Waheed Ali, 25, and Mohammed Shakil, 32, were cleared of helping the 7/7 bombers to select their targets but convicted of conspiracy to attend a training camp for terrorists after they were arrested before boarding a flight for Pakistan in 2007.
Mr Justice Gross sentenced the pair to seven years each at Kingston Crown Court.
Both men have already spent more than two years in custody, which will be deducted from the time they will serve. They admitted attending terrorist training camps in the past, before it had been made an offence.
Ali and Shakil stood trial with Sadeer Saleem, 28, for assisting the 7/7 attacks on London. Yesterday all three were found not guilty. The three men, from Beeston in Leeds, were re-tried after an earlier jury failed to reach verdicts.
They were the only people to be charged as a result of the biggest police inquiry in British history. More than 37,000 exhibits were forensically examined, 4,700 telephones seized and 24,000 people eliminated from inquiries by an army of police and MI5 investigators. The total cost of the two trials is likely to exceed £5 million.
Families of the 7/7 victims say that the verdicts mean no one is likely ever to be brought to justice for the attacks on London’s transport network. Some have demanding a full independent inquiry.
Bereaved families and survivors have also called on the Government to publish a second Intelligence and Security Committee report into the bombings without delay. And they said inquests into the deaths of all 52 victims, plus the four suicide bombers, should be held in public as soon as possible.
The three men were accused of visiting the London Eye, the Natural History Museum and the London Aquarium to identify potential targets seven months before the 2005 atrocity.
Four suicide bombers, Mohammed Siddique Khan, Shehzad Tanweer, Hasib Hussain and Germaine Lindsay, detonated rucksack devices packed with explosives on three Tube trains and a bus.
The trial heard that the three defendants travelled from Leeds to London on December 16, 2004, with Hussain, who went on to detonate his bomb on the No 30 bus in Tavistock Square, claiming 13 lives. They also met Lindsay, who killed 26 people on a Piccadilly Line Underground train.
The prosecution alleged that they conducted a “hostile reconnaissance” of potential targets during a two-day visit. The three defendants admitted making the visit but claimed it was an entirely innocent social outing.
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