Al-zammar a plotter for 9/11 attacks in USA
A German extremist with links to Sept. 11 ringleader
Mohamed Atta and other attackers has been detained in Syria, a U.S. official
confirmed Thursday.
"Mohammad Haydar Zammar, a Syrian-born German
national, was captured more than a month ago," Pentagon spokesman Eric
Pahon told NBC News.
"This terrorist was captured during a
unilateral operation by the Syrian Democratic Forces," he added, referring
to the group of U.S.-backed militias fighting ISIS.
Zammar's detention was first reported by the AFP
news agency.
According to the congressional report into the 9/11
attacks by al Qaeda, Zammar had lived in the Germany city of Hamburg and was an
"outspoken, flamboyant Islamist" and a "possible recruiter"
of some 9/11 attackers.
The 9/11 Commission Report said Zammar was "a
well-known figure in the Muslim community (and to German and U.S. intelligence
agencies by the late 1990s)," adding that he had fought in Afghanistan and
"relished any opportunity to extol the virtues of violent jihad.”
Atta was born in Egypt and studied in Hamburg. Atta
was the head of the so-called Hamburg cell, which was central to the attacks on
the United States.
After 9/11, “Zammar reportedly took credit for
influencing Ramzi Binalshibh,” as well as to “the rest of the Hamburg group,”
the congressional report added. Binalshibh was later sent to Guantánamo Bay for
his alleged role in planning and providing logistical support for the Sept. 11
attacks.
The congressional report said that “owing to
Zammar’s persuasion or some other source of inspiration,” by the late 1990s
Binalshibh, Atta and fellow attackers Marwan al-Shehhi and Ziad Jarrah
“eventually prepared themselves to translate their extremists beliefs into
action.”
Binalshibh, Atta, al-Shehhi and Jarrah are
considered part of the Hamburg cell, which “shared the anti-U.S. fervor” of
other extremists, according to the congressional report, with the “added
enormous advantages of fluency in English and familiarity with life in the
West.”
Atta, who is considered the operational leader of
the 9/11 conspiracy, served as the pilot for American Airlines Flight 11 that
crashed into the North Tower of the World Trade Center. Al-Shehhi flew United
Airlines Flight 175 into the South Tower. Jarrah was flying United Airlines
Flight 93, intending to crash it into either the Capitol or the White House in
Washington, when it plowed into a field in Shanksville, Pennsylvania, following
a revolt by passengers.
Zammar was detained by the CIA in Morocco in late
2001 and was later handed over to the Syrian government, Germany's Der Spiegel
reported in 2005. At the time, the magazine said Zammar was being held in the
notorious Far-Filastin prison in Damascus.
In 2007, a Syrian court sentenced Zammar to 12 years
in prison for being a member of the Muslim Brotherhood, but he got out in 2013
after that country's civil war broke out, the AFP press agency reported.
According to German newspaper reports, he was released
as part of a prisoner exchange between Islamist rebels and the government of
President Bashar al-Assad of Syria. Zammar is believed to be in his 50s.