
The verdict was reached at a federal court in Brooklyn. No date has yet been set for Naseer's sentencing.
During the trial
prosecutors argued that Naseer played a major part in a global al Qaeda plot to
launch coordinated attacks in Manchester, Copenhagen and New York City.
The attacks were designed
to "replicate the devastation" of the attacks on 11 September, 2001.
Greater Manchester Police's
chief investigating officer in the case, Detective Superintendent Mark Smith,
told Sky News it was "as big a plot as we've seen in the UK, quite
seriously".
He said: "The scale of
the intended attack, the number of casualties that I think we would have seen
in Manchester, would have been comparable to the 7/7 attack."
The court saw photographs
of alleged co-conspirator Tariq Ur-Rehman, who was never charged, posing as a
tourist at the Arndale centre and other locations.
The prosecution said the
images were actually reconnaissance, and that the terror cell had concentrated
on locations with glass-fronted shops to maximise casualties.
To assist with the US
government's case, serving undercover MI5 agents gave evidence in full public
view, disguised with wigs and makeup.
They described how they
followed Naseer in March and April 2009, and the jury saw surveillance notes
describing him watching a video of the 9/11 attacks on his mobile phone.
Det Supt Smith told Sky
News that his operation had learned that Naseer had sent emails to a suspected
al Qaeda handler speaking in coded language about an impending
"wedding", meaning an attack.
He said: "Those emails
indicated that he was ready to attack, and that attack was more than likely
going to take place over the following weekend, which would have been the
Easter bank holiday weekend."
But Manchester police were
rushed into making arrests ahead of schedule when Britain's most senior
counter-terrorism officer, Bob Quick, accidentally allowed details of the
operation to be photographed as he walked into Downing Street.
Naseer and 11 others were
taken into custody, but little evidence was found and all were released without
charge.
In 2013 he was extradited
to America.
Det Supt Smith said:
"It's always disappointing not to be able to prosecute a case in the UK,
but having said that, I just wanted to see Abid Naseer brought to
justice."
One of the New York
plotters who had planned to target the subway system, and who is already in
prison, described receiving bomb-making training in Pakistan and Afghanistan.
He told the court how he
had been taught to use ball bearings to injure and kill as many commuters as
possible.
The prosecution said Naseer
had received the same training, and was communicating using the same coded
language with the same senior al Qaeda handlers.
Before they rested their
case lawyers produced their final piece of evidence - never before seen
documents recovered from the raid on Osama bin Laden's compound in Pakistan.
In a court building with a
direct view of the 9/11 attack site, they said letters from senior terror
chiefs to bin Laden made direct reference to the Manchester plot, and revealed
the group's determination to attack America and its allies at home.
Naseer argued that he had
come to the UK from Pakistan on a student visa to study and to find a wife.
He told the court that all
the evidence against him was circumstantial, but it wasn't enough to convince
the Brooklyn jury in federal court room 10A.
Sky News
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