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Qaeda's Zawahri threatens more attacks in UK: tape

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Al Qaeda's deputy leader Ayman al-Zawahri in an image taken from video footage released in April 2006. Al Qaeda's second-in-command on Tuesday threatened more attacks on Britain, two weeks after failed bombings in London and Glasgow. REUTERS/Handout

Al Qaeda's deputy leader Ayman al-Zawahri in an image taken from video footage released in April 2006. Al Qaeda's second-in-command on Tuesday threatened more attacks on Britain, two weeks after failed bombings in London and Glasgow.

Credit: Reuters/Handout

DUBAI | Tue Jul 10, 2007 7:34pm EDT

DUBAI (Reuters) - Al Qaeda's second-in-command, Ayman al-Zawahri, on Tuesday threatened more attacks on Britain, two weeks after two failed bombings and criticized the country's decision to award author Salman Rushdie a knighthood.

"I say to (Former British Prime Minister Tony) Blair's successor that the policy of your predecessor drew catastrophes in Afghanistan and Iraq and even in the centre of London," the Egyptian cleric said in an audio tape posted on the Internet.

"If you did not learn the lesson then we are ready to repeat it, God willing, until we are sure you have fully understood."

It was not immediately possible to verify the authenticity of the 20-minute tape, which appeared on a Web site used by al Qaeda-linked groups with a still photograph of Zawahri.

The recording came just days after two car bombs were found in London and a fuel-packed jeep was rammed into Glasgow Airport in Scotland -- botched attacks which Prime Minister Gordon Brown said were associated with al Qaeda.

Zawahri also attacked Britain's controversial decision to award Rushdie a knighthood, saying Queen Elizabeth had sent a clear message to Muslims by honoring a novelist who had insulted Islam, and said the group was preparing a response.

Rushdie is best known for his novel "The Satanic Verses", which outraged many Muslims and prompted death threats that forced him to live in hiding for nine years.

Zawahri said the least Muslims could do was to boycott British goods to protest Rushdie's knighthood.

A spokesman for Brown rejected Zawahri's comments.

"We do not intend to dignify this with a response," the spokesman said. "As the prime minister has said, the British people will remain united, resolute and strong and we will not allow terrorists to undermine the British way of life."

ATTACK IN LEBANON, PAKISTAN

Zawahri, who has spoken out regularly in audio-taped messages in recent months, also called on Muslims in Pakistan to fight President Pervez Musharraf, whose forces killed a rebel Islamist leader and more than 50 militants on Tuesday when they stormed an Islamabad mosque compound after a week-long siege.

"I say to the Muslims in Pakistan that the real challenge to Musharraf lies not in demonstrations nor in elections... but by backing jihad in Afghanistan," he said, without referring specifically to the siege and violence at the Red Mosque.

"An Islamic emirate in Afghanistan is the hope for real change in the region and hopefully the final blow to the Crusaders ... in South Asia."

Zawahri, who last year called for attacks on United Nations peacekeepers patrolling Lebanon's southern border with Israel, also blessed a bombing that killed six Spanish troops in June and called for more.

"This operation came as a response to the occupation of these Crusader invading troops of a dear part of Lebanon and a response to the imposition of disarmament there," he said.

"This is a blessed operation that expresses the rejection of the faithful in Lebanon of the situation that the regional and international community ... imposed on them."

The United Nations force in Lebanon, UNIFIL, was expanded under U.N. Security Council resolution 1701 that halted a 34-day war between Lebanese Hezbollah guerrillas and Israel last year.

No group claimed responsibility for the bombing. Hezbollah, a Shi'ite group opposed to al Qaeda's ideology, condemned it.

Zawahri repeated earlier calls on Hamas to reject all international accords with Israel, U.N. resolutions and a Saudi-brokered deal with the rival Fatah faction of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas.

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