Four men who considered using a toy car to deliver a bomb have been jailed for a total of more than 30 years.
Luton men Zahid Iqbal, Mohammed Sharfaraz Ahmed, Umar Arshad and Syed Farhan Hussain considered bombing a Territorial Army base.
Ringleaders Iqbal and Ahmed were given extended terms of 16 years and three months, including 11 months in jail.
Arshad was jailed for six years and nine months and Hussain for five years and three months.
Sentencing the men, Mr Justice Wilkie QC said that Iqbal and Ahmed posed a continuing risk to the public.
Their extended sentence comprises 11 years in jail and an additional five years on licence after release, during which they could be recalled to prison.
The judge said: "In each of their cases, their persistent commitment to terrorist activity, in a number of different ways, over a significant period of time and, in each case, their willingness to take practical steps to obtain terrorist training abroad, marks them out as particularly dangerous.
"This, coupled with the fact that, after their houses had been searched, and they were obviously under serious suspicion, they nonetheless continued to access material consistent with the mindset which informed their previous preparatory activities, persuades me that they continue to be "dangerous" to such a degree that I should exercise my discretion to pass an extended sentence."
Mr Justice Wilkie said that while the men would be eligible for release after serving two-thirds of their sentence, the Parole Board would have the power to keep them in jail for the whole 11 years.
The four men were arrested in April 2012 and pleaded guilty at Woolwich Crown Court to engaging in preparation for acts of terrorism.
Gap under gateThe court heard that Iqbal, 31, Ahmed, 25, Hussain, 21, and Arshad, 24 had arranged terrorism training in Pakistan, debated obtaining weapons and how best to raise funds for their plans. Their conversations were secretly recorded in a joint police-MI5 operation.
In one of the secretly-recorded conversations which was played to the court, Iqbal, the group's leader, can be heard telling Ahmed: "I was looking and drove past like the TA centre, Marsh Road. At the bottom of their gate there's quite a big gap. If you had a little toy car it drives underneath one of their vehicles or something."
In another recording, the men discussed how to make a homemade bomb, based on instructions available in an English-language jihadist magazine.
As the tapes were played in court, the four men had sat smiling and giggling in the dock.
Deputy Assistant Commissioner Stuart Osborne of the Metropolitan Police's Counter Terrorism Command said: "The actions and intentions of these men starkly demonstrate what we have repeatedly said - that terrorists live among us while they carry out their plans, doing all they can to conceal their activities.
"We need the help of all our communities to come forward with information about such behaviour or activity so that we can arrest and charge individuals who have violent, extremist views and pose a danger to the public."
The men had prepared for a terrorism training camp hidden in the mountains of Pakistan by joining physical training exercises in Snowdonia and the Brecon Beacons.
But their lawyers said that although the men had pleaded guilty, they did not pose an imminent threat to people in the UK.
They said it was an overstatement to suggest the men had made genuine plans and the toy car idea had gone nowhere.
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