Government report: Attack in Britain likely


The risk of a terrorist attack taking place in Britain is said by the authorities to be “severe” – meaning that an attack is highly likely.

Christian science monitor

LONDON — After decades of campaigns by Irish Republicans and, most recently, Islamist militants, Britons have become used to the daily threat of terrorism.

But in a warning that the stakes have been raised — and just days before world leaders gather here for the Group of 20 meeting — a warning was given this week that a so-called dirty bomb on a British city is more likely than ever.

The government alert accompanied the launch of a major new anti-terrorist strategy that encourages ordinary citizens to offer Britain an additional layer of security.

The new approach aims to train some 60,000 retail, hotel and service industry staff to recognize terrorist threats. In addition, more resources will go into blocking access to information posted online on how to stage terror attacks.

Most significant, as part of a broader ideological offensive against terrorism and amid growing concern that alienated Muslim youths are being recruited by terror groups, the government will allocate funds for influential groups and individuals in Britain’s Muslim community who speak out against extremism.

The 167-page document, regarded as the frankest assessment yet of the threat facing Britain, asserts that there is a need to “challenge those who reject the rights to which we are committed, scorn the institutions and values of our parliamentary democracy, dismiss the rule of law, and promote intolerance.”

The document made headlines with a stark warning that changing technology and increased illegal transportation of chemical, radiological and biological materials make the prospect of terrorists assembling and exploding a dirty bomb more realistic.

The risk of a terrorist attack taking place in Britain is said by the authorities to be “severe” – meaning that an attack is highly likely.

The threat of home-grown militants importing technology to construct improvised explosive devices of the type used against British and U.S. forces in Iraq and Afghanistan was also highlighted in the report, called “Contest Two,” which updates the previous “Contest” strategy developed in 2003.

The strategy’s launch, however, was overshadowed by a continuing rift between the British government and Britain’s largest Muslim group, which accused ministers of wanting to “undermine its independence” by demanding one of its leaders be removed from office.

The government, which has previously funded the Muslim Council of Britain, broke off relations earlier this month after it called for the resignation of a senior council official after he reportedly called for violence against Israel.

The concerns outlined in the document corresponded with a separate report this week by the British broadcaster Sky News, which cited Pakistani intelligence sources saying that more than 20 young Britons had returned home after being trained by groups linked to al-Qaida and the Taliban.

British Home Secretary Jacqui Smith named next week’s G-20 meeting as a prime target for terrorists and told the BBC that Britain could no longer just rely on intelligence services and the police to stop the threat.

In remarks seen as directed at Britain’s Muslim population, Smith said that it was up to people in all communities to challenge those who espouse radical beliefs and reject aspects of British life such as a parliamentary democracy.

“We should all stand up for our shared values and not concede the floor to those who dismiss them,” she told the BBC.