LONDON - Britain's new security chief warned on Sunday that the battle
against domestic militancy could take up to 15 years, and said Britons must
start sharing information about neighbors they suspect of involvement in
terrorism.
A woman reacts as she waits to lay a bouquet of flowers in a
memorial garden outside King's Cross Station in London, to mark the second
anniversary of the London bombings, Saturday July 7, 2007. [AP]
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Adm. Sir Alan West, the former
navy chief who was recently named Prime Minister Gordon Brown's security
minister, said the level of the threat Britain faced was unprecedented and a new
approach was critical.
One of those approaches included challenges to the British psyche, he said.
"Britishness does not normally involve snitching or talking about someone,"
he told The Sunday Telegraph. "I'm afraid, in this situation, anyone who's got
any information should say something because the people we are talking about are
trying to destroy our entire way of life."
He said preventing the radicalization of young British Muslims was his top
priority.
"This is not a quick thing," he said. "I believe it will take 10 to 15 years.
But I think it can be done as long as we as a nation apply ourselves to it and
it's done across the board."
Meanwhile, authorities acknowledged no armed police were on duty at Glasgow
airport June 30 when two men crashed a Jeep Cherokee laden with gas cylinders
and gasoline into the main terminal.
"Armed officers are only deployed to the airport when the national threat
level requires it," a Strathclyde police spokesman said on condition of
anonymity because department policy barred him from speaking for attribution.
Britain's terrorism threat level was "severe" at the time of the attack - the
second-highest level, which means an attack is highly likely. It remains at that
level.
It is up to individual police forces to decide how to deal with the threat
level, a Home Office spokeswoman said on condition of anonymity in line with
department policy.
Most police throughout Britain do not carry firearms out of the philosophy
that arming police makes criminals feel justified in carrying weapons. However,
all forces have specially trained firearms teams ready for rapid deployment.
The two men arrested following the Glasgow attack were overpowered by an
unarmed officer, an off-duty policeman and members of the public. Armed police
have been on duty at the airport since the attack.
Eight people are in custody in connection with the attacks - seven in Britain
and one in Australia. Most of the suspects worked for Britain's health service
and come from countries in the Middle East and India. One has been charged:
Bilal Abdullah, a 27-year-old doctor born in Britain and raised in Iraq.
Two cars packed with gas cylinders and nails were discovered June 29 in the
busy heart of London's West End - one outside a crowded nightclub, the other
near Trafalgar Square. The next day, a Jeep Cherokee smashed in flames into the
security barriers at Glasgow airport.