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Al-Qaeda bombs too sophisticated to be detected by x-rays, says Brit counter-terrorism expert | A senior British counter-terrorism official has said
that the al-Qaida bomb inside a computer printer discovered at East Midlands airport on Friday, was too sophisticated to be detected by the x-rays. "One of the most
sophisticated we've seen ... the naked eye won't pick it up, experienced bomb
officers did not see it, x-ray screening is highly unlikely to catch it," the
Guardian quoted the official, as saying. Senior counter-terrorism officials warned
that al-Qaida has exposed a blind spot in international aviation security by successfully
smuggling bombs onto commercial cargo planes bound for the US. Saudi Arabian intelligence
was warned by an informant leading to the discovery of the devices at the East
Midlands and Dubai airports. A special team of officers from MI5, MI6, and GCHQ,
which works closely with the Metropolitan police's counter-terrorism branch, was
activated as soon as the Saudi Arabian authorities tipped off US and UK intelligence
agencies. Meanwhile, the British home secretary, Theresa May, has said that the
devices could have exploded over the UK or the US as it emerged that the bomb
found in the UK was first missed by investigators and was only picked up during
a second check. Expressing concern over the ease with which the explosive material
used in the devices, Pentaerythritol tetranitrate, or PETN, can be passed through
all kinds of airport security, Qatar Airways said the bomb found in Dubai had
travelled on two separate passenger aircraft without being picked up and added
that neither the x-ray screening nor sniffer dogs could detect the devices. "There
is no way of picking out PETN. It is a continued vulnerability," the paper quoted
the counter-terrorism official, as saying. Lord Carlile, the independent reviewer
of counter-terrorism laws has said that the initial failure to find the bomb on
a plane at East Midlands airport was a "weakness". "The one weakness I would identify
from what we must regard as a success in recent days is that the technical equipment
used at East Midlands Airport apparently did not detect the explosives at the
first attempt," Lord Carlile added. Earlier, the British International Freight
Association has said that there should be a review of all aspects of air cargo
following the incident at East Midlands airport on Friday.
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