"the suicide bombers next door."

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/8770417/site/newsweek/

Bombers Next Door
Four dead and four others safely in custody, but British police worry
this is only the beginning.
By Mark Hosenball
Newsweek

Aug. 8, 2005 issue - The weird thing was how ordinary they all looked.
Each new glimpse of the eight suspected foot soldiers of Al Qaeda last
week only underscored the British tabloids' description of them as
"the suicide bombers next door." A video recording surfaced showing
two of the four July 7 terrorists on a Welsh white-water-rafting
holiday, laughing and paddling, hardly a month before they killed
themselves and 52 mass-transit riders in London. The same commonplace
quality came through in TV coverage of a police raid in London last
week as two of the four suspects in the failed July 21 bombings
emerged meekly onto the balcony of their North Kensington apartment,
unclothed, eyes and noses running from tear gas. A pair of small
children toddled out onto another balcony below, visibly thrilled to
find a K-9 officer on their doorstep. Nothing about any of the eight
men's faces would have drawn a second look on most city streets.

No one doubted there could be more like them. Four of the men blew
themselves up, and the other four were run to ground from England to
Italy, only eight days after they had fled their dud bombs. The quick
arrests, thanks to closed-circuit-TV images and fast police work, were
reassuring. But Scotland Yard said it would be foolhardy to suppose
that the conspirators behind the attacks intend to stop there. Someone
must have recruited, organized and equipped the two terror cells. The
bombing suspects mirrored Britain's large immigrant population: East
Africans, Pakistanis, a Jamaican, they included a school aide, a
business student, a transit worker, a counterman from a family
fish-and-chips shop. How many other malcontents might Al Qaeda have
already groomed into other sleeper cells? "This is not the B team,"
said London's top police officer, Sir Ian Blair, of the July 21
bombers before their capture. "These were not amateurs ... They only
made one mistake," he added. "We were very, very lucky." London cops
were on high alert last Thursday after getting word that more bombings
were imminent. When the day passed with many arrests but no attacks,
they speculated that their increased visibility might have deterred an
attack, said a source close to Scotland Yard.

Investigators have found no hard evidence so far that the members of
the July 7 and July 21 cells even knew one another. Presumably the
plotters didn't want an investigation of one leading to the other.
Three of the July 7 bombers were British natives of Pakistani descent,
and all four had spent much of their lives in and around the northern
city of Leeds. The July 21 suspects appear to have been children of
refugees from the Horn of Africaâ€"Somali, Eritrean, Ethiopianâ€"who had
lived in England for several years; one had only recently become a
British citizen. There were hints last week that London police were
chasing a third cell, this one of French-speaking Muslims.

Police have yet to figure out who directed the attacks, though they've
publicly blamed Al Qaeda. The inquiry keeps coming back to the gritty
London neighborhood of Finsbury Park, home of the North London Central
Mosque, where a fiery Egyptian preacher known as Abu Hamza al-Masri
was a principal prayer leader from 1996. He had two prosthetic hands
and one sightless eyeâ€"war wounds from Afghanistan, he told people.
Until his removal two years ago, he preached venomously anti-Western
sermons to jihad recruits like shoebomber Richard Reid and the
convicted 9/11 conspirator Zacarias Moussaoui. Abu Hamza was finally
arrested in May 2004 and charged with incitement to murder, along with
other offenses.

British and American counterterrorism officials, who declined to be
identified because of the sensitive nature of the investigation, tell
NEWSWEEK they're actively pursuing possible ties between Abu Hamza's
followers and the bombings. One name that has resurfaced is that of
Richard Reid: he's said to have been acquainted with at least one of
the July 21 suspects, an Eritrean named Muktar Said Ibrahim. Another
is that of Abu Hamza's top lieutenant, Haroon Rashid Aswat, a
British-born ethnic Indian who is wanted in the United States for
allegedly trying to set up a terrorist training camp in Oregon for his
boss. In the days before the July 7 attacks, calls were logged between
a phone used by one of the bombers and one that was registered to
Aswat. Counterterrorism officials say Aswat's phone was found in
Britain, but two weeks ago Aswat was arrested in Zambia, where he is
awaiting extraditionâ€"whether to Britain or the United States has yet
to be decided.

Despite the apparent Finsbury Park links, some of the bombers had
nothing in common with thugs like Ibrahim, a convicted mugger, and
losers like Reid. Teaching assistant Mohammed Sidique Khan, a decade
older than the other July 7 bombers, was a natural leader, according
to those who knew him in the ethnically mixed neighborhoods in Leeds,
an old mill town in northern England. Muslims and non-Muslims admired
his community spirit. He set up two gyms to help get local youngsters
off the streets, mentored problem students at primary school and was
rewarded with a tour of Parliament by his M.P. "If Khan could be
turned, it means anybody could be turned," says Khurshid Drabu, an
adviser provided to the Khan family by the Muslim Council of Britain.
"That's what's terrifying."

One old friend thinks the dramatic change may have begun back in 1999,
when a Jamaican-born jihadist cleric known as Abdullah el-Faisal, an
Abu Hamza associate, went to Leeds. (In 2003 a British court convicted
him of incitement to murder and sentenced him to nine years in
prison.) Around the time of the Iraq invasion, Khan began distancing
himself from old friends and hanging out more and more with two of the
teenagers he had been mentoring at his gym, Hasib Hussain and Shahzad
Tanweer. In November 2004, Tanweer and Khan flew to Pakistan for three
months. When they came back, Khan quit his teaching job, moved his
family to another townâ€"Aswat's old hometown of Dewsbury, as it
happensâ€"and left his wife, an ethnic Indian Muslim, and their infant
daughter. Five months later, Khan and friends blew themselves up.

Such drastic withdrawal is actually a common feature of Al Qaeda's
recruitment process. Former Saudi intelligence chief (and current
ambassador-designate to the United States) Prince Turki al-Faisal, a
veteran of the secret war against Al Qaeda, described the routine to
NEWSWEEK. By the time the group's enlistment spe-cialists approach a
candidate, they have studied him carefully. "Then they approach him,"
Prince Turki says. "They express admiration for him, and they invite
him for tea or coffee." They talk about jihad and praise the ideas of
some sheik. "After a few more meetings they will offer to intro-duce
him to the sheik. That's when they start putting into his head the
idea of being careful and not telling anybody, especially his family."
Then comes the turning point: they ask the recruit to prove himself by
doing something to incriminate himself.

British police may find their jailed suspects surprisingly eager to
talk. People say Qaeda operatives are trained to withstand
interrogation. That may be true of the commanders, but Prince Turki
says captured foot soldiers tend to open up with little or no coaxing.
They want to escape their cultish isolation. "If you show them a
little sympathy, they want to come back to the way they were before,"
he says. "It's as if they were given the chance to come back again as
human beings, and many of them jump at that chance." If only they
could have made the jump before people were killed.

With Rana Foroohar and Emily Flynn in Leeds and Christopher Dickey in
Paris.

URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/8770417/site/newsweek/




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