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The London bombing trial: How much did the security services
know?
By Paul Mitchell
20 July 2007
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Earlier this month a jury in Woolwich Crown Court found Muktar
Said Ibrahim, Hussain Osman, Ramzi Mohammed, and Yassin Omar guilty
of conspiracy to murder in a failed attempt to set off four bombs
in London on July 21, 2005. The judge said each of them must serve
at least 40 years in jail before they can be considered for parole.
The jury failed to reach a verdict relating to two other defendants,
Manfo Kwaku Asiedu and Adel Yahya, who now face a retrial.
The court heard how the homemade hydrogen peroxide bombs, similar
to those used in London on July 7, 2005 that left 52 people dead
and 700 injured, were carried by the defendants in backpacks onto
three tube trains and a bus. The bombs failed to explode, emitting
a popping noise.
Ibrahim claimed that they only intended to frighten people
in a protest against the Iraq war. Omar told the court, I
hoped that this would be televised, would be shown on TV and taken
seriously and that would put pressure on the government after
they realised that people have gone to these lengths just to do
a demonstration on Iraq. Prosecutors argued that only the
wrong formula for the explosive and good fortune prevented
another atrocity from occurring.
During the trial it emerged that Ibrahim, the leader of the
plot, had arrived from Eritrea in 1990 and was jailed in 1996
for five years for a violent mugging. In 2003 he visited Sudan
for jihad training and boasted to friends on his return
that he had used rocket-propelled grenades. In May 2004, Ibrahim
encouraged Osman, Mohammed, and Omar to join him on a jihadi training
camp in Britains Lake District.
It is at this point that the trial began to expose once again
just how extensively the police and security services were monitoring
the activities of Islamic extremists.
In August 2004, Ibrahim was also captured on surveillance photographs
taken outside Finsbury Park mosque in London. The venue is associated
with many of those who have been subsequently charged with terrorist
offences. The mosque was run by the radical cleric Abu Hamza al-Masri,
who is serving seven years in jail, and swarmed with intelligence
agents and informants. Hamza has long relations with Britains
security services. Former Labour Party Environment Minister Michael
Meacher has asked if the security services encouraged British
Islamists to fight in the former Yugoslaviaa claim aired
by the former US federal prosecutor John Loftus in 2005, who has
stated that British intelligence used the al-Muhajiroun group
in London for this purpose.
There are questions as to how much the intelligence services
continued to protect or work directly with Abu Hamza. But there
is no doubt that anyone who visited Finsbury Park mosque would
be known to the police. Abu Hamza is wanted by the US for the
alleged establishment of a terrorist training camp in Oregon with
associate Haroon Rashid Aswat. Referring to Aswat, Loftus said,
Whats really embarrassing is that the entire British
police are out chasing him, and one wing of the British government,
MI6 or the British Secret Service, has been hiding him. And this
has been a real source of contention between the CIA, the Justice
Department, and Britain.... [H]e is a double agent.
Despite this surveillance, in September 2004 Ibrahim was granted
a British passport. Within a month, he was charged with a public
order offence in London after an argument with a policeman who
questioned him about the literature he was handing out. Ibrahim
jumped bail and headed for Heathrow airport in December 2004,
followed by ten MI5 undercover agents. The taxi in which he was
travelling was driven by Rauf Mohammed, an Iraqi who was suspected
of working with Syrian-born Mohammed al-Ghabra to help British
Muslims travel to Iraq to fight against the US-led occupation.
Al-Ghabra, who protests his innocence and remains at liberty in
London, had had his bank accounts frozen by US Treasury officials
who claim he was someone who provides material and logistical
support to Al-Qaeda and other terrorist organisations.
Ibrahim and his two companions were stopped by Special Branch
officers who found thousands of pounds in cash, a military first-aid
kit and manual, with passages on the treatment of gunshot wounds
heavily annotated, and a ballistics manual. Police said they did
not have enough evidence then to prevent him from completing his
journey. Razwan Majid and Shakeel Ismail, who travelled with Ibrahim,
have not been seen since and their families have reported them
missing.
It was not until documents were leaked in early 2006 by disaffected
MI5 officers demanding an inquiry into missed evidence
(to put pressure on ministers to provide more resources for the
intelligence agencies) that it became known that Ibrahim was then
followed to Pakistan. It has been suggested that whilst in Pakistan
Ibrahim may have met at least two of those involved in the July
7 bombings: Mohammed Sidique Khan and Shahzad Tanweer, who are
known to have been there at the same time.
Khan and Tanweer had been watched by MI5 for almost 18 months
before the attacks. MI5 officers had followed Khan and photographed
him on at least four occasions and made inquiries about a telephone
registered in his name. Tanweer had been identified on three occasions.
They had come to the attention of the security services as a result
of the investigation, Operation Crevice, into those subsequently
arrested for planning to blow up nightclubs or shopping centres
with fertiliser bombs in 2004.
In February that year, Khan and Tanweer were followed for 15
hours while they were in turn following a car driven by Omar Khyam,
the leader of the fertiliser bombers. On March 23, Khan and Tanweer
were again filmed alongside Khyam, only a week before he was arrested.
In a recorded conversation, Khyam and Khan discussed purchasing
one-way tickets to Pakistan. Kyam urged Khan, because youre
going to leave now, you may as well rip the country apart economically
as well. All the brothers are running scams. All the brothers
that are leaving are doing it. He added that within two
weeks of landing in Pakistan, Khan would be at the front.
Khyam also told Khan that next month, theyre going
to start raiding big time all over the UK.
MI5 also failed to send unnamed photographs of Khan and Tanweer
to the United States to be viewed by one of the fertiliser bomb
plotters, Mohammed Junaid Babar, who had turned informer after
being arrested by the FBI. Babar subsequently identified Khan
as someone he had trained with at an Al Qaeda camp in Pakistan
in 2003, together with other fertiliser bomb plotters.
When Ibrahim returned to the UK, six months later in March
2005, police did not stop him, even though they were alerted about
his return and he was the subject of an arrest warrant for jumping
bail. This failure is made all the more extraordinary, given that
Madrid had witnessed the terrible atrocity at Atocha railway station
in March 2004 that left 191 people dead. A May 2006 Intelligence
and Security Committee report into the July 7 attack warned the
intelligence services of the possibility of terrorists engaging
in unseen operational activity despite even intensive investigative
efforts.
The same report suggests the existence of the home-grown
threat had been well understood in advance of July 2005.
British nationals accused of terrorist activity included shoe-bombers
Richard Reid and Saajid Badat, both in jail for plotting to blow
up aircraft in 2001; Andrew Rowe serving 15 years for terrorist
offences in 2003; Dhiren Barot, arrested in 2004 for planning
a dirty bomb attack in Britain and sentenced to 30
years in jail; and most members of the Operation Crevice
plot who were convicted earlier this year to life imprisonment.
If official accounts are to be believed, then every trial that
has so far taken place relating to terror plots, successful or
failed, has painted an ever more damning picture of incompetence
on the part of the security services. But given the record of
MI5 and MI6, and the role provocations have historically played
in Britains policy in Ireland and elsewhere, it is entirely
possible that the London bombings of both July 7 and July 21 were
allowed to take place so as to provide the government with a pretext
for further attacks on civil liberties and new military adventures
overseas.
The usual defence offered by the security services for their
repeated failure to follow leads and arrest those under surveillance
who later turned out to be major figures in various terror plots
is to claim that resources were over-stretched and those deemed
to be peripheral figures (such as Khan and Tanweer)
were not prioritised. At the time of the fertiliser bomb plot
and the July 7 and July 21 plots a year later, estimates were
cited of up to 1,200 people involved in or sympathetic to terrorist
cells. More recent claims cite figures of 2,000 active terrorists
in 219 suspected terror networks under watch in Britain, along
with a similar number of sympathisers.
It is impossible to verify or disprove such reports. But there
is no doubt that the governments interventions in Afghanistan
and Iraq have made Britain a prime target for terrorist acts and
helped recruit significant numbers of disoriented young men to
Islamic fundamentalist groups.
Nevertheless, the fact remains that the actual situation revealed
in the three major terror trials or investigations carried out
so far is of a far smaller number of people involved in plotting
terrorist acts. Many knew each other personally or at least travelled
in the same circles and to the same places, particularly Finsbury
Park Mosque. And a significant number of these individuals had
been under sustained surveillance by the security services, without
action being taken that would have prevented a terrible loss of
life.
See Also:
Britain: New terror
warnings issued to justify policies of war and repression
[15 November 2006]
One year on: Lessons
of the London bombings
[7 July 2006]
Britain: More evidence
suggests July 7 bombings were preventable
[27 March 2006]
Britain: outstanding
questions on July 7 bombings warrant independent inquiry
[6 August 2005]
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