West Virginia Sen. Jay Rockefeller, the top Democrat on the Senate
Intelligence Committee, said Bush administration policies of the last five years
"have done more to inflame extremism than to diminish it.
"The administration's record on homeland security is one of insufficient
funding and mismanagement," he said.
Authorities said terrorists were only days away from carrying out the plan to
blow up as many as 10 airliners flying from Britain to the United States. They
were about to try a test run to see whether innocent-looking explosive materials
could be brought on board, U.S. officials say.
Chertoff said the code red alert for Britain-to-U.S. flights doesn't mean
"that we know for a fact there are people out there who are still active."
But he added that "particularly at this stage of the arrest and the takedown,
there is sufficient uncertainty about whether the British have scooped up
everybody."
He called the plot "a well-advanced plan" that was in "some respects
suggestive of an al-Qaida plot."
Two US government officials, speaking on condition of anonymity because the
information remains secret, said British, American and Pakistani investigators
are trying to determine whether a couple of the suspects attended terrorist
training camps in Pakistan.
Bush and British Prime Minister Tony Blair personally followed the developing
drama before it became public, with discussions in a lengthy teleconference
Sunday and a phone conversation Wednesday.
Intelligence officials watched the plot unfold until they could wait no
longer because of the impending test run, officials said.
A red alert for flights from Britain was the first since the color-coded
warning system was developed after the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks. The
decision to ban nearly all liquids from passenger cabins was reminiscent of the
stringent rules imposed when planes were allowed back in the skies for the first
time after the 2001 attacks.
All other flights to and within the United States were put under an orange,
or high, alert Thursday, one step below red but up from the yellow status that
had been in effect.
"No liquids or gels will be allowed in carry-on baggage," Chertoff said.
"There will be exceptions for baby formula and medicines, but travelers must be
prepared to present these items for inspection at the checkpoint, and that will
allow us to take a look at them and make sure that they're safe to fly."
Accounts leaked by investigators described a plan on the scale of 9/11 that
would use common electronic devices to detonate liquid explosives concealed in
sports drink bottles.
The bombs were to be assembled on the aircraft apparently with peroxide-based
solution and everyday carry-on items such as a disposable camera or a music
player, two American law enforcement officials said. The officials spoke on
condition of anonymity because Britain asked that no information be released.