Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Saudi military students sent home

21 trainees to be expelled after an investigat­ion into the deadly shooting at Pensacola Naval Air Station.

- BY ERIC TUCKER AND MICHAEL BALSAMO

WASHINGTON — The U.S. is sending home 21 Saudi military students following an investigat­ion into the deadly shooting last month by one of their fellow trainees at the Pensacola Naval Air Station, an attack that Attorney General William Barr said was an act of terrorism driven by some of the same motivation­s of the Sept. 11 plot.

The trainees who are being removed had jihadi or anti-American sentiments on social media pages or had “contact with child pornograph­y,” including in internet chat rooms, officials said. None is accused of having had advance knowledge of the shooting or helped the 21year-old gunman carry it out.

The Justice Department reviewed whether any of the trainees should face charges, but concluded that the conduct did not meet the standards for federal prosecutio­n, Barr said.

The Dec. 6 shooting at the base in Pensacola, Florida, in which Saudi Air Force officer Mohammed Alshamrani killed three U.S. sailors and injured eight other people, focused public attention on the presence of foreign students in American military training programs and exposed flaws in the way cadets are screened.

Despite the misconduct, U.S. officials have said they want to continue training pilots from Saudi Arabia, an important ally in the Middle East.

“The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia gave complete and total support for our counterter­rorism investigat­ion, and ordered all Saudi trainees to fully cooperate,” Barr said. “This assistance was critical to helping the FBI determine whether anyone assisted the shooter in the attack.”

Barr said the kingdom has agreed to review the conduct of all 21 to see if they should face military discipline and send back anyone the U.S. later determines should face charges.

Law enforcemen­t officials left no doubt that Alshamrani was motivated by jihadi ideology, saying he visited a New York City memorial to the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, over the Thanksgivi­ng holiday weekend and posted antiAmeric­an and anti-Israeli messages on social media just two hours before the shooting. Last Sept. 11, Barr said, Alshamrani posted a message that said “the countdown has started.”

Officials had earlier said that Alshamrani hosted a party before the shooting, where he and others watched videos of mass shootings. The gunman had also apparently taken to Twitter before the shooting to criticize U.S. support of Israel and accuse America of being anti-Muslim, another U.S. official told The Associated Press last month.

On the morning of Dec. 6, the gunman walked into a building on the grounds of the Navy base and shot his victims “in cold blood” as Marines who heard the gunfire from outside yanked a fire extinguish­er off the wall and rushed to confront him.

Alshamrani, who was killed by a sheriff’s deputy during the rampage at a classroom building, was undergoing flight training at Pensacola, where foreign military members routinely receive instructio­n.

The December shooting raised questions about how well internatio­nal military students are screened before they attend training at American bases.

National security adviser Robert O’Brien said in an interview on Fox News that the shooting “showed that there had been errors in the way that we vetted” the students. The actions being taken by the Justice Department and Defense Department to remove the Saudi students are to “protect our servicemen and women,” he said.

Twelve of the trainees being removed are assigned to the base in Pensacola, and nine others are assigned to other bases in the U.S., a senior Justice Department official said.

Of the 21 being sent home, 17 had social media containing jihadi or antiAmeric­an content, though there was no indication that anyone was affiliated with a particular group. Fifteen had some kind of contact with child pornograph­y.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP ?? Attorney General William Barr said Monday that Saudi Arabia has fully cooperated in the shooting investigat­ion.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP Attorney General William Barr said Monday that Saudi Arabia has fully cooperated in the shooting investigat­ion.

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