(Reuters) -
Britain raised its terrorism alert on Friday to the second-highest level
with Prime Minister David Cameron saying the Islamic State (IS) group
operating in Syria and Iraq posed the country's greatest ever security risk. The government said
there was no evidence an attack was imminent but the assessment of the
latest intelligence by security chiefs justified elevating the
international threat level to "severe", meaning a strike was "highly
likely". "What we're facing in Iraq
now with ISIL (IS) is a greater and deeper threat to our security than
we have known before," said Cameron, adding he was "absolutely satisfied
that ISIL ... would make specific threats to the UK". It
is the first time since mid-2011 that Britain has been placed on this
grade of alert by the Joint Terrorism Analysis Center (JTAC), the
independent body responsible for setting the national threat level. The
national threat level was first published in 2006, just over a year
after four British Islamists carried out suicide bombings on London's
transport network killing 52 people. Police
chiefs said raising the level to severe would mean a rise in the level
of visible patrols, along with other security and protection measures. White
House spokesman John Earnest said: "This is a threat that the United
States has been focused on. We've been coordinating closely with our
allies, both the Brits, but others in Europe, about countering this
threat and mitigating it." The
British move comes less than two weeks after a video released by IS
showed the beheading of U.S. journalist James Foley, by a masked
knifeman apparently speaking English with a London accent. An
investigation to identify the suspected attacker is in train. Foley's
murder prompted demands for extra security measures to tackle Britons
traveling to the Middle East to join militant groups. Officials have
warned that some who had gone to Syria or Iraq might return to Britain to carry out attacks. British
and European authorities have been warning for many months the Syrian
conflict posed a serious terrorism threat, but no specific reason was
given why JTAC had raised its alert. "The
increase in the threat level is related to developments in Syria and
Iraq where terrorist groups are planning attacks against the West," Home
Secretary (interior minister) Theresa May said in a statement. "Some
of those plots are likely to involve foreign fighters who have traveled
there from the UK and Europe to take part in those conflicts." BRITONS IN IRAQ, SYRIA Officials
estimate at least 500 Britons have traveled to Syria or Iraq, where IS
has seized large swathes of territory, and London's police chief Bernard
Hogan-Howe said on Wednesday it was believed some 250 had since
returned. Counter-terrorism
police say there have been 69 arrests linked to fighting in Syria this
year, a fivefold rise in the arrest rate compared to last year. Cameron
said he would unveil new laws on Monday to make it harder for Britons
to travel to Syria and Iraq to fight, and to tackle radicalisation among
Britain's 2.7 million Muslims. "This
will include further steps to stop people traveling, with new
legislation that will make it easier to take people's passports away,"
he told a news conference, adding the cause of the threat was a
"poisonous ideology of Islamic extremism". The
alert has twice been raised to the highest level of critical - meaning
an attack is imminent - after a plot to blow up transatlantic airliners
was thwarted in 2006 and the next year after attempted car bombings in
London and Glasgow. Security
chiefs say they have managed to stop at least one major terrorism plot
every year since the 2005 bombings, known as the 7/7 attacks, but last
year an off-duty soldier was murdered on a London street by two British
Muslim converts in what the government described as a terrorist killing.
However, Muslims and
some experts have cautioned against Britain rushing through new laws.
Muslim groups have criticized a "knee-jerk" reaction from politicians
which they said could simply backfire.
Britain raises its terrorism threat level over Syria, Iraq
Zaman Alwasl
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