to Western attempts to secure a variety of regional strategic
and economic interests, largely related to energy concerns.
As the Socialist Equality Party pointed out in an assessment
made one year after the bombings, Given the record of MI5
and its external security counterpart MI6, and the central role
provocations have historically played in Britains policy
in Ireland and elsewhere, it cannot be excluded that the London
bombings were allowed to take place.
In April this year the Terrorism Act, pushed through in the
wake of the London bombings, came onto the statute books. Organisations
and individuals who encourage terrorism, including
those who merely make statements that glorify terrorist
acts, are criminalizedeven when there is no intention to
carry out a criminal act of any kind. It is now possible to hold
people for 28 days without charge. Further repressive anti-terror
legislation is being planned for the next session of Parliament.
This summer, UK airports were brought to a halt by a terror
scare. Twenty four people were arrested and face trial. Some of
the accused had no passports and none had bought tickets for the
transatlantic flights they were supposedly targeting to be exploded
in mid-air.
It is claimed that they intended to mix liquid explosives
on board aeroplanes. Retired British Army intelligence officer
Nigel Wylde, who was decorated for his work in bomb-disposal in
Northern Ireland, has described the suggestion that terrorists
could mix explosives on board a plane as fiction.
Lt-Colonel Wylde, who retired in 1991, testified before the Barron
Inquiry into the Dublin-Monaghan bombings that was held in the
Republic of Ireland in 2004.
On top of the liquid bomb plot arrests, a further eight men
were arrested two years ago. One of these, Dhiren Barot, was on
trial last week and the others face trial next year. Reports of
Barots trial raise more questions than answers.
He is said to be a significant Al Qaeda operative
and is accused of planning large-scale terrorist attacks. The
charges include the allegation that he planned to set off a dirty
bomb full of radioactive material, and to bomb an underground
train in London, flooding the tunnels beneath the River Thames.
Barot changed his plea from not guilty to an admission of conspiracy
to murder in the last month. The police claimed he did so because
the evidence against him was overwhelming.
In fact, the evidence against him is circumstantial. Plans
detailing the attacks are said to have been discovered on a laptop.
But the computer was seized during a raid in Pakistan. This is
hardly a reliable source of evidence.
No weapons or bombs were found. No radioactive material, biological
agents or chemical substances were discovered. Barot had been
in prison for two years by the time he came to trial. How much
psychological pressure was brought to bear on him to plead guilty
is unknown. He was sentenced to a minimum of 40 years imprisonment.
One recent event demonstrates the type of operation being used
by MI5 to whip up fear of terrorist plots. Home Secretary John
Reid recently made a speech attacking Muslim bullies,
during which he was heckled by Abu Izzadeen and Anjem Choudray.
Both are affiliated to the proscribed al-Muhajiroun network, which
is allegedly linked to Al Qaeda.
As the author Nafeez Mossadeq Ahmed has pointed out, Despite
apparent proscription, the groups key members and activities
operate intact, quite unhindered. To date, the government refuses
to arrest and prosecute these individuals in spite of their repeated
violations of British law, including incitement to violence, racial
hatred and terrorism, and in particular despite their open admission
of engaging in terrorist-training with confessed intent to target
Britain.
George Galloway, Respect Member of Parliament for Bethnal Green
and Bow, raised the issue in an open letter to John Reid. He wrote,
The man who harangued youAbu Izzadine [sic]is
a well-known and violent extremist from an organisation your own
government has proscribed. Yet he was allowed within punching
distance of the British Home Secretary. How? Why?
Galloway continued, This is the same man who led a group
of fanatic thugs in the brief hostage-taking of myself
and my daughter and several innocent members of the public during
a general election meeting last year. This is well known to the
Special Branch and senior police officers in East Londonthe
very people in charge of your security today.
The incident involving Reid falls into a pattern of provocations
that have been used to justify repressive measures. Throughout
the summer, lurid claims have been made about terrorist plots.
The tiny number of Muslim women who wear the veil have been held
up as a major threat to the British way of life. An atmosphere
of hysteria has been created in which racist attacks on Muslims
have increased. Now, the director general of MI5 has stepped out
the shadows to warn of an imminent threat which she is supposedly
powerless to prevent.
It cannot be doubted that Blairs warmongering and anti-Muslim
agitation have angered millions throughout the world and created
a fertile recruiting ground for Islamic fundamentalists. What
can legitimately be asked is what role the MI5 and other agencies
of the British government will have played in any terrorist attack
that may occur.
See Also:
Rumsfelds firing: First casualty
of post-election crisis in US
[9 November 2006]
US midterm elections: An overwhelming
repudiation of the war in Iraq
[8 November 2006]
One year on: Lessons of the
London bombings
[7 July 2006]
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