Al-Qaida group takes responsibility for mail bombs

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WASHINGTON – A Yemen-based al-Qaida group is claiming responsibility for the international mail bomb plot uncovered late last week as well as the crash of a United Parcel Service cargo plane in September.

A week after authorities intercepted packages in Dubai and England that were bound for the U.S., al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula issued a message Friday saying it will continue to strike American and Western interests. They specifically said they would target civilian and cargo aircraft.

U.S. officials have said all week that there were strong indications the plot originated with AQAP, a terror group that has been gathering strength and increasingly triggering attacks on Western targets. Authorities have said the September UPS crash was caused by an onboard fire, but investigators are taking another look at the incident.

U.S. intelligence experts will be examining the message from AQAP to try to verify its authenticity, a U.S. intelligence official said, adding that they are not surprised to see this claim now.

On Friday, a U.S. counterterrorism official separately said the Yemen group remains a serious threat. The officials spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss classified matters.

A security official in the United Arab Emirets familiar with the investigations into the Sept. 3 crash of a UPS cargo plane in Dubai and the mail bombs plot said Friday that there is no change in earlier findings that the UPS crash in September was likely caused by an onboard fire and not by an explosive device.

A UPS spokesman, Norman Black, said his company had “no independent knowledge of this claim by al-Qaida,” and noted that both UAE officials and U.S. National Transportation Safety Board officials have so far ruled out the possibility of a bomb as cause in the crash.

According to an AP translation of the terror group’s statement, AQAP said that its “advanced explosives give us the opportunity to detonate (planes) in the air or after they have reached their final target, and they are designed to bypass all detection devices.”

Both mail bombs were hidden inside computer printers and wired to detonators that used cell-phone technology and packed powdered PETN, a potent industrial explosive.

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