Operation Guava

"[3] The Operation Guava plotters used the Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula magazine Inspire as an instruction manual for the bomb they planned to leave in a toilet stall at the London Stock Exchange.

[2][1] Aside from bombing the London Stock Exchange,[2] the plotters planned the establishment of a jihadist training camp in Azad Kashmir on land owned by one of the suspects, Usman Khan.

[11] Other targets included: the US Embassy in London, two rabbis each from a separate synagogue, the Dean of St Paul's Cathedral, and Boris Johnson; the plotters had procured their addresses.

[9] Three of the nine (Mohammad Shahjahan, Nazam Hussein, and Usman Khan), all from Stoke, were given indefinite prison terms, on account of being considered "more dangerous than the others".

[21][22] Usman Khan later on went on to take part in a Cambridge University rehabilitation programme where he was considered a "poster boy for Britain's anti-radicalisation strategy" and later yet perpetrated the 2019 London Bridge stabbing,[f][23] when he killed two people and wounded three more.