http://www.foxnews.com/us/2010/11/03/plotters-didnt-know-mail-bombs/?test=fa
ces

 


Plotters Didn't Know Where Mail Bombs Would Go Off


Published November 03, 2010

WASHINGTON -- The plotters behind last week's unsuccessful mail bombings
could not have known exactly where their Chicago-bound packages were when
they were set to explode, even after a suspected test run, U.S. officials
say.

The communication cards had been removed from the cell phones attached to
the bombs, meaning the phones could not receive calls, officials said,
making it likely the terrorists intended the alarm or timer functions to
detonate the bombs.

"The cell phone probably would have been triggered by the alarm functions
and it would have exploded midair," said a U.S. official briefed on the
investigation of the bombs taken off cargo planes Friday in England and the
United Arab Emirates. This person, like other officials in this story, spoke
on condition of anonymity to discuss the case.

The official also said Tuesday that each bomb was attached to a syringe
containing lead azide, a chemical initiator that would have detonated PETN
explosives packed into each computer printer toner cartridge. Both PETN and
a syringe were used in the failed Christmas Day bombing of a Detroit-bound
airliner linked to an al-Qaida branch in Yemen.

The Obama administration, which has been monitoring intelligence on possible
mail plots since at least early September, was preparing new security rules
for international cargo in response to the attempted attack.

Security officials are considering requiring that companies provide
information about incoming cargo before planes take off, one U.S. official
said. Currently, the U.S. doesn't get that information until four hours
before a plane lands.

A second official said the U.S. will also expand its definition of high-risk
cargo, meaning more cargo will be screened from countries known as hotbeds
of terrorism.

President Barack Obama stressed the need for stronger security for air cargo
in a telephone conversation Tuesday with Ali Abdullah Saleh, Yemen's
president, the White House said.

Investigators believe al-Qaida mailed three innocent-looking packages from
Yemen to Chicago in mid-September to watch the route they took.

One of those packages contained a copy of British author George Eliot's 1860
novel "The Mill on the Floss." Authorities were investigating whether it was
a subtle calling card from Anwar al-Awlaki, the U.S.-born Yemeni cleric who
has inspired a string of attempted attacks against the West.

The militant cleric is now a fugitive, targeted by a U.S. kill or capture
list. Yemeni authorities put him on trial in absentia Tuesday, charging him
as a new defendant in the October killing of a French security guard.

Al-Awlaki became well versed in English literature while in prison in Yemen
from 2006 to 2007 and later posted online book reviews slamming Shakespeare
and praising Charles Dickens. Beyond that, however, there was no immediate
connection between al-Awlaki and the book found in the package mailed in
September, one U.S. official said.

Shipping carriers allow Internet users to monitor packages from point to
point through the international cargo system.

While a test run would have given al-Qaida a sense of the shipping routes,
there was no guarantee the route would be the same a month -- or even a day
-- later, officials at UPS and FedEx said Tuesday. Routes change based on
the weather, cargo volume and plane schedules, they said.

Neither company lets customers see precisely which planes their packages are
on. Sometimes they are packed on cargo planes, sometimes on passenger
planes. There is no way for customers to track their packages in real time
while in flight, officials with both companies said.

Still, knowing the time shipments were logged in leaving Europe and the time
they were scanned arriving in Chicago would have given al-Qaida operatives a
large enough time window to allow them to have rigged their bombs to blow up
somewhere along the way.

The packages sent last week were addressed to two Chicago-area synagogues.
Because the addresses were out of date and the names on the packages
included references to the Crusades -- the 200-year wars waged by Christians
largely against Muslims -- officials do not believe the synagogues were the
targets.

 



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