logo
Foreign policy was a ‘driver of 7/7 attacks', says former counter-terror chief

Foreign policy was a ‘driver of 7/7 attacks', says former counter-terror chief

Yahoo7 hours ago
Foreign policy was a 'driver of the 7/7 attacks', a former national head of counter-terrorism has said ahead of the 20th anniversary of the bombings.
On July 7 2005, four suicide bombers targeted the capital's transport network, killing 52 people and injuring more than 770 on three London Underground trains and a bus.
A series of attempted bombings followed the attacks and, in the subsequent hunt for suspects, police shot dead innocent man Jean Charles de Menezes at a Tube station.
Speaking to The Guardian, Neil Basu said: 'A driver of the 7/7 attacks was foreign policy and Iraq. That does not excuse in any way what they did.
'That foreign policy decision has radicalised and made extremists of people who might not have been radicalised or extreme. And if they were on the pathway, it's pretty much guaranteed…
'All terrorists will have a freedom fighter story. Bin Laden would have had a freedom fighter story. We might think it's crap. We might think it's self-justification but he will have had a story about liberating his lands from the great invaders.'
He also said it did not mean a terrorist threat should dictate foreign policy.
Mr Basu said the 'shocking act' divided society.
He said: 'When terrorists hide behind a religion to commit an atrocity, people blame every follower of the religion and the religion itself. We ought to stop doing that.
'That causes a fear and suspicion of people who don't look like you, think like you, eat like you, worship like you. That has got worse, not better, and that has been caused exactly as terrorists want, by dividing a society by committing the shocking act.'
Terror attacks have 'interrupted a trajectory of tolerance', he added.
Mr Basu said: 'That's what I think has been most soul-destroying… It has interrupted a trajectory of tolerance that I was becoming very familiar and happy with…
'It started with 9/11… 7/7 accelerated that in this country. The relationship between races is worse today, or as bad today as it was in the 70s and 80s. That period of tolerance is over, and feels very much over.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump Is ‘Disappointed' With Putin on Ukraine
Trump Is ‘Disappointed' With Putin on Ukraine

Wall Street Journal

time22 minutes ago

  • Wall Street Journal

Trump Is ‘Disappointed' With Putin on Ukraine

President Trump keeps beseeching Vladimir Putin to end his vicious assault on Ukraine, but the Russian keeps stringing the American along. Could Mr. Trump finally be losing enough patience to try a different strategy? The two leaders talked by phone on Thursday in one more attempt to coax Mr. Putin to agree to a cease-fire. But Mr. Trump said he was 'very disappointed' with the conversation and 'didn't make any progress' with the Russian.

The Crisis of the Welfare State in Profile
The Crisis of the Welfare State in Profile

Wall Street Journal

time22 minutes ago

  • Wall Street Journal

The Crisis of the Welfare State in Profile

The crisis of the welfare state—fiscally unaffordable but politically unreformable—afflicts nearly every 21st-century Western democracy. And the revolt last week against British Prime Minister Keir Starmer's modest disability reforms shows how deeply the entitlement state mentality is entrenched. At issue were so-called personal independence payments for those who struggle with tasks like bathing, preparing food or managing finances owing to physical or mental infirmities. Sounds compassionate, but more Brits than ever are claiming anxiety and depression to qualify. As many as a thousand people each day are signing up for the allowance that can exceed $250 a week. Some 2.8 million jobless Brits are now classified as long-term ill, and the government says one in 10 working-age people now claim a sickness or disability benefit. Personal independence payment awards have more than doubled since the pandemic. British spending on working-age, health-related benefits has skyrocketed to £52 billion from £36 billion over the past five years, according to the London-based Institute for Fiscal Studies. Mr. Starmer sought to tighten eligibility requirements, but his own party revolted. More than 120 Labour MPs threatened to kill the reform bill outright. The government responded with concessions that shielded existing claimants from the changes, knocking billions off the total savings.

Woman Thinks Her Newly-Single Neighbor Is After Her Husband — But Her Hubby Says She's Being 'Silly'
Woman Thinks Her Newly-Single Neighbor Is After Her Husband — But Her Hubby Says She's Being 'Silly'

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Woman Thinks Her Newly-Single Neighbor Is After Her Husband — But Her Hubby Says She's Being 'Silly'

A woman is convinced that her newly single neighbor is pursuing her husband She says the other woman has done everything from asking her husband to be her 'personal trainer' to greeting him in a bikini in the middle of the day The woman shared her story on a community forum, where the majority of commenters told her she has every right to feel suspiciousA woman is convinced her female neighbor may be crossing some lines with her husband — but he thinks she's being "silly." The woman detailed her story on the U.K.-based community site Mumsnet. In her post, titled, 'Suspicious of neighbor's behavior towards my husband,' the woman shared that her next-door neighbor recently broke up with her partner and now lives in her home alone. The original poster (OP) said that while the woman 'rarely spoke to' the OP and her husband before the split, she now seems especially interested in the OP's partner. '[She] is always chatting with my husband when she sees him. I can be [standing] next to him, and she doesn't look at me and aims any conversation towards him. She also refers to him by his name, but doesn't ever say mine,' she said. The woman went on to say that the neighbor has ratcheted up her behavior in the 'last couple weeks.' 'She saw [my husband] get back from the gym and asked him if he'd be her personal trainer,' the OP said, adding that the neighbor woman then said she hadn't 'had any workouts since becoming single and added 'If you know what I mean' with a laugh.' Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. The OP also said that she was recently out all afternoon at a friend's baby shower, and so her car was not in the driveway — and the neighbor seemingly used the opportunity to make further contact with her husband. '[My husband] told me he was pottering in the garden when our neighbor called his name over the fence and asked if he could help her with moving something in her garden which was too heavy for her.' The PEOPLE Puzzler crossword is here! How quickly can you solve it? Play now! The OP said that when her husband went over to the other woman's yard, she was 'wearing a bikini, and — in his words — had clearly not been gardening.' She said that when the neighbor learned that the OP would be gone all afternoon, she invited her husband to stay for a drink. 'My husband politely made [an] excuse and came home,' she said before adding, 'I trust [my husband] completely,' but 'I worry what her intentions are.' 'Do you see where I'm coming from?' the woman asked her fellow community members, revealing that her husband thinks she's being 'silly.' The vast majority of post commenters said they thought the OP had every right to feel uneasy about her neighbor's behavior. 'YANBU [you are not being unreasonable] at all,' one person said, before adding, 'You're not being silly. You're being perceptive. There's a clear pattern here: ignoring you, flirting with your husband, conveniently appearing in a bikini to move one pot. That's not gardening, it's a rom-com audition.' The same person said, 'You're right to trust your husband, but it's also fair to feel uncomfortable when someone is disrespecting your presence in your own space.' Another person suggested that the OP have a conversation with the neighbor and put everything out in the open. 'I think you're going to have to be blunt with her and make it clear you know what she's doing and to back off. She sounds shameless,' they said. Read the original article on People

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store