German security forces arrested three terrorist suspects,
accusing them of plotting to bomb Frankfurt airport and a US
military base, German media reported on Wednesday.
German Defense Minister Franz Josef Jung disclosed the news on
state television, but he offered few details, German television
station Deutsche Welle reported.
"There was an imminent security threat," the minister said,
adding that the attacks on the airport and the military base at
Ramstein in southwestern Germany were scheduled to coincide with
the anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks on the US.
Speaking at a press conference in Karlsruhe on Wednesday,
Federal Prosecutor Monika Harms said the suspects were two German
converts to Islam and a Turkish Muslim, all in their 20s.
Harms was quoted by Deutsche Welle as saying that they were
members of the Islamic Jihad Union, which has its origins in
Uzbekistan and they attended a militant training camp in Pakistan
last year.
The prosecutor also said the suspects had collected massive
quantities of hydrogen peroxide, the same chemical used by suicide
bombers in the 2005 London attacks that killed 56 people.
The prosecutor said once turned into bombs, the material could
provoke an explosion with the same magnitude as 550 kilograms of
dynamite.
German security forces seized the materials on Tuesday in the
small town of Oberschledorn in the state of North
Rhine-Westphalia.
Jorg Ziercke, head of Germany's Federal Criminal Police Office
(BKA), said the Islamic Jihad Union was linked to al-Qaeda.
He said security forces zeroed in on the suspects when it became
clear the three had begun making bombs.
According to Harms, the suspects were apparently planning to
detonate a series of car bombs simultaneously targeting US military
facilities in Germany.
Local public radio SWR also reported that the US military base
at Ramstein, one of the largest US military facilities in Europe,
was a possible target.
Other reports, based on Berlin security sources, indicated that
the suspects also intended to hit Frankfurt's international
airport.
(Xinhua News Agency September 6, 2007)