"I opposed the Iraq war, but I still think it is daft to blame Tony Blair for the London bombings (Blair's blowback, 11 July 2005). He is culpable for the deaths in Falluja, but others bombed the Underground, and bear responsibility for their actions. As far as anyone can tell, the inspiration for the bombings arises from the political isolation of the fundamentalists, not from a groundswell of support behind them in Iraq, or anywhere else."
Doug asks
"The NYT had a piece on how one of the bombs was planted in a neighborhood of fairly assimilated Arabs. Was the aim in part to dissaude them from assimilation into British society? That's really a question."
One of the bomb sites, Edgware Road is marginally more Arabic than other parts of London, and close to the site of the Regents Park Mosque. The established Arabic part of London is mostly better off, and relatively westernised, so it is conceivable that they were a target for that reason. But the Arab part of the population is relatively small, and quite concentrated, so bombing the underground at Edgeware Road is fairly indiscriminate. If their target was Arabs it might have made more sense to attack above ground.
The other bomb sites seem to have been chosen overall for the number of people rather than their class or ethnicity. Arguably the Liverpool Street bombing was targeting the financial district, though since much of this has moved out to Canary Wharf the bomb there would have hit many more service sector workers than stock traders. Kings Cross is simply the most lines meeting, so maximum damage. The 30 bus route runs from Hackney (Afro-Caribbean/Bangladeshi, impoverished inner city) into town.
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