Londonistan?
Looks like Tony Blair was nervous after the attacks for very good reasons:
Islam, the religion of peace which continues to slaughter freely without its adherents' condemnation.
Not that I blame them---no one wants the jihadists showing up at their door.
Last week’s attacks in London, perpetrated on the heels of the opening of the G8 Summit in Edinburgh, Scotland, manifest the formidable ability of the growing jihadist network in the United Kingdom to execute high-profile, complicated attacks. While there is no confirmation yet that an Islamist group is in fact responsible for the bombings in London’s public transportation system, the multiple, well-coordinated attacks bear the trademark of al Qaeda. In the past decade, al Qaeda and its affiliated jihadist groups have created a robust infrastructure in the greater London area capable of recruiting, training, funding, and — as was horribly demonstrated on Thursday — executing attacks.
Several al Qaeda attacks and thwarted attempts worldwide have been directly linked to the jihadist network in Britain. These include the embassy bombings in Kenya and Tanzania in August 1998; the failed plot by Ahmed Rassam to bomb Los Angeles’s international airport, LAX, at the turn of the millennium; the recruitment of Zacharias Moussaoui and Richard Reid; plots to attack U.S. economic targets, uncovered in August 2004; the 2003 bombings in Casablanca; the 2004 bombings in Madrid’s train system; a suicide attack in Tel Aviv in April 2004; and an attack on Saudi oil refineries in May 2004.
Islam, the religion of peace which continues to slaughter freely without its adherents' condemnation.
Not that I blame them---no one wants the jihadists showing up at their door.
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