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Britain
Mi5 found bomb factory, bugged suspects
2006-08-13
British intelligence service agents secretly infiltrated a bomb factory and found liquid explosives and detonators weeks before they foiled the plot to blow up America-bound passenger jets flying from UK airports, media reported on Sunday.

Covert raids on homes of key terror suspects were also made to plant bugs and gather crucial evidence against them, The Mail on Sunday claimed.

The carefully planned 'sneak and peek' operation involved members of the SAS, or Special Air Service and other surveillance specialists of Mi5. It allowed the Security Service to eavesdrop on the suspected terrorists in the weeks before they were arrested.

The high-risk strategy which allowed the terror plot to almost reach fruition - potentially putting civilian lives at risk - is understood to have been discussed with Prime Minister Tony Blair and by the government's crisis management Cobra Committee, the report said.

A government source told the tabloid that this was just one of a dozen terror plots being investigated by Mi5. But the audacious surveillance exercise - approved by the Home Secretary - allowed Mi5 teams to build up a detailed picture of the group's planning, contacts and, crucially, when they intended to strike.

During months of careful work, the specialists are understood to have managed to get inside the gang's bomb-making factory - giving final confirmation that the plotters were indeed planning mass murder.

Hours of tape recordings, photographs and video are now likely to be used as evidence against the men if they are charged for their part in the alleged plot.

Tiny eavesdropping devices picked up conversations involving various members of the suspected terrorist gang as they put the finishing touches to their plans to blow up a series of commercial flights over the Atlantic.

The Security Service has a licence to 'bug and burgle' but only with the approval of the Home Secretary in order that any evidence obtained can later be used in court.

According to the report, over several months, former Home Secretary Charles Clarke and, more recently, John Reid were given detailed updates on the progress of the investigation to enable them to sign warrants for sophisticated intrusive surveillance against the terrorists.

As Mi5 reveals on its website: "The Services does use intrusive investigative methods, such as eavesdropping in a target's home and vehicle.

"However, our use of such methods is subject to a strict control and oversight regime.

"To install an eavesdropping device in a target's home we need to apply to the Secretary of State for a warrant under the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000 (RIPA) to authorise the intrusion on the privacy of the target."
Posted by:john

#12   >> #4 "Cobra Committee" -- I like that name.



/Unavailable for comment ...
Posted by: Mizzou Mafia   2006-08-13 23:27  

#11  The trend seems to be the younger, Saudi-linked radicals forcing out the older, reasonable Muslims out of positions of control, and then out of the congregations altogether, Apostate. There have been scattered stories to that effect from the US, Canada and England that I've seen in the last year or two.
Posted by: trailing wife   2006-08-13 20:43  

#10  Sorry, don't think we do "sneak and Peek" in these parts
Posted by: Captain America   2006-08-13 19:56  

#9  I can't believe the British did all that surveillance just to keep Lieberman from losing his senate seat.

/channeling moonbats
Posted by: Dreadnought   2006-08-13 18:44  

#8  If we're not going to deport all known muslims, and if we aren't going to outlaw the religion, then we damned sure better know what their up to at all times!

Of course this will never happen in the US.

My hats off to the British intelligence agences.
Posted by: RJB in JC MO   2006-08-13 18:43  

#7  Most of the moques are controlled by the older generation who aren't interested in fighting the jihad.

They'll retire long before this war is over. A dollar to a dog turd says they'll be replaced by someone trained via extremist groups from Iran or Pakistan.
Posted by: gorb   2006-08-13 14:53  

#6  Americans tend to jump too soon and never sustain convictions.

There was an article in the local fishwrap about that point this morning. Here's the NYT original. It contained a little nugget that I hadn't heard before:

British security officials have publicly acknowledged that two of the [7/7] London bombers — Mohammed Siddique Khan and Shehzad Tanweer — had been observed in connection with a different terrorist plot that was subject to heavy surveillance. But when they dropped out of sight — well before the London bombings — intelligence agencies did not pursue them because the other conspiracy seemed a much greater priority.
Posted by: Angie Schultz   2006-08-13 13:30  

#5  Lone Ranger, it's the college Islamic societies that need bugging. Most of the moques are controlled by the older generation who aren't interested in fighting the jihad.
Posted by: Apostate   2006-08-13 13:05  

#4  "Cobra Committee" -- I like that name.
Posted by: Ulelet Uniting8249   2006-08-13 12:49  

#3  hats off Mi5!
Posted by: RD   2006-08-13 12:41  

#2  Excellent. I'm glad they've got the goods. They do have a tendency to string it to the last minute. Americans tend to jump too soon and never sustain convictions.
Posted by: SOP35/Rat   2006-08-13 11:37  

#1  It's a start - a good start. Now - start bugging mosques - that is where the real terror is being bred. There is nothing sacriligious about it - no true place of worship should have anything to fear.
Posted by: Lone Ranger   2006-08-13 11:25  

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