Azzam the American | Azzam the American | al-Qaeda | Terror Networks | 20040526 | Link |
Terror Networks |
Qaida Confirms U.S. Strike Killed American Spokesman |
2015-06-26 |
![]() In a special issue of Al-Qaeda English-language magazine Resurgence, editor Hassaan Yusuf wrote that Azzam, whose real name was Adam Gadahn, was killed in a strike thought to have taken place in January on an Al-Qaeda compound in Pakistain. Yusuf also said Ahmed Faruq, an American described as a leader of Al-Qaeda in the Indian Subcontinent, and American and Italian hostages Warren Weinstein and Giovanni Lo Porto, were killed in another strike "a few weeks" prior. The White House has said neither Gadahn nor Faruq were specifically targeted in the strikes, and U.S. President Barack Obama ...I am not a dictator! said in April he took "full responsibility" for the accidental killing of the hostages. Gadahn was a teenage death metal music fan who grew up on a California goat farm before he was drawn into radical Islam. He was one of the most high-profile figures in the global jihadist movement and a regular online presence, taunting his homeland and inciting attacks. |
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Terror Networks | ||
American Al-Qaeda spokesman urges attacks | ||
2010-10-24 | ||
[Dawn] Al-Qaeda's American front man, Adam Gadahn, has urged fellow Mohammedans in the West to carry out attacks in the "Zio-Crusader coalition" states, SITE Intelligence Group said on Saturday. "To my Mohammedan brothers residing in the states of the Zio-Crusader coalition ... know that Jihad (holy war) is your duty as well," Gadahn said in a video, excerpts of which were provided by the US monitoring group.
"You have an opportunity to strike the leaders of unbelief and retaliate against them on their own soil, as long as there is no covenant between you and them," he added in the 48 minute, 20 second video, produced by Al-Qaeda media arm As-Sahab. He urged Arabs to launch "heroic operations similar to the invasion of the American consulate in Beautiful Downtown Peshawar and the bombing of the Danish embassy in Islamabad," in their cities and capitals. However, The infamous However... "it is obligatory to avoid harming Mohammedans and destroying their properties" when carrying out such attacks, he said in Arabic, with the video providing English subtitles.
In June 2008, a car bomb went kaboom!outside the Danish embassy in Islamabad killing at least eight people, including a Dane, and wounding about 27 others. Gadahn also called on Mohammedans to attack "American military bases spread across the (Arabian) Peninsula, the Gulf, the Levant countries and elsewhere...like the one carried out by Major Nidal Hasan," the US Army psychiatrist accused of opening fire on colleagues at Fort Hood, Texas, killing 13. Gadahn, also known as Azzam the American, was born in 1978. He is a native of southern Caliphornia and has appeared in several videotapes for Al-Qaeda since 2004. | ||
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India-Pakistan | |
Adam Gadahn Captured in Pakistan say Reports | |
2010-03-07 | |
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31-year-old Adam Gadahn is often quoted by media and seen as a spokesman for Al-Qaeda in the region, as recently as the March 7, 2010, Adam Gadahn can be heard in video calling for attacks by Muslims on western nations. Adam Gadahn was indicted for treason in 2006 by a federal grand jury for the capital crime of treason for aiding an enemy of the United States. Adam Gadahn was the first American charged with such a treason law since 1952. From as far back as 2004, Adam Gadahn has appeared in a number of videos produced by Al-Qaeda, identified as Azzam the American.' In 1995, at age 17, Gadahn began studying Islam at the Islamic Society of Orange County, California. Members of Gadahn's study group were young fundamentalists who targeted the mosque's chairman, Haitham Danny' Bundakji,' whom they referred to as Danny the Jew' for his practice of wearing Western clothes and being overly friendly with Jews.' Gadahn converted to Islam later that year, and shortly thereafter posted an essay to the USC website describing his conversion, entitled Becoming a Muslim.' According to his parents, Adam was arrested and convicted of assaulting his former mentor Haitham Bundakji in May 1997,' as seen in the picture above. He served two days in jail, but his failure to do 40 hours of community services leaves a warrant for his arrest active. Gadahn reportedly moved to Pakistan in 1998, where he married an Afghan refugee and maintained intermittent contact with his family. Details about Adam Gadahn's reported Pakistan capture are still forthcoming, but widely reported in Pakistan media, citing security sources. | |
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Terror Networks |
American al Qaeda member affirms self-hating Jew status |
2009-06-14 |
![]() In a new anti-Israel, anti-U.S. video, an American al Qaeda member makes reference to his Jewish ancestry for the first time in an official al Qaeda message. In the video, Adam Yahiye Gadahn, also known as Azzam the American, discusses his roots as he castigates U.S. policies and deplores Israel's offensive in Gaza that started in late December 2008 and continued into January. "Let me here tell you something about myself and my biography, in which there is a benefit and a lesson," Gadahn says, as he elicits support from his fellow Muslims for "our weapons, funds and Jihad against the Jews and their allies everywhere." "Your speaker has Jews in his ancestry, the last of whom was his grandfather," he says. Growing up in rural California, Gadahn embraced Islam in the mid-1990s, moved to Pakistan and has appeared in al Qaeda videos before. He was indicted in the United States in 2006 on charges of treason and material support to al Qaeda, according to the FBI. Gadahn is on the FBI's Most Wanted List, with a reward of up to $1 million leading to his capture. FBI records show Gadahn's date of birth as September 1, 1978. The video -- in which Gadahn speaks Arabic, with English subtitles -- surfaced on Saturday. This account is based on an English transcript provided by As-Sahab Media, the media production company used by al Qaeda. Gadahn's Jewish ancestry has been reported in the news media. But terrorism analyst Laura Mansfield says it is the first time Gadahn acknowledged his Jewish ancestry in an official al Qaeda message. Gadahn says his grandfather was a "Zionist" and "a zealous supporter of the usurper entity, and a prominent member of a number of Zionist hate organizations." "He used to repeat to me what he claimed are the virtues of this entity and encouraged me to visit it, specifically the city of Tel Aviv, where relatives of ours live," says Gadahn, referring to Israel. He says his grandfather gave him a book by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called "A Place Among the Nations" -- in which the "rabid Zionist" sets out "feeble arguments and unmasked lies to justify the Jews' rape of Muslim Palestine." But Gadahn says that despite his youth at the time, he didn't heed his grandfather's words. "How can a person with an ounce of self-respect possibly stand in the ranks of criminals and killers who have no morals, no mercy, no humanity and indeed, no honor?" he says in reference to Zionists and Israel. "Isn't it shameful enough for a person to carry the citizenship of America, the symbol of oppression and tyranny and advocate of terror in the world?" Mansfield thinks the video may have been made between late April and mid-May, before President Obama's speech in Cairo, Egypt, addressing U.S. relations with Muslims. Gadahn notes Obama's inauguration, Netanyahu's election in February, and Obama's speech in Turkey in April. Specifically mentioning the Gaza offensive and citing other hot spots such as Iraq, Afghanistan, Chechnya and Somalia, where the "Zio-Crusader alliance" is fighting his "brothers," he says "this open-faced aggression" comes as Obama has risen to power. He scorns Obama's statements in his inaugural address and in Turkey that America isn't and won't be at war with Islam, and "other deceptive, false and sugarcoated words of endearment and respect." He says Obama's language is similar to words Netanyahu uttered in the Knesset in 1996. Gadahn also backs the idea of targeting "Zio-Crusader" interests anywhere in the world, not just "within Palestine. |
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India-Pakistan |
The U.S. Is Stepping Up Efforts to Capture Adam Gadahn |
2008-06-03 |
![]() The State Department along with the Department of Diplomatic Security announced the beginning of a publicity campaign in Afghanistan urging locals to provide any information on Gadahn's whereabouts, with a reward if the information leads to his capture. Radio advertisements with information concerning the $1 million reward have already begun airing. Additionally, printed materials including matchbooks, handbills and posters will be distributed throughout the region in the coming weeks in attempts to elicit cooperation from members of the Afghan community. "As the first person charged with treason against the United States since World War II, the capture of Adam Gadahn is a high priority for the Justice Department. This man has advocated the overthrow of the United States government and applauded the murder of United States citizens. He deserves to be prosecuted, and I hope this new campaign will help bring him to justice," said United States Attorney Thomas P. O'Brien. Gadahn, a native of Orange County, was charged with treason in 2006 after he became a leading propagandist for Osama bin Laden, appearing frequently in al Qaeda videos calling for attacks on America. He's believed to report directly to bin Laden's right-hand man, Ayman al Zawahri. Gadahn, a one-time heavy-metal music fanatic, converted to Islam as a teenager. He first surfaced in an al Qaeda video in 2004, using the nom de guerre "Azzam the American." He spoke perfect English and warned, "The streets of America shall run red with blood." In addition to his propaganda role, Gadahn is believed to be helping al Qaeda with English translations and understanding American culture and vulnerabilities. |
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India-Pakistan | |
Adam Gadahn Still Missing | |
2008-02-09 | |
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Thats what Taliban sources along the Afghan-Pakistan border are wondering about the American-born al-Qaida member. Gadahn, known as Azzam al-Ameriki (Azzam the American), joined al-Qaida in 2003 and has appeared in several bombastic al-Qaida videos since then. Federal prosecutors indicted the Californian for treason in October 2006, and he's now on the FBI's Most Wanted List. U.S. intelligence officials have heard the same rumors, but tell NBC News that they have no information to suggest Gadahn is dead. They specifically deny that Gadahn was killed in the same Predator missile attack that killed al-Qaidas #4, Abu Laith al-Libi, last week near the town of Mir Ali in Pakistans North Waziristan province. Gadahn was visiting Mir Ali at the time, according to a local man who describes himself as a friend of Gadahns. Jihadist sources on the Pakistan side of the border are telling local journalists they are worried. One who described himself as a very close friend of Gadahn said the 28-year-old California native had until recently been spending most of his time in the populated areas of South Waziristan, near the towns of Wana, Azam Warsak and Shahkai. The same friend said Gadahn had left for North Waziristan a week before the Predator attack in Mir Ali, where he was supposed to attend an important meeting. The friend said that, after the Predator attack on January 31, they lost all contact with Gadahn. "All our friends are worried about him but so far we could not make any contact with him. We had sent two of our friends to Mir Ali to locate him and provide us with details about him," the supposed friend explained. He added that other militants who traveled with Gadahn also were missing. The self-described friend said Gadahn and his comrades may have decided to remain silent due to security reasons, or perhaps Gadahn was killed in the attack. Both intelligence and law enforcement sources says they have heard the same reports, but they tell NBC News they do not believe that Gadahn was killed in the Predator attack. However, they note that they are having difficulty determining the identities of the 13 people killed in the attacks. Gadahn was last heard from on January 6,when a jihadist website posted several links to a 50-minute video featuring Gadahn, released by the media arm of Al-Qaida. Gadahn delivered most of the statement in English, but spoke in Arabic on several occasions to deliver Koranic recitations, religious rhetoric, and messages to Arabic speaking persons. One of these Arabic statements called on Muslims to greet President Bush during his January trip to the Middle East with "bombs and booby-traps." Gadahn also suggested the U.S. had lost in both Afghanistan and Iraq. How, Americans might ask, is it possible that the strongest and best-equipped army on earth has been defeated by lightly-armed mujahidin? The answer is self-evident: Right triumphs over might! he said. The U.S. government is offering a $1 million reward for information which leads to Gadahns capture. | |
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Afghanistan | ||||
Welcome Bush with bombs, says militant | ||||
2008-01-06 | ||||
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In a theatrical move, he took his US passport from his breast pocket and showed its pages on camera before ripping it up in protest at the treatment of Muslim detainees.
Gadahn devoted most of the tape, entitled An Invitation to Reflection and Repentance', to a detailed explanation of the shortcomings of US foreign policy and Western Christian civilisation and their defeat at the hands of Islam and Muslims. The first question Americans might ask is: has America really been defeated? The answer is yes, and on all fronts, said Gadahn, who had a long beard and wore glasses and an Arab-style red and white chequered scarf. American and coalition officials have stated repeatedly that they are unable and unwilling to face the mujahideen in Afghanistan and Iraq militarily but are still trying to win the battle for hearts and minds, which they have also lost in spectacular fashion despite the equally spectacular amounts they have spent in payoffs and propaganda. Gadahn also listed Pakistan, Chechnya, North Africa and Somalia as areas where the United States is losing its battle against Islamist groups. The authenticity of the tape could not immediately be verified, but it was posted by As-Sahab, al-Qaeda's media arm, and had been advertised on an Islamist site for days. Gadahn is a California-born convert to Islam and the first American to be charged with treason since the World War Two era. He is believed to be in Pakistan.
The treason charge against Gadahn carries a maximum punishment of death. The FBI has been seeking to question Gadahn since 2004 and the US Government has offered a cash reward of up to $US1 million ($1.14 million) for information leading to his arrest. Gadahn converted to Islam from a Jewish-Christian family when he was 17 and a few years later moved to Pakistan. He was previously known as Adam Pearlman and grew up on a goat ranch outside Los Angeles.
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Home Front: WoT | |||||||||||
Al Qaeda Cell May Be Loose in U.S., British Plot Hints | |||||||||||
2007-08-06 | |||||||||||
As an American-born spokesman for Al Qaeda threatens to blow up American embassies abroad, intelligence gleaned from last month's British "doctors plot" of car bombers suggests that an al Qaeda cell is on the loose in the American homeland.
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Terror Networks |
Goat Boy warns of attacks 'worse than 9/11' |
2007-05-30 |
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates -- An American member of Al Qaeda warned in an Internet video that US President George W. Bush should withdraw all his troops from Muslim land or face attacks worse than September 11. See, all you chicks that used to make fun of me for being a fat, loser load! I'm an important guy now! You'll all bow down to me when Binny appoints me the new leader of the American Caliphate! I'll show you! I'll show all of you!!! Adam Gadahn, a convert to Islam who has been indicted for treason by a US jury, issued a list of demands that he said were not up for negotiation. "Your failure to heed our demands means that you and your people ... will experience things that will make you forget all about the horrors of September 11, Afghanistan and Iraq, and Virginia Tech," he said in the video posted Tuesday. "You're losing on all fronts and losing big time," said Gadahn, who is the English-language spokesman for Osama Bin Laden's terror network. Believe me, it'll be even worse then the Yankees season so far... The tape entitled Perhaps As-Sahab's production facilities deserve a visit from a JDAM... Gadahn - sporting a headdress, glasses, and long beard - said that Bush had "embroiled his nation in a series of unwinnable and bloody conflicts in the Islamic world." He also called on the United States to cease support for the "bastard state of Israel" and the "56-plus apostate regimes of the Muslim world" and to free all Muslims from its prisons. We don't negotiate with war criminals and baby killers like you. No, these are legitimate demands, which must be met," he said. Gadahn - also known Azzam Al Amriki and Azzam the American - has appeared in several videotapes for Al Qaeda since 2004, praising the September 11, 2001 attacks on New York and Washington and threatening new terror onslaughts. In October 2006, he became the first person to be charged in the United States with treason since the World War II era. The charge carries a minimum of five years in prison and a maximum penalty of death. Feel free to skip the trial and just kill him... Gadahn, who is believed to be in Pakistan, has a $1 million reward for his capture and appears along with Bin Laden on a US "Wanted" poster featuring 26 "faces of global terrorism." His last appearance in a video was in September last year. Gadahn was born in 1978 in southern California, the son of a 1960s Jewish rock musician who later converted to Christianity and became a rural goat farmer. His conversion to Islam came after he began attending the Islamic Center of Orange County, where he is believed to have come under the influence of two foreign-born Islamic radicals. Maybe time for the Islamic Center of Orange County to become a vacant lot? Gadahn is believed to have left California for Karachi in 1998 and gradually fell out of contact with relatives in the United States. |
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Olde Tyme Religion |
A troubling look inside radical Islam |
2007-02-11 |
By Jonathan Last When I first met Daveed Gartenstein-Ross, he was a young counterterrorism expert just breaking into print. I had edited some of his work. He seemed like a normal fellow. But as we spoke, he told me a remarkable story. Gartenstein-Ross grew up in Ashland, Ore., one of the West Coast's hippie enclaves. His parents were liberal, ecumenical Jews who raised him to believe in the beauty of all faiths. There were pictures of Jesus in his living room and a statue of the Buddha in the backyard. Young Daveed was attracted to various liberal causes and concerned with social justice. He went to college in North Carolina, where he converted to Islam. Upon graduation, Gartenstein-Ross went to work for a religious charity, the Al-Haramain Islamic Foundation, which was run by a group of radicals. After a year at Al-Haramain, he went to law school, where he eventually left Islam. In the wake of Sept. 11, 2001, Gartenstein-Ross learned that the FBI was investigating Al-Haramain for ties to terrorism. He reached out to the bureau and helped build its case. Gartenstein-Ross has now told his story in a book, My Year Inside Radical Islam. It is an important resource for understanding Islam in America. There are two deep insights in My Year Inside Radical Islam. The first is an illumination of one of the pathways to radicalism. When Gartenstein-Ross first converted, he embraced Sufism, a spiritual, moderate sect. He wasn't looking to become an anti-Western fundamentalist. But the more he interacted with other Muslims, the more he was pushed, in a form of groupthink, to embrace an increasingly restrictive faith. He learned that in Islam, all sorts of things are haram (forbidden). Alcohol, of course. And listening to music. And wearing shorts that expose the thigh. And wearing necklaces. Or gold. Or silk. Or using credit cards. Or shaving. Or shaking hands with women. As Gartenstein-Ross explains, Islam has commandments for every aspect of life, from how to dress to how to wipe yourself after going to the bathroom. And once he joined the Muslim community, he found that the group was self-policing. Members were eager to report and reprimand one another for infractions. It is not hard to imagine how a well-adjusted, intelligent person might get caught up in such a social dynamic. The book also illustrates the troubling state of Islamic organizations in the United States. Nearly every discussion of Islamic radicalism and terrorism is prefaced by a disclaimer that of course the vast majority of Muslims are morally opposed to both. This may well be true. But the problem in the current struggle against Islamic fascism is that the radicals often find succor from moderate Muslims - even "moderates" aren't always as liberal as one might hope. While Gartenstein-Ross never came into contact with actual terrorists, he was surrounded by people - normal Muslim citizens - whose worldviews were unsettling. Before 9/11, Al-Haramain's headquarters in Ashland was seen as a bastion of moderate, friendly Islam. Pete Seda, who ran the office, was publicly chummy with the local rabbi. The group encouraged public schools to bring children to their offices on field trips. All of this was for public consumption. In private, things were somewhat different. One of Gartenstein-Ross' coworkers, for instance, often complained about the Nation of Islam, whose members he believed were deviants. He said, "Let them choose true Islam or cut off their heads." Al-Haramain was host to a number of visitors, one of whom was a Saudi cleric named Abdul-Qaadir. He preached that those who leave Islam should be put to death. In defending the execution of apostates, he mused that "religion and politics aren't separable in Islam the way they are in the West... . Leaving Islam isn't just converting from one faith to another. It's more properly understood as treason." In warning Gartenstein-Ross about his engagement to a Christian, Abdul-Qaadir said, "As long as your wife isn't a Muslim, as far as we're concerned, she is 100 percent evil." One night at services, a visiting member of the Egyptian branch of Al-Haramain declared that the Torah was "The Jews' plan to ruin everything." He continued, "Why is it that Henry Kissinger was the president of the international soccer federation while he was president of the United States? How did he have time to do both? It is because part of the Jews' plan is to get people throughout the world to play soccer so that they'll wear shorts that show off the skin of their thighs." (Former Secretary of State Kissinger was never president of either the United States or FIFA.) The reaction of Seda - the "moderate" who cultivated a public friendship with the local rabbi - was, "Wow, bro, this is amazing. You come to us with this incredible information." Such discourse seems less than rare at American Islamic organizations. A recent New Yorker profile of another homegrown radical, Adam Gadahn (a.k.a. "Azzam the American" and one of the FBI's most-wanted terrorists), recounted Sheikh Omar Abdel Rahman's visit to the Islamic Society in Orange County, Calif. In his lecture, Rahman, later indicted for helping to plot the 1993 World Trade Center bombing, ridiculed the notion that jihad could be nonviolent and exhorted Muslims to take up fighting against the enemies of Allah. Sitting next to him and translating for the congregation was the local "moderate" imam. The New Yorker reports that "videotapes of the lecture were later offered for sale at the society's bookstore." This would likely not surprise Gartenstein-Ross, some of whose Muslim acquaintances even disapproved of his decision to go to law school. Their objection was that, as a lawyer, Gartenstein-Ross would have to swear an oath to defend the Constitution. As one Muslim told him, "There are some things in the Constitution I like, but a lot of things in the Constitution are completely against Islamic principles." This sentiment - not from an al-Qaeda fighter or a fire-breathing radical, but from a normal, devout Muslim - is important. The challenge Islam poses to the West goes beyond mere terrorism. |
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Home Front: WoT | ||
Gadahn indicted for treason | ||
2006-10-12 | ||
![]() Gadahn "knowingly adhered to an enemy of the United States, namely, al-Qaida, and gave al-Qaida aid and comfort ... with intent to betray the United States," according to the indictment, handed up by an Orange County grand jury.
Gadahn, who is believed to be in or near Pakistan, is suspected of having attended the terrorist group's training camps in Pakistan and serving as one of its translators. He has become known by his nom de guerre, Azzam al-Amriki, or "Azzam the American." Gadahn appeared last month in a 48-minute video along with al-Qaida's No. 2 leader, Ayman al-Zawahri, calling on his countrymen to convert to Islam and for U.S. soldiers to switch sides in the Iraq and Afghan wars. It was the second time he appeared in the same video with al-Zawahri. In a July 7 video marking the one-year anniversary of the terror attack on London commuters, Gadahn appeared briefly, saying no Muslim should "shed tears" for Westerners killed by al-Qaida attacks.
According to the indictment, Gadahn announced in the 2004 video that he had joined al-Qaida, "a movement waging war on America and killing large numbers of Americans." "Fighting and defeating America is our first priority," he said, according to the indictment. "... The streets of America shall run red with blood." The treason charge carries penalties ranging from a five-year prison sentence to the death penalty, while the charge of providing material support to a designated foreign terrorist organization carries a possible 15-year sentence. Raised in Southern California on a Riverside goat farm, Gadahn converted to Islam and worshipped at the Islamic Society of Orange County in 1997 before being expelled for attacking one of its leaders. His mother last spoke to him by phone in March 2001. At the time he was in Pakistan, working at a newspaper, and his wife was getting ready to have a child. Gadahn's aunt, Nancy Pearlman, declined to comment. | ||
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India-Pakistan | ||||||||||
In Pakistan, signs of Al Qaeda all around | ||||||||||
2006-09-07 | ||||||||||
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