The London Bombings: How the U.S. and the U.K. Should Respond

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The London Bombings: How the U.S. and the U.K. Should Respond

July 21, 2005 33 min read Download Report

Authors: James Phillips and Nile Gardiner

Thursday, July 7, 2005, will go down as one of the darkest days in British history since the Second World War. At least 55 people were killed in a series of bomb blasts in the heart of London, and several hundred were injured.

The July 7 attacks were followed by a series of near simultaneous minor bomb blasts on public transportation in the British capital, involving detonators, on July 21. Although there were no fatalities, the attacks caused widespread disruption to the London subway network.

The July 7 suicide bombings were carried out by four British Muslim extremists. [1] Three of the bomb­ers-Hasib Hussain, Mohammed Sidique Khan, and Shehzad Tanweer-received terrorist training and religious instruction in Pakistan several months before the bombing. [2] The fourth, Jamai­can-born Jermaine Lindsay, is believed to have con­verted to Islam in Afghanistan. [3]

Although the first attacks were definitely carried out by home­grown terrorists, the bombers were clearly part of a larger international network. The attacks were likely a sophisticated al-Qaeda operation, masterminded by experienced international operatives with local extremists acting as foot soldiers. A global manhunt is underway for several possible al-Qaeda ringleaders.

The fact that British citizens carried out the attacks is a wake-up call for Britain. The bombings must result in a sea change in how America's closest ally deals with Islamic extremists. Specifically:

  • The United Kingdom must no longer act as a safe haven for Islamic militants and terrorist organiza­tions from across the Middle East and North Africa. [4] Tougher anti-terrorist legislation and stronger immigration and asylum laws are required to help prevent further terrorist attacks on British soil.
  • The British government must not be constrained by the European Convention on Human Rights[5] in drawing up its anti-terrorism legislation. Brit­ain should immediately withdraw from articles of the Convention that restrict its power to act in areas of vital national security, including depor­tation of foreign nationals and extradition of ter­rorist suspects to countries that implement the death penalty. The London bombings should also prompt a major political debate in Parlia­ment over whether the U.K. should withdraw altogether from the European Convention on Human Rights.
  • The British government must pursue a policy of zero tolerance toward Islamic extremism, which is a deadly threat to the fabric of British society. Foreign Islamic clerics who preach vio­lence and hatred should be deported from Brit­ain, and terrorist suspects must be extradited to friendly countries that request it, especially the United States. British politicians must also be careful not to appease or promote extremists who support the use of terrorism. It is vitally important that British leaders immediately con­demn inflammatory statements and apply tre­mendous pressure on community leaders to denounce extremists in their midst.

The U.K. has distinguished intelligence services in the shape of MI5 and MI6, which have thwarted several earlier attempted terrorist attacks on Lon­don and have earned the reputation of being among the very best in the world. Their efforts must not be undermined by a lack of political determination on the part of some British politi­cians and by European conventions that all too often are more concerned with the rights of sus­pected terrorists than with national security. Britain cannot fight its domestic war on terrorism with both hands tied behind its back amidst a powerful culture of political correctness, much of it imported from continental Europe.

At the same time, the war must be taken to the terrorists on the world stage. If it is established that a state sponsor of terrorism was involved, the United States and the United Kingdom must retal­iate with force. An attack on London is no different from an attack on Washington or New York, and it demands a vigorous joint response. In this sce­nario, all options must be on the table, including air strikes and special-forces operations. Addition­ally, the continuing wars in Iraq and Afghanistan must be prosecuted aggressively, and the terrorists must be rooted out and destroyed. This may neces­sitate deploying more British troops to both the­aters of operation. This is a global conflict that is as much Britain's war as it is America's.

Motives of the Terrorists

The barbaric terrorist attacks on London were a direct assault on the Anglo-U.S. alliance, the engine of the global war on terrorism. By striking London, the world's biggest financial center, al-Qaeda hoped to achieve a three-pronged propaganda success.

First, it planned to disrupt the Group of 8 (G-8) meeting, a symbol of the most powerful Western lead­ers in the world. As is already clear, that aim failed.

Second, it hoped for the "Spanish effect": to alien­ate the British public from its government as it suc­cessfully did in Madrid. Here, too, the terrorists are bound to fail, for they have underestimated the strength and resolve of the British people. Instead, the bombings have considerably strengthened the position of British Prime Minister Tony Blair.

Third, it hoped to fracture the Anglo-American partnership in Iraq. The bombings closely resem­bled the Madrid attacks of March 2004 and were specifically aimed at forcing Britain to withdraw its 8,500 troops from Iraq. Again, this strategy is doomed to failure. There is no sign that Britain's commitment to Iraq is breaking. Indeed, the U.S. and the U.K. will not leave Iraq until the scourge of terrorism in the country is vanquished. Mem­bers of the same global network that was behind the London attacks are daily killing civilians on the streets of Baghdad and other Iraqi cities. Iraq today is the central battleground in the war on ter­rorism, and it is there that al-Qaeda can and must be fought on the battlefield.

Above all, the terrorists are driven by an evil doc­trine of hatred and loathing, based on an extreme misinterpretation of Islam, that has as its ultimate goal the destruction of liberal democracy across the world, whether it be in the West or the Middle East, and the establishment of a Muslim Caliphate.[6] It is an ideology that cannot be appeased or negotiated with, but which must be defeated. The terrorist bombings in London, and the attacks of 9/11 in Washington and New York, were not the conse­quences of U.S. or British foreign policy, but part of an epic confrontation between the forces of barbar­ism and the forces of civilization.

Similarities to the Madrid Bombings

Although regarded as "Britain's 9/11," the Lon­don bombings are more similar to "3/11," the March 11, 2004, bombings in Madrid, in terms of targeting and scale. Like the Madrid attacks, the London attacks were aimed at mass transit systems in the capital city at the height of rush hour, soft targets that would yield a large number of casual­ties. In Spain, 10 bombs hidden in sports bags blew up on four crowded trains, killing 191 and wound­ing more than 1,500.

The Madrid terrorists belonged to a loosely orga­nized ring of North African immigrants, most of them from Morocco. Some were linked to the Moroccan Islamic Combat Group, a radical Islamic terrorist group allied with al-Qaeda, which was responsible for the May 16, 2003, suicide bomb­ings in Casablanca, Morocco, that killed 45 peo­ple.[7] Three weeks after the bombings, seven prime suspects blew themselves up after Spanish police surrounded them in a Madrid suburb. This made it difficult to establish whether a local cell carried out the bombings acting by itself or with guidance or support from al-Qaeda's high command.

The Madrid bombers apparently also had plans to attack New York City. Spanish investigators warned the U.S. government in December 2004 that the Madrid train bombers had detailed plans of New York's Grand Central Station, indicating that they also may have considered an attack there. Handmade drawings and other "highly specialized technical information" about the station were found on a computer disk seized from the home of one of the suspects.[8]

The Madrid and London bombings have demon­strated that radical Islamic terrorists have devel­oped extensive support networks inside major European cities. Al-Qaeda-style attacks are increasingly likely in Europe, which has become a critical front in the global war on terrorism.

The al-Qaeda Threat

After being dislodged from its bases in Afghani­stan in late 2001 and intensively hunted in many countries, Osama bin Laden's al-Qaeda organiza­tion has dispersed, with many of its top leaders believed to be hiding along the Afghanistan-Paki­stani border or in Pakistani cities. As fugitives deprived of the state support from Afghanistan's Taliban regime, which has also been forced into exile, bin Laden and his top lieutenants have undoubtedly found it more difficult to communi­cate, recruit new cadres, raise funds, train terror­ists, and organize attacks. As a result, al-Qaeda has increasingly devolved from a distinct terrorist orga­nization into a loose coalition of like-minded Islamic extremist groups.

Bin Laden has always functioned more as al-Qaeda's chief financier, propagandist, and ideo­logical theorist than as its operational com­mander.[9] He acted more as a "chairman of the board" than as a "chief executive officer." How­ever, maintaining his own personal security has required him to isolate himself from his followers as much as possible and is believed to have diluted his ability to lead the organization on a daily basis. In one of his most recent videotapes, he sought to appear as an elder statesman sitting behind a desk rather than as a guerrilla com­mander in combat fatigues, clutching a weapon.

The worldwide manhunt for terrorists has frag­mented the al-Qaeda core group and led to the development of local franchises that often act autonomously. Groups loosely affiliated with al-Qaeda have taken the initiative to launch attacks, sometimes acting in its name.

Bin Laden also has absorbed other groups into al-Qaeda. For example, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the Jordanian terrorist who led a terrorist network that sometimes competed with al-Qaeda in fundraising, has been brought under the al-Qaeda umbrella to lead al-Qaeda operations in Iraq. Despite continu­ing ideological differences, particularly over Zar­qawi's fanatical hatred of Shiites, bin Laden may have decided to merge with Zarqawi's group to strengthen the al-Qaeda "brand name" in Iraq, which has emerged as the bloodiest theater in the global war against terrorism.

Given the use of sophisticated explosives and reports of contacts with Pakistani Islamic radicals affiliated with al-Qaeda, it is likely that the London terrorists were given logistical support by the al-Qaeda core group. In this respect, the London bombings may bear a resemblance to the first World Trade Center bombing in New York in Feb­ruary 1993. In that attack, the local ring of amateur terrorists that did most of the dirty work was guided by Ramzi Yousef, a dedicated professional terrorist who was dispatched from al-Qaeda to oversee the operation.

Future al-Qaeda attacks in Europe will likely resemble the conventional bombings of Madrid and London more than a complex 9/11-type terrorist spectacular. Al-Qaeda's local cells probably do not have the resources to mount such a massive attack without being detected. What remains of the al-Qaeda core group is probably saving its best punch for the United States, its self-declared chief enemy.

Islamic Extremism in Britain

The scale and complexity of the problem involv­ing young Islamic extremists in Britain was high­lighted in a recently leaked British Foreign Office/ Home Office study.[10] Terrorist organizations such as al-Qaeda have found a fertile recruiting ground in the U.K., where half of Muslims are under the age of 25 and where there is widespread Muslim opposi­tion to the U.S.-British-led war on terrorism.

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. The recruits are driven by "anger" over British foreign policy in places such as Iraq, Afghanistan, and Palestine as well as "alienation" from British society and "disillusionment with 'sell out' mainstream Muslim organizations." According to the report:

[Terrorist recruits in the U.K.] range from foreign nationals now naturalized and resident in the U.K. arriving mainly from North Africa and the Middle East, to second and third generation British citizens whose forebears mainly originate from Pakistan and Kashmir. In addition, whilst many have grown up in Muslim households, a significant number come from liberal, non-religious Muslim backgrounds, or only converted to Islam in adulthood. These converts include white British nationals and those of West Indian extraction. By and large most young extremists fall into one of two groups: well educated undergraduates or with degrees and technical qualifications in engineering or IT; or under-achievers with few or no qualifications, and often a criminal background.[11]

The British government study concludes that "intelligence indicates that the number of British Muslims actively engaged in terrorist activity, whether at home or abroad, or supporting such activity is extremely small and estimated at less than 1%." This translates into potentially 16,000 British Muslims out of a total population of 1.6 mil­lion. An estimated 10,000 U.K. Muslims attended an extremist conference in 2003.

The study cites a series of polls of British Muslim opinion on foreign policy issues that raise consid­erable cause for concern regarding the loyalties of some U.K. Muslims in the global war on terrorism. While the vast majority of British Muslims con­demned the 9/11 attacks, 15 percent supported them in a November 2001 BBC poll. In the same poll, 80 percent believed that military action against Afghanistan was unjustified, and 24 percent approved of "British Muslims going to fight Amer­ica and its allies in Afghanistan."[12]

Another BBC poll, in December 2002, showed that 44 percent of Muslims thought that further attacks by al-Qaeda were "justified on grounds that Muslims are being killed by America and its allies using American weapons," and 56 percent of respondents stated that the U.S. and its allies were "unjustified in blaming Osama bin Laden's al-Qaeda groups for the attacks in America on Sep­tember 11." Seventy percent of respondents dis­agreed with the view that "the war on terror is not a war against Islam," and 26 percent of those polled did not "feel very or fairly loyal/patriotic towards Britain."[13]

Strengthening British
Anti-Terrorism Measures

According to Sir John Stevens, former chief of the Metropolitan Police, "up to 3,000 British-born or British-based people have passed through Osama bin Laden's training camps."[14] This aston­ishing statistic demonstrates the gravity of the problem facing Britain's security services in com­bating homegrown terrorism.

Britain's existing anti-terrorism laws are among the strongest in Europe, but they clearly need to be strengthened following the London terrorist attacks. There are two main pieces of anti-terrorism legislation on the British statute books: the Terror­ism Act of 2000[15] and the Anti-Terrorism Crime and Security Act 2001, which was amended in 2005.[16] Over 700 suspected terrorists have been arrested in the U.K. since September 11, 2001, of which just 119 were charged. Just 17 terrorist sus­pects were convicted under the Terrorism Act between 2001 and 2005, of which only three were Islamic militants.[17]

The British government should withdraw from any provision of the European Convention on Human Rights that acts as a barrier to British national security and should strongly consider pulling out of the Convention altogether. The Convention was introduced into British law by the Blair government through the Human Rights Act of 1998. As former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher wrote in the aftermath of the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on the United States:

The basic principle has to be re-established that where national security is deemed to be at stake the government of the day should have the power to act swiftly to protect it. At the very minimum, the provisions of the Human Rights Act should be formally excluded from applying to detention, deportation and asylum cases where the national interest is involved.[18]

The London bombings highlight the need for greater powers of detention regarding terrorist sus­pects. The U.K. should enact legislation that permits the indefinite preventive detention of suspected ter­rorists in secure prison facilities. House arrest provi­sions and "control orders" such as curfews and tagging are simply not powerful enough to deter ter­rorists from operating. In order to ensure a fair sys­tem of checks and balances, the cases of individual terrorist suspects should be subject to periodic review by British (not European) courts.[19]

Several measures pioneered in the highly suc­cessful USA PATRIOT Act[20] should be imple­mented by the British government, including an increase of surveillance powers for British police and a crackdown on charities with links to terrorist organizations. There should be a far greater degree of coordination between U.S. and British authori­ties in counterterrorist measures, and the Blair gov­ernment should show a greater willingness to extradite terrorism suspects wanted for trial in the United States and other allied countries.

Britain must also tighten its liberal asylum policy, which has allowed large numbers of Islamic mili­tants to find safe haven in Britain. Foreign Islamic clerics who preach sedition against the British state and back terrorism should be prosecuted and deported, and their support networks should be completely dismantled. Britain's mosques must be reclaimed by moderate Muslims and not be allowed to operate as centers of hatred.

The British government should apply a policy of zero tolerance toward Islamic extremists and immediately condemn extreme statements from religious leaders in the U.K. It should also bar entry to Britain by anyone who has ties to any terrorist organization, has supported or funded any terrorist group, or has made public statements supporting terrorism. British politicians should be careful not to confer respectability on Islamic academics and theologians who have backed suicide bombing and other forms of terrorism.

A Greater Commitment from Europe to the War on Terrorism

The U.S. and the U.K. should jointly pressure European Union (EU) member states to adopt effective anti-terrorism measures. The attacks in Madrid, Istanbul, and now London demonstrate that no European country is immune to the threat of Islamic terrorism.

Britain's Chancellor of the Exchequer, Gordon Brown, has already called on EU finance ministers to act immediately to freeze terrorist assets in their home countries, to tighten rules on money laun­dering and wire transfers of money, and to prevent abuse of charities by terrorists.[21] The British gov­ernment should also strongly back calls for Euro­pean countries to share information on air passengers with the United States in an effort to prevent infiltration of U.S. borders by European-based terrorists.

The U.S. and U.K. should call on Europe to play a more proactive role internationally in the global war on terrorism. Powerful domestic anti-terrorism measures must be combined with a commitment to fighting al-Qaeda in all its theaters of operation, including Iraq and Afghanistan. The European Union, instead of appeasing international terrorist groups, must isolate organizations such as Hamas and Hezbollah.

European governments should place a higher priority on disrupting and dismantling local net­works that support terrorists. Western govern­ments must take a more proactive approach to monitor, infiltrate, and dismantle not only the ter­rorist groups, but also the logistical, financial, and ideological networks that support them. Britain has allowed a motley collection of foreign Islamic radicals to gain sanctuary in Britain. Some may have naively hoped that this would afford them immunity from attack, but the foreign exiles have played a dangerous role in radicalizing Britain's Muslim citizens.

The United States made a similar mistake when it gave sanctuary to Sheikh Omar Abdul Rahman, the blind cleric who was the "spiritual guide" of the 1993 World Trade Center bombers, even though he was wanted by the Egyptian government for advo­cating terrorism. After 9/11, the Bush Administra­tion became more energetic in investigating and cracking down on Islamist groups such as Hamas and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad, which had estab­lished fundraising operations inside the United States. This averted the danger that fundraising cells might evolve into full-fledged terrorist cells. It also may have hindered al-Qaeda's operations by depriving it of possible allies. Individual Islamic radicals often have links to more than one group.

The U.S. and its European allies should also focus on rooting out criminal networks that often overlap with Islamic extremist networks. For example, Islamic terrorist groups often have links with groups that smuggle drugs, arms, or illegal immigrants. The Madrid bombers had ties to a ring of petty criminals that smuggled drugs. The Hezbollah terrorist group finances itself in part by smuggling drugs out of Leb­anon. It also has profited from smuggling cigarettes in America. In July 2000, FBI agents broke up a cig­arette smuggling ring that trucked contraband from North Carolina to Detroit, with at least some of the profits funneled to Hezbollah. Other cigarette smug­glers in the United States have been linked to Hamas and al-Qaeda.

International cooperation in intelligence and police matters is paramount because of the transna­tional nature of modern terrorist networks. How­ever, European governments cannot afford to treat the London attacks and other attacks on European soil as merely a law enforcement issue. Transna­tional terrorism is a strategic security threat. Law enforcement authorities can act only after a crime has been committed or after they receive detailed knowledge that a group is conspiring to commit a crime. A law enforcement approach that focuses on individual criminals leaves the terrorist networks in place, capable of inflicting further massacres. A more assertive approach is needed to identify and root out networks before they become a lethal threat. The Italian government appears to be taking this approach. After the London bombings, it cracked down on Islamic extremists, arresting 142 and expelling 52 illegal immigrants.

The British and U.S. Commitment to Iraq

Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari recently warned against an early withdrawal of U.S. and British forces from Iraq, declaring that the country would descend into "hell" if this were imple­mented.[22] Zebari is absolutely right: The implica­tions for the future of Iraq would be disastrous, and a withdrawal would also be viewed across the Arab world as a cataclysmic defeat for the West and an immense victory for Zarqawi and his mur­derous cohorts.

Zarqawi seeks to establish Iraq as a base for exporting terrorism to Western nations and the Middle East.[23] If the insurgents triumph in Iraq, al-Qaeda will attract more recruits and funds, and a victory will embolden it for future attacks, just as the Taliban victory in Afghanistan greatly strength­ened radical Islamists allied to the Taliban.

Fortunately, Tony Blair is no Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero and is unlikely to yield to calls to with­draw British troops. The Zapatero regime's decision to withdraw Spanish forces from Iraq after the Madrid bombings was an appalling capitulation to terrorism and sent the wrong message to al-Qaeda-that the West is weak and will capitulate under pressure. Spain's appeasement of the terror­ists emboldened those who are intent on destroying the transatlantic alliance and helped to sow the seeds of the bombings in London.

Britain's Defense Cuts and the Undermining of British Power

In an increasingly dangerous world, Britain must bear a greater load of the burden borne by the United States in the war on terrorism. As recent events have shown, this is as much Britain's war as it is America's. The planned U.K. defense cuts should be reversed because they will seriously hamper Britain's ability to deploy large numbers of troops at short notice to battlefields across the globe. Britain has the world's second most powerful military in terms of global force projection, but the planned defense cuts will greatly undermine its ability to fight effectively alongside the United States.

The Blair government's decision to axe 15,000 military personnel is a huge strategic error of judg­ment that will weaken the British war machine. The Royal Air Force will lose a fifth of its 53,000 per­sonnel, as well as five bases and four frontline squadrons. The Royal Navy will be reduced by six surface ships, making it smaller than the French navy for the first time in 200 years. The British Army will lose four of its most famous regiments, including the illustrious Black Watch, which has played a major role in British operations in Iraq.[24]

With defense spending falling to a historical low of just 2.6 percent of gross domestic product, Brit­ain is already extremely overstretched militarily, with its forces spread thinly across the Middle East, Africa, and Europe. With these cuts, it would be a struggle for Britain to embark upon another opera­tion like the Iraq War, which involved 45,000 Brit­ish troops, or another Falklands War.

Implications of the London Bombings for U.S. Homeland Security

The U.S. government should allocate homeland security funds to defend against the most likely ter­rorist threats and the most lethal. Although urban mass transit systems may need more investment in security systems, the United States and its allies cannot afford to be stampeded into a heavy invest­ment in transportation security measures that ter­rorists can defeat relatively easily. Protecting all passengers on public transit systems everywhere is simply impossible. Funds should be allocated to protecting the most likely targets in major cities such as Washington and New York, not disbursed across America according to politically motivated pork-barrel considerations.

The federal government's first priority should be to stop terrorists before they can attack, through proactive counterterrorism measures based on vig­ilant intelligence and early warning. Another top priority should be to prepare for catastrophic ter­rorism. State and local governments should take the lead in protecting critical infrastructure and responding to local attacks.[25]

Anti-terrorism security measures should also be assigned priorities according to the likelihood of the terrorist threat, the potential costs of a possible terrorist attack on a given target, and the opportu­nity costs of protecting a given target at the expense of protecting other possible targets. The U.S. gov­ernment must be proactive and consider al-Qaeda's most likely future threats and not merely react to its past attacks. Al-Qaeda is imaginative and adaptive. When its first attempt to destroy the World Trade Center failed and security against truck bombs was increased, it used airplanes as guided missiles to defeat ground-based security.

Al-Qaeda and many of its affiliates choose targets that are laden with symbolism, exact considerable economic damage, and inflict maximum casualties. Because many of its attacks are aimed to inspire the radical Muslim audience as much as to terrify the targeted civilian audience, it favors targets that pro­vide dramatic television or video footage that it can then use to recruit additional followers.

Although protecting mass transit facilities is important, protecting a wide range of other possi­ble targets is even more important. The highest pri­ority should be to protect America's elected leaders in the White House and the Capitol. Al-Qaeda has already targeted them and is sure to try again. Al-Qaeda has also put a high priority on political assassinations, including unsuccessful attempts to kill U.S. President Bill Clinton and Pakistani Presi­dent Pervez Musharraf. Military leaders are also likely targets, as is the Pentagon, which could be attacked again.

Bin Laden has a long record of trying to obtain chemical, biological, nuclear, and radiological weapons of mass destruction. The Department of Homeland Security must therefore assign a high priority to detecting, defending against, and deal­ing with the aftereffects of such weapons, particu­larly a "dirty" bomb, which uses a conventional blast to disperse radioactive materials. Such a weapon could inflict immense economic damage if detonated in a major city.

Al-Qaeda could also turn chemical facilities or trains carrying lethal chemicals into weapons of mass destruction that would threaten a large num­ber of people downwind from any explosion. Nuclear power plants, reprocessing facilities, and the electrical power grid also are tempting targets. The bombing or incineration of oil, gas, and lique­fied natural gas facilities would impose a cascade of economic costs on the petroleum-dependent U.S. economy and provide televised infernos that would terrorize Americans and inspire young impression­able Muslim radicals, who will make up al-Qaeda's next generation of terrorists.

While the London and Madrid bombings have raised Americans' awareness of the potential vul­nerabilities of transportation facilities inside the United States, the threats mentioned above are even more acute and deserve greater attention.

What the U.K. and the U.S. Should Do

In response to the London bombings, the British government should:

  • Strengthen British anti-terrorism laws. Brit­ish anti-terrorism legislation must be strength­ened to prevent further attacks on the scale of the London bombings. Greater powers should be given to British authorities to detain sus­pected terrorists, and the U.K. should immedi­ately withdraw from provisions in the European Convention on Human Rights that might act as a barrier to effective anti-terrorism measures. The British government should strongly consider implementing counterterror­ist laws pioneered by the United States in the PATRIOT Act.
  • Follow a policy of zero tolerance for Islamic extremism. Britain is and always will be one of the world's most open and tolerant societies. However, it must no longer tolerate the Islamic militancy in its midst, which seeks to destroy British society and impose a Muslim state. For­eign Islamic radicals who preach hatred and violence in the U.K. should be arrested and deported. Every effort must be made to ener­gize Muslim community leaders in Britain to work actively against the extremists in their midst. British politicians must also immediately denounce and act against inflammatory state­ments by Muslim extremists.
  • Reverse Britain's defense cuts. Britain remains the world's second most powerful military power in terms of global force projection, but the planned defense cuts will greatly undermine its ability to fight effectively alongside the United States. The London bombings and the continuing wars in Iraq and Afghanistan underline the need for the U.K. to increase the size of its military rather than reduce it. Expenditures on Britain's armed forces must rise in correlation with the ris­ing threats to national and international security.

The governments of the United States and the United Kingdom should jointly:

  • Coordinate London and Washington's Anti-Terrorist Lists. There is a striking discrepancy between the U.S. and U.K. lists of interna­tional terrorist organizations. (See Appendix 1.) The U.K. list omits over 15 organizations classified as terrorist groups by the U.S. Department of State. Washington and London should carefully coordinate their lists of pro­scribed groups and present a united position in the global war on terrorism.
  • Stay the course in Iraq. The terrorist attacks in London must increase the resolve of both the U.S. and the U.K. to win the war against the al-Qaeda-backed insurgency in Iraq. Iraq has become a central front in the war on terrorism. Abu Musab al-Zarqawi and his terrorists must be eliminated. A clear message must be sent to al-Qaeda operatives that they will be fought and destroyed in Iraq. The defeat of al-Zarqawi and his army of suicide bombers and jihadists must become a top priority for Downing Street.
  • Press Pakistan to root out Islamic extremist groups. The trail of the London bombing con­spiracy leads to Pakistan. Pakistani security officials told The Times that three of the Lon­don bombers met known al-Qaeda suspects during their trip to Pakistan.[26] They appar­ently spent most of their time in the company of figures from outlawed Pakistani militant groups. Shehzad Tanweer reportedly spent several months at a madrass (Islamic religious school) in Pakistan run by Lashkar-i-Taiba, an Islamic extremist group affiliated with al-Qaeda that ostensibly was outlawed in 2002. Although Pakistani President Pervez Mushar­raf's government has adopted a tough rhetori­cal stance against such Islamic militant groups, it has in practice turned a blind eye to many of their activities because it seeks to pre­serve them as useful allies against India. In the aftermath of the London bombings, Musharraf has ordered a crackdown on Islamic extrem­ists, but the Pakistani government has eased up on such groups after past crackdowns.

Washington and London should escalate pres­sure on the Pakistani government to follow through on its promises to combat and perma­nently dismantle Islamic extremist groups, espe­cially those linked to al-Qaeda. If Pakistan continues to undermine Western security by permitting its Islamic radicals to recruit and train Western Muslims as terrorists, London and Washington should halt foreign aid to Paki­stan[27] and seek to block any future loans from international economic institutions to Pakistan.

  • Take the war to the terrorists. The war against al-Qaeda must be waged militarily as well as through intelligence and police opera­tions. Whoever has harbored, funded, aided, or abetted the London bombers must be held to account. If any state played a role in these attacks, there must be consequences. Special-forces operations, strategic air strikes, and the targeted elimination of terrorist leaders must all be on the table, in addition to a meticulous hunt for al-Qaeda sleeper cells operating in London and other major cities across Europe. No quarter should be given to those who have murdered innocent civilians.

Conclusion

The terrorists responsible for the London bomb attacks will not succeed in changing British policy in the war on terrorism. If anything, the attacks will increase the determination of the British govern­ment to stay the course in Iraq and may result in an expansion of British military operations in both Iraq and Afghanistan.

In Britain's hour of need, the United States will stand shoulder to shoulder with her British allies, who are bloodied but unbowed. This latest terrorist attack will succeed only in bringing the British and American people closer together. The terrorist attacks will strengthen Anglo-American resolve. Great Britain, like America, is a great warrior nation that will always respond aggressively to national security threats and the murder of its citizens. This is an epic confrontation between civilization and the barbaric forces that wish to destroy it.

The U.S.-British alliance is a strikingly success­ful partnership of two great powers built on the solid foundations of a common heritage, culture, and vision. The two nations have fought alongside each other in seven major wars in the past 90 years, from World War I to the Iraq war. The war on ter­rorism is a global conflict that may last for decades, but it will be won by the two nations that stand at the forefront of defending freedom and liberty on the world stage.

Nile Gardiner, Ph.D., is Fellow in Anglo-Ameri­can Security Policy and James Phillips is Research Fel­low in Middle Eastern Studies in the Douglas and Sarah Allison Center for Foreign Policy Studies, a divi­sion of the Kathryn and Shelby Cullom Davis Institute for International Studies, at The Heritage Foundation. The authors are grateful to John Hulsman, Ph.D., Senior Research Fellow in European Affairs, James Jay Carafano, Ph.D., Senior Fellow for National Security and Homeland Security, and Paul Rosenzweig, Senior Legal Research Fellow, for their advice and suggestions. Heritage Foundation interns Sara Liston, Chelsea Kinsman, and Rob Diamond contributed to the research for this paper.

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[1]For a profile of the bombers, see Sam Knight, "The Leeds Bombers," The Times (London), July 13, 2005, at www.timesonline.co.uk/printFriendly/0,,1-20749-1692402,00.html (July 15, 2005). For a profile of the fourth bomber, see Adam Fresco, Sean O'Neill, and Stewart Tendler, "Jamaican-Born Bomber from the Suburbs of Middle England," The Times, July 15, 2005, at www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,22989-1694965,00.html (July 15, 2005).

[2]"Forgotten Men Who Became Foot Soldiers of Al-Qaeda," The Times, July 18, 2005.

[3] Ibid.

[4]For analysis of London's role as a sanctuary for Islamic terrorists, see Steve Coll and Susan B. Glasser, "In London, Islamic Radicals Found a Haven," The Washington Post, July 10, 2005, p. A1, at www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/ 07/09/AR2005070901390.html (July 15, 2005), and Elaine Sciolino and Don Van Natta, Jr., "For a Decade, London Thrived as a Busy Crossroads of Terror," The New York Times, July 10, 2005, at www.nytimes.com/2005/07/10/international/europe/ 10qaeda.html?incamp=article_popular_5 (July 15, 2005).

[5]Council of Europe, "Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms," at www.echr.coe.int/NR/ rdonlyres/D5CC24A7-DC13-4318-B457-5C9014916D7A/0/EnglishAnglais.pdf (July 19, 2005).

[6]This is a point made powerfully by the British Prime Minister in a July 16, 2005, speech; see "Full Text: Blair Speech on Ter­ror," BBC News, at http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/4689363.stm.

[7]Renwick McLean, "Spain Arrested More Than 130 Suspects in Islamic Terrorism in '04," The New York Times, January 6, 2005, p. A6.

[8]Reuters, "Madrid Train Bombers Also Targeted New York," March 2, 2005.

[9]See James A. Phillips, "Defusing Terrorism at Ground Zero: Why a New U.S. Policy Is Needed for Afghanistan," Heritage Foundation Backgrounder No.1383, July 12, 2000, at www.heritage.org/Research/MiddleEast/bg1383.cfm.

[10]Sir Andrew Turnbull, Secretary of the Cabinet and Head of the Home Civil Service, "Relations with the Muslim Community," memo to John Gieve, Home Office, April 6, 2004, at www.times- archive.co.uk/ onlinespecials/cabinet1.pdf, www.times-archive.co.uk/onlinespecials/cabinet2.pdf, www.times- archive.co.uk/ /onlinespecials/cabinet3.pdf, and www.times-archive.co.uk/ onlinespecials/cabinet4.pdf (July 15, 2005). See also Robert Winnett and David Leppard, "Leaked No. 10 Dossier Reveals al-Qaeda's British Recruits," The Sunday Times, July 10, 2005, at www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2087-1688261,00.html (July 15, 2005).

[11]Turnbull, "Relations with the Muslim Community," p. 11.

[12]ICM Research and BBC Radio 4, Muslims Poll, November 2001, at www.icmresearch.co.uk/reviews/2001/today-muslims-poll-nov-2001.htm (July 15, 2005).

[13]ICM Research and BBC Radio 4, Muslims Poll, December 2002, atwww.icmresearch.co.uk/reviews/2002/bbc-today-muslims-dec-02.htm (July 15, 2005).

[14]Sir John Stevens, quoted in "Home-Grown Bombers 'Behind London Attacks,'" Press Association, July 10, 2005.

[15]United Kingdom Home Office, "Terrorism Act 2000 (TACT)," at www.homeoffice.gov.uk/terrorism/govprotect/legislation/ tact.html (July 15, 2005).

[16]United Kingdom Home Office, "Anti-Terrorism Crime and Security Act 2001 (ATCSA)-Part 4 Powers," at www.homeoffice.gov.uk/terrorism/govprotect/legislation/atcsa.html (July 15, 2005).

[17]"Hundreds Arrested, Few Convicted," BBC News, March 11, 2005, at news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/3290383.stm (July 15, 2005).

[18]Margaret Thatcher, Statecraft: Strategies for a Changing World (London: HarperCollins, 2002), pp. 277-278.

[19]For analysis of the issue of detaining terrorist suspects, see Paul Rosenzweig and James Jay Carafano, Ph.D., "Preventive Detention and Actionable Intelligence," Heritage Foundation Legal Memorandum No. 13, September 16, 2004, at www.heritage.org/Research/HomelandDefense/lm13.cfm.

[20]For an in-depth summary of the provisions of the PATRIOT Act, see Paul Rosenzweig, Alane Kochems, and James Jay Carafano, Ph.D., eds., The Patriot Act Reader, Heritage Foundation Special Report No. 1, September 20, 2004, at www.heritage.org/Research/HomelandDefense/The-Patriot-Act-Reader.cfm.

[21]"UK Urges Terrorist Asset Seizure," BBC News Online, July 12, 2005, at news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/4673975.stm (July 15, 2005). See also "EU Fight Against Terrorism Set to Focus on Intelligence Sharing," Financial Times, July 13, 2005.

[22]See Patrick Coburn, "Iraqi Minister Says Troop Pull-Out Would 'Take Country into Hell,'" The Independent, July 12, 2005, at news.independent.co.uk/world/middle_east/article298523.ece (July 15, 2005).

[23]Porter Goss, "Global Challenges 2005: Meeting Long-Term Challenges with a Long-Term Strategy," testimony before the Select Committee on Intelligence, U.S. Senate, February 16, 2005.

[24]For background on the British defense cuts, see "Brown Demands 2.6 billion MoD Savings a Year in Exchange for His Cash Pledge," The Daily Telegraph, July 19, 2005; "Britain's Defence Sums Don't Add Up," The Economist, July 24, 2004; and "Brit­ain Spends Too Little on Its Forces," The Daily Telegraph, August 23, 2004.

[25]See Alane Kochems, "Who's on First? A Strategy for Protecting Critical Infrastructure," Heritage Foundation Backgrounder No. 1851, May 9, 2005, at www.heritage.org/Research/HomelandDefense/bg1851.cfm.

[26]Simon Freeman, "Bombers Traveled Around Pakistan for Three Months," Times Online, July 18, 2005.

[27]The United States gave $400 million in grant assistance to Pakistan in 2004. The Bush Administration is committed to giving a further $3 billion in aid to Pakistan over the next five years ($600 million a year). "U.S. Foreign Policy Towards Pakistan," speech by Nancy J. Powell, U.S. Ambassador to Pakistan, Lahore, August 20, 2004, at www.state.gov/p/sa/rls/rm/35681.htm. The United Kingdom's Department for International Development (DFID) expects to spend over $400 million in develop­ment assistance in Pakistan over the next three years. See U.K. Foreign and Commonwealth Office, "Country Profile, Paki­stan: UK Development Assistance," at www.fco.gov.uk/servlet/Front?pagename=OpenMarket/Xcelerate/ ShowPage&c=Page&cid=1007029394365&a=KCountryProfile&aid=
1019041564003
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Authors

Phillips
James Phillips

Former Visiting Fellow, Allison Center

Nile Gardiner
Nile Gardiner

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