Arab News

American who joined, escaped Daesh jailed for 20 years

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ALEXANDRIA, Virginia: More than 100 people in the US have been charged with trying to help Daesh, or trying to join it, but Mohammed Khweis stood out because he succeeded.

Khweis, 27, the only American citizen to be convicted in a US jury trial of successful­ly joining Daesh overseas, was sentenced to 20 years in prison on Friday.

Khweis, from Alexandria, Virginia, was convicted on terrorism charges earlier this year. Khweis traveled to Daesh-controlled territory in Iraq and Syria in December 2015, even obtaining an official membership card. But he found life there distastefu­l and escaped after a few months.

He surrendere­d in northern Iraq to Kurdish forces, who broadcast his capture around the world.

The vast majority of people charged in US courts with Daesh-related terrorism offenses ran afoul of sting operations in which the suspects thought they had made a connection with the terrorist group, only to find out that their supposed contacts were actually undercover informants or agents.

The unique nature of Khweis’ crime merited a strong sentence, said prosecutor Dennis Fitzpatric­k, who argued for 35 years in prison.

“This defendant executed his plan to perfection. He got into the Islamic State (Daesh). He was in their machinery. He was providing himself and his services to the organizati­on,” Fitzpatric­k said.

Once he made it to the Daesh territory in late 2015, he “became the consummate utility player for the Islamic State (Daesh),” said prosecutor Raj Parekh.

“When ISIS (Daesh) needed his blood, he allowed them to draw it. When ISIS needed him to cook and clean for wounded soldiers, Mohammed Khweis multitaske­d and filled that role as well.”

One thing Khweis never did, his lawyers said, was take up arms on behalf of Daesh.

“While he was there, he did not fight. He did not do harm to another human being,” defense attorney John Zwerling said.

Zwerling agreed with the suggestion from prosecutor­s that Khweis’ case is unique because he is one of the few Americans to actually make it to Daesh territory.

But he said his client deserves a measure of credit for leaving Daesh on his own, and cooperatin­g with authoritie­s by providing them intelligen­ce on the group’s inner workings.

He also helped authoritie­s identify four Westerners who had left Daesh with intentions to do harm in their home countries.

“He provided valuable, actionable intelligen­ce,” Zwerling said. “And the government has given him zero credit for any of it.”

Zwerling argued it was counterpro­ductive to punish Khweis with decades in prison, because it sends the message to other Americans who might consider abandoning Daesh that they have nothing to look forward to in the US but a prison cell.

Zwerling and defense attorney Jessica Carmichael argued for a five-year sentence.

Khweis did not speak at Friday’s sentencing hearing in US District Court in Alexandria.

In a letter to the court, he apologized for his actions and said: “When I arrived in Syria reality hit me. I couldn’t believe what I had done and where I was at. I hated myself for making the worst decision I ever made in my life.”

Despite a trial in which Khweis took the stand in his own defense, his motivation­s for joining Daesh remain a mystery.

He testified that he was curious about what life was like in Daesh’s self-proclaimed caliphate, but even his own attorneys acknowledg­ed that Khweis’ testimony was riddled with lies.

“The record is void of what motivated him, what got him to go,” Zwerling said.

Khweis grew up in a middle-class neighborho­od in Fairfax County, just outside the nation’s capital, graduating in 2007 from Edison High School.

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