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6
Men Charged in Plot to Attack Fort Dix
By
WAYNE PARRY, Associated Press Writer
Six
foreign-born Muslims were arrested and accused
Tuesday of plotting to attack Fort Dix and slaughter
scores of U.S. soldiers — a scheme the FBI
says was foiled when the men asked a store clerk
to copy a video of them firing assault weapons
and screaming about jihad.
The defendants, all men in their 20s from the
former Yugoslavia and the Middle East, include
a pizza deliveryman suspected of using his job
to scout out the military base.
Their
goal was "to kill as many American
soldiers as possible" with mortars, rocket-propelled
grenades and guns, prosecutors said.
"Today we dodged a bullet. In fact, when
you look at the type of weapons that this group
was trying to purchase, we may have dodged a lot
of bullets," said FBI agent J.P. Weis.
"We
had a group that was forming a platoon to take
on an army. They identified their target, they
did their reconnaissance. They had maps. And
they were in the process of buying weapons. Luckily,
we were able to stop that."
Authorities
said there was no direct evidence connecting
the men to any international terror organizations
such as al-Qaida. But several of them said they
were ready to kill and die "in
the name of Allah," according to court papers.
Investigators said they infiltrated the group
with two informants well over a year ago and bided
their time while they secretly recorded the defendants,
four of whom lived in Cherry Hill, a Philadelphia
suburb about 20 miles from Fort Dix.
"This is what law enforcement is supposed
to do in the post-9/11 era — stay one step
ahead of those who are attempting to cause harm
to innocent American citizens," U.S. Attorney
Christopher Christie said.
Weis
saluted the unidentified New Jersey store clerk
who noticed the suspicious video as the "unsung
hero" of the case. "That's why we're
here today — because of the courage and heroism
of that individual," the FBI agent said.
In addition to plotting the attack on Fort Dix,
the defendants spoke of assaulting a Navy installation
in Philadelphia during the annual Army-Navy football
game and conducted surveillance at other military
installations in the region, prosecutors said.
One
defendant, Eljvir Duka, was recorded as saying: "In
the end, when it comes to defending your religion,
when someone ... attacks your religion, your way
of life, then you go jihad."
The six were arrested Monday night trying to buy
AK-47 assault weapons, M-16s and other weapons
from an FBI informant, authorities said.
They appeared in federal court Tuesday in Camden
and were ordered held without bail for a hearing
Friday. Five were charged with conspiracy to kill
U.S. military personnel; the sixth was charged
with aiding and abetting illegal immigrants in
obtaining weapons.
Four of the men were born in the former Yugoslavia,
one was born in Jordan and one came from Turkey,
authorities said. All had lived in the United States
for years. Three were in the United States illegally;
two had green cards allowing them to stay in this
country permanently; and the sixth is a U.S. citizen.
One defendant, Mohamad Ibrahim Shnewer, spoke
of using rocket-propelled grenades and other weapons
to kill at least 100 soldiers, according to court
documents.
"My intent is to hit a heavy concentration
of soldiers," he was quoted as saying. "You
hit four, five or six Humvees and light the whole
place (up) and retreat completely without any losses."
"It doesn't matter to me whether I get locked
up, arrested or get taken away," another defendant,
Serdar Tatar, was alleged to have said. "Or
I die, it doesn't matter. I'm doing it in the name
of Allah."
The men trained by playing paintball in the woods
in New Jersey and taking target practice at a firing
range in Pennsylvania's Pocono Mountains, where
they had rented a house, authorities said.
They often watched terror training videos, clips
featuring Osama bin Laden, a tape containing the
last will and testament of some of the Sept. 11
hijackers, and tapes of armed attacks on U.S. military
personnel, erupting in laughter when one plotter
noted that a Marine's arm was blown off in an ambush,
authorities said.
Asked
if those arrested had any links to al-Qaida,
White House spokesman Tony Snow said it appears "there
is no direct evidence of a foreign terrorist tie."
The
FBI's Weis said the U.S. is seeing a "brand-new
form of terrorism," involving smaller, more
loosely defined groups that may not be connected
to al-Qaida but are inspired by its ideology.
"These homegrown terrorists can prove to
be as dangerous as any known group, if not more
so. They operate under the radar," Weis said.
In
court documents, prosecutors said the suspects
came to the attention of authorities in January
2006 when a Mount Laurel, N.J., shopkeeper alerted
the FBI to a "disturbing" video he had
been asked to copy onto a DVD.
The
video showed 10 young men "shooting assault
weapons at a firing range ... while calling for
jihad and shouting in Arabic 'Allah Akbar' (God
is great)," the complaint said. The 10 included
six of those arrested, authorities said.
Within months, the FBI had managed to infiltrate
the group with two informants, according to court
documents.
One
of the suspects, Tatar, worked at his father's
pizzeria and made deliveries to the base, using
the opportunity to scout out Fort Dix for an attack,
authorities said. "Clearly, one of the guys
had an intimate knowledge of the base from having
been there delivering pizzas," Christie said.
The men also allegedly conducted surveillance
at other area military installations, including
Fort Monmouth in New Jersey, Dover Air Force Base
in Delaware, and a Philadelphia Coast Guard station.
Besides Shnewer, Tatar and Duka, the other three
men were identified in court papers as Dritan Duka,
Shain Duka and Agron Abdullahu.
Fort Dix is used to train soldiers, particularly
reservists. It also housed refugees from Kosovo
in 1999.
The arrests renewed worries among New Jersey's
Muslim community. Hundreds of Muslim men from New
Jersey were rounded up and detained in the months
after the Sept. 11 attacks, but none were connected
to that plot.
"If these people did something, then they
deserve to be punished to the fullest extent of
the law," said Sohail Mohammed, a lawyer who
represented scores of detainees after the 2001
attacks. "But when the government says `Islamic
militants,' it sends a message to the public that
Islam and militancy are synonymous."
"Don't equate actions with religion," he
said.
___
Associated Press Writers Matt Apuzzo and Ben Feller
in Washington, Geoff Mulvihill in Mount Laurel,
Tom Hester Jr. in Trenton and Jeffrey Gold in Newark
contributed to this story.
SOURCE:
Yahoo News
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