BEIJING OLYMPICS & JIHADI TERRORISM
-INTERNATIONAL TERRORISM MONITOR---PAPER NO. 384
By B. Raman
Among those presently
undergoing imprisonment in the US for their role in the
explosions in the New York World Trade Centre in
February, 1993, is Ramzi Yousef, a Kuwaiti resident of
Pakistani origin. Before his arrest in Pakistan and
conviction in the US, he had planned a series of explosions
on board a number of planes. He plotted this from a hide-out
in Manila. Khalid Sheikh Mohammad, a principal architect of
the 9/11 terrorist strikes in the US, was also involved in
this conspiracy.
2. However, the plot was
thwarted by the Filipino police after an accidental fire in
the Manila apartment of Ramzi Yousef alerted them to it.
Ramzi Yousef ran away to Pakistan, where he was arrested by
the Pakistani authorities and handed over to the Federal
Bureau of Investigation (FBI) of the US. The investigation
brought out that Ramzi and KSM were plotting to blow up the
planes with the help of liquid explosives smuggled into the
aircraft.
3. While Ramzi was facing a
trial in the US for his involvement in the explosions of
February, 1993, in the New York World Trade Centre, , the US
Justice Department had persuaded Greg Scapra, a jail-mate,
to develop friendship with Ramzi and sound him as to how to
make liquid explosives. It was reported that Ramzi not only
told him orally, but also gave him hand-written notes,
explaining how to smuggle liquids into aircraft, how to mix
them on board aircraft to make explosives and how to
detonate them. This was in 1996.
4. In the London blasts of
July, 2005, the suicide bombers, three of them of Pakistani
origin, had reportedly fabricated the explosive material by
mixing in the bathtub of the apartment of one of them
women's cosmetic items.
5. In August, 2007, the
London Police discovered a plot by a group of terrorist
suspects of Pakistani origin to simultaneously blow up a
number of US-bound planes by taking into the aircraft
liquids such as cosmetics of day-to-day use, mixing them in
the toilet after the aircraft had taken off and using the
explosive material thus fabricated to blow up the aircraft.
Rashid Rauf, a British resident of Mirpuri
(Pakistan-Occupied Kashmir) origin, who was arrested by the
Pakistani authorities, was reported to have given the
initial information about this plot, which led to its
discovery by the London Police and the arrests that
followed.
6. Rashid Rauf is related by
marriage to Maulana Masood Azhar, the Amir of the Jaish-e-Mohammad
(JEM). He was arrested in Bahawalpur, the home town of Azhar.
The police recovered from his house a peroxide-based liquid.
Rashid reportedly contended during the interrogation that
the peroxide-based liquid was used by him to disinfect
injuries. He denied that it was meant for possible use as an
explosive material. For mysterious reasons, Rashid Rauf was
not handed over to the British for interrogation. He was
kept in detention in Pakistan. He escaped from custody on
December 15, 2007, while he was being taken back to jail
after a court hearing. He has not so far been traced.
7. Thus, since 1993 jihadi
terrorists of Pakistan as well as foreign terrorists based
in Pakistan have been planning to use liquid explosives made
from day-to-day material on board planes to blow them up.
After the discovery of the London plot of August, 2007,
physical security agencies all over the world initially
banned the passengers from carrying any liquids on board
the flights. Subsequently, they modified this to allow
passengers to carry only liquids such as alcohol and
cosmetics bought in the duty-free shops, which have to be
carried in transparent bags provided by the shops.
8. Initially, they allowed
the passengers to carry bottles of soft drinks and mineral
water, but not cans, but the security staff made the
passengers drink some portion of the drink inside the bottle
in order to check for effects on the passenger if they had
mixed the drink with a liquid capable of being used as an
explosive. Subsequently, they apprehended that liquid
explosives, because of their heavier density, would go down
the bottle and that drinking from the top would not have any
ill-effect on the passenger. They, therefore, totally banned
passengers from carrying soft drinks and mineral water
bottles on board the flights.
9. In the light of this, one
was surprised to note that the two terrorist suspects
detained by the Chinese authorities on March 7, 2008, for
allegedly trying to blow up a plane going from Urumqi in
Xinjiang to Beijing (a third person escaped) had carried the
explosive liquid on board the aircraft in soft drink cans.
If true, the fact that the airport security at Urumchi
allowed these cans to be carried---- when all over the world
there is a ban on such cans and bottles being carried---
speaks poorly of the physical security at some Chinese
airports,
10. The 'News" of Pakistan
has reported online on March 21, 2008, that the two suspects
arrested---- a woman and a man--- travelled with Pakistani
passports. The woman has been described as an Uighur living
in Pakistan and trained in a Pakistani jihadi camp and the
man as a Central Asian (Uzbeck?). The third person, who
escaped, has been described as a Pakistani, who had
masterminded the plot. No further details are given. Could
it be Rashid Rauf, who was knowledgeable on the smuggling
and use of liquid explosives?
11. Even the meagre facts
available so far about the thwarted plot speak of
deficiencies in the physical security set-up in China. It is
such deficiencies, which the jihadi terrorists wanting to
disrupt the Olympics will exploit. As the Olympics approach,
there is a need for a review of the physical securitry
measures in the light of the lessons from the Urumqi
incident.
12. As of now, there are two
possibilities which have to be factored into by the Chinese
authoritiesn in their physical security plan. Firstly, a
terrorist strike by pro-Al Qaeda Uighurs either at Beijing
or in Xinjiang or elsewhere. Secondly, a Munich,1972 like
terrorist strike by Al Qaeda or pro-Al Qaeda organisations
in Beijing itself. Apart from the usual physical security
measures, the Danish teams will need special protection. If
there is an attempted repeat of Munich, it will most
probably be directed against the Danish participants because
of the continuing anger of the Muslims against the
publication of cartoons in the Danish media showing a
depiction of the Holy Prophet.
(The writer is
Additional Secretary (retd), Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of
India, New Delhi, and, presently, Director, Institute For
Topical Studies, Chennai. He is also associated with the
Chennai Centre For China Studies. E-mail:
seventyone2@gmail.com)