http://www.ladlass.com/intel/archives/010755.html

 

Bomber spotted a year before July 7


By Michael Evans

 

January 23, 2006

Analysis of surveillance tapes found that the terrorists' leader cropped up
more than was thought

 

THE leader of the London suicide bombers, Mohammad Sidique Khan, appeared on
surveillance tapes a year before the attacks on July 7, the security
services have admitted. 

MI5 has been trawling through transcripts of eavesdropping tapes and video
footage of surveillance carried out on a large number of terrorist suspects
over a period of about 12 months, leading up to the attacks on the London
Underground and a double-decker bus. 

Its analysts have been checking to see what could have been uncovered about
Khan's activities and preparations for the suicide bombings. 

Previously it had been admitted that one surveillance tape had identified
Khan but he had been judged to be only "on the periphery" of suspected
terrorist endeavours and, with limited resources available, he was not
considered a priority. 

Like many other potential suspects caught up in the process of long-term
surveillance operations, Khan escaped the net because there was insufficient
evidence against him to merit a full-scale monitoring programme, which can
take up to 20 MI5 officers for each suspect. 

However, since the July 7 bombings, MI5 and other secret agencies have
produced a wealth of intelligence that has enabled the Security Service to
pinpoint Khan's activities in the previous year with more accuracy. 

Security sources said that with the new intelligence it had been possible to
identify Khan on a number of surveillance tapes, matching what were often
grainy pictures taken in the dark with the features and profile of the
suicide bomber. 

The sources said that it was not just a question of benefiting from
hindsight. It was the post-July 7 intelligence that had helped to build up a
fuller picture of a potential terrorist plot and the key individuals who
were to be involved. Apart from Khan, there was also some prior knowledge of
Shehzad Tanweer, one of the other suicide bombers. 

The discovery of more tape and video evidence puts MI5 in a sensitive
position. While the organisation can argue that it did not have the
resources to follow every suspect who flitted in and out of its long-term
surveillance operations, the more that the Security Service finds from the
past records, the more difficult it will be to satisfy the families of the
52 victims of the London bombings that everything possible had been done to
try to prevent the terrorist attacks. 

The parliamentary Intelligence and Security Committee, headed by Paul
Murphy, the former Northern Ireland Secretary, has questioned Dame Eliza
Manningham-Buller, the Director-General of MI5, and several of her most
senior intelligence officers on a number of occasions as part of its inquiry
into the July 7 bombings. 

The committee is examining whether there were intelligence failings and is
expected to publish a report in March or April. 

Separately, the Home Office is also drawing together a publishable
"narrative" of the events leading up to July 7, which is expected to be
published in the spring. 

Tony Blair has ruled out holding a public inquiry into the bombings. 

 

ON THE TRAIL OF A TERROR SUSPECT

*  Mohammad Sidique Khan was spotted on several occasions meeting other
terrorist suspects 

*  He visited a terrorist training camp in northern Pakistan in 2003 

*  Khan and Shehzad Tanweer were bugged talking about raising funds for
Islamic extremism 

*  The pair went to Pakistan together in November 2004 

*  Khan learnt how to make bombs in the Pakistani al-Qaeda camp



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