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The Courts Government News Politics

Liquid Terror Charges Dropped 364

A Pakistani judge has decided to drop terrorism charges against the man described as a "key figure" in the alleged plan to blow up flights out of London using liquid explosives. Instead of facing charges of terrorism for the plot, which forced many travelers to follow strict guidelines with respect to liquids, Rashid Raud now faces charges such as forgery. From the article: "Several commentators said the threat was deliberately exaggerated to bolster the anti-terror credentials of Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf and that it helped to demonise British Muslims of Pakistani origin. The Crown Prosecution Service in the UK said the dropping of charges against Mr Rauf in Pakistan would "make no difference" to the case against the men charged in Britain."
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Liquid Terror Charges Dropped

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  • Awesome (Score:5, Funny)

    by BitterAndDrunk ( 799378 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @05:05PM (#17228630) Homepage Journal
    I'd assume this means we're not going to have to take off our shoes or check our liquids anymore? Oh wait, I keep on assuming the TSA isn't a government agency run by the retarded and/or blind.
    • Re:Awesome (Score:5, Interesting)

      by clark0r ( 925569 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @05:10PM (#17228704)
      You would have thought that after the whole threat was rubbished by just about anybody with any basic knowledge of classroom chemistry, the home office and BAA would have downgraded the threat. I must say though, I flew from Gatwick 1 week after the plot was 'uncovered' and it didn't really affect me in the slightest. The queues were orderly and moved at quite a good pace, but the security staff didn't have a clue what they were doing. One woman performing searches on people let several people through with cigarette lighters and cigarettes, both clearly not allowed through the checkpoints. Shambles.
      • I find it funny that the FAA doesn't allow matches to be in luggage checked into the plane. I can understand a lighter might leak and therefore expose something very flammable in the undercarriage. But matches? How could they accidentally light themselves?
        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          by EvilSS ( 557649 )
          They probably had strike anywhere matches in mind when they did that. Of course, those are almost impossible to find anymore. I really miss them too. Literally fun on a stick.
          • Re:Awesome (Score:5, Interesting)

            by jandrese ( 485 ) <kensama@vt.edu> on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @05:40PM (#17229130) Homepage Journal
            I dropped a brand new box of those strike anywhere matches on the floor once when I was a kid. It was still pretty tightly sealed so after the heads burned the wood didn't go anywhere, but it was still pretty scary.
          • Tell me about about it. You used to be able to light Swan matches (UK) on a pane of glass.
            • by h4rm0ny ( 722443 )

              Just went and tried that and yes, you still can. Have to be pretty quick though. I managed to get two matches out of five. I'm discounting the three where the phosphorous got rubbed off to the point it wouldn't have lighted anyway.
          • by spun ( 1352 )
            Here's a good trick with strike anywhere matches. Cut a small (1/8") slit in the wooden end. Put two small strips of paper into the slit and bend them out to make four fins. Throw the match at any hard surface and it will ignite.
        • Re:Awesome (Score:5, Funny)

          by nomadic ( 141991 ) <`nomadicworld' `at' `gmail.com'> on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @05:34PM (#17229072) Homepage
          I find it funny that the FAA doesn't allow matches to be in luggage checked into the plane. I can understand a lighter might leak and therefore expose something very flammable in the undercarriage. But matches? How could they accidentally light themselves?

          It was through pressure brought by the Grue lobby.
      • Re:Awesome (Score:5, Interesting)

        by glesga_kiss ( 596639 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @05:32PM (#17229020)
        You would have thought that after the whole threat was rubbished by just about anybody with any basic knowledge of classroom chemistry, the home office and BAA would have downgraded the threat.

        I thought it was now common knowledge that the whole thing was a sham. It was to get another embarrassing item off the news at the time; our ongoing support for the bombardment of Lebanon when every other country in the world was crying out for a ceasefire. It was getting pretty embarrassing for them just as this story "broke".

        UK intelligence agencies have said (off-the-record of course) that they wanted to continue observing the group and taking notes, getting contacts and so on. There was never any danger; not only did they not have any chemicals or plane tickets, most of those involved did not even have passports!! It was amateur hour and I believe that the intelligence agencies were waiting to see if they actually knew anyone relevant that they could further investigate.

        It was said at the time that the push to make arrests came from the US intelligence service and that this was in spite of vocal opposition from those watching "the group". Now, from what I understand, the only reference to actually attacking planes comes from the torture of someone in Pakistan. The person in question had fled the UK on suspision of murder charges. So, what do you get when you combine an untrustworthy person with torture? Fairytales.

        Further reading:

        A chemists view [interesting-people.org]

        Opinion on those involved [craigmurray.co.uk]

        More on the chemical side [theregister.co.uk]

        This was a non-story and I am amazed that the sham has held so long. I'd make a point of arguing the banality of it when passing through an airport, but it's just not worth the cavity search. I guess I should just be a nice, compliant citizen and be afraid and keep my mouth shut.

        • by why-is-it ( 318134 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @06:10PM (#17229558) Homepage Journal
          This was a non-story and I am amazed that the sham has held so long. I'd make a point of arguing the banality of it when passing through an airport, but it's just not worth the cavity search. I guess I should just be a nice, compliant citizen and be afraid and keep my mouth shut.

          I agree with everything you said, but there is something I would like to add: what the authorities did wasn't even sound police work. It was a lame attempt for some good PR to justify the cost and inconvenience of all these policies designed to make us feel safe, even if they don't actually work.

          Let us assume for the moment that there really was a plot. Instead of a photo-op and a few headlines, the smart thing to do would have been to continue efforts to infiltrate the group, gather more evidence and when there is a case, quietly arrest the suspects and let the justice system do it's job. Of course, I am making the huge assumption that the people in charge of the investigation were not subject to political interference at home, or abroad.

          Unfortunately, the people who make homeland security policies seem to make decisions based on theater rather than plain-old boring police work. One gets you headlines, and the other gets you results. What a shame that massaging their own egos is priority #1.

          • by nido ( 102070 ) <nido56@noSPAm.yahoo.com> on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @07:22PM (#17230444) Homepage
            Unfortunately, the people who make homeland security policies seem to make decisions based on theater rather than plain-old boring police work.

            But what if good police work turned up inconvenient facts? Such as, for example, there being no substantial threat from arab/muslim "terrorists", as the fabricated liquid bomb plot seems to substantiate? Or the likelihood of Israeli foreknowledge [muckrakerreport.com] of the 9/11 attacks?

            Theater is essential to the War Of Terror, because without it the need for perpetual war evaporates.
          • And when plain old boring police work fails, you're up in arms over incompetence. Either that, or conspiracy idiots are yelling that it must be an inside jobs because muslims are too stupid to pull it off. There's just no pleasing people.
          • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

            Unfortunately, the people who make homeland security policies seem to make decisions based on theater rather than plain-old boring police work. One gets you headlines, and the other gets you results. What a shame that massaging their own egos is priority #1.

            You presume that there are any results to get.

            Given the really low rate of actual attacks over the last 10-20 years, it seems like there are probably less than 10 potential plots of any significance, maybe even less than 5, "out there."

            Presumably the peo
          • by theLOUDroom ( 556455 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @11:31PM (#17232466)
            Let us assume for the moment that there really was a plot. Instead of a photo-op and a few headlines, the smart thing to do would have been to continue efforts to infiltrate the group

            Why bother when you're allowed to torture people?

            Given enough time, you get these guys to say anything you want.
            Why waste all that effort to find the guilty, when you can just pick someone and beat them until they admit their guilt or agree to testify to someone else's guilt?

            So what if the actual terrorists blow up a few more things, it only confrims that you need even more power to persue them!

            I'm not necessarily saying that's what happened here, but when you look at the big picture, it sure looks really bad.
            • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

              by Incadenza ( 560402 )

              Why bother when you're allowed to torture people? Given enough time, you get these guys to say anything you want. Why waste all that effort to find the guilty, when you can just pick someone and beat them until they admit their guilt or agree to testify to someone else's guilt?

              There was an article in the science section of NRC Handelsblad [www.nrc.nl] a couple of weeks ago on interrogation techniques. The article was written because the whole torture discussion so far is about the morality of torture, not about the ef

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by Sabaki ( 531686 )
      The shoes were an entirely separate incident [wikipedia.org].
    • Heh. You think the Zip Loc Bag Lobby is going allow congress to let that happen!

      HAH!

      They're making a killing.
  • the threat was deliberately exaggerated
    No, really? Gosh, does anyone else have any earthshaking revelations that absolutely no one expected that they'd like to share today?
  • Great. (Score:5, Funny)

    by Tackhead ( 54550 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @05:09PM (#17228680)
    Now that that's cleared up, can I finally bring my oh-so-dangerous fifth of vodka in the same carry-on I use to hold my laptop so I can drink myself back into unconsciousness when the oh-so-harmless lithium batteries run out?
    • You can bring a huge bottle of vodka onto the plane. You just have to purchase it in the gate (i.e. after the checkpoint).
      • With a 600% markup compared to the bars and/or liquor stores around the airport :)
      • Re:Great. (Score:4, Funny)

        by TheJorge ( 713680 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @05:47PM (#17229232)
        Or, go to your liquor store and buy a case (or two) of those little airline-sized bottles. Throw them all in a big plastic bag. At least for domestic US flights, you're all set.

        I recently did this with an absurd quantity of alcohol on a bachelor party trip with some friends. Of course, we got a good-spirited security guy who laughed at us (and obviously thought about the same thing I do of these regulations) and waved us through. Despite the willingness to anal probe you before you board a flight, these men and women are definetly the bottom rung of a government agency and likely hate these new rules more than you do.
        • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

          by StikyPad ( 445176 )
          1) Put 20-50 airplane bottles of various liquors into an opaque bag.
          2) Remove 5 bottles at random.
          3) Pour into glass.
          4) Drink.

          Now THAT'S liquid terror!
      • Not if you want to do it carry on, at least at San Francisco. They didn't allow any liquids on the plane even if you had purchased it after the security check. They didn't search you as you were boarding the plane or anything, but I don't think I'd want to bring out a bottle of vodka if the rules clearly state "no liquids allowed" - planes have been turned back for less.

        I was told by the duty-free shop past the checkpoint that any liquor I bought would have to be packaged and put on checked baggage - which
  • by Rosco P. Coltrane ( 209368 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @05:12PM (#17228722)
    Numerous experts have said there's no practical or safe way to make a bomb from separate liquids onboard an airplane. Google for it, you'll be amazed how vaccuus the allegation from London police is.

    Which leaves us with only one reason why the UK government would make such a noise around this fantasy: to raise the terror feeling in the general population in order to pass more restrictive laws and embed the police state a little deeper.

    I keep wondering why nobody stands up to these clowns. There isn't a shred of evidence to support the current rules that prevent people from bringing soda pops and baby bottles in airplanes. Quite the contrary. Yet people seem to accept this. It's 1984 unfolding before our very eyes in Britain and in the US and that makes me sad...
    • "Safe" (Score:5, Insightful)

      by DBett ( 241601 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @05:16PM (#17228770)
      Numerous experts have said there's no practical or safe way to make a bomb from separate liquids onboard an airplane.


      Not sure if 'safety' would be a top priority.
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Volante3192 ( 953645 )
        It has to be safe up to the point of detonation otherwise if it kills you off from, say, fumes, or is too unstable to even carry on the plane if you could sneak it on before you can blast a hole in the fuselage, what's the point in trying?
        • It has to be safe up to the point of detonation otherwise if it kills you off from, say, fumes, or is too unstable to even carry on the plane if you could sneak it on before you can blast a hole in the fuselage, what's the point in trying?
          Terror? I'm sure offing yourself in the bathroom (likely several people in the area as well) or blowing a new window in the jetway would still make the news and get politicians to start dreaming up new ways to save the rest of us.
          • by interiot ( 50685 )

            No suicide bomber that I know of has ever targeted a bathroom. If a terrorist is going to go to the risk of carrying out a bomb plot (where just the act of planning/purchasing/collaborating is more than enough to put them in jail), and if they're rational and ascribe at least a little value to their life, they'll try to give themselves the best chance to get the explosives onto a plane, because it will have far more impact in that case.

            Really, many liquid explosives are very unstable, and just the act of

            • So you mean I've been... lied to or otherwise misled... by government officials and the media... all this time?!@?!@?
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      I keep wondering why nobody stands up to these clowns. There isn't a shred of evidence to support the current rules that prevent people from bringing soda pops and baby bottles in airplanes. Quite the contrary. Yet people seem to accept this. It's 1984 unfolding before our very eyes in Britain and in the US and that makes me sad...

      Yeah, noone has ever used a contact lens fluid container with a liquid explosive and a casio watch to set off a bomb on an airplane. Nor did they assemble it in the airplane lavatory. That is just crazy talk [wikipedia.org]. It is clearly impossible.

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by DBett ( 241601 )
        Don't confuse people with facts. Let them continue to assume the only risk is from the government(s). That makes them feel better - since at some level they know that the government isn't really 1984 come to life.
      • by Kesh ( 65890 )
        Yeah, noone has ever used a contact lens fluid container with a liquid explosive and a casio watch to set off a bomb on an airplane. Nor did they assemble it in the airplane lavatory. That is just crazy talk [wikipedia.org]. It is clearly impossible.

        Congratulations. You've just completely misconstrued the nature of the events. This plot was supposedly based on people smuggling various non-explosive liquids onto a plane to combine into a chemical explosive. The event you cite was a single explosive liquid being brought onb

        • The event you cite was a single explosive liquid being brought onboard and detonated with a mechanical device, which is easily detected with modern security measures.

          How so? Modern security measures mainly look for metals and nitrates. Picture a few D-cell batteries in an electronic device filled with acetone peroxide (TATP - not a liquid but a powder and not really producable in an airplane toilet) with a phosphorus detonator. Phosphorus burns when exposed to air. Just encase a stick in a helium fill

      • Question: How was this a threat to the plane?
        Answer: It wasn't.

        Unless you take the entire plane down, smuggling a bomb on board a plane is just moronic. If you're going to detonate a bomb that's only strong enough to kill maybe one or two people, why the FUCK would you do it in inside an airplane - one of the most secure locations you can find this side of a locked-down military base? Bragging rights? The thrill of it?
        The only threats that should even be considered in regards to airplane security are those
      • by TheRaven64 ( 641858 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @07:44PM (#17230694) Journal
        In the article you linked to, one person died as a result of the bomb. One. You could quite easily kill one person on a plane without a bomb, although injuring 10 others might be a bit more effort. The only advantage this had was that the bomber was not on the plane when it went off, although not dying doesn't seem to be much of an issue for most terrorists these days. The plot in question, however, was not about taking a liquid explosive on the plane. It was about taking a bunch of different chemicals which would not show up as explosives and mixing them together. The compound that the government claim was going to be made:
        1. Requires longer than a transatlantic flight to make, and
        2. Will explode if shaken (e.g. by turbulence) at several stages, although the explosion will only be big enough to kill the person mixing it.
        Even discounting the fact that most flight attendants would probably be suspicious of someone spending eight hours in the toilet, it doesn't seem entirely feasible.
    • The level of education has fallen so drastically, that people will believe everything "an expert from the government" tells them.
      Furthermore, they are content to just sit back and not actually research the topic, even if it took 2 seconds. The fear mongering media doesn't help either.

      It's like how congress on this side of the pond passed the patriot act without actually reading the entire thing.
      Apathy on the part of the people is the cause of this, and the folks at the top are more than happy to pursue thei
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by truthsearch ( 249536 )
      the current rules that prevent people from bringing soda pops and baby bottles in airplanes.

      Soda (bigger than 3 oz.) can be brought on if purchased in the gate. Baby bottles of any size are also allowed. There are other exceptions, such as any medicines with a prescription.

      People accept it because there's little they can do. It's either obey or not get on the plane. The only way to potentially change the rules (that I can think of) is to have a huge letter writing or signed petition campaign go to membe
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Dutch Gun ( 899105 )
      I'm sorry you feel inconvenienced with some additional rules regarding liquids when flying. But 1984? Did you and I see the same movie? Ah, I see... "it's just the first step", right?

      Here's my explanation for the ban on liquids: the government is just covering it's arse. These guys (the ones making the decisions) are politicians and beauracrats, not scientists or engineers. Yes, it may be stupid and overreactionary. But I don't subscribe some sinister motive to these actions either. In my estimation,
    • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @05:51PM (#17229278)
      Last week I was on a short business flight within Canada.

      When I went through security I had to give up my ***potentially explosive*** 1L plastic bottle of Pepsi, and be hassled about wearing steel toed shoes (regulation work issued footwear).

      After clearing security and getting into the holding pen..err...Lounge area, I went to a vending machine and purchased a GLASS bottle of orange juice.

      Now, I'm not the stereotypical terrorist type, but yeah, I could kill a pilot or a couple stews with a broken bottle. It makes me so appreciative of the safety provided by those airline security fees I paid for, knowing they are being circumvented by the Coca-Cola delivery guy ;).
       
    • Numerous experts have said there's no practical or safe way to make a bomb from separate liquids onboard an airplane. Google for it, you'll be amazed how vaccuus the allegation from London police is.

      This plot has been carried out before. There was a discovery program about it; I wish I could remember the details. A guy brought explosive components separately onto a plain flying to/from somewhere like Bangkok and assembled a bomb from his digital watch and liquid in a contact-lens-solution bottle. He pla

      • There was a discovery program about it; I wish I could remember the details.

        Here it is [wikipedia.org]. I hope the people who are doing this stuff aren't interrupting the people who are saying that it's impossible.

        • More specifically [wikipedia.org].
        • Didn't read anything about him carrying on a set of liquids to mix together on the plane in that article (or the flight 434 one). What I did read was that he managed to get a fairly conventional explosive through the baggage check and detonate it.
          The thing that people are saying is impossible (or at least difficult enough to make it not worth it) is the idea of mixing up an explosive on board the plane from two or more innocuous looking liquids.
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by bmajik ( 96670 )
      Unless there has been an imposter or misattribution, at least one highly respected "expert" but from a non-traditional background has said that it was definitely possible:

      http://www.pournelle.com/archives2/archives2mail/m ail428.html#Carmack [pournelle.com]

      The expert? John Carmack.
      His qualifications? Mixing easily available chemicals into rocket propellants.

      Diclosure of Bias:
      I happen to respect both Jerry Pournelle and John Carmack. And I happen to think the register is a lousy "publication".
    • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

      by Haeleth ( 414428 )

      Which leaves us with only one reason why the UK government would make such a noise around this fantasy: to raise the terror feeling in the general population in order to pass more restrictive laws and embed the police state a little deeper.

      I keep wondering why nobody stands up to these clowns. There isn't a shred of evidence to support the current rules that prevent people from bringing soda pops and baby bottles in airplanes. Quite the contrary. Yet people seem to accept this. It's 1984 unfolding before ou

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by guruevi ( 827432 )
        a totalitarian state that disappears its own citizens into brutal torture chambers at the merest suspicion of dissident thoughts ==> Check (Gitmo, American & Brittish concentration camps)
        apparently launches missiles at its own cities to keep its citizens in check ==> Check (9/11, Cold War)
        and is trying to brainwash its entire population into being literally incapable of understanding the very concept of freedom ==> Check (your very comment)
      • It's not as farfetched as you seem to think.

        In Britain the government were pushing for 3 months imprisonment without charge under the guise of terrorism, they settled on 1 month. A lot of US and UK citizens are disappeared into Guantanemo bay. We don't launch nukes at our own to keep them in check, but we certainly overstress the dangers of terrorism to scare the populace and justify the erosian of liberties and freedoms. Which ties into the last point about brain-washing, our governments operate and justif
    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by BRSQUIRRL ( 69271 )

      Numerous experts have said there's no practical or safe way to make a bomb from separate liquids onboard an airplane.

      Eh, perhaps...but this [wikipedia.org] was awfully close, and was perpetrated by Al-Qaeda, no less.

    • by CodeBuster ( 516420 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @07:09PM (#17230336)
      The practicality of the creation of such a device is irrelevant to the charges at hand. The demonstration of means, even though such means may prove to be flawed, motive and opportunity to commit a terrorist act combined with the creation of martyrdom videos and possession of other terrorism manuals and associated materials is enough by itself to merit charges and, judging from the evidence collected thus far, conviction of conspiracy to commit mass murder.

      It is right for us, the civilized members of society, to send a message that this sort of behavior will NOT be tolerated after 9/11 and 7/7. It should be made clear to these terrorists that we will lock them up in supermax for the remainder of their natural lives or hang them for treason when we catch them. The terrorists are the common enemies of all humanity and they should be treated as such.

      This does not mean that we give up our freedoms, but rather that we deal with terrorists harshly when we catch them. It is legally no different than the special distinction that is made between ordinary crimes and hate crimes where the penalties are increased due to the ulterior motivations and heinous nature of the offenses.
    • by fuzzix ( 700457 )
      Numerous experts have said there's no practical or safe way to make a bomb from separate liquids onboard an airplane.

      Hmmm... I wonder if you could use a two part expanding foam - two separate containers of nondescript looking liquid which when mixed could quickly block off part of the plane from interference. ...or just chuck them in the cockpit :)
  • by Scrameustache ( 459504 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @05:12PM (#17228724) Homepage Journal
    It's not physically possible to do the "mix household liquids" terrorist plot in a plane [theregister.co.uk]. It takes hours, releases a lot of fumes, and requires control over the temperature. The officials know this.

    The "safety" measures were a show.
    They had nothing to do with keeping people safe, and everything to do with keeping people affraid.
    • by geekoid ( 135745 )
      Bleach and amonia could cause some difficulties.

      But the concern wasn't over household products, it was over more 'industrial' products put into ordinary containers.

      Did they over compensate? yeah.
    • In any case, if boxcutters can crash 4 planes simultaneously i'm sure you don't need something as complicated as a binary liquid explosive. The reason to not be afraid isn't because something bad isn't reasonably feaseable, but because so far it's unlikely.
      • by glesga_kiss ( 596639 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @06:07PM (#17229522)
        In any case, if boxcutters can crash 4 planes simultaneously i'm sure you don't need something as complicated as a binary liquid explosive.

        If anything like that ever happens again, it won't be for a very long time. People know what happened on 9/11. You are not going to do so well with a melee weapon against a whole airliner worth of people who know they are fighting for their lives.

    • by askegg ( 599634 )
      As President of the Safety Institute of Australia (Tasmanian Division) I am saddened to say that most safety measures are for show.

      While the airline industry does an excellent job engineering their machines to stay skies (probabilistically), there are more public aspects to "safety" that have little to do with reality and more providing the illusion of safety. The movie "Fight Club" mentions this in passing: "placid as Hindu cows" when referring to the in-flight safety cards.

      I believe the sentiment i
  • by GungaDan ( 195739 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @05:14PM (#17228742) Homepage
    "Not all liquids are terrrorists, but all terrorists are liquids?" At least somewhere between 50 and 75 percent of them, anyway.

    • "Not all liquids are terrrorists, but all terrorists are liquids?"
      No, it's: "People who are willing to sacrifice their liquids in exchange for security from the terrorsists are deserving of neither". Or...something like that.
    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by Intron ( 870560 )
      I can't carry any liquid onto a plane? That pisses me off!
  • I take it the guy will disappear soon, just before some unlisted American flights out of the country. Well, at least he will never be charged again, tortured^Wharsly talked to and imprisoned maybe, but never charged. Ah, American 'justice'.
  • by twifosp ( 532320 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @05:21PM (#17228866)
    I'm no conspiracy theorist, but to ignore the political knee-jerk reaction that occurred when these events happened is just ignorant. I seriously doubt the plot was engineered by political entities using fear in an attempt to sway public opinion. Having said that, I also have very little doubt this entire scenario was a knee-jerk reaction from political pressure to law enforcement agencies (both British and American) to find a real plot in the making, ANY plot no matter how far-fetched or improbable to acctually happen, and blow it way out of proportion. This allowed them convince the public that we are always on the verge of a major terrorist attack and we need to give the government more powers in order to protect us.

    The fact that the courts are not finding enough evidence to convict only support this theory. Combine that with timing of the event, and the new scare policies implemented in Airports, along with the speeches made by certain political parties (i.e. better not vote for our opponents or next time this would have killed your newborn child, puppy dog, and a baby seal) and you have yourself what appears to be a bonified piece of engineered political propaganda.

    Interesting, are the times we live; the methods used to influence public opinion, and therefore events and public control, are no different than they were 50-60 years ago when the world was in turmoil. We never really learn do we?

    • the methods used to influence public opinion, and therefore events and public control, are no different than they were 50-60 years ago when the world was in turmoil. We never really learn do we?

      I don't think it's a lack of education. The people in control today would have approved of the actions taken 60 years ago. The public takes years to react in an organized way. And by then it's almost too late. We need to ask much better questions of those running for office. "What would you do if you were a Sena
    • Having said that, I also have very little doubt this entire scenario was a knee-jerk reaction from political pressure to law enforcement agencies (both British and American) to find a real plot in the making, ANY plot no matter how far-fetched or improbable to acctually happen, and blow it way out of proportion.

      Alright, but suppose next time they do nothing and many more British citizens are killed? Would you be willing to cut the government some slack for having lax security measures or would you blame
  • Inconclusive? (Score:2, Interesting)

    FTA:

    As well as forgery charges, Mr Rauf has also been charged with carrying explosives. But his lawyer says police evidence amounts only to bottles of hydrogen peroxide found in his possession. Hydrogen peroxide is a disinfectant that can be used for bomb-making if other chemicals are added.

    the article also states that Rauf is flagged as a ringleader for this particular operation/mission.
    There were other arrests made here, so let's review:

    • Murder case in 2002
      • Primary suspect flees country to Pakistan
    • Suspects carrying potential ingredients for creating explosives
      • Raul is one of many (one potential ingredient)
      • was not carrying a bomb per-se
      • Raul is however suspect in other outstanding cases

    Raul was found not guilty on terrorist charges which (IANAL) are inconclusive as he was

  • A Pakistani judge...

    Oh, well, all right then.

    Don't mind me. I'm currently in full bore year end burnout mode.

  • by TheWoozle ( 984500 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @06:09PM (#17229538)
    Sounds like the batch of home-made beer my dad made when I was 10...

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