Some obvious questions are suddenly being raised in public by the British investigators at Scotland Yard, the Sunday Telegraph reports.
The U.S. press is still referring to the London bombings as suicide attacks. Six pages worth of today's NY Newsday are devoted to sociological analyses of what makes suicide bombers tick.
But skeptics of the 7/7 official story have been saying all along that this makes little sense. Why waste valuable willing terror agents on suicide bombings, when this is unnecessary? (Palestinians and Tamil Tigers resort to the tactic when they have no other means of attack.) Had they survived, the London bombers might have been able to launch many more attacks.
Why did the alleged bombers carry IDs that led police directly back to their homes, possible accomplices, and a cache of further explosives that they curiously chose not to use?
Note that there has never been a coordinated suicide attack of this kind. Note that there has never been a suicide attack in Britain, despite its decades of terrorist attacks.
Isn't the simpler explanation that the bombers were duped into carrying bombs that their controllers then detonated ahead of plan? Recall reports that cell phones were used as timers!
Now think about this: Why would "al-Qaeda" deceive willing recruits in this fashion? Aren't they aware that this would harm future recruitment?
What kind of planners would have interest in making sure the bombers were found dead at the scene and the case was thus open-and-shut?
The following excerpt is from Canberra Times, but the story originated with Sunday Telegraph (which I cannot find) and has been picked up by many English and German-language media that I have found:
UK bombers 'tricked' - All four paid for return train tickets
Monday, 18 July 2005
British police are considering the possibility that the four key suspects in the London terrorist attacks may have been tricked into triggering their bombs.
(...)
Police believe the bombers may have been tricked by a "master" who told them they would have time to escape when in fact the devices were set to explode instantly. Investigators are giving the hypothesis serious attention given the unusual behaviour of the four bombers for such a sophisticated terrorist action.
The four men are seen together on closed-circuit TV at Luton railway station at 7.20am on Thursday July 7, 90 minutes before the first bomb exploded.
(...)
All four men had paid their parking tickets before boarding a train at Luton, 40km north of London, for King's Cross station and had all bought return tickets to the capital. "We do not have hard evidence that the men were suicide bombers," a Scotland Yard spokesman told the Sunday Telegraph newspaper.
More here and all around the Web:
http://canberra.yourguide.com.au/detail.asp?class=news&subclass=international&category=general%20news&story_id=409269&y=2005&m=7