From: Guardian
Paul Harris and Ed Pilkington in New York
Bomber involved in plot to attack US-bound jet was working as an informer with Saudi intelligence and the CIA, it has emerged
Paul Harris and Ed Pilkington in New York
A would-be "underwear bomber" involved in a plot to attack a
US-based jet was in fact working as an undercover informer with Saudi
intelligence and the CIA, it has emerged.
The
revelation is the latest twist in an increasingly bizarre story about
the disruption of an apparent attempt by al-Qaida to strike at a
high-profile American target using a sophisticated device hidden in the
clothing of an attacker.
The plot, which the White House said on
Monday had involved the seizing of an underwear bomb by authorities in
the Middle East sometime in the last 10 days, had caused alarm
throughout the US.
It has also been linked to a suspected US drone strike in Yemen
where two Yemeni members of al-Qaida were killed by a missile attack on
their car on Sunday, one of them a senior militant, Fahd Mohammed Ahmed
al-Quso.
But the news that the individual at the heart of the
bomb plot was in fact an informer for US intelligence is likely to raise
just as many questions as it answers.
Citing US and Yemeni
officials, Associated Press reported that the unnamed informant was
working under cover for the Saudis and the CIA when he was given the
bomb, which was of a new non-metallic type aimed at getting past airport
security.
The informant then turned the device over to his
handlers and has left Yemen, the officials told the news agency. The LA
Times, which first broke the news that the plot had been a "sting
operation", said that the bomb plan had also provided the intelligence
leads that allowed the strike on Quso.
Earlier John Brennan,
Barack Obama's top counter-terrorism adviser and a former CIA official,
told ABC's Good Morning America that authorities are "confident that
neither the device nor the intended user of this device pose a threat to
us".
US officials have said the plot was detected in its early stages and that no American airliner was ever at risk.
The FBI
is conducting forensic tests on the bomb as a first step towards
discovering whether it would have cleared existing airport scanning
systems. Dianne Feinstein, the Democratic senator for California who
heads the Senate intelligence committee, gave an early hint when she
said that she had been briefed about the device which she called
"undetectable".
But AP quoted an unnamed US official as saying
current detection methods probably would have spotted the shape of the
explosive in the latest device.
Just how major an escalation in
threat is posed by the bomb remains unclear. Security sources have told
news agencies that it was a step up in levels of sophistication from the
original underwear bomb that was used in a failed attempt to blow up an
airliner over Detroit on Christmas Day in 2009.
The device used a more refined detonation system, and Brennan said "it was a threat from a standpoint of the design".
When
it comes to who made the device the focus is on an al-Qaida's offshoot,
Al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP). Matthew Levitt, a
counter-terrorism expert at the Washington Institute, said that the
interception of the plot amounted to a significant achievement for US
security agencies.
He said: "The FBI is holding the device, which
suggests that this was done by having boots on the ground. This was a
sophisticated operation that shows we are making in-roads in serious
places." MORE
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