Left to right: Amar Hussein, Bilel Saadaoui, and Walid Saadoui. Hussein and Bilel Saadoaui were convicted on December 23, 2025, of planning a terror attack to kill hundreds of Jews in the United Kingdom. Walid Saadoui was convicted for not alerting authorities of the plot. (Greater Manchester Police)
Attacker sought 'to kill as many Jewish people as he could'

Three convicted for plotting ‘deadliest terror attack in UK history,’ against Jews

Manchester court finds ISIS-inspired would-be terrorists guilty of plotting the violence, and one more of not alerting authorities; men tried to buy weapons from undercover cop

by · The Times of Israel

LONDON (Reuters) – Two men were found guilty on Tuesday of plotting to kill hundreds in an Islamic State-inspired gun rampage against the Jewish community in England, a planned attack investigators say demonstrates the resurgent risk posed by the terror group.

Police and prosecutors said Walid Saadaoui, 38, and Amar Hussein, 52, who went on trial a week after an unrelated deadly attack on a synagogue in the nearby northwest city of Manchester in October, were Islamic extremists who wanted to use automatic firearms to kill as many Jews as they could.

Had their plans come to fruition, it would have resulted in “one of, if not the, deadliest terrorist attack in UK history,” said Assistant Chief Constable Robert Potts, in charge of Counter-Terrorism Policing in northwest England.

Their convictions come little more than a week after an antisemitic mass shooting at a Hanukkah celebration on Sydney’s Bondi Beach in which 15 people were killed.

Islamic State said the Australian attack was a “source of pride.” Although the jihadist group did not claim responsibility, its response has heightened fears of an increase in violent Islamist extremism.

While not posing the same threat of a decade ago when Islamic State (ISIS) controlled vast areas of Iraq and Syria, European security officials caution that ISIS and affiliated al-Qaeda groups are once again looking to export violence abroad, radicalizing would-be attackers online.

Mourners attend the memorial held for the victims of the anti-Jewish terror attack at Bondi Beach in Sydney, on December 21, 2025. (Saeed KHAN / AFP)

“You can see signs of some of those terrorism threats starting to grow again and starting to escalate,” British Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper said last week.

British prosecutors told jurors that Saadaoui and Hussein had “embraced the views” of Islamic State and were prepared to risk their own lives in order to become “martyrs.”

Saadaoui had arranged for two assault rifles, an automatic pistol and almost 200 rounds of ammunition to be smuggled into Britain through the port of Dover when he was arrested in May 2024, prosecutor Harpreet Sandhu said.

Weapons and ammunition rounds seized by police from the would-be perpetrators of a major antisemitic terror attack in the UK, who were convicted on December 23, 2025. (Greater Manchester Police)

He added that Saadaoui planned to obtain two more rifles, another pistol and collect at least 900 rounds. Unbeknown to him, a man known as “Farouk” he was trying to get the weapons from was an undercover operative, which police said meant his plan never came close to being put into operation.

Sandhu said the assault rifles Saadaoui wanted were similar to those used in a 2015 Islamist terror attack on the Bataclan concert hall in Paris that killed 130 people. He added that Saadaoui “hero-worshiped” Abdelhamid Abaaoud, who coordinated that attack.

Saadaoui said in a message to “Farouk,” who he thought was a fellow terrorist, that the Paris attack was “the biggest operation after that of Osama (bin Laden),” an apparent reference to the September 11, 2001, attack on the United States.

A woman is evacuated from the Bataclan concert hall after a terrorist shooting attack in Paris, November 13, 2015. (AP Photo/Thibault Camus, File)

“Based on Walid’s communications and interactions with the undercover operative, and some of the things he said, that made it very clear that he regarded a less sophisticated attack with less lethal weaponry as not being good enough,” Potts said.

“Because, in effect, it was his role and his duty to kill as many Jewish people as he could, and that wasn’t going to be achieved via the use of a knife or, for example, potentially a vehicle as a weapon.”

Both Saadaoui and Hussein had pleaded not guilty and Saadaoui said that he had played along with the plot out of fear for his life.

Hussein did not give evidence and barely attended his trial after he angrily shouted from the dock on the first day “How many babies?” in an apparent reference to Israel’s war in Gaza.

They were convicted in Preston Crown Court on a single charge of preparing terrorist acts.

Walid Saadaoui’s brother Bilel Saadaoui, 36, was found guilty of failing to disclose information about acts of terrorism but prosecutors said he had been reluctant to join the attack.

Members of the Jewish community comfort each other near the Heaton Park Hebrew Congregation synagogue, in Crumpsall, Manchester, England, after a deadly terror attack on October 2, 2025. (Peter Byrne/PA via AP)

The foiled plot is the latest in Britain and elsewhere inspired by Islamic State, which emerged in Iraq and Syria a decade ago and quickly created a “caliphate,” declaring its rule over all Muslims and largely displacing al-Qaeda.

At the height of its power in 2014-17, Islamic State held swaths of the two countries, ruling over millions of people and imposing a strict, brutal interpretation of Islamic sharia law.

Its fighters also carried out or inspired attacks in dozens of cities around the world, which were often claimed by Islamic State even without any actual connection.

The SITE Intelligence Group said in the wake of the Bondi Beach attack in Australia that ISIS had encouraged Muslims to take action elsewhere, particularly singling out Belgium.

This handout photo from a court exhibit released by the NSW Courts as part of the police fact sheet on December 22, 2025, shows a general view of a home-made painted Islamic State (ISIS) flag, appearing to be made with white paint on black fabric, located in the vehicle CN59DR, registered to Naveed Akram, in Sydney. (Handout / NSW Courts / AFP)

A European intelligence official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said ISIS was flooding social media with propaganda and while this impacted only a handful of people, it meant there were more terrorism investigations than last year.

Ken McCallum, head of Britain’s domestic spy agency MI5, said in October that his service and the police had thwarted 19 late-stage attack plots since the start of 2020, and intervened to counter many hundreds of other terrorism threats.

“Terrorism breeds in squalid corners of the internet where poisonous ideologies, of whatever sort, meet volatile, often chaotic individual lives,” McCallum said.