On
this date, September 30, 2011, an Islamic Militant, Anwar Al-Awlaki was killed
by two predator drones in Yemen. I will post information about this terrorist
from Wikipedia.
Anwar al-Awlaki in Yemen in 2008.
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Born
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Anwar bin Nasser bin
Abdulla al-Aulaqi
April 21, 1971 (UPI gives April 22) Las Cruces, New Mexico, USA |
Died
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September 30, 2011 (aged 40)
al-Jawf Governorate, Yemen |
Cause of death
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Hellfire missile
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Residence
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Yemen
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Ethnicity
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Arab
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Citizenship
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U.S. and Yemen (dual)
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Alma mater
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Colorado State University
(B.S.)
George Washington University (Ph.D., incomplete) |
Occupation
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Lecturer, former imam, Inspire magazine
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Organization
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Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula
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Known for
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Alleged senior al-Qaeda
recruiter and spokesman |
Religion
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Islam
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Children
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5
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Parents
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Nasser al-Awlaki (father)
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Anwar al-Awlaki (also spelled al-Aulaqi; Arabic: أنور العولقي
Anwar al-‘Awlaqī; April 21, 1971 – September 30, 2011) was an
American and Yemeni imam and Islamic militant. U.S. government officials said
that he was a senior talent recruiter and motivator who was involved in
planning terrorist operations for the Islamist militant group al-Qaeda. With a
blog, a Facebook page, the al-Qaeda magazine Inspire, and many YouTube
videos, the Saudi news station Al Arabiya described him as the "bin Laden
of the Internet." After a request from the U.S. Congress, in November 2010
YouTube removed many of Awlaki's videos.
U.S.
officials say that as imam at a mosque in Falls Church, Virginia (2001–02),
which had 3,000 members, al-Awlaki spoke with and preached to three of the 9/11
hijackers, who were al-Qaeda members. In 2001, he presided at the funeral of
the mother of Nidal Malik Hasan, an Army psychiatrist who later e-mailed him
extensively in 2008–09 before the Fort Hood shootings. During al-Awlaki's later
radical period after 2006–07, when he went into hiding, he was associated with
Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, the Nigerian who attempted the 2009 Christmas Day
bombing of an American airliner. Al-Awlaki was allegedly involved in planning
the latter's attack.
The
Yemeni government began trying him in absentia in November 2010, for
plotting to kill foreigners and being a member of al-Qaeda. A Yemeni judge
ordered that he be captured "dead or alive." U.S. officials said that
in 2009, al-Awlaki was promoted to the rank of "regional commander"
within al-Qaeda. He repeatedly called for jihad against the United
States.
In
April 2010, U.S. President Barack Obama placed al-Awlaki on a list of people
whom the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency was authorized to kill because of
terrorist activities. The "targeted killing" of an American citizen
was unprecedented. Al-Awlaki's father and civil rights groups challenged the
order in court. Al-Awlaki was believed to be in hiding in Southeast Yemen in
the last years of his life. The U.S. deployed unmanned aircraft (drones) in
Yemen to search for and kill him, firing at and failing to kill him at least
once, before succeeding in a fatal American drone attack in Yemen on September
30, 2011. Two weeks later, al-Awlaki's 16-year-old son, Abdulrahman
al-Awlaki, a U.S. citizen who was born in Denver, was killed by a CIA-led drone strike in Yemen. Nasser al-Awlaki, Anwar's
father, released an audio recording condemning the killings of his son and
grandson as senseless murders.
Early life
Al-Awlaki
was born in New Mexico in the United States in 1971 to parents from Yemen,
while his father was doing graduate work at U.S. universities. His father,
Nasser al-Awlaki, was a Fulbright Scholar who earned a master's degree in
agricultural economics at New Mexico State University in 1971, received a
doctorate at the University of Nebraska, and worked at the University of
Minnesota from 1975 to 1977. Nasser al-Awlaki served as Agriculture Minister
and as President of Sana'a University. He was a prominent member of then-Yemeni
President Ali Abdullah Saleh's ruling party. Yemen's Prime Minister from 2007
to 2011, Ali Mohammed Mujur, was a relative of al-Awlaki.
In
1978, when al-Awlaki was seven years old, he returned with his family to Yemen.
He lived in Yemen for 11 years, where he studied at Azal Modern School.
In
1991, al-Awlaki returned to the U.S. state of Colorado to attend college. He
earned a B.S. in Civil Engineering from Colorado State University (1994), where
he was president of the Muslim Student Association. He attended the university
on a foreign student visa and a government scholarship from Yemen, claiming to
be born in that country, according to a former U.S. security agent. He spent a
summer of his college years training with the Afghan mujahideen.
Al-Awlaki
also studied Education Leadership at San Diego State University, though he
never completed his degree there. He worked on a doctorate degree in Human
Resource Development at George Washington University Graduate School of
Education & Human Development from January to December 2001.
Islamic education
Al-Awlaki's
Islamic education was primarily informal, and consisted of intermittent months
with various scholars (including the Salafi teacher ibn Uthaymeen),
reading and contemplating works by several prominent Islamic scholars. Some
Muslim scholars said they did not understand al‑Awlaki's popularity, because
while he spoke fluent English and could therefore reach a large
non-Arabic-speaking audience, he lacked formal Islamic training and study.
Ideology
Awlaki
was said to have developed an animosity towards the U.S. and became a proponent
of Takfiri and Jihadi thinking, while retaining Islamism.
While imprisoned in Yemen after 2004, al-Awlaki became influenced by the works
of Sayyid Qutb, an originator of the contemporary "anti-Western Jihadist
movement". He read 150–200 pages a day of Qutb's works, and described
himself as "so immersed with the author I would feel Sayyid was with me in
my cell speaking to me directly".
He
later became noted for attracting young men to his lectures, especially
U.S.-based and U.K.-based Muslims. Terrorism consultant Evan Kohlmann in 2009
referred to al-Awlaki as "one of the principal jihadi luminaries
for would-be homegrown terrorists. His fluency with English, his unabashed
advocacy of jihad and mujahideen organizations, and his Web-savvy
approach are a powerful combination." He called al-Awlaki's lecture,
"Constants on the Path of Jihad", which he says was based on a
similar document written by al-Qaeda's founder, the "virtual bible for
lone-wolf Muslim extremists". Philip Mudd, formerly of the CIA's Counterterrorism
Center and the FBI's top intelligence adviser, called him "a
magnetic character … a powerful orator."
U.S.
officials and some U.S. media sources called al-Awlaki an Islamic
fundamentalist and accused him of encouraging terrorism. According to documents
recovered from Bin Laden's hideout, the Al-Qaeda leader was unsure about
al-Awlaki's qualifications.
Later
life, and ties to terrorism
In
the United States; 1990–2002
Soon
after his return to the U.S. in 1990 to attend college, al-Awlaki applied for a
Social Security number, falsely giving his birthplace as Yemen rather than the
U.S. He may have been trying to qualify for scholarships reserved for foreign
students.
In
1993, while still a college student in Colorado State's civil engineering
program, al-Awlaki visited Afghanistan in the aftermath of the Soviet
occupation. He was depressed by the country's poverty and hunger, and
"wouldn't have gone with al-Qaeda," according to friends from
Colorado State, who said he was profoundly affected by the trip. At the time of
his visit, much of Afghanistan was under the control of various Mujahideen
factions, and the U.S. also supported the defeat of the Russians there. Mullah
Mohammed Omar did not form the Taliban until 1994. When Awlaki returned to
campus, he showed increased interest in politics and religion, and quoted from
the prominent Palestinian scholar Abdullah Azzam, who provided theological
justification for the Afghan jihad. Azzam was later said to influence Osama
bin Laden.
In
1994, Awlaki married a cousin from Yemen, and began service as a part-time imam
of the Denver Islamic Society, where he preached "eloquently against vice
and sin." In 1996, he was chastised by an elder for encouraging a Saudi
student to fight in Chechnya against the Russians. He left Denver soon after,
moving to San Diego.
From
1996–2000, al-Awlaki served as imam of the Masjid Ar-Ribat al-Islami mosque at
the edge of San Diego, California, where he had a following of 200–300 people.
U.S. officials would later allege that Nawaf al-Hazmi and Khalid al-Mihdhar,
who became the hijackers of American Airlines Flight 77, attended
his sermons and met personally with Awlaki during this period. Hazmi later
lived in Northern Virginia and attended Awlaki's mosque there. The 9/11
Commission Report said that the hijackers "reportedly respected
[al-Awlaki] as a religious figure". While in San Diego, al-Awlaki was
known for the time he spent with youth, for his interest in fishing, for his
discussions of travels with friends, and for a popular and lucrative series of
lectures that he recorded.
In
August 1996 and in April 1997, al-Awlaki was arrested in San Diego and charged
with soliciting prostitutes. In the first instance, he pled guilty to a lesser
charge on condition of entering an AIDS education program, and paying $400 in
fines and restitution. The second time, he pled guilty to soliciting a
prostitute, and was sentenced to three years' probation, fined $240, and
ordered to perform 12 days of community service.
In
1998 and 1999, he served as vice-president for the Charitable Society for
Social Welfare (CSSW). Years later in 2004, the FBI testified that this group
was a "front organization to funnel money to terrorists". Though the
FBI investigated Awlaki from June 1999 through March 2000 for possible links to
Hamas, the Bin Laden contact Ziyad Khaleel, and a visit by an associate of Omar
Abdel Rahman, it did not find sufficient evidence for a criminal prosecution.
Al-Awlaki told reporters that he resigned from leading the San Diego mosque
"after an uneventful four years," and took a brief sabbatical,
traveling overseas to various countries.
In
January 2001 after returning to the US, al-Awlaki settled on the East Coast in
the Washington Metropolitan Area. There, he served as imam at the Dar al-Hijrah
mosque near Falls Church, Virginia, serving Muslims in Northern Virginia. He
also led academic discussions frequented by FBI Director of
Counter-Intelligence for the Middle East Gordon M. Snow. Al-Awlaki also served
as the Muslim chaplain at George Washington University, where he was hired by
Esam Omeish.
Omeish
said in 2004 that he was convinced that al-Awlaki: "has no inclination or
active involvement in any events or circumstances that have to do with
terrorism". Fluent in English, known for giving eloquent talks on Islam,
and with a mandate to attract young non-Arabic speakers, Awlaki "was the
magic bullet", according to the mosque spokesman Johari Abdul-Malik;
"he had everything all in a box;" "he had an allure. He was
charming."
When
police investigating the 9/11 attacks raided the Hamburg, Germany, apartment of
Ramzi bin al-Shibh, they found the telephone number of al-Awlaki among bin
al-Shibh's personal contacts. The FBI interviewed al-Awlaki four times in the
eight days following the 9/11 attacks. One detective later told the 9/11
Commission he believed al-Awlaki "was at the center of the 9/11
story". And an FBI agent said,"if anyone had knowledge of the plot,
it would have been" him, since "someone had to be in the U.S. and
keep the hijackers spiritually focused". One 9/11 Commission staff member
said: "Do I think he played a role in helping the hijackers here, knowing
they were up to something? Yes. Do I think he was sent here for that purpose? I
have no evidence for it." A separate Congressional Joint Inquiry into the
9/11 attacks suggested that al-Awlaki may have been part of a support network
for the hijackers, according to its director, Eleanor Hill. In 2003,
Representative Anna Eshoo (D-CA), a member of the House Intelligence Committee
said, "In my view, he is more than a coincidental figure."
Soon
after the 9/11 attacks, Awlaki was sought in Washington, DC as a media source
to answer questions about Islam and its rituals, and its relation to the
attacks. He was interviewed by National Geographic, The New York
Times, and other media. Al-Awlaki condemned the attacks, stating,
There is no way that the people who did this could be Muslim, and if they claim to be Muslim, then they have perverted their religion." He noted that others might "say that Muslim land is now invaded by the U.S., there are U.S. soldiers stationed in Saudi Arabia and in the Gulf. And then, the state of Israel is an occupying force which is supported by the U.S.
According
to an NPR report in 2010, in 2001 al-Awlaki appeared to be a moderate who could
"bridge the gap between the United States and the worldwide community of
Muslims." The New York Times said at the time that he was
"held up as a new generation of Muslim leader capable of merging East and
West."
Six
days after the 9/11 attacks, al-Awlaki suggested in writing on the IslamOnline.net
website that Israeli intelligence agents might have been responsible for the
attacks, and that the FBI "went into the roster of the airplanes, and
whoever has a Muslim or Arab name became the hijacker by default".
In
2010, FOX and the New York New York Daily News reported that months
after the 9/11 attacks, a Pentagon employee invited al-Awlaki to a luncheon in
the Secretary's Office of General Counsel. The U.S. Secretary of the Army had
asked for a presentation from a moderate Muslim as part of an outreach effort
to ease tensions with Muslim-Americans.
In
2002, al-Awlaki was the first imam to conduct a prayer service for the
Congressional Muslim Staffer Association at the U.S. Capitol. The prayers were
for Muslim congressional staffers and officials for the Council on
American-Islamic Relations (CAIR). The 2002 PBS documentary, Legacy of a
Prophet, includes a brief appearance of al-Awlaki with this group. That
year Nidal Malik Hasan visited his mosque when Awlaki presided over the funeral
of Hasan's mother. In November 2009 the psychiatrist was the primary suspect in
the Fort Hood shooting. Hasan usually attended a mosque in Maryland closer to
where he lived while working at the Walter Reed Medical Center (2003–09).
Weeks
later in 2002, the imam posted an essay in Arabic entitled, "Why Muslims
Love Death," on the Islam Today website, praising the Palestinian
suicide bombers. Months later, in a videotaped lecture broadcast in English in
a London mosque, he lauded the men. By July 2002, al-Awlaki was under investigation
in the U.S. for having been sent money by the subject of a U.S. Joint Terrorism
Task Force investigation. His name was placed on an early version of what is
now the federal terror watch list.
In
June 2002, a Denver federal judge signed an arrest warrant for al-Awlaki for
passport fraud. On October 9, the Denver U.S. Attorney's Office filed a motion
to dismiss its complaint, and vacate the arrest warrant. Prosecutors believed
that they lacked sufficient evidence of a crime, according to U.S. Attorney
Dave Gaouette, who authorized its withdrawal. Al-Awlaki had listed Yemen rather
than the United States as his place of birth on his 1990 application for a U.S.
Social Security number, soon after arriving in the US. "The bizarre thing
is if you put Yemen down (on the application), it would be harder to get a
Social Security number than to say you are a native-born citizen of Las
Cruces", Gaouette said.
Al-Awlaki
used this documentation to obtain a passport in 1993. He later corrected his
place of birth to Las Cruces, New Mexico.
Prosecutors
could not charge him in October 2002, when he returned from a trip abroad,
because a 10-year statute of limitations on lying to the Social Security
Administration had expired. The motion for rescinding the arrest warrant was
approved by a magistrate judge on October 10, and filed on October 11.
According to a 2012 investigative report by Fox News, the arrest warrant for
passport fraud was still in effect on the morning of Oct 10, 2002, when FBI
Agent Wade Ammerman ordered al-Awlaki's release. U.S. Congressman Frank Wolf
(R-VA) and several congressional committees are urging FBI Director Robert
Mueller to provide an explanation about the bureau’s interactions with
al-Awlaki, including why he was released from federal custody when there was an
outstanding warrant for his arrest.
ABC News
reported in 2009 that the decision to cancel the arrest warrant outraged
members of a Joint Terrorism Task Force in San Diego at the time. They were
monitoring al-Awlaki and wanted to "look at him under a microscope".
But U.S. Attorney Gaouette said that no objection had been raised to the
rescinding of the warrant during a meeting including Ray Fournier. He was the
San Diego federal diplomatic security agent whose allegation had set in motion
the effort to obtain a warrant. Gaouette said that if al-Awlaki had been
convicted at the time, he would have faced about 6 months in custody.
The New York Times suggested later that al-Awlaki had claimed birth in
Yemen (his family's place of origin) to qualify for scholarship money granted
to foreign citizens. U.S. Congressman Frank R. Wolf (R-VA) wrote in May 2010
that it was his understanding that by doing so, al-Awlaki fraudulently obtained
more than $20,000 in scholarship funds reserved for foreign students, for which
he was not legally eligible.
While
living in Northern Virginia, al-Awlaki visited Ali al-Timimi, later known as a
radical Islamic cleric. Al-Timimi was convicted in 2005 and is now serving a
life sentence for leading the Virginia Jihad Network, inciting Muslim followers
to fight with the Taliban against the U.S.
al-Awlaki booked for soliciting prostitution,
1997 (photo: San Diego PD, via KPBS)
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9/11 hijacker Nawaf
al-Hazmi, for whom al-Awlaki was reportedly a spiritual adviser in San
Diego
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In
the United Kingdom; 2002–04
Al-Awlaki
left the U.S. before the end of 2002, because of a "climate of fear and
intimidation" according to Imam Johari Abdul-Malik of the Dar al-Hijrah
mosque.
Moving
to the UK for several months, he gave talks to up to 200 youths at a time. He
urged young Muslim followers: "The important lesson to learn here is
never, ever trust a kuffar [non-Muslim]. Do not trust them! [They] are
plotting to kill this religion. They're plotting night and day." "He
was the main man who translated the jihad into English," said a
student who attended his lectures in 2003.
He
gave a series of lectures in December 2002 and January 2003 at the London
Masjid al-Tawhid mosque, describing the rewards martyrs receive in paradise,
and developing a following among ultraconservative young Muslims. He was a
"distinguished guest" speaker at the U.K.'s Federation of Student
Islamic Societies' (FOSIS) annual dinner in 2003. He began a grand lecture tour
of Britain, from London to Aberdeen, as part of a campaign by the Muslim
Association of Britain. He also lectured for the Islamic Forum Europe (IFE),
based at the East London Mosque, and appeared at an event at the East London
Mosque in which he told his audience: "A Muslim is a brother of a Muslim…
he does not betray him, and he does not hand him over… You don't hand over a
Muslim to the enemies."
In
Britain's Parliament in 2003, Louise Ellman, MP for Liverpool Riverside,
discussed the relationship between al-Awlaki and the Muslim Association of
Britain (MAB), a Muslim Brotherhood front organization founded by Kemal
el-Helbawy, a senior member of the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood.
In
Yemen; 2004–11
Al-Awlaki
returned to Yemen in early 2004, and lived in his ancestral village in the
southern province of Shabwa with his wife and five children. He lectured at
Iman University, headed by Abdul Majeed al-Zindani. The latter has been
included on the UN 1267 Committee's list of individuals belonging to or
associated with al-Qaida. Some believe that the school's curriculum deals
mostly, if not exclusively, with radical Islamic studies, and that it is an
incubator of radicalism. The American convert, John Walker Lindh, and some
other alumni have been accused of terrorism. Al-Zindani denied having any
influence over al-Awlaki, or that he had been his "direct teacher".
On
August 31, 2006, al-Awlaki was arrested with four others on charges of
kidnapping a Shiite teenager for ransom, and participating in an al-Qaeda plot
to kidnap a U.S. military attaché. He was imprisoned in 2006 and 2007,
reportedly under American pressure on the Yemeni authorities. He was
interviewed around September 2007 by two FBI agents with regard to the 9/11
attacks and other subjects, and John Negroponte, the U.S. Director of National
Intelligence, told Yemeni officials he did not object to al-Awlaki's detention.
His
name was on a list of 100 prisoners whose release was sought by al-Qaeda-linked
militants in Yemen. After 18 months in a Yemeni prison, al-Awlaki was released
on December 12, 2007, following the intercession of his tribe. According to a
Yemeni security official, this indicated the U.S. did not insist on his
incarceration, and that he said he repented. He moved to his family home in
Saeed, a hamlet in the rugged Shabwa mountains.
Moazzam
Begg's Cageprisoners, an organization representing former Guantanamo detainees,
campaigned for al-Awlaki's release when he was in prison in Yemen. Shortly after
his release, Begg obtained an exclusive telephone interview with him. According
to Begg, prior to his incarceration in Yemen, al-Awlaki had condemned the 9/11
attacks.
Some
analysts believe that al-Awlaki became radicalized by his prison experience. In
December 2008, al-Awlaki sent a communique to the Somalian terrorist group,
al-Shabaab, congratulating them. He thanked them for
"giving us a living example of how we as Muslims should proceed to change our situation. The ballot has failed us, but the bullet has not." In conclusion, he wrote: "if my circumstances would have allowed, I would not have hesitated in joining you and being a soldier in your ranks."
Al-Awlaki
provided al-Qaeda members in Yemen with the protection of his powerful tribe,
the Awlakis, against the government. The tribal code required it to protect
those who seek refuge and assistance. This imperative has greater force when
the person is a member of the tribe, or a tribesman's friend. The tribe's motto
is "We are the sparks of Hell; whomever interferes with us will be
burned." Al-Awlaki also reportedly helped negotiate deals with leaders of
other tribes.
Sought
by Yemeni authorities with regard to an investigation into his al-Qaeda ties,
al-Awlaki avoided detection. According to his father, al-Awlaki disappeared and
went into hiding in approximately March 2009. By December 2009, al-Awlaki was
on the Yemen government's most-wanted list. He was believed to be hiding in
Yemen's rugged Shabwa or Mareb regions, which are part of the so-called
"triangle of evil." (It is known as an area attracting al-Qaeda
militants seeking refuge among local tribes who are unhappy with Yemen's
central government).
Yemeni
sources originally said al-Awlaki might have been killed in a pre-dawn air
strike by Yemeni Air Force fighter jets on a meeting of senior al-Qaeda leaders
at a hideout in Rafd, a remote mountain valley in eastern Shabwa, on December
24, 2009. But he survived. Pravda reported that the planes, using Saudi
Arabian and U.S. intelligence aid, killed at least 30 al-Qaeda members from
Yemen and abroad, and that an al-Awlaki house was "raided and
demolished". On December 28 The Washington Post reported that U.S.
and Yemeni officials said that al-Awlaki had attended the al-Qaeda meeting.
Abdul Elah al-Shaya, a Yemeni journalist, said the former imam called him on
December 28, said that he was well and had not attended the al-Qaeda meeting.
Al-Shaya insisted that al-Awlaki was not tied to al-Qaeda. He did not address
whether he was connected to the Nigerian, Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, who had
tried to bomb the plane in Detroit on Christmas Day 2009.
In
March 2010, a tape featuring al-Awlaki was released in which he urged Muslims
residing in the U.S. to attack their country of residence. In the video, he
stated:
To the Muslims in America, I have this to say: How can your conscience allow you to live in peaceful coexistence with a nation that is responsible for the tyranny and crimes committed against your own brothers and sisters? I eventually came to the conclusion that jihad (holy struggle) against America is binding upon myself just as it is binding upon every other able Muslim.
In
July 2010, a Seattle cartoonist was warned by the FBI of a death threat against
him issued by al-Awlaki in the al-Qaeda magazine Inspire. Eight other
cartoonists, journalists, and writers from Britain, Sweden and Denmark were
also threatened with death. "The prophet is the pinnacle of Jihad",
al-Awlaki wrote. "It is better to support the prophet by attacking those
who slander him than it is to travel to land of Jihad like Iraq or
Afghanistan."
"He's the most dangerous man in Yemen. He's intelligent, sophisticated, Internet-savvy, and very charismatic. He can sell anything to anyone, and right now he's selling jihad".— Yemeni official familiar with counterterrorism operations
Reaching
out to the United Kingdom
After
2006, al-Awlaki was banned from entering the United Kingdom. He broadcast
lectures to mosques and other venues there via video-link from 2007 to 2009, on
at least seven occasions at five locations in Britain. The East London Mosque
provoked the outrage of The Daily Telegraph by allowing Noor Pro Media
Events to hold a conference on New Year's Day 2009, showing a videotaped
lecture by al-Awlaki; former Shadow Home Secretary Dominic Grieve expressed
concern over his being featured.
He
also gave video-link talks in England to an Islamic student society at the
University of Westminster in September 2008, an arts center in East London in
April 2009 (after the Tower Hamlets council gave its approval), worshippers at
the Al Huda Mosque in Bradford, and a dinner of the Cageprisoners organization
in September 2008 at the Wandsworth Civic Centre in South London. On August 23,
2009, al-Awlaki was banned by local authorities in Kensington and Chelsea,
London, from speaking at Kensington Town Hall via videolink to a fundraiser
dinner for Guantanamo detainees promoted by Cageprisoners. His videos, which
discuss his Islamist theories, have also been circulated across the United
Kingdom. Until February 2010, hundreds of audio tapes of his sermons were
available at the Tower Hamlets public libraries. In 2010 it was reported that
the London-based Islam Channel had in 2009 carried advertisements for DVDs of
al-Awlaki's sermons and for at least two events at which he was to speak via
video link.
Charles E. Allen, former U.S.
Undersecretary for Homeland Security, in 2008 publicly warned that
al-Awlaki was targeting Muslims with online lectures encouraging terrorist
attacks.
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Other
connections
Main
article: People linked to Anwar al-Awlaki
BI
agents had identified al-Awlaki as a known, important "senior recruiter
for al Qaeda", and a spiritual motivator.
Al-Awlaki's
name came up in a dozen terrorism plots in the U.S., UK, and Canada. The cases
included suicide bombers in the 2005 London bombings, radical Islamic
terrorists in the 2006 Toronto terrorism case, radical Islamic terrorists in
the 2007 Fort Dix attack plot, the jihadist killer in the 2009 Little
Rock military recruiting office shooting, and the 2010 Times Square bomber. In
each case the suspects were devoted to al-Awlaki's message, which they listened
to on laptops, audio clips, and CDs.
Al-Awlaki's
recorded lectures were also an inspiration to Islamist fundamentalists who
comprised at least six terror cells in the UK through 2009. Michael Finton
(Talib Islam), who attempted in September 2009, to bomb the Federal Building
and the adjacent offices of Congressman Aaron Schock in Springfield, Illinois,
admired al-Awlaki and quoted him on his Myspace page. In addition to his
website, al-Awlaki had a Facebook fan page with a substantial percentage of
"fans" from the U.S., many of whom were high school students.
Al-Awlaki
influenced several other extremists to join terrorist organizations overseas
and to carry out terrorist attacks in their home countries. Mohamed Alessa and
Carlos Almonte, two American citizens from New Jersey who attempted to travel
to Somalia in June 2010 to join Al Shabaab, the al-Qaeda-linked terrorist group
based there—allegedly watched several al-Awlaki videos and sermons in which
al-Awlaki warned of future attacks against Americans in the U.S. and abroad.
Zachary Chesser (nicknamed Abu Talha al-Amrikee), another American citizen who
was arrested for attempting to provide material support to Al Shabaab, also told
federal authorities that he watched online videos featuring al-Awlaki and that
he exchanged several e-mails with al-Awlaki. In July 2010, Paul Rockwood
pleaded guilty to, and received an eight-year prison sentence for, assembling a
hit list of 15 targets for assassination or bomb attacks within the U.S. of
people who he felt had desecrated Islam. Rockwood admitted to having become a
"strict adherent to the violent jihad-promoting ideology of cleric
[Awlaki]", which "included a personal conviction that it was
[Rockwood's] religious responsibility to exact revenge by death on anyone who
desecrated Islam", and following al-Awlaki's ideology, "including
devotion to [Awlaki's] violence-promoting works, Constants on the Path to
Jihad and 44 Ways to Jihad".
In
October 2008, Charles Allen, U.S. Undersecretary of Homeland Security for
Intelligence and Analysis, warned that al-Awlaki "targets U.S. Muslims
with radical online lectures encouraging terrorist attacks from his new home in
Yemen." Responding to Allen, al-Awlaki wrote on his website in December
2008: "I would challenge him to come up with just one such lecture where I
encourage 'terrorist attacks'".
U.S. Army Major Nidal Malik Hasan, named as the
shooter in the November 5, 2009 Fort Hood mass shooting. Photograph released by
the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences.
At the time of the photo, Hasan was a Captain.
|
Fort
Hood shooter
Fort Hood shooter Nidal
Malik Hasan was investigated by the FBI after intelligence agencies
intercepted at least 18 e-mails between him and al-Awlaki between December 2008
and June 2009. Even before the contents of the e-mails were revealed, terrorism
expert Jarret Brachman said that Hasan's contacts with al-Awlaki should have
raised "huge red flags". According to Brachman, al-Awlaki is a major
influence on radical English-speaking jihadis internationally. The
Wall Street Journal reported that "There is no indication Mr. Awlaki
played a direct role in any of the attacks, and he has never been indicted in
the U.S."
In
one of the e-mails, Hasan wrote al-Awlaki: "I can't wait to join you [in
the afterlife]". "It sounds like code words," said Lt. Col. Tony
Shaffer, a military analyst at the Center for Advanced Defense Studies.
"That he's actually either offering himself up, or that he's already
crossed that line in his own mind." Hasan also asked al-Awlaki when jihad
is appropriate, and whether it is permissible if innocents are killed in a
suicide attack. In the months before the attacks, Hasan increased his contacts
with al-Awlaki to discuss how to transfer funds abroad without coming to the
attention of law authorities.
A
DC-based Joint Terrorism Task Force operating under the FBI was notified of the
e-mails, and reviewed the information. Army employees were informed of the
e-mails, but they didn't perceive any terrorist threat in Hasan's questions.
Instead, they viewed them as general questions about spiritual guidance with
regard to conflicts between Islam and military service, and judged them to be
consistent with legitimate mental health research about Muslims in the armed
services. The assessment was that there was not sufficient information for a
larger investigation.
Charles
Allen, no longer in government, said:
I find it difficult to understand why an Army major would be in repeated contact with an Islamic extremist like Anwar al-Awlaki, who preaches a hateful ideology directed at inciting violence against the United States and the West… It is hard to see how repeated contact would in any legitimate way further his research as a psychiatrist.
And
former CIA officer Bruce Riedel opined: "E-mailing a known al-Qaeda
sympathizer should have set off alarm bells. Even if he was exchanging recipes,
the bureau should have put out an alert."
Al-Awlaki
had set up a website, with a blog on which he shared his views. On December 11,
2008, he condemned any Muslim who seeks a religious decree "that would
allow him to serve in the armies of the disbelievers and fight against his
brothers".
In
"44 Ways to Support Jihad", another sermon posted on his blog
in February 2009, al-Awlaki encouraged others to "fight jihad",
and explained how to give money to the mujahideen or their families
after they've died. Al-Awlaki's sermon also encouraged others to conduct
weapons training, and raise children "on the love of Jihad".
Also that month, he wrote: "I pray that Allah destroys America and all its
allies." He wrote as well: "We will implement the rule of Allah on
Earth by the tip of the sword, whether the masses like it or not." On July
14, he criticized armies of Muslim countries that assist the U.S. military,
saying, "the blame should be placed on the soldier who is willing to
follow orders … who sells his religion for a few dollars." In a sermon on
his blog on July 15, 2009, entitled "Fighting Against Government Armies in
the Muslim World", al-Awlaki wrote, "Blessed are those who fight
against [American soldiers], and blessed are those shuhada [martyrs] who are
killed by them."
A
fellow Muslim officer at Fort Hood said Hasan's eyes "lit up" when
gushing about al-Awlaki's teachings. Some investigators believe that Hasan's
contacts with al-Awlaki are what pushed him toward violence.
After
the Fort Hood shooting, on his now temporarily inoperable website (apparently
because some web hosting companies took it down), al-Awlaki praised Hasan's
actions:
Nidal Hassan is a hero.... The U.S. is leading the war against terrorism, which in reality is a war against Islam..... Nidal opened fire on soldiers who were on their way to be deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan. How can there be any dispute about the virtue of what he has done? In fact the only way a Muslim could Islamically justify serving as a soldier in the U.S. army is if his intention is to follow the footsteps of men like Nidal.The fact that fighting against the U.S. army is an Islamic duty today cannot be disputed. No scholar with a grain of Islamic knowledge can defy the clear cut proofs that Muslims today have the right—rather the duty—to fight against American tyranny. Nidal has killed soldiers who were about to be deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan in order to kill Muslims. The American Muslims who condemned his actions have committed treason against the Muslim Ummah and have fallen into hypocrisy.... May Allah grant our brother Nidal patience, perseverance, and steadfastness, and we ask Allah to accept from him his great heroic act. Ameen.
Yemeni
journalist Abdulelah Hider Shaea interviewed al-Awlaki in November 2009.
Al-Awlaki acknowledged his correspondence with Hasan. He said he "neither
ordered nor pressured … Hasan to harm Americans." Al-Awlaki said Hasan
first e-mailed him December 17, 2008, introducing himself by writing: "Do
you remember me? I used to pray with you at the Virginia mosque." Hasan
said he had become a devout Muslim around the time al-Awlaki was preaching at
Dar al-Hijrah, in 2001 and 2002, and al-Awlakisaid 'Maybe Nidal was affected by
one of my lectures.'" He added: "It was clear from his e-mails that
Nidal trusted me. Nidal told me: 'I speak with you about issues that I never
speak with anyone else.'" Al-Awlaki said Hasan arrived at his own
conclusions regarding the acceptability of violence in Islam, and said he was
not the one to initiate this. Shaea said, "Nidal was providing evidence to
Anwar, not vice versa."
Asked
whether Hasan mentioned Fort Hood as a target in his e-mails, Shaea declined to
comment. However, al-Awlaki said the shooting was acceptable in Islam because
it was a form of jihad, as the West began the hostilities with the
Muslims. Al-Awlaki said he "blessed the act because it was against a
military target. And the soldiers who were killed were … those who were trained
and prepared to go to Iraq and Afghanistan".
Al-Awlaki
released a tape in March 2010, in which he said, in part:
To the American people … Obama has promised that his administration will be one of transparency, but he has not fulfilled his promise. His administration tried to portray the operation of brother Nidal Hasan as an individual act of violence from an estranged individual. The administration practiced to control on the leak of information concerning the operation, in order to cushion the reaction of the American public.Until this moment the administration is refusing to release the e-mails exchanged between myself and Nidal. And after the operation of our brother Umar Farouk, the initial comments coming from the administration were looking the same – another attempt at covering up the truth. But al-Qaeda cut off Obama from deceiving the world again by issuing their statement claiming responsibility for the operation.
Christmas
Day "Underwear Bomber"
Al-Awlaki
and Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, the convicted
al-Qaeda attempted bomber of Northwest Airlines Flight 253 on December 25,
2009, had contacts according to a number of sources. In January 2010, CNN
reported that U.S. "security sources" said that there is concrete
evidence that al-Awlaki was Abdulmutallab's recruiter and one of his trainers,
and met with him prior to the attack. In February 2010, al-Awlaki admitted in
an interview published in al-Jazeera that he taught and corresponded
with Abdulmutallab, but denied having ordered the attack.
Representative
Pete Hoekstra, the senior Republican on the House Intelligence Committee, said
officials in the Obama administration and officials with access to law
enforcement information told him the suspect "had contact [with
al-Awlaki]".
The Sunday Times
established that Abdulmutallab first met al-Awlaki in 2005 in Yemen, while he
was studying Arabic. During that time the suspect attended lectures by
al-Awlaki. The two are also "thought to have met" in London,
according to The Daily Mail.
NPR
reported that according to unnamed U.S. intelligence officials he attended a
sermon by al-Awlaki at the Finsbury Park Mosque. Khalid Mahmood, the Labour MP
for Birmingham Perry Barr, who resigned as trustee of the mosque, pointed to
the NPR report in expressing "grave misgivings" with regard to the
stewardship of the mosque. The Finsbury Park Mosque stated, however:
Neither
Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab nor Anwar al-Awlaki has ever been invited to attend
NLCM since we took charge of the mosque in February 2005. We can be certain
that neither man has been given a platform at the mosque in any form and in the
case of Anwar al-Awlaki we can be confident that he would not have been able to
enter the mosque without his presence being brought to our attention.
Abdulmutallab
was also reported to have attended a talk by al-Awlaki at the East London
Mosque, which al-Awlaki may have attended by video teleconference, according to
CBS News, The Daily Telegraph, and The Sunday Telegraph.
However, The Sunday Telegraph later removed the report from its website
following a complaint by the East London Mosque, which stated that "Anwar
Al Awlaki did not deliver any talks at the ELM between 2005 and 2008, which is
when the newspaper had falsely alleged that Abdullmutallab had attended such
talks".
Evidence
collected during searches of flats connected to Abdulmutallab in London
indicated that he was a "big fan" of al-Awlaki, as web traffic showed
he followed al-Awlaki's blog and website.
The
suspect was "on American security watch-lists because of his links with …
al-Awlaki", according to University of Oxford historian, and professor of
international relations, Mark Almond.
The
two were communicating in the months before the bombing attempt, reported CBS
News, and CBS reported that sources said that al-Awlaki at a minimum
was providing spiritual support. According to federal sources, over the year
prior to the attack, Abdulmutallab intensified electronic communications with
al-Awlaki. "Voice-to-voice communication" between the two was
intercepted during the fall of 2009, and one government source said al-Awlaki
"was in some way involved in facilitating [Abdulmutallab]'s transportation
or trip through Yemen. It could be training, a host of things." NPR
reported that intelligence officials it did not name suspect al-Awlaki may have
directed Abdulmutallab to Yemen for al-Qaeda training.
Abdulmutallab
told the FBI that al-Awlaki was one of his al-Qaeda trainers in remote camps in
Yemen. And there were confirming "informed reports" that
Abdulmutallab met with al-Awlaki during his final weeks of training and
indoctrination prior to the attack. The Los Angeles Times reported that
according to a U.S. intelligence official, intercepts and other information
point to connections between the two:
Some of the information … comes from Abdulmutallab, who … said that he met with al-Awlaki and senior al-Qaeda members during an extended trip to Yemen this year, and that the cleric was involved in some elements of planning or preparing the attack and in providing religious justification for it. Other intelligence linking the two became apparent after the attempted bombing, including communications intercepted by the National Security Agency indicating that the cleric was meeting with "a Nigerian" in preparation for some kind of operation.
Yemen's
Deputy Prime Minister for Defense and Security Affairs, Rashad Mohammed
al-Alimi, said Yemeni investigators believe that in October 2009 the suspect
traveled to Shabwa. There, he met with al-Qaeda members in a house built by
al-Awlaki and used by al-Awlaki to hold theological sessions, and Abdulmutallab
was trained there and equipped there with his explosives. A top Yemen
government official said the two met with each other.
In
January 2010, al-Awlaki acknowledged that he met and spoke with Abdulmutallab
in Yemen in the fall of 2009. In an interview, al-Awlaki said: "Umar
Farouk is one of my students; I had communications with him. And I support what
he did." He also said: "I did not tell him to do this operation, but
I support it," adding that he was proud of Abdulmutallab. Separately,
al-Awlaki asked Yemen's conservative religious scholars to call for the killing
of U.S. military and intelligence officials who assist Yemen's
counter-terrorism program. Fox News reported in early February 2010 that
Abdulmutallab told federal investigators that al-Awlaki directed him to carry
out the bombing.
In
his March 2010 tape, al-Awlaki also said:
To the American people … nine years after 9/11, nine years of spending, and nine years of beefing up security you are still unsafe even in the holiest and most sacred of days to you, Christmas Day…. Our brother Umar Farouk has succeeded in breaking through the security systems that have cost the U.S. government alone over 40 billion dollars since 9/11.
In
June 2010 Michael Leiter, the Director of the U.S. National Counterterrorism
Center (NCTC), said al-Awlaki had a "direct operational role" in the
plot.
Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, the Northwest Airlines Flight 253 suspected bomber |
Sharif
Mobley
Alleged
al-Qaeda member Sharif Mobley, who is charged with having killed a guard during
a March 2010 escape attempt in Yemen, left his home in U.S state of New Jersey
to seek out al-Awlaki, hoping that al-Awlaki would become his al-Qaeda mentor,
according to senior U.S. security officials as reported by CNN. He was
in contact with al-Awlaki, according to officials from the U.S. and Yemen, The
New York Times reported. A Yemeni embassy spokesman in Washington, D.C.,
said he was not surprised by al-Awlaki's apparent links to Mobley, calling
al-Awlaki: "a fixture in jihad 101".
Times
Square bomber
Faisal Shahzad, convicted of the attempted
car bombing of Times Square in May 2010, told interrogators that he
was "inspired by" al-Awlaki. Shahzad said he was moved to action, at
least in part, by al-Awlaki's English-language writings calling for holy war
against Western targets, and he was a "fan and follower" of
al-Awlaki. On May 6, 2010 ABC News reported that unknown sources told
them Shahzad made contact with al-Awlaki over the internet, a claim that could
not be independently verified.
Stabbing
of British former minister Stephen Timms
After
becoming radicalized by online sermons of al-Awlaki, Roshonara Choudhry stabbed
British former Cabinet Minister Stephen Timms in May 2010. On November 4, 2010,
she was sentenced at the Old Bailey in London to life imprisonment for
attempted murder.
Seattle
Weekly cartoonist death threat
In
2010, cartoonist Molly Norris at Seattle Weekly had to stop publishing,
and at the suggestion of the FBI change her name, move, and go into hiding due
to a Fatwā calling for her death issued by al-Awlaki, after Everybody
Draw Mohammed Day. Al-Awlaki cursed her and eight other cartoonists, authors,
and journalists who are Swedish, Dutch, and British citizens for
"blasphemous caricatures" of the Prophet Muhammad, in the June 2010 issue
of an English-language al-Qaeda magazine that calls itself Inspire,
writing "The medicine prescribed by the Messenger of Allah is the
execution of those involved" . Daniel Pipes observed in an article
entitled "Dueling Fatwas", "Awlaki stands at an unprecedented crossroads
of death declarations, with his targeting Norris even as the U.S. government
targets him."
British
passenger plane plot
British
Home Secretary, Theresa May, said on November 3, 2010, that an associate of
al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, who was in touch with al-Awlaki, had been
arrested in 2010 for allegedly planning a terrorist attack on passenger planes
in Britain.
Cargo
planes bomb plot
The Guardian
and The Daily Telegraph reported that U.S. and British counter-terrorism
officials believe that al-Awlaki was behind the cargo plane PETN bombs that
were sent from Yemen to Chicago in October 2010. The New York Times also
reported that some analysts believe the attempted bombing may be linked to
al-Awlaki. In addition, when U.S. Homeland Security official John Brennan was
asked about al-Awlaki's suspected involvement in the plot, he said:
"Anybody associated with al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula is a subject of
concern." U.S. Ambassador to Yemen Gerald Feierstein said "al-Awlaki
was behind the two … bombs."
Final
years
Officials
stated that the "imminent threat" international legal standard is
used to add names to the C.I.A.'s list of targets.
Al-Awlaki's
father proclaimed his son's innocence in an interview with CNN's Paula Newton,
saying: "I am now afraid of what they will do with my son. He's not Osama
bin Laden, they want to make something out of him that he's not."
Responding to a Yemeni official's claims that his son was hiding in the
southern mountains of Yemen with al-Qaeda, Nasser said: "He's dead wrong.
What do you expect my son to do? There are missiles raining down on the
village. He has to hide. But he is not hiding with al-Qaeda; our tribe is
protecting him right now." The Awlaq tribe is large and powerful, with a number
of connections to the Yemeni government. "He has been wrongly accused,
it's unbelievable. He lived his life in America; he's an all-American
boy", said his father.
The
Yemeni government negotiated with tribal leaders, trying to convince them to
hand al-Awlaki over. Yemeni authorities offered guarantees they would not turn
al-Awlaki over to the U.S. or let him be questioned. The governor of Shabwa
said in January 2010 that al-Awlaki was on the move with a group of al-Qaeda
elements from Shabwa, including Fahd al-Quso, who was wanted in connection with
the bombing of the USS Cole.
"Terrorist No. 1, in terms of threat against us."— Representative Jane Harman, (D-CA), Chairwoman of House Subcommittee on Homeland Security
In
January 2010, White House lawyers considered the legality of attempting to kill
al-Awlaki, given his U.S. citizenship. Opportunities to do so "may have
been missed" because of legal questions surrounding such an attack. But on
February 4, 2010, New York Daily News reported that al-Awlaki was "now
on a targeting list signed off on by the Obama administration".
On
April 6, The New York Times also reported that President Obama had
authorized the killing of al-Awlaki. The CIA and the U.S. military both
maintain lists of terrorists linked to al-Qaeda and its affiliates who are
approved for capture or killing. Because he is a U.S. citizen, his inclusion on
those lists was approved by the National Security Council. U.S. officials said
it is extremely rare, if not unprecedented, for an American to be approved for
targeted killing. The New York Times reported that international law
allows the use of lethal force against people who pose an imminent threat to a
country, and U.S. officials said that was the standard used in adding names to
the target list. In addition, Congress approved the use of military force
against al-Qaeda after 9/11. People on the target list are considered military
enemies of the U.S., and therefore not subject to a ban on political
assassinations approved by former President Gerald Ford. Nevertheless, the
authorization was controversial.
The
powerful al-Awalik tribe responded "We warn against cooperating with
America to kill Sheikh Anwar al-Awlaki. We will not stand by idly and
watch." Al-Awlaki's tribe wrote that it would "not remain with arms
crossed if a hair of Anwar al-Awlaki is touched, or if anyone plots or spies
against him. Whoever risks denouncing our son (Awlaki) will be the target of
Al-Awalik weapons," and gave warning "against co-operating with the
Americans" in the capture or killing of al-Awlaki. Abu Bakr al-Qirbi, the
Yemeni foreign minister, followed by announcing that the Yemeni government had
not received any evidence from the U.S., and that "Anwar al-Awlaki has
always been looked at as a preacher rather than a terrorist and shouldn't be
considered as a terrorist unless the Americans have evidence that he has been
involved in terrorism".
Following
the Northwest Airlines Flight 253 incident David Barron and Martin Lederman,
lawyers in the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel, were tasked to
declare whether deliberately killing Awlaki, despite his citizenship, would be
lawful, assuming it was not feasible to capture him. Confronted by 18 U.S.C §
1119 which states that "A person who, being a national of the United
States, kills or attempts to kill a national of the United States while such
national is outside the United States but within the jurisdiction of another
country shall be punished" both lawyers discovered a 1997 U.S. district
court decision. The case involved a woman who was charged with killing her
child in Japan. The district court judge handling the case ruled that the terse
overseas-killing law must be interpreted as incorporating the exceptions of its
domestic-murder counterpart, writing, “Congress did not intend to criminalize
justifiable or excusable killings.” Both lawyers concluded that the
foreign-killing statute would not impede a drone strike by arguing that it is
not unlawful “murder” when the U.S. government kills an enemy leader in war or
national self-defense.
Al-Awlaki's
e-mail conversations with Hasan were not released, and he was not placed on the
FBI Most Wanted list, indicted for treason, or officially named as a
co-conspirator with Hasan. The U.S. government was reluctant to classify the
Fort Hood shooting as a terrorist incident, or identify any motive. The Wall
Street Journal reported in January 2010 that al-Awlaki: "has never
been indicted in the U.S." Al-Awlaki's father, tribe, and supporters
denied his alleged associations with Al-Qaeda and Islamic terrorism.
"al-Awlaki is the most dangerous ideologue in the world. Unlike bin Laden and al-Zawahiri, he doesn't need subtitles on his videos to indoctrinate and influence young people in the West."— Sajjan M. Gohel, Asia-Pacific Foundation
In
a video clip bearing the imprint of al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, issued
on April 16 in al-Qaeda's monthly magazine Sada Al-Malahem, al-Awlaki
said: "What am I accused of? Of calling for the truth? Of calling for jihad
for the sake of Allah? Of calling to defend the causes of the Islamic
nation?". In the video he also praises both Abdulmutallab and Hasan, and
describes both as his "students".
In
late April, Representative Charlie Dent (R-PA) introduced a resolution urging
the U.S. State Department to issue a "certificate of loss of
nationality" to al-Awlaki. He said al-Awlaki "preaches a culture of
hate" and had been a functioning member of al-Qaeda "since before
9/11", and had effectively renounced his citizenship by engaging in treasonous
acts.
By
May, U.S. officials believed he had become "operational", plotting,
not just inspiring, terrorism against the West. Former colleague Abdul-Malik
said he "is a terrorist, in my book", and advised shops not to carry
even the earlier, non-jihadist al-Awlaki sermons. In an editorial, Investor's
Business Daily called al-Awlaki the "world's most dangerous man",
and recommended that he be added to the FBI's most-wanted terrorist list, a
bounty put on his head, that he be designated a "Specially Designated
Global Terrorist" like Zindani, charged with treason, and extradition
papers filed with the Yemeni government. IBD criticized the Justice
Department for stonewalling Senator Joe Lieberman's security panel's
investigation of al-Awlaki's role in the Fort Hood massacre.
On
July 16, the U.S. Treasury Department added him to its list of Specially
Designated Global Terrorists. As a result, any U.S. bank accounts he may have
had would have been frozen, Americans were forbidden from doing business with him,
and he was banned from traveling to the U.S. Stuart Levey, Under Secretary of
the Treasury for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence, said al-Awlaki:
has proven that he is extraordinarily dangerous, committed to carrying out deadly attacks on Americans and others worldwide … [and] has involved himself in every aspect of the supply chain of terrorism—fundraising for terrorist groups, recruiting and training operatives, and planning and ordering attacks on innocents.
A
few days later, the United Nations Security Council placed al-Awlaki on its UN
Security Council Resolution 1267 list of individuals associated with al-Qaeda,
saying in its summary of reasons that he is a leader of al-Qaeda in the Arabian
Peninsula and was involved in recruiting and training camps. That required U.N.
member states to freeze his assets, impose a travel ban on him, and prevent
weapons from landing in his hands. The following week, the Canadian government
ordered financial institutions to look for and seize any property linked to
al-Awlaki, and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police's senior counter-terrorism
officer Gilles Michaud singled out al-Awlaki as a "major, major factor in
radicalization". In September 2010, Jonathan Evans, the Director General
of the United Kingdom's domestic security and counter-intelligence agency
(MI5), said that al-Awlaki was the West's Public Enemy No 1.
In
October 2010, U.S. Congressman Anthony Weiner (D-NY) urged YouTube to take down
al-Awlaki's videos from its website, saying that by hosting al-Awlaki's
messages, "We are facilitating the recruitment of homegrown terror."
Pauline Neville-Jones, British security minister, said "These Web sites …
incite cold-blooded murder." In November 2010, YouTube removed from its
site some of the hundreds of videos featuring al-Awlaki calls to jihad.
Al-Awlaki
was charged in absentia in Sana'a, Yemen, on November 2 with plotting to
kill foreigners and being a member of al-Qaeda. Ali al-Saneaa, the head of the
prosecutor's office, announced the charges as part of a trial against another
man, Hisham Assem, who had been accused of killing a Frenchman, also saying
that al-Awlaki corresponded with Assem for months, encouraging him to kill
foreigners. The prosecutor said:
Yesterday a regular visitor of bars and discotheques in America … Awlaki today has become the catalyst for shedding the blood of foreigners and security forces. He was chosen by Al-Qaeda to be the lead in many of their criminal operations in Yemen. Awlaki is a figure prone to evil devoid of any conscience, religion, or law.
A
lawyer for al-Awlaki denied he was linked to the Frenchman's murder. On
November 6, Yemeni Judge Mohsen Alwan ordered that al-Awlaki be caught
"dead or alive".
In
a video posted to the internet on November 8, 2010, al-Awlaki called for
Muslims around the world to kill Americans "without hesitation", and
overthrow Arab leaders. He said that no fatwa (special clerical ruling)
is required to kill Americans: "Don't consult with anyone in fighting the
Americans, fighting the devil doesn't require consultation or prayers or
seeking divine guidance. They are the party of the devils." That month,
Intelligence Research Specialist Kevin Yorke of the New York Police
Department's Counterterrorism Division called him "the most dangerous man
in the world".
In
his book Ticking Time Bomb: Counter-Terrorism Lessons from the U.S.
Government's Failure to Prevent the Fort Hood Attack (2011), former U.S.
Senator Joe Lieberman wrote that al-Awlaki, Australian Muslim preacher Feiz
Mohammad, Muslim cleric Abdullah el-Faisal, and Pakistani-American Samir Khan
were examples of a "virtual spiritual sanctioner" who over the
internet provides a level of religious justification for Islamist terrorist
violence.
Lawsuit
against the U.S.
U.S.
officials stated that the "imminent threat" international legal
standard was used to add al-Aulakqi's name to the C.I.A.'s list of people
targeted for killing. In July 2010, al-Awlaki's father, Nasser al-Awlaki,
contracted the Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR) and the American Civil
Liberties Union (ACLU) to represent his son in a lawsuit that sought to remove
Anwar from the targeted killing list. ACLU's Jameel Jaffer said:
the United States is not at war in Yemen, and the government doesn't have a blank check to kill terrorism suspects wherever they are in the world. Among the arguments we'll be making is that, outside actual war zones, the authority to use lethal force is narrowly circumscribed, and preserving the rule of law depends on keeping this authority narrow.
Lawyers
for Specially Designated Global Terrorists must obtain a special license from
the U.S. Treasury Department before they can represent their clients in court.
The lawyers were granted the license on August 4, 2010.
On
August 30, 2010, the groups filed a "targeted killing" lawsuit,
naming President Barack Obama, CIA Director Leon Panetta, and Secretary of
Defense Robert Gates as defendants. They sought an injunction preventing the
targeted killing of al-Awlaki, and also sought to require the government to
disclose the standards under which U.S. citizens may be "targeted for
death". Judge John D. Bates dismissed the lawsuit in an 83-page ruling,
holding that the father did not have legal standing to bring the lawsuit, and
that his claims were judicially unreviewable under the political question
doctrine inasmuch as he was questioning a decision that the U.S. Constitution
committed to the political branches.
On
May 5, 2011, the U.S. tried to kill al-Awlaki by firing a missile from an
unmanned drone at a car in Yemen, but he survived the attempted killing. A
Yemeni security official said that two al-Qaeda operatives in the car died.
Death
On
September 30, 2011, in northern Yemen's al-Jawf province, two Predator drones,
based out of a secret CIA Base in Saudi Arabia, fired Hellfire missiles at a
vehicle containing al-Awlaki and three other suspected al-Qaeda members. A
witness said the group had stopped to eat breakfast while traveling to Ma'rib
Governorate. A Predator drone was spotted by the group, which then tried to
flee in the vehicle. According to U.S. sources, the strike was carried out by
Joint Special Operations Command, under the direction of the CIA. U.S.
President Barack Obama said:
The death of Awlaki is a major blow to Al-Qaeda's most active operational affiliate. He took the lead in planning and directing efforts to murder innocent Americans … and he repeatedly called on individuals in the United States and around the globe to kill innocent men, women and children to advance a murderous agenda. [The strike] is further proof that Al-Qaeda and its affiliates will find no safe haven anywhere in the world.
Yemen's
Defense Ministry announced that al-Awlaki had been killed in the country. Also
killed was Samir Khan, an American born in Saudi Arabia, who was editor of
al-Qaeda's English-language web magazine, Inspire.
Blogger
and columnist for The Guardian, Glenn Greenwald, argued that killing
Awlaki violated his First Amendment right of free speech. and doing so outside
of a criminal proceeding violated the Constitution's due process clause. He
mentioned doubt among Yemenese experts about Awlaki's role in Al Qaida, and
called U.S. government accusations against him unverified and lacking in
evidence.
Another
American critic of the War on Terror Paul Craig Roberts wrote Awlaki gave
"sermons critical of Washington’s indiscriminate assaults on Muslim
peoples" who "told Muslims that they did not have to passively accept
American aggression." He called the operation "The Day America
Died" as he asserted the U.S. lacked evidence either Awlaki or Khan were
real threats or Al Qaeda operatives.
In
a letter dated May 22, 2013 to the chairman of the U.S. Senate Judiciary
committee, Patrick J. Leahy, U.S. attorney general Eric Holder wrote that
high-level U.S. government officials [...] concluded that al-Aulaqi posed a continuing and imminent threat of violent attack against the United States. Before carrying out the operation that killed al-Aulaqi, senior officials also determined, based on a careful evaluation of the circumstances at the time, that it was not feasible to capture al-Aulaqi. In addition, senior officials determined that the operation would be conducted consistent with applicable law of war principles, including the cardinal principles of (1) necessity - the requirement that the target have definite military value; (2) distinction - the idea that only military objectives may be intentionally targeted and that civilians are protected from being intentionally targeted; (3) proportionality - the notion that the anticipated collateral damage of an action cannot be excessive in relation to the anticipated concrete and direct military advantage; and (4) humanity - a principle that requires us to use weapons that will not inflict unnecessary suffering. The operation was also undertaken consistent with Yemeni sovereignty. [… ] The decision to target Anwar al-Aulaqi was lawful, it was considered, and it was just.
FOIA
documents
In
January 2013, it was announced by Fox News that FBI documents obtained by
Judicial Watch through a Freedom of Information Act request showed possible
connections between al-Awlaki and the 9/11 attacks. According to Judicial
Watch, the documents show that the FBI knew that al-Awlaki had bought three
tickets for three of the hijackers to fly into Florida and into Las Vegas.
Judicial Watch further stated that al-Awlaki "was a central focus of the
FBI's investigation of 9/11. They show he wasn't cooperative. And they show
that he was under surveillance."
When
queried by Fox News, the FBI denied having evidence connecting al-Awlaki and
the 9/11 attacks: "The FBI cautions against drawing conclusions from
redacted FOIA documents. The FBI and investigating bodies have not found
evidence connecting Anwar al-Awlaki and the attack on Sept. 11, 2001. The
document referenced does not link Anwar al-Awlaki with any purchase of airline
tickets for the hijackers."
Family
Abdulrahman
al-Awlaki
Anwar
al-Awlaki and Egyptian-born Gihan Mohsen Baker had an American son, born on
September 13, 1995, in Denver, named Abdulrahman Anwar al-Awlaki. Abdulrahman
al-Awlaki was killed at the age of 16 in an American drone strike on October
14, 2011, in Yemen, along with alleged al-Qaeda members two weeks after the
death of his father. Nine other people were killed in the same CIA-led attack.
Among the dead was a 17-year-old cousin of Abdulrahman. According to U.S.
officials the killing of Abdulrahman al-Awlaki was a mistake; the actual target
was an Egyptian, Ibrahim al-Banna. Abdulrahman al-Awlaki was
reported to have gone out in the desert to search for his missing father but
was sitting in a cafe when he was killed. Human rights groups have raised
questions as to why an American citizen was killed by the U.S. in a country
with which the United States is not at war. Abdulrahman al-Awlaki had no
connection to terrorism. Former White House press secretary Robert Gibbs stated
that the drone killing of Anwar al-Awlaki's son was justified and that the boy
"should have [had a] more responsible father," even though Anwar
al-Awlaki had been killed in a separate drone strike two weeks prior.
Nasser
al-Awlaki
Nasser
al-Awlaki is the father of Anwar and grandfather of Abdulrahman al-Awlaki.
Al-Awlaki stated he believed his son had been wrongly accused and was not a
member of Al Qaeda. After the deaths of his son and grandson, Nasser published
a 6 minute audio message condemning the U.S. for the killings. In the audio he
described Obama:
"I urge the American people to bring the killers to justice. I
urge them to expose the hypocrisy of the 2009 Nobel Prize laureate. To some, he
may be that. To me and my family, he is nothing more than a child killer."
He
claimed his son was far from any battlefield. After some media outlets
interpreted his audio as violent, Nasser al-Awlaki made statements denying that
he was endorsing violence.
A
brother-in-law of Awlaki is Tariq al-Dahab, who leads al-Qaeda insurgents in
Yemen. On Thursday, February 16, 2012, the terrorist organization stated he had
been killed by agents, though it was speculated by the media that he was killed
by his brother in a bloody family-type feud.
Works
The
Nine
Eleven Finding Answers Foundation said al-Awlaki's ability to write
and speak in fluent English enabled him to be a key player in inciting
English-speaking Muslims to commit terrorist acts. As al-Awlaki himself wrote
in 44 Ways to Support Jihad:
Most of the Jihad literature is available only in Arabic and
publishers are not willing to take the risk of translating it. The only ones
who are spending the time and money translating Jihad literature are the
Western intelligence services … and too bad, they would not be willing to share
it with you.
Written
works
44 Ways to Support Jihad—Essay
(January 2009)—A practical step-by-step guide to pursuing or supporting jihad.
Writes: "The hatred of kuffar [those who reject Islam] is a central
element of our military creed," and asserts that all Muslims must
participate in Jihad in person, by funding it, or by writing. Says all
Muslims must remain physically fit, and train with firearms "to be ready
for the battlefield". According to U.S. officials, considered a key text
for al-Qaeda members.
Al-Awlaki also wrote for Jihad
Recollections, an English language online publication published by
Al-Fursan Media.
Allah is Preparing Us for Victory –
short book (2009).
Lectures
- Lectures on the book Constants on the Path of Jihad by Yousef Al-Ayyiri—concerns leaderless jihad.
- Numerous lectures have been posted to YouTube on various channels such as this and this A U.K. government analysis of YouTube in 2009 found 1,910 videos of his videos, one of which had been viewed 164,420 times.
- The Battle of Hearts and Minds
- The Dust Will Never Settle Down
- Dreams & Interpretations
- The Hereafter—16 CDs—Al Basheer Productions
- Life of Muhammad: Makkan Period—16 CDs—Al Basheer Productions
- Life of Muhammad: Medinan Period—Lecture in 2 Parts—18 CDs—Al Basheer Productions
- Lives of the Prophets (AS)—16 CDs—Al Basheer Productions
- Abu Bakr as-Siddiq (RA): His Life & Times—15 CDs—Al Basheer Productions
- Umar ibn al-Khattāb (RA): His Life & Times—18 CDs—Al Basheer Productions
- 25 Promises from Allah to the Believer—2 CDs—Noor Productions
- Companions of the Ditch & Lessons from the Life of Musa (AS)—2 CDs—Noor Productions
- Remembrance of Allah & the Greatest Ayah—2 CDs—Noor Productions
- Stories from Hadith—4 CDs—Center for Islamic Information and Education ("CIIE")
- Hellfire & The Day of Judgment—CD—CIIE
- Quest for Truth: The Story of Salman Al-Farsi (RA)—CD—CIIE
- Trials & Lessons for Muslim Minorities—CD—CIIE
- Young Ayesha (RA) & Mothers of the Believers (RA)—CD—CIIE
- Understanding the Quran—CD—CIIE
- Lessons from the Companions (RA) Living as a Minority'—CD—CIIE
- Virtues of the Sahabah—video lecture series promoted by the al-Wasatiyyah Foundation