German prosecutors and
police said that a man and a woman had been arrested in the
Frankfurt-area town of Oberursel on suspicion of planning a Boston-style
attack, but the authorities did not explicitly reveal the target.
The
suspected target, according to Florian Flade, the terrorism researcher,
was a race planned for Friday. The race loops around Eshborn and
Frankfurt on May Day each year, attracting large crowds of spectators
along the cycle route.
Prosecutor
Albrecht Schreiber said police recovered a pipe bomb ready to be used,
100 rounds of 9mm ammunition, a gun, the essential parts of a G-3
assault rifle and 3 liters of hydrogen peroxide, which becomes explosive
at high concentrations and has been used in multiple terror plots in
the West, including the 2005 London bombings.
Earlier
Thursday, Andreas Hemmes, a spokesman for the police of West Hesse,
told CNN that the house and car of two individuals in Oberursel, in the
forested hills west of Frankfurt, had been searched. As a result of what
had been found, police had expanded their search along the L3004 road
on the bike race route, Hemmes said.
"We
suspect that there was a Salafist background," said Peter Beuth, the
interior minister for Hesse, referring to ultra-fundamentalist
interpretations of Islam. "Police investigations at this stage indicate
that we have thwarted an Islamist attack."
Couple identified as being of Turkish descent
Flade,
a journalist at Die Welt and terrorism researcher who first broke the
story of the police raids, told CNN that a German couple of Turkish
descent -- Halil and Senay D. -- were under arrest.
He
said the couple had ties to radical Islamist circles in the Frankfurt
area. Neither is suspected of having direct links to the leadership of a
terrorist group.
Last week German
police observed Halil D. moving in and out of a small forest near where
he was living. They suspect he was looking for a good place to hide a
bomb along the bike race route, according to Flade.
Flade
said that according to German police documents, German police first
became aware of the couple at the end of March when they went to a
garden center near Frankfurt to purchase hydrogen peroxide. He said the
store employee contacted police after becoming suspicious for several
reasons.
The first was that the woman
was covered in a full veil. The second was that the couple claimed they
wanted to buy hydrogen peroxide to clean their fish pond in their
garden, but the amount they were ordering would have been enough to
clean dozens of such ponds.
Furthermore,
after police thwarted a bomb plot by German extremists trained in the
tribal areas of Pakistan to kill American servicemen in Germany in
September 2007 with hydrogen peroxide-based bombs -- the so-called
"Sauerland" plot -- German law had required such stores to report to
police significant purchases of hydrogen peroxide.
Surveillance in Spain
According
to Flade, after the tipoff, German investigators began trying to figure
out who the couple were. All they had to go on was the surveillance
footage.
The woman was fully veiled and
her male companion was blurry in the tape, so they did not immediately
know who they were. But in early to mid-April they were able to identify
them and start surveillance to investigate the couple's radical ties.
According
to Flade, German police established that the couple had recently
traveled to Spain, where they met with members of Sharia4Spain, a
radical pro-jihadist group linked to Al Muhajiroun in the United
Kingdom. Spanish police had monitored the meeting in Spain. They also
established that the couple had links to radicals who had gone to fight
with AQIM, al Qaeda's North African.
And
they found the couple were in contact with a young radical Islamist
from Frankfurt who had gone to fight in Syria at the end of last year
and was recently killed.
The pipe bomb
that was recovered by police appears to have similarities to devices
built by Boston Marathon bombers Tamerlan and Dzhokhar Tsarnaev. Flade
said the device recovered near Frankfurt included nails as shrapnel. The
Boston bombers downloaded instructions from a recipe in Inspire
magazine, an online Engish language magazine put out by al Qaeda in
Yemen, which has also been translated into German and other languages.
In
August 2013, the British security agency MI5 revealed to Parliament's
intelligence and security committee that Inspire has been "read by those
involved in at least seven out of the 10 attacks planned within the UK
since its first issue (in 2010). We judge that it significantly enhanced
the capability of individuals in four of these 10 attack plots."
Elevated threat in Germany
Like
other European countries, Germany is grappling with an unprecedented
terrorist threat because of the high number of its citizens who have
traveled to Syria and Iraq.
In recent
years there has been growing concern over radicalization in Germany's
large Turkish diaspora community. Travel to Syria is particularly easy
for individuals of Turkish descent because Turkey is the entry point for
most foreign fighters traveling to Syria.
According
to Flade, almost 700 Germans are believed to have traveled to Syria and
Iraq, with up to 90% joining ISIS. One-third of these have returned to
Germany and 70 to 80 have been killed in the fighting in Syria and Iraq.
There
has only been one fatal terrorist attack in Germany since 9/11 -- the
shooting death of two U.S. airmen outside Frankfurt Airport by a
lone-wolf radicalized Islamist in March 2011.
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