http://www.usnews.com/usnews/news/articles/060814/14london.htm
 
 

British sift through potential plane-bomb materials

By Chitra Ragavan
British forensic experts are slowly sifting through materials that could
potentially have been used as precursor chemicals to make explosives - the
materials were found in the homes of suspects arrested last week in the
alleged plot to blow up at least 10 planes headed from the United Kingdom to
the United States.
But the experts are not saying yet whether any of these materials could have
been combined to make liquid explosives potent enough to blow the planes out
of the skies. Among the materials discovered: flashlight bulbs, AA
batteries, hydrogen peroxide and containers for the solution, disposable
cameras, and half liter bottles of Dutch commercial food additives, law
enforcement sources tell U.S. News.
Left to their own devices, British police might have waited longer before
making the arrests in order to obtain more evidence, U.S. and British law
enforcement sources said. The British arrests took place only because
Pakistan - at the urging of the FBI - made a key arrest that the British
feared could have a domino effect and tip off the London suspects, several
of whom had made trips to and from Pakistan for fundraising, training, and
recruiting.
U.S. law enforcement sources say the bureau pressured Pakistan to make their
move, forcing the British to scramble. A senior FBI official, however,
denied any pressure was placed on either the British or the Pakistanis. "It
was entirely their call," he said. He said the FBI worked collaboratively
with the British to chase down hundreds of leads in the United States -- but
no connections were found. Senior FBI officials also were taking note of the
growing difficulty that the British faced in keepings tabs on the suspects,
because there were so many suspects and the operation was sucking up
considerable police manpower.
"It was getting more and more unwieldy," asserts one FBI official. Towards
the middle of last week, according to U.S sources, British police could not
be sure they knew where all the suspects were, and some were starting to
purchase potential precursor chemicals and shopping for airline tickets,
according to a knowledgeable official.
But some in the British Metropolitan Police's anti-terrorist branch fear
that investigators may pay a price for pulling the plug too early. "I've got
a feeling that if we let it run for 10 more days, we would have got a lot
more concrete evidence" says one official.
"We would have liked an easier job bringing terrorists to court," this
official says. "They are very bad lads, and it would have been nice to have
a sealed case. We have a saying here, 'shutting the door when the horse has
bolted.' Well, the bloody horse has long gone on this one."
The real fear, among British and U.S. law enforcement, is that terror
plotters are constantly watching the news and learning better and better how
to hide their tracks. After the July 7, 2005, bombings on the London subways
that killed 52 people, police found a veritable bomb factory inside 18
Alexander Grove, the ground-floor flat that three of the four bombers rented
next to the Leeds Grand Mosque.
"They were so inept at covering their trail, they didn't even watch CSI:
Miami, for God's sakes," the British official says. The concern this time
around is that these alleged London plane-bomb suspects may have concealed
their supplies. "These guys had thought about getting caught."
"It's a danger for us to underestimate their flexibility," says one U.S. law
enforcement source. "They are very fluid. They are learning from past
mistakes."


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