(Reuters) - Al Qaeda militants in Syria
are plotting attacks to inflict mass casualties in the West, possibly
against transport systems or "iconic targets", the head of Britain's MI5
Security Service said on Thursday. Speaking after gunmen
killed 12 people in an assault on a French satirical newspaper, MI5 boss
Andrew Parker warned a strike on the United Kingdom was highly likely. "A group of core al Qaeda terrorists in Syria
is planning mass casualty attacks against the West," Director General
Parker said in a rare public speech at MI5 headquarters in London. His
last public speech was in October 2013. In the speech, planned before the killings in Paris, Parker said seasoned al Qaeda militants in Syria aimed to "cause large-scale loss of life, often by attacking transport systems or iconic targets" in the West. Al
Qaeda killed nearly 3,000 people by attacking the United States with
hijacked passenger planes on September 11, 2001. Militants inspired by
the group killed 52 commuters in London on July 7, 2005 with suicide
bombs. Al Qaeda's leader
Osama bin Laden was killed by U.S. special forces in 2011, and the
threat posed by the network to the West seemed to recede in recent
years. But spies in Europe and the United States have been troubled that al Qaeda militants from Pakistan have appeared in wartorn Syria, in what some intelligence analysts say could be part of a plot to mount a major attack against the West. Thursday's
stark warning from one of the West's most influential spymasters
mirrors a growing concern among Western political leaders and their Arab
allies about the threat from the cauldron of militant groups in Syria and Iraq. "DARK PLACES" Parker said around 600 British extremists had traveled to Syria, many joining the militant group which calls itself "Islamic State" and has taken control of swathes of Iraq and Syria. The
group, an offshoot of al Qaeda, has beheaded two U.S. journalists and
an American and two British aid workers in an effort to put pressure on a
U.S.-led international coalition bombing its fighters in Syria. Islamic State militants in Syria
were plotting attacks on Britain and making sophisticated use of social
media to incite British nationals to carry out violence, Parker said. MI5,
established in 1909 to counter German espionage ahead of World War One,
had stopped three potentially deadly "terrorist plots" against the
United Kingdom in recent months, he said. "We
face a very serious level of threat that is complex to combat and
unlikely to abate significantly for some time," said Parker, who has
argued strongly for more surveillance powers to spy on militant
communications on the Internet. He said that the security services needed to have access to such communications. "My
sharpest concern as Director General of MI5 is the growing gap between
the increasingly challenging threat and the decreasing availability of
capabilities to address it," he said. Twitter and Facebook
are so important to militants that technology giants should give
security services greater access to their networks, the head of
Britain's GCHQ eavesdropping agency said last year. "The
dark places from where those who wish us harm can plot and plan are
increasing," Parker said. "We need to be able to access communications
and obtain relevant data on those people when we have good reason."
Britain's MI5 chief warns al Qaeda in Syria planning mass attacks on West
![](CustomImage/get/700/500/6701ee851a69183c5cb545c5.jpg)
Comments About This Article
Please fill the fields below.