The official said the plotters intended to simultaneously target multiple 
planes bound for the United States. 
"We think this was an extraordinarily serious plot and we are confident that 
we've prevented an attempt to commit mass murder on an unimaginable scale," 
Deputy Police Commissioner Paul Stephenson said. 
Prime Minister Tony Blair, vacationing in the Caribbean, briefed President 
Bush on the situation overnight, Blair's office said. There was no immediate 
public comment from the White House. Bush is spending a few days at his ranch 
near Crawford, Texas. 
US Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff said the plot had the 
hallmarks of an operation planned by al-Qaida, the terrorist group behind the 
Sept. 11 attack on the United States. 
"It was sophisticated, it had a lot of members and it was international in 
scope. It was in some respects suggestive of an al-Qaida plot," Chertoff said, 
but he cautioned it was too early in the investigation to reach any conclusions. 
It is the first time the red alert level in the Homeland Security warning 
system has been invoked, although there have been brief periods in the past when 
the orange level was applied. Homeland Security defines the red alert as 
designating a "severe risk of terrorist attacks." 
"We believe that these arrests (in London) have significantly disrupted the 
threat, but we cannot be sure that the threat has been entirely eliminated or 
the plot completely thwarted," Chertoff said. 
He added, however, there was no indication of current plots within the United 
States. 
Chertoff said the plotters were in the final stages of planning. "We were 
really getting quite close to the execution phase," he said, adding that it was 
unclear if the plot was linked to the upcoming fifth anniversary of the Sept. 11 
terror attacks. 
A senior US counterterrorism official said authorities believe dozens of 
people - possibly as many as 50 - were involved in the plot. The 
official spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the 
situation. 
The plan involved airline passengers hiding masked explosives in carry-on 
luggage, the official said. "They were not yet sitting on an airplane," but were 
very close to traveling, the official said, calling the plot "the real deal." 
Passengers in Britain faced delays as tighter security was hastily enforced 
at the country's airports and additional measures were put in place for all 
flights. Laptop computers, mobile phones, iPods, and remote controls were among 
the items banned from being carried on board. 
Liquids, such as hair care products, were also barred on flights in both 
Britain and the U.S., raising the possibility that authorities were searching 
for a liquid explosive. 
In the mid-1990s, officials foiled a plan by terrorist mastermind Ramzi 
Youssef to blow up 12 Western jetliners simultaneously over the Pacific. The 
alleged plot involved improvised bombs using liquid hidden in contact lens 
solution containers. 
Huge lines formed at ticket counters and behind security barriers at Heathrow 
and other airports in Britain. 
Ed Lappen, 55, a businessman from Boston, who was traveling with his wife and 
daughter to Russia, found himself unable to travel further. "We're safe, we're 
OK," he said at Heathrow. "Now my daughter is going to get a shopping trip in 
London."