{"id":32217,"date":"2017-06-03T06:00:43","date_gmt":"2017-06-02T20:00:43","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/?p=32217"},"modified":"2017-06-02T18:21:19","modified_gmt":"2017-06-02T08:21:19","slug":"manchester-bombing-waking-horror-uk-libya-nexus","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/manchester-bombing-waking-horror-uk-libya-nexus\/","title":{"rendered":"The Manchester bombing: waking to the horror of a UK\u2013Libya nexus"},"content":{"rendered":"
The horror of the Manchester bombing runs along multiple planes. It wasn\u2019t just that the attack, like that on popular al-Faqma ice-cream parlor in Baghdad\u2019s Karada district one week later, callously targeted children.<\/p>\n
Two days before the Manchester bombing, on 20 May, a massive ambush attack in southern Libya saw at least 141 killed. Then on 23 May a siege in the name of the so-called Islamic State (IS) erupted in the western Mindanao city of Marawi in the Philippines killing over 100. \u00a0The first week of Ramadan saw a double bombing Baghdad that claimed 27 lives followed by a massive blast in Kabul killing more than 80, all in the name of IS. \u00a0A massive IS truck bomb in Karada last Ramadan killed 341.\u00a0 These events speak of grim days ahead.<\/p>\n
For the British security community, the horror of the first massive terrorist attack since the 7\/7 bombings in London in 2005, which took 56 lives, came with the realisation that after twelve years of containing the threat, terrorists had finally found a way of breaking though.<\/p>\n
Realistically, the sheer weight of numbers meant that it was always a matter of \u2018when\u2019 not \u2018if. Around 3,000 security personnel, in addition to regular police, are tracking 3,000 suspected terrorists, and keeping tabs on a further 20,000 previously investigated. With the UK security services running 500 separate lines of investigations and making, on average, one terror-related arrest each day, it was inevitable that something would eventually slip past.<\/p>\n
The defensive game has been impressive. Dozens of terrorist plots thwarted since 2005, including at least eighteen in the four years since the lone-wolf murder in June 2013 of soldier Lee Rigby in Woolwich and five in the last few weeks alone.<\/p>\n
The grim circumstances linking the lone bomber, Salman Abedi, and his family in Manchester with terrorist networks in Libya, is compounded by the realisation\u2014crystal-clear in hindsight\u2014that Britain\u2019s fixation on toppling Muammar Gaddafi in 2011 opened the way for a massive, systemic security failure. It was a disaster waiting to happen and it was hiding in plain-sight.<\/p>\n
Salman Abedi was born 22 years ago in Manchester to parents who had fled Gaddafi\u2019s Libya in 1991. The radical Islamist views of Salman\u2019s father, Ramadan Abedi, had long provoked concerns among the large Libyan diaspora community in southern Manchester. His hyper-religious, judgmental outlook, and the knowledge that he was linked to the al-Qaeda-affiliated Libyan Islamic Fighting Group<\/em> (LIFG)<\/a> worried many.<\/p>\n Manchester was a hub for LIFG militants, who used the Muslim Brotherhood-orientated Didsbury Mosque as an informal base. LIFG leaders in Libya include Manchester man and master bomb-maker Abd al-Basset Azzouz. Azzouz had lived in the same street as Ramadan Abedi in 2000 before moving to Libya in 2009, via Afghanistan\/Pakistan, reportedly under orders from al-Qaeda\u2019s Ayman al-Zawahiri, to lead operations in Libya. Azzouz was suspected of involvement in the 2012 Benghazi attacks and was thought to have recruited several hundred fighters in eastern Libya.<\/p>\n It now appears that Salman Abedi, who returned from one of many trips to Libya just four days before the attack, may have been tutored in bomb-making by Azzouz. All of this was made possible by the fact that the UK government operated an \u2018open door\u2019 policy after the 2011 uprising against Gaddafi commenced, allowing LIFG and other militants to freely shuttle between the UK and Libya<\/p>\n Known to social workers and police but not considered to represent a significant risk, Salman was short-tempered, not very bright, and easily influenced. By 2012 his behaviour had become a cause for concern for his family and friends. He began to hang out with gang members, smoke cannabis, and drink heavily by the time he was arrested on charges of theft and assault.<\/p>\n