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Parcel Plot Exposes Softness in UK Security 

 
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by Raff Pantucci    


Tuesday, 02 November 2010 



UK rushes to tighten up cargo security processes. 

Weekend revelations by British Prime Minister David Cameron that the bombs
being delivered from Yemen to the United States using the international
postal service were meant to blow up in the air have added a further
dimension to the already confusing flow of information emerging from the
Yemen cargo parcel bomb incident. 

The details of how the plot was uncovered are still filtering into the
public domain. One report in the British press which was independently
corroborated, suggested that one of the first streams for the plot came from
a message picked up by GCHQ (Britain's answer to the National Security
Agency), which seemed to suggest that something was afoot. In parallel to
this, information reached American and British forces from Saudi Arabia
which pointed more specifically to a threat from Al Qaeda in the Arabian
Peninsula (AQAP). According to the BBC, the Saudi's intelligence came from
information obtained from Jabr al-Faifi, a Saudi Guantanamo returnee who had
been through the Saudi de-radicalisation program, returned to the
battlefield alongside AQAP, before once again changing his mind and
surrendering to Saudi authorities. Information from al-Faifi appears to have
also been behind an earlier statement by the French Interior Minister in
mid-October that his nation had received a threat warning from the Saudi's
about AQAP targeting "the European continent and France in particular." 

The combination of information from al-Faifi and GCHQ (and doubtless other
sources) appears to have provided a rich picture to security forces to go
and check a specific package which was tracked down to Dubai airport. It
also sent a warning to British police in Leicestershire to go and check the
cargo in an airplane at East Midlands Airport outside Nottingham. British
police rushed to the scene with sniffer dogs and explosives experts, but
were initially unable to find anything until they received specific
information about what had been discovered in the Emirates. At this point,
they went looking in a more targeted manner and were able to uncover a
package which had originated in Yemen and passed through Germany prior to
the UK. Similar to its Emirati partner, the parcel was headed for a Jewish
institution in Chicago. 

The devices, fabricated from PETN and carefully concealed inside printer
cartridges, were undetectable by current technology. But it is uncertain
when they were primed to go off: initial suspicions were that the target was
the Chicago synagogues they were addressed to. The Prime Minister and John
Brennan's comments over the weekend were backed on Monday in Parliament when
the Home Secretary Theresa May announced, "the devices were probably
intended to detonate mid-air and to destroy the cargo aircraft on which they
were being transported." Disturbingly for security services, it now seems as
though the packages may have spent some time on planes filled with
passengers as well as freight - meaning a disaster was barely avoided. 

While on the one hand British services deserve congratulation, it seems
equally clear that there were some flaws in the system which allowed the
package onto a plane in the United Kingdom and secondly that police were
unable in the first instance to discover the device. As the former police
head of counter-terrorism Andy Hayman characterized it to the BBC, "there
was some indecision, first the cordons were on, then they were off, then
they were on." 

This has led to a tightening of measures announced by the Home Secretary: 

. A review of all aspects of air freight security; 

. Updating of information given to airport personnel which includes the new
relevant information; 

. From midnight Monday the suspension of all "unaccompanied" air freight
from Yemen and Somalia, and the suspension of printer toner cartridges
larger than 500g in hand luggage; 

. Finally, the prohibition of "air cargo into, via or from the UK unless
they originate from a known consignor - a regular shipper with security
arrangements approved by the Department for Transport." 

For Britain this plot exposed some weaknesses in the security blanket, while
at the same time highlighting the impressive and effective work that
counter-terrorist's undertake. Nevertheless, the reality remains that the
plot was effectively underway when the security services latched onto it. As
the Home Secretary put it to the house, "at this stage we have no
information to suggest that another attack of a similar type by Al Qaeda in
the Arabian Peninsula is imminent. But this organisation is very active." It
remains to be seen when they are next able to be effective. 

Raff Pantucci, an HSToday.us correspondent and frequent contributor to
Homeland SecurityToday, is based in the United Kingdom. 

 



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