Moderate Muzzy Thingy: Bombers count on a web of support
The ability of London's bombing suspects to elude police, slip through borders and fade into ethnic communities suggests a broad network of support.
When the bomb he tried to detonate aboard a London Tube train failed to explode, police say Osman Hussain jumped out a carriage window, ran along the track, then hopped through backyards before melting into the city's bustle.
After going underground for five days, Hussain boarded a train at Waterloo station -- possibly walking past his picture and those of three other suspected July 21 attackers on posters that blanketed the city. Then he slipped away, traveling from London through France to Rome.
His ability to escape a massive British dragnet, coupled with the arrest of another suspect in Zambia with al Qaeda ties, raised fears about the global reach of today's terrorists and the depth of their networks.
"The way people fanned out after the bombings, it's brought it home to people . . . that it is part of a kind of a network, interconnected -- all the fingerprints are there," said Michael Cox, a professor at London's Royal Institute of International Affairs specializing in the post-Sept. 11 terrorism threat.
"They'd have to have a much wider support base than just those who are active suicide bombers."
Hussain, an Ethiopian-born Briton, was captured Friday at his brother Remzi Isaac's house in Rome, where police traced him through his use of a relative's cellphone. Italian newspapers said investigators suspected Hussain's real name was Hamdi Isaac.
Hussain admitted Saturday to a role in the attack but said it was only intended to be an attention-grabbing strike, not a deadly one, according to a legal expert familiar with the probe.
Grilled by a pair of Italy's top anti-terrorism prosecutors, Hussain said that months ago in London, his chief -- who he identified as "Muktar" -- taught him how to assemble explosives using fertilizers and stuff explosives and timers into backpacks, the Rome daily La Repubblica said.
Hussain was referring to Muktar Said Ibrahim, 27, one of the other bombing suspects captured Friday in a London raid, the newspaper said. Ibrahim is suspected of planting explosives on a London bus on July 21.
"Muktar urged us to be careful," La Repubblica quoted Hussain as telling his interrogators. "We didn't want to kill, just sow terror."
The arrest sparked more than a dozen follow-up raids across the country, as Italian authorities tried to determine if any attacks on Italy were being plotted.
In addition to Hussain, at least two of the other July 21 suspects were of East African origin, and Italian Interior Minister Giuseppe Pisanu said the country was watching the area closely.
"We are following the evolution of the overall situation in the Horn of Africa where, in stateless lands, al Qaeda has arrived, has settled, and from where it tends, in various ways, to dispatch its followers into Europe and the rest of the world," Pisanu said.
Though officials have not yet said they found links between the deadly July 7 attacks and the failed attacks exactly two weeks later -- both of which targeted three subway trains and a bus -- police chief Sir Ian Blair said there was a "resonance" between the two.
If it turns out there was a single mastermind for both events and a common bomb maker, experience shows they probably would have fled Britain before the attacks, said Alex Standish, editor of Jane's Intelligence Digest. A likely hiding place would be in western Europe, where they could flee without having to undergo tough border security checks.
"They'll go to ground in areas that they will not be conspicuous," Standish said. "Most European Union countries have a significant Muslim population where these guys can just sit there and fade into the background."
Britain was seeking Hussain's extradition and said it was seeking the return of one of its citizens detained in Zambia.
Though the Foreign Office has not released the person's name, it is widely reported to be Haroon Rashid Aswat, whom Zambian officials have said was being questioned about 20 phone calls he allegedly made to some of the men involved in the July 7 attacks, which killed 56 people, including four suicide bombers.
Aswat is implicated in a 1999 plot to establish a terrorist training camp in the United States and has told Zambian investigators he once was a bodyguard for al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, Zambian officials said.
Before he was detained in Zambia, Aswat had been hiding in Johannesburg, South Africa, and was followed after entering the country from Botswana, the Zambian officials said.
"Every single terrorist event we've had, and the failed ones we've had, there usually are foreign connections, even though the cannon fodder may be home grown," said Magnus Ranstorp, director of the Center for the Study of Terrorism and Political Violence at the University of St. Andrews in Scotland.
British authorities were fortunate to have good quality closed-circuit television pictures of the July 21 suspects. That could have spooked them into a "panic" response counter to known terrorist training methods, with three failing to immediately flee the country and Hussain using a cellular phone that could be traced easily, Ranstorp said.
Posted by: .com 2005-07-31 |