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U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder1 says Faisal Shahzad, the Pakistani-American man accused of attempting to bomb Times Square, is providing useful information to investigators2, and authorities are pursuing new leads in the case. Holder said Thursday in Washington that although the car bomb failed to detonate, it provided a reminder3 that terrorists are still plotting to kill Americans.
As Faisal Shahzad tells his story to investigators, questions arise about why someone like him would become a terrorist. He once seemed to be living the American dream - an immigrant who had gained U.S. citizenship4, after earning two university degrees and getting a job as a financial analyst5.
But Shuja Nawaz at the Atlantic Council points out that even some of the terrorists who attacked the United States in September 2001 came from affluent6 families. "These are not the uneducated suicide bombers7 who are being used and hired locally. These are the people who feel they can do something spectacular," he said.
Jerrold Post, the author of "Mind of the Terrorist," points out that American newspapers quote officials close to the investigation8 as saying Shahzad told them he was inspired by Anwar al-Awlaki, the U.S. born Muslim cleric hiding in Yemen. Awlaki has used his sermons on the Internet to try to recruit American Muslims and turn them against Americans. "It's not you. You are not the problem. The reason you are not finding satisfaction and accomplishment9 in life is, them. They are taking it away from you," he said.
Post explains how Awlaki tries to convince his audience that Islam is in danger. "One, the Muslim as a victim. Two, the necessity for defensive10 jihad - the West is out to destroy Islam and we have to defend it. And three, the person who martyrs11 himself for the cause has higher stature12 and will be rewarded in paradise. That is a powerful series of messages," he said.
Both analysts13 say Shahzad's transition was gradual, and came about from a combination of religion and anger.
Post points to the numerous trips Shahzad made to Pakistan since 1998 when he first came to the United States, and the fact that his hometown is close to the Pakistani region where the militants14 are now being targeted by U.S. drone attacks. "There is intense anti-American sentiment in Pakistan. This has been magnified by some of the drone killings16, targeted assassination17 basically, of Taliban leaders in which, unfortunately, there is always some collateral18 damage. This has been magnified by al-Qaida and Taliban as action of America killing15 Muslims," he said.
The analysts note that American Muslims are part of mainstream19 society, and for the most part do not face discrimination like they do in some European coutries. But Nawaz says that's not enough - there should be more moderate Muslim voices to provide an alternative to the Awlaki's provocative20 messages. "Which I think has been a failing not only of the countries like Pakistan where some of the terrorists or suspected terrorists come from, but also on the part of the U.S. Public Diplomacy21. They need to focus on bringing those leaders of the Muslim community from India, Pakistan and Indonesia who can relate Islam to modern times," he said.
The analysts say the core issue is how personal frustrations22 among young Muslims can turn into political causes that drive them to kill. And this can be averted23 if the message of clerics like Awlaki can be countered by moderate Muslim voices.
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