4 New Blasts Rock London

QueEx

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Police Snipers track al-Qaeda Suspects

<font size="6"><center>Police snipers track al-Qaeda suspects</font size></center>

Sunday Times London
July 17, 2005

UNDERCOVER police sniper squads are tracking as many as a dozen Al-Qaeda suspects because security services fear they could be planning more suicide attacks, writes David Leppard.
The covert armed units are under orders to shoot to kill if surveillance suggests that a terror suspect is carrying a bomb and he refuses to surrender if challenged.

The deployment of the teams in the past week signals the huge “intelligence gap” that has opened up since the London bombings.

Police fear the suspects could be planning a further wave of attacks but do not have enough evidence to arrest them, or place them under the government’s new anti-terror control orders.

Sir Ian Blair, the Metropolitan police commissioner, warned last week that there was a “very strong possibility” of more terrorist bombings.

Scotland Yard and MI5 say there may be more “bomb factories”. However, officers admit that they have no idea which suspects could be planning the next attacks so they are deploying the sniper squads as an emergency measure.

A member of S019, Scotland Yard’s elite firearms unit, said: “These units are trained to deal with any eventuality. Since the London bombs they have been deployed to look at certain people.”


http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2087-1697326,00.html
 

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QueEx said:
<font size="6"><center>Police snipers track al-Qaeda suspects</font size></center>

Sunday Times London
July 17, 2005

UNDERCOVER police sniper squads are tracking as many as a dozen Al-Qaeda suspects because security services fear they could be planning more suicide attacks, writes David Leppard.
The covert armed units are under orders to shoot to kill if surveillance suggests that a terror suspect is carrying a bomb and he refuses to surrender if challenged.

The deployment of the teams in the past week signals the huge “intelligence gap” that has opened up since the London bombings.

Police fear the suspects could be planning a further wave of attacks but do not have enough evidence to arrest them, or place them under the government’s new anti-terror control orders.

Sir Ian Blair, the Metropolitan police commissioner, warned last week that there was a “very strong possibility” of more terrorist bombings.

Scotland Yard and MI5 say there may be more “bomb factories”. However, officers admit that they have no idea which suspects could be planning the next attacks so they are deploying the sniper squads as an emergency measure.

A member of S019, Scotland Yard’s elite firearms unit, said: “These units are trained to deal with any eventuality. Since the London bombs they have been deployed to look at certain people.”


http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2087-1697326,00.html


So it begins! Seems like the start of a "Gastopo" with justification of course. At least ours were not anounced to the press. Get the popcorn out. Bushy Wushy has really got this thing going for his masters. Hey George, if you sell out humanity that actually includes you.
 
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QueEx

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QueEx

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<font size="4">
Red Alert Special Report: Four Blasts Confirmed in London
STRATFOR
July 21, 2005</font size>

Security officials in London have confirmed four blasts (or attempted blasts) July 21 -- three in the Underground and one on a bus. The incidents come two weeks to the day after the July 7 London bombings that left 56 dead and more than 700 injured. They also come at a time when the London mass transit system is still at heightened security levels following the July 7 attacks.

At 12:38 p.m. local time, London's ambulance service responded to a call at The Oval station, located in southeast London in a fairly run-down area near a cricket ground. Witnesses report that a person with a backpack approached a train, threw the backpack on and fled as other passengers attempted to give chase. The backpack then gave off small explosions and noises that "sounded like champagne corks popping."

At 12:45 p.m. local time, emergency services responded to a call from Warren Street Station in Central London, close to businesses and upscale neighborhoods. Before the station was evacuated, passengers reported seeing smoke coming from one of the trains, and some reported seeing a backpack explode. The British Transport Police reported one injury at Warren Street but did not specify its nature; reports also indicate that police detonated suspicious items at the station as a precautionary measure. Some reports indicate a nail bomb exploded on the train.

The third incident happened at the Shepherd's Bush Station, in a west London commercial district. This incident was reportedly above ground. There were no reports of injuries at this incident.

The fourth incident was an explosion onboard a No. 26 route bus on Hackney Street near Bethnal Green station, just southwest of Victoria Park in north-central London. A bus driver reported no injuries; witnesses say windows were blown out of the bus after an explosion occurred on the upper floor of the double-decker.

The incidents bear a clear resemblance to the July 7 attacks -- they occurred on a Thursday, there were three attacks on the Underground and one on a bus, and the attacks were spread out yet nearly simultaneous. However, the differences are more striking.

The attacks on July 21 occurred at mid-day, not rush hour, minimizing the potential casualties. The bombs used were also apparently significantly smaller, perhaps fireworks and smoke bombs or pipe bombs. Thus far, only one injury has been reported.

The coordination and resemblance to July 7 does not appear to be accidental; neither do the smaller size of the bombs and the off-peak time of the explosions. This attack was aimed at a more psychological end -- to shatter confidence in the mass transit system and authorities' ability to provide security.

This does not appear to be an attack by either the Irish Republican Army or al Qaeda, given the size of the bombs, though it could have been a move by local al Qaeda sympathizers. London hosts a large pool of Islamist radicals who would be interested in riding on the fears created by the July 7 attacks. Though al Qaeda sticks to well-trained operants to carry out attacks, these independent radicals are ready and willing to become jihadists. This in turn works in favor of al Qaeda, which has continually striven to inspire its sympathizers to act on their own with motivation derived from "the base" -- the literal Arabic translation of "al Qaeda." In fact, al Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden has proclaimed that the United States and the West would not enjoy security or peace of mind as long as those in the Muslim world do not. Such sparks of fear clearly follow a Quranic verse that tells of "striking terror in the hearts of the enemy" -- a verse frequently used in radical Islamist circles. This was likely the driving motivation for the copycat bombers, rather than the motivation (or capability) to kill.

The July 21 incidents in London demonstrate the vulnerabilities of and difficulties in securing public transportation systems. Furthermore, if these small bombs could be taken into exactly the same kinds of targets as the July 7 bombs, more serious incidents cannot be ruled out.
Send questions or comments on this article to analysis@stratfor.com.
 

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I guess he fit the profile.

London Police Kill Man at Subway Station

By ROBERT BARR, Associated Press Writer 46 minutes ago

LONDON - Police shot and killed a man wearing a thick coat at a London subway station Friday, a day after the jittery city was hit by its second wave of terrorist attacks in two weeks.
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The man died after being shot by officers at the Stockwell subway station in south London, police said.

Passengers said a man, described as South Asian, ran onto a train at Stockwell station in south London. Witnesses said plainclothes police chased him, he tripped, and police then shot him.

"They pushed him onto the floor and unloaded five shots into him. He's dead," witness Mark Whitby told the British Broadcasting Corp. "He looked like a cornered fox. He looked petrified."

Britain is home to many immigrants from the South Asian countries of Pakistan, India, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh, among others.

Whitby said the man did not appear to have been carrying anything but said he was wearing a thick coat that looked padded. Temperatures in London on Friday were in the 70s.

Police confirmed that armed officers entered Stockwell station in south London just after 10 a.m.

"A man was challenged by officers and subsequently shot," a police statement said. "London Ambulance Service attended the scene. He was pronounced dead at the scene."

Police would not say which armed unit was involved. Ordinary police officers in London do not usually carry guns, but some special units do, and armed police have become a more common sight on the streets in recent years.

Muslim leaders expressed concern at the shooting. Inayat Bunglawala, spokesman for the Muslim Council of Britain, said he had spoken to "jumpy and nervous" Muslims since the shooting.

"I have just had one phone call saying `What if I was carrying a rucksack?' It's vital the police give a statement about what occurred and explain why the man was shot dead," he said.

Service on the Northern and Victoria Tube lines, which pass through Stockwell, was suspended because of the shooting, British Transport Police said. Stockwell is one station away from the Oval station, which was affected by Thursday's attacks.

Also Friday, police said they were investigating an apparent attempt to set fire to the home of a man identified as one of the July 7 suicide bombers.

Officers went to the home of Jermaine Lindsay in Aylesbury, 40 miles west of London, on Friday morning after reports of a smell of gasoline in the street, Thames Valley Police said. They confirmed the presence of some kind of fuel.

"The substance was found around the family home of the fourth London bomber, which is currently unoccupied," said Superintendent Carole Haveron. Police have identified Lindsay as the bomber who attacked a subway train between Russell Square and King's Cross on July 7.

Investigators searched for fingerprints, DNA and other forensic evidence connected to Thursday's attacks on three subway trains and a double-decker bus, which were hauntingly reminiscent of suicide bombings only two weeks before.

The devices in Thursday's attacks were either small or faulty, and authorities said the only person who needed medical attention was a person suffering an asthma attack. The July 7 bombings on three Underground trains and a bus killed 56 people, including the four suicide bombers.

A statement posted Friday on an Islamic Web site in the name of an al-Qaida-linked group claimed responsibility for Thursday's attacks. The group, Abu Hafs al Masri Brigade, also claimed responsibility for the July 7 bombings. The statement's authenticity could not immediately be verified.

Experts say the group has no proven history of attacks and said it had claimed responsibility for events in which it was unlikely to have played any role, such as the 2003 blackouts in the United States and London that resulted from technical problems. In recent months, it also has made threats that its operatives would strike in Europe if countries there did not withdraw troops from
Afghanistan and
Iraq.

The attacks targeted trains near the Oval, Warren Street and Shepherd's Bush stations. The double-decker bus had its windows blown out on Hackney Road in east London.

Jittery commuters already facing cutbacks in service from the last attack faced more Underground closures Friday.

"People are worried, but if it's going to happen, it's going to happen, isn't it?" said Chidi O'Hanekwu, 23. Still, he said he found himself being "a bit more paranoid" on the ride in.

Mia Clarkson, 24, defiantly said she refused to change her schedule. "You've got to keep living, don't you?" she said as she exited the Chancery Lane station after a trip from across town.

Newspapers reflected the city's volatile mood — part defiance, part anxiety.

"Britain will not be beaten," vowed a front-page headline in the Daily Express. "Is this how we must now live?" asked the Daily Mirror over pictures of the attacks' aftermath. The Independent had a similar photo montage and the words: "City of Fear."

Police would not comment on the investigation. Witnesses described seeing men fleeing several of the attack scenes.

The nearly simultaneous lunch-hour blasts agitated a jittery capital.

Police appealed for witnesses to give information and set up a Web site to receive amateur video of the attacks and their aftermath.

"Clearly, the intention must have been to kill," Police Commissioner Ian Blair said. "You don't do this with any other intention."

The London transport agency said the three affected subway stations remained closed Friday, and service was suspended on all or part of several lines.

Authorities said it was too early to determine whether the attacks were carried out by the same organization as the July 7 blasts — or whether they were linked to al-Qaida.

Michael Clarke, director of the Center for Defense Studies at King's College, London, said Thursday's attacks looked "very amateurish."

"It looks like determined imitators who perhaps must have planned this a little while ago ... but it doesn't look quite like the same network behind it," Clarke told BBC radio.

Saudi ambassador Prince Turki al-Faisal, a former head of Saudi intelligence and the incoming ambassador to the United States, said the attacks had "all the hallmarks" of al-Qaida.

"The modus operandi, the sheer cowardice associated with them and the attacks on innocent civilians — these are all part and parcel of al-Qaida," he told BBC radio.
 

QueEx

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Re: Police Snipers track al-Qaeda Suspects

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QueEx

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Re: Police Snipers track al-Qaeda Suspects

<font size="5"><center>Police Detain Bombing Suspect
Man Shot Deat Not connected with Attacks</font size>


s_370.jpg
</center>

July 22, 2005
DEBKAfile

Anti-terror police detain a man in Birmingham, another in London. Three addresses were raided in London Friday afternoon, July 22. Man shot dead in Stockwell Tube station earlier had no connection with the Thursday bomb attacks.

Scotland Yard called a news conference to issue video images of four bombers in action on three underground trains and a bus targeted Thursday, July 21. An urgent appeal was issued for public assistance and information. DEBKAfile’s terrorism experts say publication of the four images eliminates the possibility that the man shot dead earlier at Stockwell station was one of the four attackers.

Passengers were evacuated as officers of a special undercover armed police unit shot the man as he vaulted over a barricade carrying a big bag and headed for a train.

This unit ordered to shoot to the head to disable any suspected terrorist. Victoria and Northern underground lines are suspended. No one was hurt in the second round of attacks two weeks after the first left 56 dead. The bombs were only partly detonated. The same al Qaeda-linked group which claimed the first attacks answered also for the second.

http://www.debka.com/headline.php?hid=370
 

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