By Paul Haven
The Associated Press
Its scope was ruthlessly ambitious, causing destruction officials say would have been “unimaginable.” While details are still sketchy, the alleged plot to take down several U.S.-bound planes with liquid explosives appears to be unlike anything the world has seen in years.
Counterterrorism officials said Thursday that the London plot appears to bear the fingerprints of al-Qaida, and may even have been “the Big One” they have been dreading since Sept. 11, 2001, particularly as the five year anniversary of the carnage approaches.
More than 20 people have been jailed, terror threat levels have been raised to some of their highest levels, and hundreds of flights have been canceled worldwide.
“The scope or the magnitude of this attack is much larger than previous attacks,” said Rohan Gunaratna, a terrorism expert at Singapore’s Institute of Defense and Strategic Studies.
He added that everything known so far points to involvement by Osama bin Laden’s terror group.
“It is a classic al-Qaida tactic. It is a hallmark of al-Qaida to carry out coordinated, simultaneous attacks, and the aviation domain is certainly known to al-Qaida. They have obvious experience in working around that system and extensive knowledge of the aviation domain.”
U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff echoed those sentiments, saying the planned attack “was sophisticated, it had a lot of members and it was international in scope.” He added that: “It was in some respects suggestive of an al Qaida plot,” but cautioned that the investigation was still under way.
There have been dozens of thwarted plots around the world since 2001, and several that were murderously successful. Suicide bombers killed 52 people in London on July 7, 2005, 58 in two attacks in Istanbul, Turkey in 2003, and 202 in Bali in 2002. Islamic radicals killed 191 people in Madrid on March 11, 2004, then blew themselves up days later when police were closing in.
While al-Qaida’s call for global jihad clearly acted as inspiration, there has been no direct evidence that bin Laden or his No. 2, Ayman al-Zawahri, had advance knowledge of those attacks, that they helped plan them, or that they provided financial or logistical help to those who carried them out.
The group’s failure to match the destruction it inflicted on Sept. 11 has led to speculation that a global dragnet that has forced bin Laden into hiding and ensnared many of his most trusted deputies may have degraded al-Qaida’s abilities.
Analysts said Thursday that that is a theory to be believed only at the world’s peril.
The airline plan had the potential to dwarf the attacks of recent years — killing hundreds, perhaps thousands.
It also appears to have involved far more extensive planning and expertise.
Counterterrorism agents have been tracking the alleged plotters for months, and made arrests in London and its suburbs, as well as Birmingham. A British police official said the suspects appeared to be “homegrown,” though it was not immediately clear if they were all British citizens.
Magnus Ranstorp, a terrorism expert at Sweden’s Center for Asymmetric Threat Studies who has done extensive research into al-Qaida’s efforts to recruit in Europe, said the foiled plot in Britain “could very well have been an attempt at ‘the Big One.’”
Andrea Nativi, a researcher at the Rome-based Military Center for Strategic Studies, said the London plot resembled that of Sept. 11, 2001 in its ambition, and was an entirely different animal from other terror schemes of recent years.
“By comparison, the London subway attacks look like child’s play,” he said. “The new element here is their cleverness in trying to overcome the new security systems installed after 2001 ... No one can really expect to pass security checks with explosives in their pocket, they had to look for a plan B.”
Rodolfo Mendoza, a police intelligence official in the Philippines, said the “modus operandi” is the same as al-Qaida has used in the past — and he should know.
Mendoza was among the law enforcement officers involved in thwarting a plot by al-Qaida terror mastermind Ramzi Yousef — this one way back in 1995 — to use liquid explosives to blow up a dozen airliners as they flew across the Pacific Ocean to U.S. destinations like Los Angeles, San Francisco, Honolulu and New York.
Like al-Qaida’s decade-long effort to bring down the World Trade Center in New York, first in 1993 and then, disastrously, in 2001, the latest plot to blow up commercial airliners reveals the group’s unwavering resolve, Mendoza said.
“These people are obsessed,” he said. “They will try and try and try again to accomplish their mission.