The Mindanao Examiner Regional Newspaper

Brussels attack investigat­ion: What's next for authoritie­s?

- ( Joshua Berlinger, CNN. CNN's F rederik Pleitgen, Catherine E. Shoichet, Margot Haddad and Greg Botelho contribute­d to this report.)

AUTHORITIE­S have identified the two suicide bombers involved in the attack at the Brussels airport, a senior Belgian security source told CNN.

They are brothers Khalid and Brahim El Bakraoui, both of whom were known to police, but for organized crime, not for acts of terrorism, state broadcaste­r RTBF reported.

Khalid El Bakraoui rented an apartment in Brussels that was raided last week, the source said.

Investigat­ors are expected to ascertain clues based on the explosives that struck the airport and a metro station in Maelbeek, and they're hunting for the one remaining suspect that they think is alive, digging up informatio­n and attempting to untangle the network used to plan the attack.

While Belgian officials say both brothers were suicide bombers, a U. S. official briefed earlier on preliminar­y evidence from the investigat­ion says authoritie­s are looking at the possibilit­y that one of the airport explosions may have been caused by a bomb inside a suitcase and the other was a suicide bombing. Three suspects, two explosions and a taxi

driver One of the first major breaks in the investigat­ion appears to have come from a taxi driver.

Just hours after the explosions, Belgian authoritie­s released a photo from airport security that showed three men -two in black and one in lighter clothes, wearing a hat.

Video shows the men exiting a taxi and moving through the airport, according to two U. S. officials.

The two in darker clothes are believed to be suicide bombers who died in the explosions in the airport's departure lounge, according to Belgian federal prosecutor Frederic Van Leeuw.

But investigat­ors believe the man in light- colored clothing planted a bomb at the airport, then left -- a move that appeared to be planned, the two U. S. officials said.

Authoritie­s are calling him a wanted man and asked for the public's help tracking him down.

"It's Salah Abdeslam all over again," Dirk Coosemans, a reporter at Belgian newspaper Het Nieuwsblad, told CNN. "This one was there to be a suicide terrorist, and he didn't do it."

Belgian media also reported a Kalashniko­v assault rifle was found in the departure hall of the Zaventem airport.

Fortunatel­y, a taxi driver called police shortly after the photo was released and said he believed that he drove the trio to the airport.

The driver told authoritie­s that his passengers would not allow him to unload the suitcases from the cab. He also led investigat­ors to the location where he picked the three of them up.

Schaerbeek That informatio­n prompted authoritie­s to raid a residence after the attacks, the officials said.

Investigat­ors found a nail bomb, chemical products and an ISIS flag during a house search in the northeast Brussels neighborho­od of Schaerbeek, Belgium's federal prosecutor said in a statement.

Forensic teams are now scouring an apart- ment building in that neighborho­od and have been seen carrying out bags of evidence, according to CNN's Frederik Pleitgen, who was reporting from just outside the building.

Their work continued into the night. Putting the pieces back

together Determinin­g what type of explosives were used will be crucial, according to CNN National Security Analyst Peter Bergen.

French prosecutor­s have said that the bombs used in the November Paris attacks were made from triacetone triperoxid­e, or TATP.

If the same type of bombs were used in Paris and Brussels, that would be a key clue linking the two attacks.

"Such bombs have been a signature of jihadist terrorists in the West for more than a decade because the materials are so easy to acquire, unlike military- grade explosives, which are tightly controlled in much of the West," Bergen said.

TATP- based bombs require technical know- how and bulk purchases of hydrogen peroxide or hair bleach. That helps authoritie­s winnow down potential bomb- making suspects, because making the explosives can sometimes bleach hair. So authoritie­s can identify bomb- makers in part by recognizin­g unusuallyb­leached hair or asking sellers to report any suspicious­ly large purchases of hydrogen peroxide. Dearth of Maelbeek

informatio­n While authoritie­s have been able to move quickly on intelligen­ce from the airport attacks, very little has been publicly revealed about the bombing at the Maelbeek metro station.

Coosemans, the Het Nieuwsblad reporter, says that's because there isn't as much surveillan­ce there compared to the airport.

"We just know less about the Maelbeek attack because we don't have pictures there," he told CNN. "The police know less about Maelbeek." Unraveling the network

Two senior U. S. officials told CNN they believe the Belgium attack is tied to the same network as terror suspect Salah Abdeslam ( ISIS has claimed responsibi­lity for the attack.)

And the "working assumption" in Belgium is that the attackers came from the network behind the Paris attack, Belgian security sources said. However, they cautioned it is very early in the latest investigat­ion.

The identities of the three airport suspects aren't clear to U. S. authoritie­s, either because Belgian authoritie­s haven't completed identifica­tion or haven't shared that informatio­n with counterter­rorism officials in the U. S., the officials said.

Going forward, intelligen­ce sharing will be very important, says Steve Moore, a CNN law enforcemen­t contributo­r.

"They obviously have some informatio­n. They don't know if they're looking at one cell or a series of cells. And so now it's time to get all around at the same table and exchange informatio­n," he said. "If you can get them all to use the same currency, I cannot believe that you can't get them all to share intelligen­ce."

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 ??  ?? Injured passengers are covered in blood and dust after the explosions in the terminal building. ( Mail Online photo)
Injured passengers are covered in blood and dust after the explosions in the terminal building. ( Mail Online photo)

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