They are called "homegrown terrorists," citizens of Western countries
highly prized by Islamist militant groups because they can move across
borders and carry out attacks easier than people from Middle East and
South Asian co
They are called "homegrown terrorists," citizens of Western countries
highly prized by Islamist militant groups because they can move across
borders and carry out attacks easier than people from Middle East and
South Asian countries closely identified with terrorism.
Two such people -- one Canadian and one Australian -- are believed to
have been involved in the July bus bombing in Bulgaria that killed five
Israeli tourists and a Bulgarian driver, according to Bulgarian
investigators. Bulgarian Interior Minister Tsvetan Tsvetanov said the
two were members of the Lebanese Shiite Muslim militant group Hezbollah,
which is in turn linked to Iran.
Here are some examples of Western citizens who have been linked to
terrorism both in their home countries or abroad in recent years:
LONDON SUBWAY BOMBING
Four young Britons -- three of Pakistani and one of Jamaican origin
-- carried out a series of suicide attacks July 7, 2005, on the London
public transport that killed 56 people. More than 700 people were
injured. All four had lived normal lives under the police radar and had
no criminal records. They carried home-made bombs in backpacks. Al-Qaida
released video testimonies of two of the bombers who denounced the West
and declared their allegiance to Osama bin Laden.
SHOE BOMBER
Richard Reid was a British citizen who converted to Islam in prison.
After his release he traveled to Afghanistan and Pakistan, where
authorities say he trained with al-Qaida. More than three months after
Sept. 11 attacks, Reid boarded an American Airlines flight in Paris
bound for Miami and tried to detonate a bomb in his shoes. He was
subdued by passengers and crew members, and the plane landed safely in
Boston. In 2002 Reid was sentenced to life without parole after pleading
guilty to eight counts of terrorism and attempting to destroy a
commercial airliner.
DAVID COLEMAN HEADLEY
Headley, a Pakistani-American, used his U.S. passport to travel
frequently to India, where he allegedly scouted out venues for terror
attacks on behalf of the Lashkar-e-Taiba terrorist organization. The
al-Qaida-affiliated group used the information to plan and carry out the
2008 attacks in Mumbai, India, in which more than 160 people died. Last
month Headley was sentenced by a U.S. federal court in Chicago to 35
years in prison for his role in the Mumbai attacks.
TIMES SQUARE FAILED BOMBING
On May 1, 2010, two street vendors alerted police to smoke coming out
of a vehicle parked on New York's Time Square -- an area teeming with
tourists. Police found the vehicle was rigged with a bomb that failed to
explode. Two days later, federal agents in New York arrested Faisal
Shahzad, 30, a Pakistan-born U.S. citizen who lived in Bridgeport,
Connecticut, after he had boarded a flight bound for Dubai in the
Persian Gulf. Shahzad confessed to the attempted car bombing and said he
had trained at a Pakistani terror training camp. Shahzad was sentenced
to life imprisonment in October 2010.
ANWAR AL-AWLAKI
Al-Awlaki was born in 1971 in New Mexico, where his father was
studying agriculture as a Fulbright scholar. The son was educated in the
United States but left in 2002, eventually returning to Yemen where he
became a key figure in the local al-Qaida branch, which U.S. authorities
believed was the most dangerous of the al-Qaida franchises. Al-Awlaki's
fluent English and articulate speaking style won him a huge following
among disaffected young Muslims in the West. He and another American,
Samir Khan, who edited al-Qaida's Internet magazine, were killed in a
U.S. drone attack in Yemen on Sept. 30, 2011.
MAJ. NIDAL MALIK HASAN
Born in Arlington, Virginia, to Palestinian parents, Hasan joined the
U.S. Army in college and became a military psychiatrist. Colleagues
said that during an assignment at Walter Reed Medical Center, he was
deeply affected by dealing with young soldiers wounded in Iraq and
Afghanistan. FBI investigators alleged that he corresponded by email
with al-Awlaki. Hasan was wounded and captured by police on Nov. 5,
2009, after he allegedly opened fire on soldiers in Fort Hood, Texas,
killing 13 and wounding more than two dozen. Hasan, who was paralyzed
from the waist down in the shooting, was charged with 13 counts of
premeditated murder and 32 counts of attempted premeditated murder. A
trial date has not been set, and he could face the death penalty if
convicted.
ADAM GADAHN
Born Adam Pearlman in Oregon, Gadahn converted to Islam in 1995 and
moved to Pakistan, where he joined al-Qaida as a propagandist. Using the
name "Azzam the American," he appeared in numerous al-Qaida videos,
denouncing U.S. moves in Afghanistan and elsewhere and threatening
attacks on Western interests abroad. U.S. authorities filed treason
charges against him in 2006 and have offered a $1 million reward for
information leading to his arrest or conviction. Despite rumors he had
been killed or captured, Gadahn appeared in a video last September
marking the 11th anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks.
GLASGOW AIRPORT ATTACK
On June 30, 2007, a jeep loaded with propane canisters slammed into
the terminal of the Glasgow International Airport in Scotland, setting
the building on fire. Five bystanders were injured. Both occupants of
the vehicle were arrested. Police identified them as Bilal Abdulla, a
British-born, Muslim doctor of Iraqi descent and Kafeel Ahmed, the
driver. Anti-terrorism officials said Abdulla became radicalized due to
the Iraq war. Ahmed, an Indian engineering student, died of his burns.
Abdulla was convicted of conspiracy to commit murder and was sentenced
to 32 years in prison.
AHMAD OMAR SAEED SHEIKH
Following his education in Britain, the British-born Sheikh traveled
to South Asia, where he joined Islamic militant groups. He was sent to
prison for kidnapping Western tourists in India in 1994, but was
released to Pakistan five years later in an exchange of prisoners
following the hijacking of an Indian airliner to Afghanistan. In 2002 he
was convicted of kidnapping and murder in the death of Wall Street
Journal reporter Daniel Pearl and sentenced to death. His appeal is
still pending in a Pakistani court.
untries closely identified with terrorism.
Two such people -- one Canadian and one Australian -- are believed to
have been involved in the July bus bombing in Bulgaria that killed five
Israeli tourists and a Bulgarian driver, according to Bulgarian
investigators. Bulgarian Interior Minister Tsvetan Tsvetanov said the
two were members of the Lebanese Shiite Muslim militant group Hezbollah,
which is in turn linked to Iran.
Here are some examples of Western citizens who have been linked to
terrorism both in their home countries or abroad in recent years:
LONDON SUBWAY BOMBING
Four young Britons -- three of Pakistani and one of Jamaican origin
-- carried out a series of suicide attacks July 7, 2005, on the London
public transport that killed 56 people. More than 700 people were
injured. All four had lived normal lives under the police radar and had
no criminal records. They carried home-made bombs in backpacks. Al-Qaida
released video testimonies of two of the bombers who denounced the West
and declared their allegiance to Osama bin Laden.
SHOE BOMBER
Richard Reid was a British citizen who converted to Islam in prison.
After his release he traveled to Afghanistan and Pakistan, where
authorities say he trained with al-Qaida. More than three months after
Sept. 11 attacks, Reid boarded an American Airlines flight in Paris
bound for Miami and tried to detonate a bomb in his shoes. He was
subdued by passengers and crew members, and the plane landed safely in
Boston. In 2002 Reid was sentenced to life without parole after pleading
guilty to eight counts of terrorism and attempting to destroy a
commercial airliner.
DAVID COLEMAN HEADLEY
Headley, a Pakistani-American, used his U.S. passport to travel
frequently to India, where he allegedly scouted out venues for terror
attacks on behalf of the Lashkar-e-Taiba terrorist organization. The
al-Qaida-affiliated group used the information to plan and carry out the
2008 attacks in Mumbai, India, in which more than 160 people died. Last
month Headley was sentenced by a U.S. federal court in Chicago to 35
years in prison for his role in the Mumbai attacks.
TIMES SQUARE FAILED BOMBING
On May 1, 2010, two street vendors alerted police to smoke coming out
of a vehicle parked on New York's Time Square -- an area teeming with
tourists. Police found the vehicle was rigged with a bomb that failed to
explode. Two days later, federal agents in New York arrested Faisal
Shahzad, 30, a Pakistan-born U.S. citizen who lived in Bridgeport,
Connecticut, after he had boarded a flight bound for Dubai in the
Persian Gulf. Shahzad confessed to the attempted car bombing and said he
had trained at a Pakistani terror training camp. Shahzad was sentenced
to life imprisonment in October 2010.
ANWAR AL-AWLAKI
Al-Awlaki was born in 1971 in New Mexico, where his father was
studying agriculture as a Fulbright scholar. The son was educated in the
United States but left in 2002, eventually returning to Yemen where he
became a key figure in the local al-Qaida branch, which U.S. authorities
believed was the most dangerous of the al-Qaida franchises. Al-Awlaki's
fluent English and articulate speaking style won him a huge following
among disaffected young Muslims in the West. He and another American,
Samir Khan, who edited al-Qaida's Internet magazine, were killed in a
U.S. drone attack in Yemen on Sept. 30, 2011.
MAJ. NIDAL MALIK HASAN
Born in Arlington, Virginia, to Palestinian parents, Hasan joined the
U.S. Army in college and became a military psychiatrist. Colleagues
said that during an assignment at Walter Reed Medical Center, he was
deeply affected by dealing with young soldiers wounded in Iraq and
Afghanistan. FBI investigators alleged that he corresponded by email
with al-Awlaki. Hasan was wounded and captured by police on Nov. 5,
2009, after he allegedly opened fire on soldiers in Fort Hood, Texas,
killing 13 and wounding more than two dozen. Hasan, who was paralyzed
from the waist down in the shooting, was charged with 13 counts of
premeditated murder and 32 counts of attempted premeditated murder. A
trial date has not been set, and he could face the death penalty if
convicted.
ADAM GADAHN
Born Adam Pearlman in Oregon, Gadahn converted to Islam in 1995 and
moved to Pakistan, where he joined al-Qaida as a propagandist. Using the
name "Azzam the American," he appeared in numerous al-Qaida videos,
denouncing U.S. moves in Afghanistan and elsewhere and threatening
attacks on Western interests abroad. U.S. authorities filed treason
charges against him in 2006 and have offered a $1 million reward for
information leading to his arrest or conviction. Despite rumors he had
been killed or captured, Gadahn appeared in a video last September
marking the 11th anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks.
GLASGOW AIRPORT ATTACK
On June 30, 2007, a jeep loaded with propane canisters slammed into
the terminal of the Glasgow International Airport in Scotland, setting
the building on fire. Five bystanders were injured. Both occupants of
the vehicle were arrested. Police identified them as Bilal Abdulla, a
British-born, Muslim doctor of Iraqi descent and Kafeel Ahmed, the
driver. Anti-terrorism officials said Abdulla became radicalized due to
the Iraq war. Ahmed, an Indian engineering student, died of his burns.
Abdulla was convicted of conspiracy to commit murder and was sentenced
to 32 years in prison.
AHMAD OMAR SAEED SHEIKH
Following his education in Britain, the British-born Sheikh traveled
to South Asia, where he joined Islamic militant groups. He was sent to
prison for kidnapping Western tourists in India in 1994, but was
released to Pakistan five years later in an exchange of prisoners
following the hijacking of an Indian airliner to Afghanistan. In 2002 he
was convicted of kidnapping and murder in the death of Wall Street
Journal reporter Daniel Pearl and sentenced to death. His appeal is
still pending in a Pakistani court.
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