Police have smashed a suspected al Qaeda terror cell nursing a "profound hatred
of US citizens" plotting to bomb civilian and military jets.
The force of the planned explosions would have been worse than the train bombings in Madrid and the Tube and bus attacks in London on 7 July, 2005, according to
German security sources. Those attacks killed 191 and 52 people respectively.
Three men aged 22, 28 and 29 have been arrested in Germany days before
they planned to strike, and bomb-making equipment and explosives have been
seized.
The arrests come a day after Danish police conducted raids and
took eight young Muslims into custody whom they suspect of plotting a bomb
attack and having links with al Qaeda. No direct link has yet been established
between the two plots.
Federal prosecutor Monika Harms said the three
suspects had bought 700kg (1,500lbs) of hydrogen peroxide to make massive bombs.
She said: "We have prevented what we believe would have been the worst terror
attacks ever on German soil".
She declined to name specific targets but
said the suspects had an eye on institutions and establishments frequented by
Americans in Germany, including discos, pubs and airports.
Citing
unnamed security sources in Berlin, the broadcaster Suedwestfunk said Frankfurt
International Airport and US Ramstein Air Base were among targets.
Joerg
Ziercke, the head of Germany's federal crime office, said the men had a
"profound hatred of US citizens".
German security sources have
reportedly said the men belonged to the Islamic Jihad, an Egyptain terrorist
group that merged with al Qaeda in 2001.
Wolfgang Bosbach, an MP with
Chancellor Angela Merkel's Christian Democrats, said the plot may have been
timed to coincide with the anniversary of the 2001 atrocities in the US.
Franz Josef Jung, the defence minister, said: "The attacks were planned
for the near future. They presented a real threat to life."
The suspects
are believed to have been planning simultaneous attacks on aircraft sitting on
the ground. Security services had been watching them for six months until
yesterday, when the investigators spontaneously made the arrests after the men
were observed moving chemicals from one storage location to another.
As
is customary in Germany, the suspects have only been identified by their first
names and last initials. Daniel S comes from the Saarland, Fritz G from Ulm in
Bavaria and Adem Y from Turkey, although there are reports that he holds a
Pakistani passport. The two Germans are 22 and 28, while Adem Y is 29.
The men were arrested yesterday as two dozen raids took place across
Germany. They are believed to have been detained in the Frankfurt area.
One of those held, Fritz G, put up a fight when police raided the men's
house in the Frankfurt area. He escaped through a bathroom window and managed to
reach an outer cordon of officers about 300 metres away before being aprehended.
He was able to snatch a gun, which went off, from a policeman. No one was hurt.
A German network reported that shots had been fired when police raided a
house in a town in the western state of North Rhine-Westphalia.
The
Germans are converts to Islam. At least one of the men is reported to have
received terrorist training overseas.
The German intelligence service is
said to have learned of the plot through emails.
The suspects are
reported to have confessed. Security services are trawling their contacts to
make sure there are no back-up teams.
Ramstein serves as America's main
logistical base to service the war in Iraq. Germany has ground troops in
Afghanistan.
"There are clear indications that at a minimum Ramstein and
the Frankfurt airport were possible targets and that they would not have waited
long to strike," leading conservative politician Wolfgang Bosbach told German
television station N24, adding the attacks could have been timed to coincide
with the anniversary of September 11.
Police believe that the men wanted
to experiment in the coming days and weeks with the chemicals and possibly start
building a bomb. They were, however, far away from making a bomb that could be
detonated.
A "bomb factory" is said to have been found in the village of
Oberschledorn in the Sauerland. Locals said undercover police had been watching
the house from a caravan.
Captain Jeff Gradeck, a spokesman for the US
European Command (EUCOM) in Stuttgart, said: "We don't have any information yet
that US facilities were targeted."
There was no comment from Frankfurt
airport, one of Europe's busiest. The Ramstein base in the nearby state of
Rhineland-Palatinate, 130 km (80 miles) southwest of the airport, is one of the
most important US air bases overseas.
Germany, which has forces
stationed in Afghanistan, has been on high alert for attacks. The country has
feared a re-emergence of militant Islamic groups since 2001, when the northern
city of Hamburg was used as a base for planning the September 11 attacks.
Earlier this year, federal prosecutors charged a Lebanese man held in
detention over an unsuccessful attempt to detonate bombs on two trains in
Germany in 2006.
He and another suspect were caught on surveillance
cameras wheeling suitcases containing bombs aboard trains at Cologne's main
railway station.
Both men left suitcases on the trains, which they
planned to detonate later in the day with a timed explosive device. Despite
being activated, the bombs failed to go off because of a technical error, the
prosecutor's office said.