Special Report: Major UK air terror plot
thwarted
ISLAMABAD, Aug. 16 (Xinhua) -- "Al-Qaida's No. 3" was
the mastermind behind the plot to blow up transatlantic flights, local newspaper
Dawn Wednesday quoted an intelligence source as saying.
"It is not Osama bin Laden and it's not Aiman Al
Zawahiri, but someone close to the rank of Abu Faraj Al-Libbi," the source said.
It is an al-Qaida connection, the source said with
anonymity.
"It is the top hierarchy," he said.
Abu Faraj Al-Libbi, a third-tier al-Qaida operative,
was believed involved in an attempt to assassinate President Gen Pervez
Musharraf and was arrested from Mardan in May 2005.
The intelligence source said the plot to blow up
U.S.-bound planes was similar in pattern to the one hatched to kill President
Musharraf.
"There was a mastermind, there was a planner and
there were the executioners," he said.
The source said that al-Qaida's link to the London
airline bombing plot was established.
Stressing the importance of key person Rashid Rauf's
arrest, the source said that without his capture the plot would not have been
foiled.
He acknowledged that there had been some hype about
the bombing plots but said the plotters were in the planning stage and were
procuring chemicals and equipment. They were not in the execution stage, he
said.
The source said that Rauf had gone to the United
Kingdom in 1981 when he was less than one year old. He returned to Pakistan in
2002 and had since been living here.
He had been living in Pakistan, the source clarified
but declined to say when and where he had been arrested.
The source said that Pakistan was withholding the
information due to British legal sensitivities and that a team of their legal
experts was in Pakistan to discuss the case.
He said that Pakistani security agencies had arrested
six to seven suspects, including Rashid Rauf.
This is an ongoing operation and there could be more
arrests, he said. "Certainly, there will be more arrests as the investigation
proceeds," he said.
The source agreed that some of the London plotters
might have come to Pakistan but said that Islamabad was awaiting information,
including antecedents and passport details of the plotters to ascertain facts.
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