American al-Qaeda?
Maybe the FBI and al-Qaeda should coordinate a frequent flyer program. Last week yet another alleged al-Qaeda sympathizer in Southeast Asia was handed over to American officials and sent packing to the U.S. on a military plane. Slight difference this time: the suspect is an American. U.S. authorities claim Ahmed Ibrahim Bilal, who was deported from Malaysia on Oct. 11 after his passport was revoked by Washington, is part of a six-person al-Qaeda terror cell based in Oregon. The group is alleged to have "conspired to wage war" against the U.S., most notably when five of them sought to enter Afghanistan last fall to fight in support of the Taliban. Four of the six, including Bilal's brother, have been arrested in the U.S., while one suspect remains at large. Bilal himself flatly denies the charge. A straight-A student at Kuala Lumpur's International Islamic University, Bilal was well-liked by his peers and, odd for an alleged terrorist, noted for his American patriotism. The 25-year-old also planned to marry his girlfriend this December. It could be a lengthy engagement.
Top Stories on Time.com
Most Popular
-
Most Read
- 24 Words the CED Want to Exuviate (Shed)
- Can McCain Map Out a Comeback Strategy?
- Will Palin's Obama-Terrorist Speech Backfire?
- Why Some Women Hate Sarah Palin
- Maybe We Should Blame God for the Subprime Mess
- Can Obama Turn Colorado Blue?
- If Women Were More Like Men: Why Females Earn Less
- The End of Prosperity?
- Klein: Palin Was Fine, but This Debate Was No Contest
- What's Behind McCain's Nosedive
-
Most Emailed
- Why Some Women Hate Sarah Palin
- Maybe We Should Blame God for the Subprime Mess
- If Women Were More Like Men: Why Females Earn Less
- 24 Words the CED Want to Exuviate (Shed)
- Klein: Palin Was Fine, But This Debate Was No Contest
- The End of Prosperity?
- Can Obama's Grassroots Army Win Missouri?
- Credit Default Swaps: The Next Crisis? - TIME
- US Embassy in London to Move Down-Market
- Hangman, Spare that Word: The English Purge Their Language
Mixx





RSS