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June 05, 2006
On Saturday, we noted the raid by London police on a house where chemical bomb-making was suspected. Two brothers were arrested; one was shot in the shoulder. Since then, the police have been searching the house, but so far haven't found what they're looking for. The authorities are worried that the chemical bomb may have been spirited away from the house before the raid: Anti-terrorist police hunting for a suspected chemical-based bomb after a raid on a house in east London fear that the device may have been moved and could still be used. The counter-attack has already begun: The new leader of Britain's biggest Muslim organisation said yesterday that trust between the police and the community affected by last week's terrorism raid in east London could break down. Flawed intelligence? How is that possible? Intelligence relating, not to a far-away, secretive police state, but to a house in east London! Meanwhile, the police are trying to figure out whether a chemical device, believed to be designed to emit sarin gas, is loose somewhere in London. It all has a rather familiar ring. UPDATE: From the Guardian: Senior counter-terrorism officials now believe that the intelligence that led to the raid on a family house last Friday in a search for a chemical device about to be used to attack Britain was wrong, the Guardian has learned. That's true, of course. But that doesn't mean the authorities won't be sued if they guessed wrong. |
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