Kashmir Observer

US: Suit Blames Saudi Arabia For 2019 Attack At Florida Army Base

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Victims of a 2019 shooting at a military base in the US state of Florida and their families are suing Saudi Arabia, claiming the kingdom knew the gunman had been radicalise­d and that it could have prevented the killings.

The lawsuit was filed on Monday in the Northern District of Florida on behalf of the families of the three who were killed and 13 others who were injured, including sheriff's deputies.

Mohammed Saeed Alshamrani, a Saudi Air Force officer training at the Naval Air Station Pensacola, shot and killed three US sailors on December 6, 2019.

The lawsuit comes nine months after US officials revealed that Alshamrani had communicat­ed with al-Qaeda operatives about planning and tactics in the weeks leading up to the attack and that he had been radicalise­d before coming to the US for a military training programme.

The lawsuit alleges that Saudi Arabia knew of Alshamrani's associatio­ns with al-Qaeda and his radicalisa­tion and yet failed to monitor, supervise or report him.

The suit also claims that other Saudi trainees at the base knew in advance about plans for the shooting but did nothing to stop it.

It says the gunman told fellow Saudi trainees at a dinner party the night before the attack that he planned to carry out the shooting the following day, but instead of reporting it, they called in sick in the morning. One recorded the shootings while standing outside the building; two others watched from a car nearby.

“None of the Royal Saudi Air Force trainees at the scene of the attack reported Al-Shamrani's behaviour nor did they try to stop” it, the lawsuit says. “Because they supported it.”

The complaint also says Alshamrani's fellow Saudi trainees were aware that he had purchased and stored firearms and ammunition in his barracks, and that he had posted and shared extremist material on social media and screened videos of mass shootings before the attack.

‘ Trojan Horse’

“Al-Shamrani was a Trojan Horse sent by his country, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, and its proxy, al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, for flight training at Naval Air Station Pensacola, Florida, under the auspices of a programme tied to billions of dollars in military arms sales from the United States to the Kingdom,” the lawsuit states.

“Little did the American people know that such an arrangemen­t would soon devolve into a horrific, Faustian bargain.”

One month after the shooting, then-Attorney General William Barr announced that 21 Saudi trainees found to have had proarmed group or anti-American sentiments on social media pages or “contact with child pornograph­y” were being sent home.

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