




The background of the apparent chief suspect, Iraqi doctor Bilal Abdullah, suggests networks in the Iraq region that are linked to al-Qaeda selecting and dispatching operatives on a mission to Britain, experts say. Abdullah’s medical credentials, British passport and suspected ties to Sunni fundamentalists in Iraq could make him an ideal leader for a plan to hit London with a taste of Baghdad-style carnage, experts say.
“This is exactly what a number of us in the intelligence world had been predicting,” said Sir David Omand, who served as Britain’s security and intelligence co-ordinator until April 2005. “The concern was that al-Qaeda in Iraq would turn their minds to attacks outside Iraq. It’s not really a strategic surprise.”
The analysis remains incomplete. Investigators need time to pursue leads in West Asia, India and Australia. Although five suspects are Arab medical professionals, three are Indians.
“We have always been sure that if the war stopped in Iraq, we would have a lot of guys ready to come back and cause problems for us,” a European anti-terror investigator said.
The amateurish aspects of the failed British car bomb plot give the impression that the attackers had limited training, but that does not preclude links to dangerous networks, experts say. Al-Qaeda figures in Iraq or
Pakistan might not deploy a complete team with a concrete plan, officials said. Instead, their pattern has been
to prepare one or two operatives outside of the target country, and then give them autonomy to enlist accomplices and develop plots. A foreign doctor would be likely to recruit fellow foreign doctors.
US investigators are also looking into potential links to Iraq and elsewhere, especially after the revelation that two of the doctors jailed here had looked into working in the United States. But it’s premature to conclude that al-Qaeda in Iraq orchestrated the latest plot in Britain, said a US counter-terrorism official, and sometimes it takes years to unearth such details.


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