[Excerpt: Major Alan Richmond, the second in command of the Queen’s
Dragoon Guards, said that despite the army’s good work there was
evidence that extremists and weapons materials were still getting
through....."We have done some operations against militants coming in
from Kuwait," he said, though he declined to elaborate.....He said that,
while Iraq was already awash with guns, it was clear that more
sophisticated weapons, including Semtex, were still getting in across
the Iranian border.....The more porous Saudi and Syrian borders also
remain a cause for concern.]

http://news.scotsman.com/international.cfm?id=96132005


Wed 26 Jan 2005

UK troops on alert for suicide attacks in southern Iraq

TEAMS of suicide bombers are heading from Baghdad to pick off soft
targets in the British-controlled south of Iraq in the run-up to the
country’s elections, British forces believe.

Militants are also known to be crossing into Iraq from Kuwait, and there
are reports of Semtex plastic explosives and other even more
sophisticated weapons being smuggled across the Iranian border.

British forces have been put on alert and warned to be aware of the risk
posed by suicide bombers ahead of the country’s first democratic
elections on Sunday.

Troops involved in policing the 80-mile border with Kuwait have mounted
operations to attempt to stop terrorists crossing into the country, but
some are believed to have managed to breach the defensive ditches and
electric fences.

Soldiers serving with UK forces in Basra say they are concerned about
the threat of more suicide bombings, after nine soldiers were injured in
an attack on the main British base at Shaibah, near Basra, last week.

Suicide attacks on British troops based at Camp Dogwood in central Iraq
last year led to a change in tactics.

British officers say the Sunni terrorists behind the attacks are
becoming more professional, and although they still operate
predominantly in and around Baghdad, they are increasingly capable of
moving further afield to mount operations.

One officer said yesterday there had been reports of more attempts to
move suicide-bomb teams south towards Basra, and soldiers said they
believed Basra was now seen as a softer target.

British forces have been heavily involved in securing Iraq’s borders
with Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Iran, working with Iraq’s Department of
Border Enforcement to plug many of the gaps.

Major Alan Richmond, the second in command of the Queen’s Dragoon
Guards, said that despite the army’s good work there was evidence that
extremists and weapons materials were still getting through.

"We have done some operations against militants coming in from Kuwait,"
he said, though he declined to elaborate.

He said that, while Iraq was already awash with guns, it was clear that
more sophisticated weapons, including Semtex, were still getting in
across the Iranian border.

The more porous Saudi and Syrian borders also remain a cause for
concern.

The question of security is expected to play a significant role in
turn-out for Sunday’s elections, with one of the terrorists of most
concern to coalition forces, al-Qaeda-linked Abu Musab al-Zarqawi,
already warning that anyone going to the polls to vote is putting their
life on the line.

But at Shalamacheh yesterday, the only official border crossing into
Iran, people planning to vote said they would not be put off by the
threats. Osama Abdul Karim, 30, from Basra, said he intended to vote for
Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani’s coalition, despite the warnings.

"I am not scared about voting. We are going to vote anyway," he said.
"Iraqis are not scared of these people coming in from outside. We need
the election for the future. The election must succeed."

•

A SURVIVOR of a suicide bomb attack on British troops has spoken
publicly for the first time about the moment the bomber struck.

Lieutenant Huw Longmore, 27, told how the bombers, who had travelled
from Fallujah, planned to video the attack on a British checkpoint and
how his squadron of light tanks headed them off, only for the bomber to
detonate his device next to their vehicles.

He described how his driver, Trooper Lee Williams, was saved from taking
the full force by luck, ducking down to pick up his rifle just as the
bomb went off.

"His back was covered in flecks of suicide bomber," he said. "I felt the
heat and the blast and there was black smoke everywhere."

Lt Longmore, from Cardiff, was a member of the 100-strong force of
Queen’s Dragoon Guards sent to Camp Dogwood near Baghdad.

The incident happened on 17 November.

Lt Longmore said he would like to know more about what had driven the
bomber to carry out the attack.

"He was just a normal guy, about 20 to 30," he said.
enditem
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