U.S., British downplay French comment on mail bombs

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PARIS – American and British officials moved quickly Thursday to downplay the French interior minister’s comment that one of two mail bombs sent from Yemen last week was disarmed just 17 minutes before it was set to go off.

The issue of timing is central to the investigation because it could indicate whether terrorists hoped to blow up the planes over U.S. airspace or whether they simply wanted to take down the planes regardless of their location.

“One of the packages was defused only 17 minutes before the moment that it was set to explode,” French Interior Minister Brice Hortefeux told state-run France-2 television. He made no other comment on the Yemen mail bomb plot in the interview and was not available afterwards.

White House press secretary Robert Gibbs said the question of when the bombs found in Britain and the United Arab Emirates were to go off was still under investigation and there was no information confirming such a close call.

U.S. State Department counterterror coordinator Daniel Benjamin also questioned the French minister’s comments.

“This is not our understanding of the situation. Our understanding is the investigators are still looking at the fusing and the timing of a possible detonation so I can’t confirm that right now,” he told reporters in Rotterdam.

A government official in Britain said the device found there was still undergoing forensic tests and it had not been determined how close it was to being detonated. A security source in the United Arab Emirates said Hortefeux’s remark did not describe the bomb found in that country.

“If this was a reference to the device found in the Federal Express (Fedex) site in Dubai, then it is not correct,” a security source in the United Arab Emirates who is familiar with the investigation said.

Both were not authorized to discuss the case publicly and spoke on the condition of anonymity.

Hortefeux did not say where he got the information about the timing, although U.S. and European intelligence officials have been exchanging information on the plot. The French Interior Ministry would not elaborate on Hortefeux’s comment.

Sweden, meanwhile, changed its travel recommendations for Yemen, advising citizens on Thursday to refrain “from all travel to Yemen until further notice.” The foreign ministry cited conflicts in Yemen’s north, unrest and kidnappings in the south and “repeated terror actions against foreigners and foreign interests.”

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