FBI
Believes Missing Men Joined Somali Terrorists
by Dina Temple-Raston
Listen Now
[7 min 46 sec]
add to playlist
Morning Edition, March
12, 2009 · Young Somali-Americans in Minneapolis have been vanishing without warning
for the past year and a half. On Wednesday, for the first time, the FBI hinted
at an answer to the mysterious disappearances: There are recruiters operating
in Minnesota helping young men make their way
to Somalia.
The young men who left are believed to have joined the ranks of a Somali
terrorist group called al-Shabab.
"We do
worry that there is a potential that these individuals could be indoctrinated
by al-Qaida while they are in Somalia and then return
to the United States with the intention to launch attacks," Andrew Liepman, the deputy director of the National Counterterrrorism Center, told a Senate committee
Wednesday. "They could provide al-Qaida with
trained extremists inside the United
States."
Here's one
piece of worrisome evidence. A college student named Shirwa
Ahmed disappeared about 18 months ago. Last October, he rammed a car full of
explosives into a crowd in Somaliland, in the
Horn of Africa. Twenty-eight people died in the attack. The bombing was
attributed to al-Shabab — the group linked to the
missing Minneapolis
boys. Ahmed was the first American citizen to become a suicide bomber.
Abdullahe Hussein was a friend of Shirwa
Ahmed's. We sat down with him recently at the student center at the University of Minnesota. He was wearing a Yankees
baseball cap. He said he learned about his friend's death on the local news
last fall. "I got home, turned on the TV and his picture was on
there," he said. Hussein can't believe the person who did those things was
the person he knew.
Which, of
course, is what most of the Somali families in Minneapolis find themselves thinking — the
boys who left all seemed so normal. Community leaders searched for an
explanation. They suspected two local mosques were involved. One of them was
the Dawah Islamic Institute of St. Paul. Videos on
the institute's Web site worried them. They appeared to be urging kids to sign
up for jihad, to prove they were sufficiently Islamist.
"My
life, my death is for Allah," began one of the Internet videos. "Who
of us can say that? Who of us? We all can say we're Muslims, but can we say
that, that statement right there?"
The FBI
hasn't accused the Dawah mosque of any involvement in
the disappearances. And, as inflammatory as the rhetoric might be, FBI
Assistant Director Philip Mudd said videos aren't
enough to actually recruit someone. "The Internet often is a tool that
helps someone along a path but not the proximate cause to get someone to buy a
ticket to Mogadishu."
To actually
get them on a plane to Somalia,
recruiters need to talk to the young men face to face and find where they are
vulnerable. There was a similar terrorism case that played out near Buffalo, N.Y.,
in 2002, known as the Lackawanna Six. It was an early effort by al-Qaida to recruit Americans. Peter Ahearn was the special
agent in charge there. "They are skilled at their psychological overview
of these kids," he said. "They can pick and choose the one they think
are more of the followers rather than the leaders."
In Minneapolis, the FBI
thinks the recruiters got the young men together to goad each other into
action. And, as in the video, they used a classic recruitment ploy: questioning
a young man's faith. That's what happened to a boy named Mustafa. His uncle
Abdullah Man said someone had clearly started talking to him about his faith
and questioning how good a Muslim he really was. "He was talking about
some extreme interpretation of the Koran," his uncle said. "He said
he'd go back and fight, and the people that believe this stuff, go around and teach
kids this belief."
Looking back
on it, he says in many ways Mustafa was more Minneapolis
than Mogadishu.
He didn't even speak the Somali language. But last August he got on a plane to Somalia. The
day he disappeared, Mustafa told his mother he was going to do his laundry. No
one has seen him since.
Looking at
the Somali teenagers roaming the bright orange corridors of the Brian Coyle Center in East Minneapolis,
it is easy to see them as vulnerable. There are teenage boys playing foosball
... while others settle into beanbag chairs to play video games on a big screen
television. The center is clearly a second home for many of these teenagers.
There's homework help in the afternoon, a computer lab and basketball courts
for pickup games.
At the
entrance to the gym, a young Somali carefully registers the boys on a roll
sheet. He smiles, taps his clipboard, and says, "It's an alibi." If
kids are accused of being in trouble outside the center, this is supposed to
prove they were here.
Abdi Rizak Bihi
is one of the Coyle
Center directors. He says
the boys who went to Somalia
were tricked. He said the community has always suspected there was someone
brainwashing their kids. "They were highly sophisticated," he said.
"I don't believe and none of the families believe that they left
willingly. A lot of people say was there a pistol or revolver to their head
when they went to the airport? No. There was a bigger gun: Their mind."
Bihi is himself one of the worried relatives; his nephew Burhan vanished in November. When we spoke with him
recently at the recreation center he said his nephew was much too naive to
orchestrate a trip to Africa on his own. Even
before the FBI talked Wednesday about the idea of recruiters, relatives had
already assumed as much.
"The
biggest shock came when we found out that people were with them at a local
ticketing agent," Bihi said. "That was a
big shock."
If the kids
couldn't pay for the tickets themselves, someone else had to be doing it. The
FBI's Mudd told senators on Wednesday how the process
might work. "You have a ticket; you have someone at the other end who is a
facilitator, someone who is in a general training camp with other folks. Given
the vast amount of money, extensive amount of money raised in large diaspora communities here, I personally don't think it
would be hard to skim some money and buy plane tickets for tens of people.
Terrorism is cheap."
While the
FBI inches closer to solving the mystery of how some two dozen young men have
simply disappeared, for the parents in Minneapolis, the story is far from over.
They want their children back.
Source:
NPR