View Full Version : Official: Diffused Bomb in Central London Would Have Caused Significant Damage
Team Sergeant
06-29-2007, 09:07
Let me guess, islamic muslim terrorist cowards targeting innocent civilians.
Team Sergeant
Official: Diffused Bomb in Central London Would Have Caused Significant Damage
LONDON — Police thwarted an apparent terror attack Friday near the famed Piccadilly Circus in the heart of London, defusing a bomb made of a lethal mix of gasoline, propane gas, and nails after an ambulance crew spotted smoke coming from a silver Mercedes outside a nightclub.
Hours later, police closed a major road in central London because of a suspicious vehicle.
A police spokesman said there was no immediate information about the vehicle on Park Lane, on the eastern edge of Hyde Park. He said there was nothing immediately to suggest it was linked to the earlier incident.
The bomb in the city's theater district was powerful enough to have caused "significant injury or loss of life" — possibly killing hundreds, British anti-terror police chief Peter Clarke said.
Britain's new home secretary, Jacqui Smith called an emergency meeting of top officials, calling the attempted attack "international terrorism."
"We are currently facing the most serious and sustained threat to our security from international terrorism," she said afterward. "This reinforces the need for the public to remain vigilant to the threat we face at all times."
Police planned to examine footage from closed-circuit TV cameras in the area, Clarke said, hoping the surveillance network that covers much of central London will help them track down the driver of the rigged Mercedes.
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,287292,00.html
Lady luck sure showed up at the right time this morning!
Hoepoe
The Reaper
06-29-2007, 10:21
I doubt that it was international terrorism.
Based on events and my observations of England last year, it is probably British citizens who did it, perhaps with motivation from abroad.
I suspect that they are saying that to avoid disturbing any of the delicate sensibilities of the greater Muslim community there.
Looks like the new government will be a lot like the old one, perhaps even weaker.
TR
Watching the news this evening ( LINK (http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/19495826/) ) the plot had some odd features.
Two cars, rigged for separate attacks, hints at organization - and, too, one of the vehicles had been stolen in Scotland, so that suggests some ability to create a plan and carry it out over time and distance.
On the other hand - there were two calls made to the cell-phone detonator in the first car. Both attempts to explode the device failed (fortunately!). I certainly don't know anything about explosives, but it seems strange that the terrorists would be (seemingly) effective in one way, and (seemingly) ineffective in another. It's also odd that they would place the cars in an area filled with high-resolution cameras.
Perhaps the terrorists are fanatical but ineffective. But in terms of the costs their actions have now imposed on the UK and the US, versus the costs to the terrorists (of whatever origin) I wonder how much they really lost. They seem to have an ample supply of those willing to carry out such actions.
x-factor
06-29-2007, 19:16
You've got to wonder how many bullets the UK can dodge before they really get whacked on a 9/11 scale.
The Reaper
06-29-2007, 20:16
You've got to wonder how many bullets the UK can dodge before they really get whacked on a 9/11 scale.
No lie.
And the people of London now look like those of Karachi.
Makes Detroit look homogenous.
They have tens of thousands of people to watch, if not more.
TR
Mosby Raider
06-29-2007, 21:48
It was reportd that one of the vehicles was parked outside a night club in which it was ladies night. How contemptable is it that the misogynistic Islamist bombers would target a night club with a crowd approaching two thousand patrons, the majority of whom were women. It was reported also that the Brits have a crystal clear photo of the driver, and surprise, surprise it was an individual they had arrested weeks or months earlier, but released.
The Reaper
06-30-2007, 09:48
Connection?
I think there could very well be.
TR
BBC: Glasgow Airport Evacuated After Car Rams Terminal Building
Saturday , June 30, 2007
GLASGOW, Scotland —
Witnesses said a motorist tried to ram a Jeep Cherokee in flames into the main terminal building of Glasgow airport Saturday, reports said.
The British Broadcasting Corp. said witnesses described an SUV driving at full speed toward the terminal building with flames pouring out from the car.
The airport was evacuated and all flights suspended, the report said.
Police, however, said two cars had collided outside the airport around 3:15 p.m., with one of them bursting into flames.
Strathclyde Police spokeswoman Lisa O'Neil did not confirm media reports saying the motorist tried to drive into the terminal building.
"One car is on fire, but it is not clear if it went inside the terminal building," she said.
x-factor
06-30-2007, 11:33
Identity of the driver is conspicuously absent.
The Reaper
06-30-2007, 12:23
Identity of the driver is conspicuously absent.
Initial ID is "Asian appearing", and early reports were that occupants were allegedly throwing more gas on the car before they were taken down.
TR
x-factor
06-30-2007, 16:16
Well thats good news.
The Reaper
06-30-2007, 18:11
2 Arrested After Car on Fire Rams Glasgow Terminal
Saturday , June 30, 2007
GLASGOW, Scotland —
A Jeep Cherokee trailing a cascade of flames rammed into Glasgow airport on Saturday, shattering glass doors just yards from passengers at the check-in counters. Police said they believed the attack was linked to two car bombs found in London the day before.
Britain raised its terror alert to "critical" — the highest possible level — and the Bush administration announced plans to increase security at airports and on mass transit.
Five bystanders were wounded, though none seriously, police said.
One of the men in the car was in critical condition at a hospital with severe burns, while the other was in police custody, said Scottish Police Chief Constable Willie Rae. He said a "suspect device" was found on the man at the hospital and it was taken to a safe location where it was being investigated.
Rae would not say whether the device was a suicide belt. British security officials said evidence pointed toward the Glasgow attack being a suicide mission.
"I can confirm that we believe the incident at Glasgow airport is linked to the events in London yesterday," Rae said. "There are clearly similarities and we can confirm that this is being treated as a terrorist incident."
Police foiled the plot Friday after two cars were found in central London packed with explosives — one outside a nightclub near Piccadilly Circus and another parked nearby.
A British government security official said the methods used in the airport attack and Friday's thwarted plots were similar, with all three vehicles carrying large quantities of flammable materials.
The official spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the information.
Police and MI5 had no specific intelligence warning of a plan to attack Scotland, but they have monitored a host of suspected terrorists and plots there, he said. It was not yet clear whether there was an international element to the planning or funding of the attacks, the official said.
The new terror threat presents Prime Minister Gordon Brown, a Scot who took office on Wednesday, with an enormous challenge and comes at a time of already heightened vigilance one week before the anniversary of the July 7 London transit attacks, which killed 52 people.
"I know that the British people will stand together, united, resolute and strong," Brown said Saturday in a televised statement.
President Bush was being kept informed of the situation, the White House said. "We're in contact with British authorities on the matter," said Gordon Johndroe, a spokesman for the National Security Council, in Washington.
The green Jeep barreled toward Glasgow's main airport terminal shortly after 3 p.m. Leeson said bollards — security posts outside the entrance — stopped the driver from driving into the bustling terminal, but the nose of the vehicle smashed the glass doors.
"If he'd got through, he'd have killed hundreds, obviously," he said.
AP photographs from the scene showed the car hit the building at an angle and was poking into the terminal. The Jeep struck the building directly in front of check-in counters, where dozens of passengers were lined up, police said.
Lynsey McBean, a witness at the terminal, said the driver kept trying to push the car forward after it got stuck, and "the wheels were spinning and smoke was coming from them."
She said one of the men then took out a plastic gasoline canister and poured a liquid under the car. "He then set light to it," said McBean, 26, from Erskine, Scotland.
Police subdued the driver and a passenger, both described by witnesses as South Asian — a term used to refer to people from India, Pakistan, Afghanistan and other countries in the region. The previous round of terrorist activity in Britain, in July 2005, was largely carried out by local Muslims, raising ethnic tensions in Britain.
Witnesses said one of the men was engulfed in flames and spoke "gibberish" as an official used a fire extinguisher to douse the fire.
Glasgow police spokeswoman Elisa Dunn said five bystanders were treated for injuries — one of whom was hospitalized with a leg injury.
The airport was evacuated and all flights suspended. Police said Liverpool Airport and roads around Edinburgh were also closed.
The attack left passengers shaken and stranded on the first day of summer vacation for Glasgow schools. At the time of the crash, the airport was bustling with families heading out on vacation.
Meanwhile in London, police were gathering evidence from closed circuit television footage, as forensics experts searched for clues into the foiled bombings. The two Mercedes cars had been loaded with gasoline, gas canisters and nails in one of the capital's busiest areas on a night when Londoners like to go out and party. Security officials and police denied an ABC News report that they had a "crystal clear" picture of one suspect from CCTV footage.
The vehicles were found abandoned in the early hours of Friday in what police believe was an attempt to kill scores or even hundreds of people. Detectives said they were keeping an open mind about the bombers' identities, but terrorism experts said the signs pointed to a cell linked to or inspired by al-Qaida.
One car was abandoned outside the Tiger Tiger nightclub on Haymarket in the heart of London's entertainment district. The other had been towed after being parked illegally on nearby Cockspur Street and was discovered in an impound lot about a mile away in Park Lane, near Hyde Park.
London police said extra officers were being deployed at landmarks, airports, train stations and bus terminals across the capital Sunday, and had been ordered to step up the use of stop and search powers. Armed police would patrol at major rail stations, it said.
At least 450 officers would monitor a rock concert at London's Wembley Stadium on Sunday to mark the 10th anniversary of the death of Princess Diana, police said.
Brown came to office pledging to win back the support of voters disenchanted over the Iraq war. But he backed Tony Blair's decision to send troops to Iraq in 2003 and has shown support for greater anti-terror measures that have angered Britain's some 1.8 million Muslims.
The airport incident carried reminders of a foiled plot in December 1999 to attack Los Angeles International Airport, when customs agents stopped an Algerian-born man in a car packed with 124 explosives. He was jailed for 22 years and prosecutors said he was intent on bombing the Los Angeles airport on the eve of the millennium.