Signal, No Noise

September 6, 2010

Report: Iran Paying Taliban to Kill U.S. Troops

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Report: Iran Paying Taliban to Kill U.S. Troops

Published September 05, 2010 | Sunday Times

KABUL — At least five Iranian companies in Afghanistan’s capital are using their offices covertly to finance Taliban militants in provinces near Kabul, according to an investigation by London’s Sunday Times.

Afghan intelligence and Taliban sources have told the newspaper that the firms, set up in the past six months, provide cash for a network of district Taliban treasurers to pay battlefield expenses and bonuses for killing the enemy and destroying their vehicles.

The Iranian companies win contracts to supply materials and logistics to Afghans involved in reconstruction. The money often comes in the form of aid from foreign donors.

Profits are transferred through poorly regulated Afghan banks — including Kabul Bank, which is partly owned by President Hamid Karzai’s brother Mahmood — to Tehran and Dubai.

From these countries, the money returns to Afghanistan through the informal Islamic banking system known as hawala to be dispersed to the Taliban.

“This means the companies involved in funding the insurgency can cover their tracks easily. It makes it harder for us to trace the cashflow,” a senior Afghan intelligence official said.

Iranian companies have been established with the intention of winning contracts funded by foreign aid so that donors’ cash could be channeled into the insurgency, the official said. Western officials believe the network may have been set up by the Al-Quds force, an elite branch of Iran’s Revolutionary Guard.

The Iranian embassy in Kabul refused to respond to the allegations. But according to the Taliban treasurer, who has been interviewed by The Sunday Times, Iran is paying bonuses of $1,000 for killing an American soldier and $6,000 for destroying a U.S. military vehicle.

September 2, 2010

Police kill Green Terrorist who held 3 at Discovery Channel

Filed under: Americas,North America,Terror.Target,Terrorism,USA,target.media — mungurk @ 06:17

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Police kill gunman who held 3 at Discovery Channel
Posted 9/1/2010 9:14 PM ET
 An armored vehicle drives near the Discovery Channel network's building in Silver Spring, Md., Wednesday, Sept. 1, 2010. Police shot and killed a man upset with the Discovery Channel network's programming who took two employees and a security officer hostage at the company's headquarters Wednesday, officials said. All three hostages escaped safely.  (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)
Enlarge by Manuel Balce Ceneta, AP
An armored vehicle drives near the Discovery Channel network’s building in Silver Spring, Md., Wednesday, Sept. 1, 2010. Police shot and killed a man upset with the Discovery Channel network’s programming who took two employees and a security officer hostage at the company’s headquarters Wednesday, officials said. All three hostages escaped safely. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)
By Sarah Brumfield, Associated Press Writer
SILVER SPRING, Md. — A man who railed against the Discovery Channel’s environmental programming for years burst into the company’s headquarters with at least one explosive device strapped to his body Wednesday and took three people hostage at gunpoint before police shot him to death, officials said.

The hostages — two Discovery Communications employees and a security guard — were unhurt after the four-hour standoff. Montgomery County Police Chief Thomas Manger said tactical officers moved in after officers monitoring Lee on building security cameras saw him pull out a handgun and point it at a hostage.

An explosive device on the gunman’s body detonated when police shot him, Manger said. Police were trying to determine whether two boxes and two backpacks the gunman had also contained explosives.

A law enforcement official speaking on condition of anonymity because the investigation was ongoing said authorities had identified James J. Lee as the likely suspect.

NBC News reported that after its producers called Discovery’s general number, a man identifying himself as James J. Lee got on the phone and said he had a gun and several bombs.

“I have several bombs strapped to my body ready to go off. I have a device that if I drop it, if I drop it, it will … explode,” the man told NBC.

He said he built the bombs in about three weeks. “I did a lot of research. I had to experiment,” he said.

Manger said the suspect held the hostages in the lobby area of the first floor. Authorities said they will methodically go through the building and identify any suspicious items.

The “building is still a crime scene,” Manger said. “We still have work to do.”

Manger said police spent several hours negotiating with the armed man after he entered the suburban Washington building about 1 p.m. None of the 1,900 people who work in the building were hurt, and most made it out before the standoff ended.

Lee was convicted of disorderly conduct for a protest he organized outside Discovery’s offices in February 2008. According to court records, he paid homeless people to carry signs and set off a scramble for money when he threw fistfuls of cash into the air, calling it “just trash.”

Lee served two weeks in jail. County State’s Attorney John McCarthy said Lee was ordered to stay 500 feet away from Discovery headquarters as part of his probation, which ended two weeks ago. A magistrate ordered a doctor’s evaluation, but the result was not immediately available Wednesday.

“The Discovery Channel produces many so-called ‘Environmental Programs’ supposedly there to save the planet,” Lee said in an ad he took out in a Washington newspaper to promote the protest. “But the truth is things are getting WORSE! Their programs are causing more harm than good.”

In court and online, Lee faulted the Discovery Channel for shows as varied as “Future Weapons,” “It Takes a Thief” and “Planet Green.”

A lengthy posting that could be seen Wednesday on a website registered to Lee said Discovery and its affiliates should stop “encouraging the birth of any more parasitic human infants,” a possible reference to shows like “Kate Plus 8″ and “19 Kids and Counting.” Instead, he said, the network should air “programs encouraging human sterilization and infertility.”

Discovery Communications Inc. operates U.S. cable and satellite networks including The Discovery Channel, TLC and Animal Planet. Discovery shows include “Cash Cab” and “Man vs. Wild,” and TLC airs “American Chopper” and “Kate Plus 8.”

David Leavy, Discovery’s executive vice president for corporate affairs, said all employees had been accounted for. “We’re relieved that it ended without any harm to our employees,” he said.

Melissa Shepard, 32, of Peterborough, N.H., a consultant who works in the building, said she was on the third floor with several other workers when someone announced over a loudspeaker that there was a situation in the lobby and people should stay at their desks.

After some time, they were told to move to the other end of the building. She said she was among a dozen workers who went into an office, shut the door and turned off the lights.

Then she said someone knocked on the door and told them to leave the building. She said there was some confusion as they were told to go to an upper floor or down the stairs.

“Finally, I screamed, ‘Tell us where we need to go! … I just want to get out of there,’” she said. “I was shaking. … I was like, ‘What do we do? What do we do?’”

Adam Dolan, a sales director in Discovery’s education division, said that when he got to the bottom floor he saw shattered glass near the company’s day-care center and suspected it was broken to get the children out. He later got an e-mail saying the children were safe and had been taken to a McDonald’s.

Dolan said the company has unarmed security guards who won’t let anyone into the building without a badge.

Leavy said Discovery hopes and expects to be open Thursday. “The priority is going to be nurturing and responding to employee needs over the coming days as this is a scary event,” he said.

Discovery officials are familiar with the suspect and his past protest at the building, Leavy said.

At Lee’s trial, The Gazette of Montgomery County reported, Lee said he began working to save the planet after being laid off from his job in San Diego.

He said he was inspired by “Ishmael,” a novel by environmentalist Daniel Quinn, and by former Vice President Al Gore’s documentary “An Inconvenient Truth.”

Quinn told The Associated Press from his home in Houston that he found out about the standoff in Maryland from the media. Just a few hours later, he said he was feeling “a bit ragged” after getting calls from reporters across the country.

He said he had never heard of Lee and was stunned that Lee’s manifesto advocated things like human sterilization and an end to farming, ideas Quinn said he would never support.

“He wants to get more exposure … and he thinks that he can get it … by occupying Discovery,” Quinn said. He added that if he could talk to Lee, he would tell him “he’s giving a bad name to the ideas that he’s trying to espouse.”

___

Associated Press Writers Kathleen Miller in Silver Spring; Matthew Barakat in Rockville, Md.; Matt Apuzzo, Eileen Sullivan and Nafeesa Syeed in Washington; Ben Nuckols in Baltimore; Ramit Plushnick-Masti in Houston; and Jacob Jordan in Atlanta contributed to this report.

September 1, 2010

Saudi Arabia Crushing Political Opposition in Name of Counterterrorism

Filed under: Counterterrorism,Middle East,Saudi Arabia,Terrorism — mungurk @ 10:28

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Riyadh reportedly crushing dissent

Published: Aug. 31, 2010 at 1:54 PM

RIYADH, Saudi Arabia, Aug. 31 (UPI) — A crackdown in Saudi Arabia on Islamic militancy is used as a pretense to arrest dissidents seeking political reform, opponents said.

Washington praised Saudi Arabia for rounding up scores of Islamic militants in the years since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the United States.

Critics, however, said the ruling monarchy is using the crackdown as an excuse to silence opposition forces in the kingdom, The Wall Street Journal reports.

Mohammad al-Qahtani, who represents detained dissident and former Judge Suliman al-Reshoudi, complained the monarchy was using the fight against terrorism as an excuse.

“Using the anti-terror campaign has been the conspicuous Saudi policy to arrest and harass political reformists and human-rights activists,” he told the Journal. “It is a serious threat to those dedicated to nonviolent change in the nation.”

Lawyers have sued the Saudi interior ministry for what they say was the arbitrary arrest of the former judge, who is still held without charge more than three years after his arrest. The U.S. State Department, meanwhile, mentioned Reshoudi’s name in its write-up on human rights in Saudi Arabia.

The interior minister threw out the case, however, and the Saudi government told the Journal it wouldn’t comment on ongoing internal matters.

Ex-Islamists walk free from Libyan jail

Filed under: Africa,Counterterrorism,Libya,North Africa,Terrorism — mungurk @ 10:01

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By Salah Sarrar – Tue Aug 31, 6:37 pm ET

TRIPOLI (Reuters) – Libya freed 37 prisoners late on Tuesday, including at least one former detainee at the U.S. military prison at Guantanamo Bay, who had been jailed for links to radical Islamist groups but have since renounced violence.

The prisoners were kissed and hugged by waiting relatives when they walked out of the Abu Salim prison near Tripoli, in the latest in a series of releases designed to draw a line under radical Islamist violence in Libya.

“These releases come in the context of national reconciliation and social peace,” said Mohamed al Allagi, chairman of the human rights committee of the Gaddafi Foundation, the charity which helped organize the release.

The charity is headed by Saif al-Islam, a reform-minded son of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi who some analysts say could eventually succeed his father.

Saif al-Islam has campaigned for reconciliation with Islamists who promise to lay down their arms. His initiative has met resistance from conservatives in his father’s entourage with whom he is competing for influence.

The 37 prisoners, all dressed in traditional Libyan costume, were given refreshments in a tent inside the prison grounds before being greeted by relatives, many of whom were in tears, said a Reuters reporter at the prison.

Five of the prisoners had links to the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group (LIFG), which tried to overthrow Gaddafi but whose leaders have since renounced violence, said Abdelhakim Belhadj, a former LIFG leader freed earlier this year.

Belhadj said the rest of the prisoners released Tuesday had been detained because they sympathized with Islamist militant movements, but were not LIFG members.

Belhadj was among about 200 former Islamist militants who were freed from Abu Salim prison in March, in another release organized by Saif al-Islam’s foundation.

One of the prisoners released Tuesday, Sofiane Ibrahim Gammu, said he was detained in the U.S. military prison in Guantanamo Bay for six years before serving a further three years in Abu Salim prison.

Media reports had earlier quoted an official in the Gaddafi Foundation as saying Gammu was a former driver for al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden.

Asked about the allegation as he left the prison Tuesday night, Gammu said: “I am not bin Laden’s driver. It’s a misunderstanding.”

More than 700 prisoners accused of having ties to Islamist militant groups have now been released under the reconciliation program, but over 300 are still behind bars, according to figures given by Libyan officials.

(Writing by Christian Lowe; editing by Tim Pearce)

August 29, 2010

Tear gas sprayed outside funeral that Westboro church was protesting

Filed under: Americas,Christianity,North America,Religion,Terrorism,USA — mungurk @ 21:26

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OMAHA, Neb. | An Omaha man was arrested Saturday on suspicion of spraying tear gas into a crowd of mourners and protesters outside a funeral for a Marine killed in Afghanistan.

The protesters were from the Topeka-based Westboro Baptist Church, run by Fred Phelps. Members of the church believe the deaths of U.S. troops are God’s punishment for the nation’s tolerance of homosexuality.

Investigators think George Vogel, 62, sprayed tear gas from an industrial-size dispenser as he drove past First United Methodist Church just before 10 a.m. At least 16 people, including a police officer, were sprayed, Omaha police spokesman Michael Pecha said.

Vogel’s truck was stopped near the scene, and he was arrested. It appears that he was targeting the protesters, Pecha said. Vogel faces 16 misdemeanor charges of assault and one count each of felony assault of an officer and child neglect.

Police officers were at the church for the funeral of Marine Staff Sgt. Michael Bock. Pecha said officers were assigned to monitor a protest by the Phelps group.

Neither the protesters nor the Patriot Guard Riders, whose members try to shield mourners from such protests, was thought to be involved in the tear-gas incident.

Al Qaeda Plans for War with Israel

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Al Qaeda is warning its supporters and sympathizers to prepare for a new war in the Middle East, which it says will pit Israel against Iran. Al Qaeda’s franchise in Yemen, the self-styled al Qaeda in the Arabian Pennisula (AQAP), issued an audio message this month with a lecture by its second-in-command Saeed al Shehri in which he tells jihadists in the Middle East that “what is expected is for the war to begin by the Jews against Iran.” Israel will stage air strikes on Iran’s nuclear installations to start. Shehri expects the Iranian Shia regime to try to take advantage of an Israeli attack on its nuclear facilities to seize the holy cities of Mecca and Medina by blaming Saudi Arabia for helping Israel attack. In turn, the Israelis will seize territory in the Levant to establish “the greater state of Israel.” The Sunni Arab population of the Middle East will be caught between the “Jews in the Middle East and Iran in the Peninsula.”

Shehri was held in Guantanamo for six years after being caught in Pakistan in December 2001 before being sent back home to his native Saudi Arabia and then fleeing to Yemen to help set up AQAP. He has been a creative strategist for AQAP from its start and was behind the plot to assassinate Saudi Arabia’s deputy interior minister, Muhammad bin Nayef, a year ago that failed only by inches when the suicide bomber tripped at the last minute. In this message, Shehri tells the jihadist faithful that this climatic war will offer many opportunities for al Qaeda and that they should begin planning now how to exploit the conflict. Any sympathizer who has access to Arab leaders like the princes of the House of Saud, for example, should look for a chance to kill one in an act of terror reminiscent of the assassination of the “tyrant Anwar Sadat” in 1981. Any pilot in the Saudi air force or other Arab air forces who secretly supports the jihad should fly his plane into Israeli air space and try to blow up a target by smashing into it. Other practical ways to create terror and mayhem are laid out as well.

Al Qaeda has consistently said a struggle between Israel and Iran can only be good for the global Islamic jihad by blooding two of its enemies and forcing America to side with Israel. But this warning is the most vivid by far and comes with the most explicit instructions on how to exploit a new conflict.

Shehri tells his supporters that AQAP is ready for the next war. He says the “Shura Council of the Mujahedin in the Arabian Peninsula” has held a meeting to prepare for the coming apocalypse and is ready to act. AQAP has demonstrated in the last year that it can reach beyond Yemen to carry out its plans when it dispatched the suicide bomber who tried to blow up Northwest Flight 253 last Christmas. It has been active this summer in attacking intelligence officers of the Yemeni government and in publishing Inspire, the first al Qaeda journal in English on the Internet. General James Mattis, the new commander of Central Command, told the Senate this week that al Qaeda is putting significant pressure on the Yemeni government, already stretched by other internal problems and that there are “signs of decline in the capacity of Yemeni President Ali Abdallah Salih to control the situation.”

So why does al Qaeda want another war? Because it calculates an Israeli strike on Iran will prompt Iran to strike back against not only Israel but also the United States. Iran will attack American installations in the Gulf, encourage its proxies in Iraq and Afghanistan to attack Americans, and engage in a global terror campaign. In Lebanon, Hezbollah will start another war, raining missiles down on northern Israeli cities and towns and provoking Israeli airstrikes on Beirut and maybe even into Syria. Iran might even try to close the Strait of Hormuz and disrupt the global energy market. All this chaos and violence will make America even more unpopular in the Islamic world and open doors for al Qaeda to exploit. In this they are right, another war will be blamed on America rightly or wrongly. Shehri and his boss, Osama bin Laden, probably don’t really know if another war is in the making but they are almost certainly right that if it comes it will be good news for al Qaeda

Arson Suspected in Tennesee Islamic Center Fire

Filed under: Americas,Christianity,Islam,North America,Religion,Terrorism,USA — mungurk @ 17:21

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Arson Suspected in Tennesee Islamic Center Fire

By KEVIN DOLAK

A fire early Saturday morning at the construction site of a new Islamic Center in Murfreesboro, Tennessee, is being investigated by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. Officials say that the incident was an arson attack.

“It is absolutely heartbreaking,” Camie Ayash, spokeswoman for the Islamic Center of Murfreesboro told ABC affiliate WKRN News 2 in Nashville. ”This has absolutely set fear throughout our community.”

The older members of the congregation were very affected by this,” she added. ”We had a man say this morning ‘God forbid someone come and try to attack me.’”

Police and the fire department in the Nashville suburb responded to a call at the site at approximately 1:30 a.m. Saturday morning and extinguished the fire. One construction vehicle was significantly damaged, while several others were doused with an accelerant but not set ablaze. It is suspected that a passerby scared off the suspects.

August 26, 2010

Airport Check-in: LAX security concerns raised by police group

Filed under: Americas,Counterterrorism,North America,Terrorism,USA — mungurk @ 10:10

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By Ben Mutzabaugh, USA TODAY

From USA TODAY’s Airport Check-in column: Local lawmakers in Los Angeles want to review security policies at Los Angeles International Airport after a police group said the airport is vulnerable to terrorist attacks and other crimes.

In June, the Los Angeles Airport Peace Officers Association sent a letter to Airport Police Chief George Centeno, expressing concern that cuts in the airport’s police personnel, training and equipment budget were compromising its security. The letter was leaked to the local press.

Earlier this month, L.A. City Councilwoman Janice Hahn, who chairs a committee that’s looking into the claims, said she wanted a security audit of the airport. Other state and local lawmakers have also called for an investigation.

LAX defended its security record, releasing a statement last week that showed the number of crimes at the airport fell 6% to 1,146 cases in the first six months of the year.

“LAX continues to be one of the safest airports in the world and one of the safest areas in all of Southern California,” Centeno said in a statement. “The total number of major crimes against persons is remarkably low, given over 28.7 million travelers used LAX the first half of this year.”

The airport has said its budget has tripled in recent years to about $100 million annually, while the number of officers has grown to 447 from 263 in 2002.

Marshall McClain, president of the Los Angeles Airport Peace Officers Association, says he wrote the letter to urge the airport police to beef up staffing and budget given LAX’s size and growth ambition. “It’s a difference of opinion on the numbers,” he says, adding that officers total 423. “We have grown in size. That’s never been an issue. The issue is we want to do more with more. We want to ensure that as the airport grows, the (number of) officers grows as well.”

Iran ready to sell arms to Lebanon

Filed under: Iran,Lebanon,Middle East,Military,Terrorism,groups.Hezbollah — mungurk @ 10:04

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Iran’s defence minister has said his country is prepared to sell weapons to Lebanon should it ask for help to equip its military.

General Ahmad Vahidi on Wednesday said Lebanon “is our friend” and that Iran is ready to offer military aid.

“If there is a demand in this respect, we are ready to help that country and conduct weapons transactions with it,” he was quoted as saying by the official Irna news agency.

Vahidi’s comments come a day after Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah, the Hezbollah leader, proposed the Lebanese government formally seek military assistance from Iran.

Nasrallah vowed in a televised speech on Tuesday that his Iranian-backed group could help secure the aid for Lebanon’s poorly-equipped army.

‘Friendly assistance’

“I vow that Hezbollah will work fervently and capitalise on its friendship with Iran to ensure it helps arm the Lebanese military in any way it can,” he said.

Nasrallah, whose movement is backed by Iran and Syria, made the call following a US freeze in its military aid to Lebanon in the wake of deadly border clashes between Lebanese and Israeli troops.

A US legislator earlier this month suspended $100m of military aid to Lebanon over concerns the weapons could be used to attack Israel, and that Hezbollah may have influence over the Lebanese army.

In Washington Mark Toner, a US state department spokesman, said the possibility of Iranian arms sales to Lebanon underscore “the importance both to our national security and the security of the region to continue with our security assistance to the Lebanese army”.

Toner said a review of the aid programme to Lebanon was under way and that “we hope to conclude that soon and renew assistance”.

The Lebanese army is still seen as under-equipped compared to Hezbollah.

August 25, 2010

Ten things the Philippines bus siege police got wrong

Filed under: Asia,Philippines,South East Asia,Terrorism,target.bus — mungurk @ 09:40

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A security analyst who has worked in counter-terrorism with the British Army and Scotland Yard, Charles Shoebridge, says the officers involved in Manila’s bus siege showed great courage – but they were not properly trained or equipped for the task.

Here are 10 areas where, in his view, they could have done better.

1. Determination

Philippine police end Manila bus hijack

The first officers who tried to storm the bus were driven out by gunshots from the hostage taker, former policeman Rolando Mendoza. “They showed great courage to go on board. It’s very crowded, just one aisle down the middle of the bus. But once you get on board it’s not unexpected you are going to be fired at. Squads like this have to be made up of very special people, specially trained and selected for their characteristics of courage, determination and aggression. In this case they acted as 99% of the population would have, which was to turn round and get out. They didn’t seem to have the necessary determination and aggression to follow the attack through.”

2. Lack of equipment

The police spent a long time smashing the windows of the bus, whereas explosive charges (known as frame charges) would have knocked in windows and doors instantly. “They had no ladders to get through the windows. They smashed the windows but didn’t know what to do next,” Mr Shoebridge says. “They almost looked like a group of vandals.” Their firearms were also inappropriate – some had pistols, some had assault rifles. Ideally they would have carried a short submachine gun, suitable for use in confined spaces.

3. Lost opportunity to disarm the gunman

Mendoza’s gun was not always raised

There were numerous opportunities to restrain the gunman, Mr Shoebridge believes. “The negotiators were so close to him, and he had his weapon hanging down by his side. He could have been disabled without having to kill him.”

4. Lost opportunity to shoot the gunman

The video of the drama also shows there were occasions when the gunman was standing alone, during the course of the day, and could have been shot by a sharpshooter. “You are dealing with an unpredictable and irrational individual. The rule should be that if in the course of negotiations an opportunity arises to end the situation decisively, it should be taken,” Mr Shoebridge says. Either this possibility did not occur to the officers in charge, he adds, or they considered it and decided to carry on talking.

5. Satisfying the gunman’s demands

“I wondered why the authorities just didn’t give in to all of his demands,” says Charles Shoebridge. “A promise extracted under force is not a promise that you are required to honour. Nobody wants to give in to the demands of terrorists, but in a situation like this, which did not involve a terrorist group, or release of prisoners, they could have just accepted his demands. He could be reinstated in the police – and then be immediately put in prison for life for hostage taking.” The Philippines authorities did in fact give in to the gunman’s demands, but too little, too late. One message promised to review his case, while he wanted it formally dismissed. A second message reinstating him as a police offer only arrived after the shooting had started.

6. Televised proceedings

The gunman was able to follow events on television, revealing to him everything that was going on around him. This was a “crucial defect in the police handling”, Mr Shoebridge says. He adds that police should always consider putting a barrier or screen around the area, to shield the scene from the cameras and keep the hostage taker in the dark.

7. No element of surprise

It was clear to the gunman what the police were doing at all times, not only because the whole incident was televised, but also because they moved “laboriously slowly”, Mr Shoebridge says. The police did not distract him, so were unable to exploit the “crucial element of surprise”.

8. Safeguarding the public

This boy, a bystander, was hit by a stray bullet

At least one bystander was shot, possibly because the public was allowed too close. The bullet from an M16 rifle, as carried by the gunman, can travel for about a mile, so preventing any risk of injury would have been difficult, Mr Shoebridge says, but a lot more could have been done. “When you saw the camera view from above, it was clear there was little command and control of the public on the ground,” he says.

9. Using the gunman’s brother to negotiate

Relatives and close friends can be a double-edged sword, Mr Shoebridge says. While they may have leverage over the hostage taker, what they are saying cannot be easily controlled. In this case, the gunman’s brother was included in the negotiations – however, at a certain stage he became agitated and police started to remove him from the scene. The gunman saw this on television, and became agitated himself. According to one report he fired a warning shot.

10. Insufficient training

In some parts of the Philippines, such as Mindanao, hostage taking is not an uncommon occurrence, so the country has some forces that are well trained in the necessary tactics. The detachment involved in Monday’s incident clearly was not, says Mr Shoebridge. After smashing the windows, one of the officers eventually put some CS gas inside, though “to what effect was not clear” he says. A unit involved in this work, needs to be “trained again and again, repeatedly practising precisely this kind of scenario,” he says.

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