Britain | ||
Airliner bomb trial: The al-Qaeda connection | ||
2008-09-09 | ||
The liquid bomb plotters shared the same al-Qaeda bomb maker as the July 7 and July 21 suicide gangs, intelligence agencies believe. That man, Abu Ubaida al-Masri, apparently came up with a novel design of home-made detonator that would be utilised in the attacks. Although intelligence services know what al-Masri looks like and have a photograph of him, they do not know his true identity. Al-Masri, which is not his real name, has been described as being in his mid-forties, 5ft 7ins tall, muscular and tanned, with greying black hair and a greying beard. He is also missing two fingers, probably as the result of a bomb explosion in Chechnya during the 1990s. Al-Masri was among a contingent of Egyptians who fought the Soviets in Afghanistan and afterwards travelled to Bosnia and Chechnya before arriving in Britain. By 1995 he was in Munich, Germany, using an alias and asking for asylum. The claim was rejected and he was jailed pending deportation, then released. He returned to Afghanistan in 2000, serving as an instructor at a training camp near Kabul, where he taught about explosives, artillery and mapping. The CIA now believes that al-Masri is dead, probably from hepatitis C earlier this year. He was just one of the links between the liquid bomb plot gang and the July 7 and July 21 bombers.
Security sources believe Rauf, who knew the leader of the July 21 bombers, Muktar Ibrahim, was the man who housed the liquid bomb plot gang as they arrived at a safe-house in Bahawalpur, Pakistan, where he worked as a travelling salesman. Investigators believe he acted as a staging post and sent the bombers up to the mountains of the lawless tribal areas to meet with al-Qaeda's bomb-makers. It was Rauf's sudden arrest in Pakistan which led to the rounding up of the airlines terror cell in Britain as the Metropolitan Police Counter Terrorism Command feared their operation could be exposed. But Britain was unable to get him extradited and 16 months after his arrest he disappeared from custody in a bizarre escape after a court hearing. Rauf's family run a bakery in Birmingham. His father was a religious judge in Kashmir, before he moved to Britain in the 1980s, later setting up an Islamic charity called Crescent Relief. | ||
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-Obits- | |
Abu Ubaida al-Masri: The Obituary | |
2008-04-10 | |
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At the time of his death, the Egyptian-born al-Masri was responsible for the terror organizations external operations, focusing on plotting attacks outside the tribal areas of Pakistan. Al-Masri is tied to two major terrorist plots. The first being the July 7, 2005, London subway bombing, in which al-Masri recruited, trained and directed four homicide bombers in a coordinated attack on London's transportation system. In the attack, known as the 7/7 Bombings, three bombs exploded during morning rush-hour within 50 seconds of each other on three London Underground trains. A fourth bomb exploded on a bus nearly an hour later. The attack left 52 commuters dead, and more than 700 injured. It was the largest and deadliest terror attack on London in its history. The second plot, in August, 2006, involved the use of liquid explosives smuggled aboard several airliners traveling from London's Heathrow and Gatwick airports to major cities in the U.S. and Canada with the intention of detonating the bombs in midair, destroying at least 10 aircraft. British intelligence foiled that plot, arresting 24 suspects in and around London. Eight of the original suspects currently are on trial in London, charged with conspiring to murder and destroy aircraft. U.S. officials say al-Masri probably has been dead for several months, with no explanation as to why news of his death was not released sooner. Few have heard of al-Masri outside a select circle of anti-terrorism officials and Islamic militants, the Los Angeles Times reported last week. "Abu Ubaida al Masri" is an alias, and officials have yet to learn the mysterious operative's real name, the Times reported. "He is considered capable and dangerous," an unidentified British official told the newspaper. "He is not at the very top of Al Qaeda, but has been part of the core circle for a long time. He is someone who has emerged and grabbed our attention as others were caught or eliminated in the last couple of years. Perhaps he rose faster than he would have otherwise." Al-Masri was in his mid-40s according to a German investigative file obtained by the Times. His alias means "The Egyptian Father of Ubaida." Little is known about his youth other than that he belonged to a generation of Egyptians who have dominated Al Qaeda since the terror group fought the Soviets in Afghanistan in the 1970s and '80s, the Times reported. Al-Masri fought in Bosnia-Herzegovina in the early 1990s, went on to Chechnya and lost two fingers in combat leading to the nickname "Three-Fingered Egyptian" the investigative file cites. He surfaced in Germany in 1995 requesting asylum, which was rejected in 1999. He was jailed pending deportation, but was then released for unknown reasons, the newspaper reported. An associate of al-Masri in Germany included a Moroccan computer science student who married the daughter of Ayman Zawahiri, Usama bin Laden's deputy, the newspaper reported. By 2000 al-Masri was back in Afghanistan serving as an explosives instructor at a training camp near Kabul. During the U.S.-led military operation in Afghanistan in late 2001, Masri fought in a paramilitary unit that took heavy casualties covering bin Laden's escape into Pakistan, Rohan Gunaratna, author of "Inside Al Qaeda," told the newspaper. When the self-proclaimed Sept. 11 mastermind Khalid Shaikh Mohammed was captured in 2003, al-Masri joined a group of chiefs responsible for external operations, the Times reported. "He's considered a player," a U.S. anti-terrorism official told the newspaper. | |
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India-Pakistan |
MI-6 Weaponizes Hepatitis? (Abu Ubaida al-Masri Dead) |
2008-04-09 |
![]() The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren't authorized to discuss the matter publicly. |
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Terror Networks |
A look inside Al Qaeda |
2008-04-02 |
The militant is known as Abu Ubaida al Masri, and charting his path reveals his vulnerabilities and those of the terrorist group.... Masri's ongoing contact with foreign operatives put him in the cross hairs. U.S. forces have unleashed a flurry of airstrikes in Waziristan this year, killing a top Libyan chief, Abu Laith al Libi, and other Arab militants in late January. Recent intelligence suggests that Masri died too, officials say. But they say they have no confirmation, no Internet eulogies of the kind that celebrated Libi. Cultivating the art of survival through anonymity, Masri may have beaten the odds once again. Or it may be that, for strategic reasons, both sides want to keep his fate ambiguous as a successor emerges. The external operations chief, the senior British official said, has "the job with the lowest life expectancy in international politics." |
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