The Liquid Bomb Hoax: The Larger Implications
By James Petras
08/26/06 "Information
Clearing House" -- -- The charges leveled by the British, US and
Pakistani regimes that they uncovered a major bomb plot directed
against nine US airlines is based on the flimsiest of evidence,
which would be thrown out of any court, worthy of its name.
An analysis of the current state of the investigation raises a
series of questions regarding the governments’ claims of a bomb plot
concocted by 24 Brits of Pakistani origin.
The arrests were followed by the search for evidence, as the August
12, 2006 Financial Times states: “The police set about the mammoth
task of gathering evidence of the alleged terrorist bomb plot
yesterday.” (FT, August 12/, 2006) In other words, the arrests and
charges took place without sufficient evidence -- a peculiar method
of operation -- which reverses normal investigatory procedures in
which arrests follow the “monumental task of gathering evidence.” If
the arrests were made without prior accumulation of evidence, what
were the bases of the arrests?
The government search of financial records and transfers turned up
no money trail despite the freezing of accounts. The police search
revealed limited amounts of savings, as one would expect from young
workers, students and employees from low-income immigrant families.
The British government, backed by Washington, claimed that the
Pakistani government’s arrest of two British-Pakistanis provided
“critical evidence” in uncovering the plot and identifying the
alleged terrorist. No Western judicial hearing would accept evidence
procured by the Pakistani intelligence services that are notorious
for their use of torture in extracting ‘confessions’. The Pakistani
dictatorship’s evidence is based on a supposed encounter between a
relative of one of the suspects and an Al Qaeda operative on the
Afghan border. According to the Pakistani police, the Al Qaeda agent
provided the relative and thus the accused with the bomb-making
information and operative instructions. The transmission of
bomb-making information does not require a trip half-way around the
world, least of all to a frontier under military siege by US led
forces on one side and the Pakistani military on the other. Moreover
it is extremely dubious that Al Qaeda agents in the mountains of
Afghanistan have any detailed knowledge of specific British airline
security, procedures or conditions of operations in London. Lacking
substantive evidence, Pakistani intelligence and their British
counterparts touched all the propaganda buttons: A clandestine
meeting with Al Qaeda, bomb-making information exchanges on the
Pakistani-Afghan border, Pakistani-Brits with Islamic friends,
family and terrorist connections in England . . .
US intelligence claimed, and London repeated, that sums of money had
been wired from Pakistan to allow the plotters to buy airline
tickets. Yet air tickets were found in only one residence (and the
airline and itinerary were not stated by the police). None of the
other suspects possessed plane tickets and some did not even have
passports. In other words, the most preliminary moves in the
so-called bomb plot had not been taken by the accused. No terrorist
plot to bomb airplanes exists when the alleged conspirators are
lacking travel funds, documents and tickets. It is not credible to
argue that the alleged conspirators depended on instructions from
distant handlers ignorant of the basic ground level conditions.
Initially the British and US authorities claimed that the explosive
device was a “liquid bomb,” yet no liquid or non-liquid bomb was
discovered on the premises or persons of any of the accused. Nor has
any evidence been produced as to the capability of any of the
suspects in making, moving or detonating the “liquid bomb” -- a very
volatile solution if handled by unskilled operatives. No evidence
has been presented on the nature of the specific liquid bomb
question, or any spoken discussion or written documents about the
liquid bomb, which would implicate any of the suspects. No bottle,
liquid or chemical formula has been found among any of the suspects.
Nor have any of the ingredients that go into making the “liquid
bomb” been uncovered. Nor has any evidence been presented as to
where the liquid was supposed to come from (the source) or whether
it was purchased locally or overseas.
When the liquid bomb story was ridiculed into obscurity, British
Deputy Assistant Commissioner Peter Clark claimed that, “bomb making
equipment including chemicals and electric components had been
found,” (BBC News, 8/21/2006)
Once again there is no mention of what “electronic components” and
“chemicals” were found, in whose home or office and if they might be
related to non-bomb making activities. Were these so-called new
bomb-making items owned by a specific person or group of persons,
and if so were they known by the parties implicated to be part of a
bombing plot. Moreover, when and why have the authorities switched
from the liquid bombs to identifying old fashion electronic
detonators? Is there any evidence -- documents or taped discussions
-- that link these electronic detonators and chemicals with the
specific plot to “blow up 9 US bound airliners”?
Instead of providing relevant facts clearing up basic questions of
names, dates, weapons, and travel dates, Commissioner Clark gives
the press a laundry list of items that could be found in millions of
homes and the large number of buildings searched (69 so far). If
stair climbing earns promotions, Clark should be nominated for a
knighthood. According to Clark the police discovered more than 400
computers, 200 mobile telephones, 8,000 computer media items (items
as catastrophic as memory sticks, CDs and DVDs); police removed
6,000 gigabytes of data from the seized computers (150 from each
computer) and a few video recordings. One presumes, in the absence
of any qualitative data demonstrating that the suspects were in fact
preparing bombs in order to destroy nine US airliners, that
Commissioner Clark is seeking public sympathy for his minions’
enormous capacity to lift and remove electronic equipment from one
site to another in up to 69 buildings. This is a notable achievement
if we are talking about a moving company and not a high-powered
police investigation of an event of “catastrophic consequences.”
Some of the suspects were arrested because they have traveled to
Pakistan at the beginning of the school year holidays. British and
US authorities forget to mention that tens of thousands of Pakistani
ex-pats return to visit family at precisely that time of year.
The wise guys on Wall Street and The City of London never took the
liquid bomb plot seriously: At no point did the Market respond,
nose-dive, crash or panic. The announced plot to bomb airlines was
ignored by all Big Players on the US and London stock markets. In
fact, petrol prices dropped slightly. In contrast to 9/11 and the
Madrid and London bombings (to which this plot is compared) the
stock market ‘makers’ were not impressed by the governments’ claims
of a ‘major catastrophe.’ George Bush or Tony Blair, who were
informed and discussed the “liquid bomb plot” several days
beforehand, didn’t even skip a day of their vacations, in response
to the catastrophic threat.
And each and every claim and piece of ‘evidence’ put forth by the
police and the Blair and Bush security authorities runs a cropper.
Some of the alleged suspects are released, and new equally paltry
‘evidence’ is breathlessly presented: two tape recordings of “martyr
messages” were found in the computer of one suspect, which, we are
told, foretold a planned terrorist attack. The Clark team claimed
with great aplomb that they found one or a few martyr videotapes,
without clarifying the fact that the videos were not made by the
suspects but viewed by them. Many people the world over pay homage
to suicide martyrs to a great variety of political causes. Prime
Minister Koizumi of Japan visits a shrine dedicated to World War II
military dead -- including kamikaze suicide pilots, defying Chinese
and Korean protests. Millions of US citizens and politicians pay
homage to the war heroes in Arlington cemetery each year, some of
whom deliberately sacrificed their lives in order to defend their
comrades, their flag and the justice of their cause. It should be of
no surprise that Asians, Muslims and others should collect videos of
anti-Israeli or anti-occupation martyrs. In none of the above cases
where people honor martyrs is there any police attempt to link the
reverent observer with future suicide bomb plots -- except if they
are Muslims. Hero worship of fallen fighters is a normal everyday
phenomenon -- and is certainly no evidence that the idolaters are
engaged in murderous activity.
A “martyr message” is neither a plot, conspiracy nor action, it is
only an expression of free speech -- one might add, ‘internal
speech’ (between the speaker and his computer) which might at some
future time become public speech. Are we to make private dialogue a
terrorist offense?
As the legal time limit expires on the holding of suspects without
charges, the British authorities released two suspects, charged
eleven, and eleven others continue to be held without charges,
probably because there is no basis for proceeding further. As the
number of accused plotters thin out in England, Clark and company
have deflected attention to a world-wide plot with links to Spain,
Italy, the Middle East and elsewhere. Apparently the logic here is
that a wider net compensates for the large holes. In the case at
hand, of the eleven who have been remanded to trial, only eight have
been charged with conspiracy to prepare acts of terrorism; the other
three are accused of “not disclosing information” (or being
informers . . . of what?) and “possessing articles useful to a
person preparing acts of terrorism.” (BBC News, 8/21/06) Since no
bombs have been found and no plans of action have been revealed, we
are left with the vague charge of ‘conspiracy’, which can mean a
hostile private discussion directed against US and British subjects
by several like-thinking individuals. The reason that it appears
that ideas and not actions are in question is because the police
have not turned up any weapons or specific measures to enter into
the locus of attack (air tickets to board planes, passports and so
on). How can suspects be charged with failing to disclose
information, when the police lack any concrete information
pertaining to the alleged bomb plot. The fact that the police are
further diluting their charges against three more plotters is
indicative of the flimsy basis of their original arrests and public
claims. To charge a 17 year-old-boy with “possessing articles useful
to a person preparing acts of terrorism” is so open-ended as to be
laughable: Did the article have other uses for the boy or for his
family (like a box cutter). Did he ‘possess’ written articles
because they were informative or fascinating to a young person?
Since he still possessed the article, he had not passed these
articles to any person making bombs. Did he know of any specific
plans to make bombs or any bomb-makers? The charges could implicate
anyone possessing and reading a good spy novel or science fiction
thriller in which bomb making is discussed. The eleven have already
pleaded innocent; the trial will begin in due time. The government
and mass media have already convicted the accused in the electronic
and print media. Panic has been sown. Fear and hysterical anger is
present in the long security lines at airports and train stations .
. . Asian men quietly saying prayers are being pulled off of
airplanes and planes diverted or airports evacuated.
The bomb plot hoax has caused enormous losses (in the hundreds of
millions of dollars) to the airlines, business people, oil
companies, duty free shops, tourist agencies, resorts and hotels,
not to speak of the tremendous inconvenience and health related
problems of millions of stranded and stressed travelers. The
restrictions on laptop computers, travel bags, accessories, special
foods and liquid medicines have added to the ‘costs’ of traveling.
Clearly the decision to cook up the phony bomb plot was not
motivated by economic interests, but domestic political reasons. The
Blair administration, already highly unpopular for supporting Bush’s
wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, was under attack for his unconditional
support for Israel’s invasion of Lebanon, his refusal to call for an
immediate ceasefire and his unstinting support for Bush’s servility
to US Zionist lobbies. Even within the Labor party over a hundred
backbenchers were speaking out against his policies, while even
junior cabinet ministers such as Prescott stated that Boss Bush’s
foreign policy smelled of the barnyard. Bush was not yet cornered by
his colleagues in the same way as Blair, but unpopularity was
threatening to lead his Republican party to congressional defeat and
possible loss of a majority of seats.
According to top security officials in England, Bush and Blair were
“knowledgeable” about the investigation into a possible “liquid
bomb” plot. We know that Blair gave the go-ahead for the arrests,
even as the authorities must have told him they lacked the evidence
and at best it was premature. Some reports from British police
insiders claim that the Bush Administration pushed Blair for early
arrests and the announcement of the ‘liquid bomb’ plot. Security
officials then launched a massive, all-out ‘terror propaganda’
campaign designed to capture the attention and support of the public
with the total support of the mass media. The security-mass media
campaign served its objective -- Bush’s popularity increased, Blair
avoided censure and both continued on their vacations.
The bomb plot political ploy fits the previous political pattern of
sacrificing capitalist economic interests to serve domestic
political and ideological positions. Foreign policy failures lead to
domestic political crimes, just as domestic policy crises lead to
aggressive military expansion.
The criminal frame-up of young Muslim-South Asian British citizens
by the British security officials was specifically designed to cover
up for the failed Anglo-American invasion of Iraq and the
Anglo-American backing for Israel’s destructive but failed invasion
of Lebanon. Blair’s “liquid bombers” plot sacrificed a multiplicity
of British capitalist interests in order to retain political offices
and stave off an unceremonious early exit from power. The costs of
failed militarism are borne by citizens and businesses.
In an analogous fashion Bush and his Zioncon and other militarists
exploited the events of 9/11 to pursue a militarist multi-war
strategy in Southwest Asia and the Middle East. With time and
scientific research, the official version of the events of 9/11 have
come under serious questioning -- both regarding the collapse of one
of the towers in New York, as well as the explosions in the
Pentagon. The events of 9/11 and the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq
sacrificed major US economic interests: Losses in New York, tourism,
airline industry and massive physical destruction; losses in terms
of a major increase in oil prices and instability, increasing the
costs to US, European and Asian consumers and industries.
Likewise the Israeli military invasion of Gaza and Lebanon, backed
by the US and Great Britain, were economically costly destroying
property, investments and markets, while raising the level of mass
anti-imperial opposition.
In other words, the politics of US, British and Israeli (and by
extension World Zionist) militarism has been at the expense of
strategic sectors of the civilian economy. These losses to key
economic sectors require the civilian-militarists to resort to
domestic political crimes (phony bomb plots and frame-up trials) to
distract the public from their costly and failed policies and to
tighten political control. On both counts, the civilian militarists
and the Zioncons are losing ground. The “liquid bomb” plot is
unraveling, Israel is in turmoil, the Zioncons are preaching to the
converted, and the US is, as always, the United States: The
Democratic civilian militarists are capitalizing on the failures of
their incumbent colleagues.
James Petras, a former Professor of Sociology at Binghamton
University, New York, owns a 50-year membership in the class
struggle, is an adviser to the landless and jobless in Brazil and
Argentina, and is co-author of Globalization Unmasked (Zed Books).
His latest book is, The Power of Israel in the United States
(Clarity Press, 2006). He can be reached at:
jpetras@binghamton.edu.
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