The Foiled London Bomb Attack: A Reminder That Britain Is At War

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The Foiled London Bomb Attack: A Reminder That Britain Is At War

June 29, 2007 5 min read Download Report
Nile Gardiner
Director, Margaret Thatcher Center for Freedom and Bernard and Barbara Lomas Fellow
Nile Gardiner is Director of The Heritage Foundation’s Margaret Thatcher Center for Freedom and Bernard and Barbara Lomas Fellow.

On June 29, British police thwarted a car bomb attack that would have brought carnage to the streets of London just days before the 2nd anniversary of the July 7, 2005, bombings that claimed 52 lives. The car was packed with nails, gas canisters, and petrol containers and left outside a nightclub near Piccadilly Circus. This latest attempt to kill and maim hundreds of civilians is most likely the work of al-Qaeda or one of its numerous British-based affiliates. It was timed to coincide with the departure of Tony Blair and the entrance of new Prime Minister Gordon Brown. It also coincided with Blair's appointment as the Quartet's new Middle East Envoy in the face of strong opposition in the Arab world.

A Test of Resolve for Gordon Brown

In the coming months, the Al-Qaeda network and its allies will seek to test the strength and resolve of the new British government, as well as the fledgling Prime Minister, whom they may well see as a weaker figure than Blair. They will attempt to intimidate both British public and the nation's political leadership into withdrawing from Iraq and scaling down Britain's close alliance with the United States.

It is imperative that Gordon Brown demonstrate that he will redouble efforts to defeat Islamic terrorism both in Britain and internationally. He must also recognize that Great Britain is in a state of war, make a commitment to increasing British defense spending, and be willing to project British military power on the world stage, wherever British interests are threatened. Like Blair, Brown will have to demonstrate his abilities as a war leader--at a time of great threat to British and international security.

The Al-Qaeda Threat to the U.K.

In recent years, Britain has become a hornet's nest of Islamic extremism. The domestic intelligence service MI5 is currently investigating 30 major terror plots in the U.K. and has under surveillance more than 1,600 individuals, who are operating as part of 200 British-based terror networks.[1]In April, British courts convicted an Islamic terror cell of attempting to kill thousands of shoppers at the U.K.'s largest shopping mall, in Bluewater, Kent. Between September 2001 and December 2006, there were 1,166 terrorism-related arrests in the U.K., with more than 400 people charged.[2]

The scale of the problem involving young Islamic extremists in Britain was highlighted in a major 2005 British Foreign Office/Home Office study, "Young Muslims and Extremism." Terrorist organizations such as al-Qaeda have found a fertile hunting ground in the U.K., where half of Muslims are under the age of 25, and where there is widespread opposition to the U.S.-British-led war on terror. The report revealed that extremist groups are secretly recruiting well-educated, affluent Muslims from British universities, in addition to impoverished, underachieving Muslims through mosques and prisons. Former MI5 Director General Eliza Manningham-Buller estimates that more than 100,000 British citizens consider the July 2005 London attacks "justified."

Al-Qaeda's strategy over the next decade will be to try to split the U.S.--U.K. alliance, the central bulwark against its totalitarian world vision. It will seek to raise the cost of British support for the United States and Israel and test the determination of the British public. More attacks on U.K. interests in the Middle East and Africa, as well as bombing campaigns on British soil, are likely.

Al-Qaeda will attempt to recreate the "Madrid effect" in Britain. That strategy failed with the 2005 London bombings, partly due to Tony Blair's strong response, but will test the resolve of future British leaders. Al-Qaeda will also seek to foster political tensions between London and Washington by cultivating British-based Islamic terror cells to act against transatlantic targets. For example, a major suicide attack on a U.S. airliner by a British citizen or British-based terrorists, resulting in huge loss of American life, would place a massive strain on the relationship.

Britain as a Central Front in the War on Terror

The attempted attack underscores that Britain remains in a state of war, and is a central front in the global war against terrorism. New Prime Minister Gordon Brown must demonstrate courage, resolve, and determination in the face of a mounting threat. Indeed, his own legacy as a British leader may be defined ultimately by his ability to deal with the most important issue of our time-global terrorism and its support by state sponsors such as Iran and Syria.

It is imperative that Brown not show any sign of weakness as a leader. Domestically, he must do everything possible to deal with the terrorist threat. Greater powers must be given to British authorities to monitor, detain, and extradite suspected terrorists, and the U.K. should immediately withdraw from all articles and protocols in the European Convention on Human Rights that might act as a barrier to effective anti-terrorism measures. Ultimately, Britain should withdraw from the convention altogether, and reassert national sovereignty in this critically important area.

The U.K. must not tolerate the Islamic militancy in its midst, which seeks to destroy British society and impose a Muslim state. Foreign Islamic clerics who preach treason and violence should be deported and banned from re-entering the country. Britain also clearly needs a new generation of Muslim leaders who are untainted by association with, or sympathy for, Islamic extremism and who are proud of their British identity. They must be willing to condemn terrorism unequivocally in all its forms, and help root out extremists from Muslim communities.

On the world stage, the new British government must not allow Al-Qaeda and its allies to dictate British foreign policy, as they have succeeded in doing in countries such as Spain. Brown should not agree to an artificial timetable for the withdrawal of British forces from Iraq and must remain committed to increasing British troop strength as part of the NATO-led operation against the Taliban in southern Afghanistan. He must also stand up to Iranian intimidation in Iraq and send a clear message that there are military consequences for Iranian-backed attacks on British forces. In addition, Gordon Brown must ensure that the maintenance of the Anglo-American special relationship remain a top priority.

Britain's battle against terrorism must be fought on several fronts, both at home and abroad. The war must be taken to the enemy, including state sponsors of international terror. Britain must fight this war in conjunction with its closest ally, the United States, sending a clear message that the West will not be divided in the defense of freedom.

Nile Gardiner, Ph.D., is Director of the Margaret Thatcher Center for Freedom, a division of the Kathryn and Shelby Cullom Davis Institute for International Studies, at The Heritage Foundation. Heritage interns Hannah Martone and Erin Magee assisted with research for this paper.


[1] "The International Terrorist Threat to the UK", Speech by the Director General of the Security Service, Dame Eliza Manningham-Buller, at Queen Mary's College, London, November 9, 2006, at http://www.mi5.gov.uk/output/Page374.html

 

[2] Philip Johnston, "Terrorists Will be Put on Special Register", Daily Telegraph, June 8, 2007.

Authors

Nile Gardiner
Nile Gardiner

Director, Margaret Thatcher Center for Freedom and Bernard and Barbara Lomas Fellow