Did U.S. Make U.K. a
Target?
Fox News
Ap
Monday, July 18, 2005
LONDON — Britain's close alliance with the United States
has put it at particular risk of terrorist attack, two leading
think tanks said Monday, but a government minister said the
nation would not have been safer by staying out of wars in
Afghanistan and Iraq.
The continuing debate about the wisdom of Britain's military
commitments has intensified after the bombings of three London
underground trains and a bus on July 7 killed 55 people,
including the four suicide bombers, and injured some 700
others.
The Royal Institute of International Affairs (search) and the
Economic and Social Research Council (search) said the situation
in Iraq had given "a boost to the Al Qaeda network's propaganda,
recruitment and fund-raising" and provided an ideal training
ground for Al Qaeda-linked terrorists.
Defense Secretary John Reid (search), however, argued that
terrorism had to be confronted.
"The idea that somehow by running away from the school bully,
then the bully will not come after you is a thesis that is known
to be completely untrue by every kid in the playground and it is
also refuted by every piece of historical evidence that we have,"
Reid said in a British Broadcasting Corp. radio interview.
"The time for excuses for terrorism is over," British Foreign
Secretary Jack Straw (search) said at an EU meeting in Brussels,
Belgium. "The terrorists have struck across the world, in
countries allied with the United States, backing the war in Iraq
and in countries which had nothing whatever to do with the war in
Iraq."
On Sunday, Britain's largest Sunni Muslim group issued a
binding religious edict, or fatwa (search), condemning the
suicide bombings as the work of a "perverted ideology."
The Sunni Council said the Koran, the Muslim holy book,
forbade suicide attacks.
"Who has given anyone the right to kill others? It is a sin.
Anyone who commits suicide will be sent to hell," said Mufti
Muhammad Gul Rehman Qadri, the council chairman. "What happened
in London can be seen as a sacrilege. It is a sin to take your
life or the life of others."
The council said Muslims should not use "atrocities being
committed in Palestine and Iraq" to justify attacks.
"We equally condemn those who may have been behind the
masterminding of these acts, those who incited these youths in
order to further their own perverted ideology," Qadri said.
The Sunday Times reported that one suspected bomber,
30-year-old Mohammad Sidique Khan (search), was investigated last
year by MI5 (search), Britain's domestic intelligence service,
but was not regarded as a threat to national security or
subsequently put under surveillance.
MI5 began evaluating Khan, a Briton of Pakistani ancestry,
during an inquiry that focused on an alleged plot to explode a
large truck bomb outside a target in London, the newspaper
said.
The Metropolitan Police and a spokesman for Prime Minister
Tony Blair declined comment.
The bombings have prompted the government to propose new
legislation outlawing "indirect incitement" of terrorism —
including public praise for those who carry out attacks.
Nevertheless, Charles Falconer (search), the lord chancellor,
denied the government had been negligent in screening political
refugees from Muslim countries, making Britain a fertile
recruiting ground for Islamic terrorism.
"In terms of asylum, our policy is: If you are in fear of
persecution, you are entitled to come here," the minister said on
BBC television. "Obviously, if you then seek to attack the very
state that you come to, that gives rise to different
questions."
The fatwa was issued as investigators in Leeds continued to
focus on an Islamic bookshop and a house near the home of one of
the four alleged bombers, 22-year-old Shahzad Tanweer
(search).
Tanweer, born in Britain to Pakistani parents, was believed to
be one of the Underground train bombers and reportedly visited
two religious schools on a trip to Pakistan.
Pakistani intelligence agents have questioned students,
teachers and administrators at the school in central Lahore, and
at least two other Al Qaeda-linked radical Islamic centers,
showing pictures and a dossier on Tanweer.
Three of the four men identified by police as the suspected
suicide bombers were born in Britain to parents of Pakistani
origin. They are Tanweer, Khan and 18-year-old Hasib Hussain
(search), who were all from the Leeds area. The fourth suspect is
Jamaican-born Germaine Lindsay (search), 19, who came to Britain
as an infant and lived in Luton, a city north of London.
Police on Saturday released an image captured by surveillance
cameras showing all four bombers with backpacks entering the
Luton train station on the morning of the attacks. Investigators
say the four took a train from Luton to London's King's Cross
station, where they split up to carry out the bombings.
Officers have also been searching the Leeds home of an
Egyptian biochemist after investigators reportedly found traces
of explosives in the man's bathtub. Magdy Mahmoud Mustafa
el-Nashar (search) is being interrogated by Egyptian authorities,
who say the biochemist denies having any connection to the
attacks.
Egypt is not prepared to hand el-Nashar over to Britain,
Egyptian security officials said. British investigators are in
Cairo to observe the questioning. The two countries have no
extradition treaty.
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