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Are certain people worried about losing Scotland and losing Scotland's
gas and oil?
Are sections of certain security services planning to carry out acts
of fake terror in Scotland?
Scotland on Sunday, 19 March 2006, has a news story entitled: Scots
terror team draws up plans for national disasters
According to Murdo MacLeod of Scotland on Sunday, Scottish civil servants are
to have contingency plans in place to deal with acts of terror.
The civil servants are thinking about attacks on cities, nuclear plants, nuclear
convoys and oil rigs.
According to Scotland on Sunday:
A team headed by Gregor Lindsay, a civil servant and RAF reservist, is working
in Perth...
An Executive insider said: "The view is that the international situation
means Scotland is more of a target for terror. Irish terrorists were less
of an issue here during the Troubles because they supposedly had a thing about
not attacking their 'fellow Celtic people'. That doesn't apply to the new
breed of international terrorists."
(If you were a powerful Iraqi leader would you want to play golf at St Andrews
or would you want to blow up Auchtermuchtie? Yes, play golf.)
Scenarios which the unit has plans for include:
• Terrorists setting off a bomb in Edinburgh.
• Extremists taking over a North Sea oil rig.
• A lethal bird flu pandemic sweeping across Scotland.
• An airliner flying over the Edinburgh City Bypass losing an engine
which falls on a nuclear convoy and the fallout spreads across the city.
• Scotland's main oil refinery at Grangemouth being put out of action.
• Dounreay nuclear reactor blowing up.
• A conventional flu epidemic gripping Scotland, causing a staffing
crisis in hospitals and other public services.
• Protesters blocking the motorways heading into Glasgow.
The Executive insider added: "You might think the idea that an airliner
engine falls on a nuclear convoy on Edinburgh City Bypass and wind blows fallout
over the city is far-fetched but the point is that by studying the implications
you can draw lessons for anything similar..."
A senior source in Scottish policing said: "There is a fear that because
London is seen by terrorists as increasingly hard to crack because of the extra
security, terrorists will instead look to Scotland to get the maximum publicity
for an attack. If you can't 'do' London, then you still want something high-profile
and internationally prestigious, Scotland is second to London in that respect."