Photographs: Yuri Gripas/Reuters
It is important for Indian security agencies to pay attention to likely threats from Al Qaeda elements outside the Af-Pak region, cautions B Raman.
From the sketchy details available so far regarding two packages containing materials for explosive devices found on October 29 on two cargo flights reportedly emanating from Yemen and bound for Chicago via Dubai and East Midlands airport in the United Kingdom, the following preliminary observations are possible:
Normally, courier companies do not accept closed packages. The packages have to be kept open at the time of handing them over so that their contents could be checked for any suspicious material. The fact that the suspicious material was not detected at the time of handing over the packages would indicate the possible complicity of some employees of the two courier companies.
Some questions on the latest terror threat to US
Image: A New York policeman stands at the scene of a suspected bomb contained in a UPS package at a bank in BrooklynPhotographs: Jessica Rinaldi/Reuters
Some questions on the latest terror threat to US
Image: A police helicopter hovers over UPS containers at East Midlands Airport in Castle Donington, central EnglandPhotographs: Darren Staples/Reuters
Presuming the packages had reached their destination in Chicago undetected, how did the terrorists intend to activate them? Were they meant to explode through spring action or other such device as the packages were being opened or did they intend causing an explosion through a mobile telephone before the packages were opened?
It has been reported that the Saudi authorities had alerted the security agencies of the United Kingdom and the US about the presence of the suspicious packages and that was how these were detected and deactivated. How did the Saudi authorities come to know about it? Through moles in Al Qaeda of the Arabian Peninsula, whose hand is suspected or through informants in the courier companies, who had knowledge of the packages?
Some questions on the latest terror threat to US
Image: A soldier talks to a man in front of the UPS office in Sanaa, YemenPhotographs: Khaled Abdullah/Reuters
article