Train attacker ‘ready to fight to the end’ — and ‘so were we’
Three American travellers say they relied on gut instinct and a close bond forged over years of friendship as they took down a heavily armed man on a passenger train speeding through Belgium.
U.S. airman Spencer Stone, recounting for the first time on Sunday how a likely catastrophe was averted two days earlier, said the gunman, an assault rifle strapped to his bare chest, appeared determined to fight. But, he added, “So were we.” Without a note of bravado but a huge dose of humility, the three described Friday’s drama on an Amsterdam-to-Paris fast train.
His arm in a sling, Stone, 23, said he was coming out of a deep sleep when the gunman appeared.
One of his friends, Alek Skarlatos, a 22-year-old national guardsman recently back from Afghanistan, “just hit me on the shoulder and said ‘Let’s go.’ ”
“He seemed like he was ready to fight to the end,” Stone said. “So were we.” French President François Hollande and a bevy of officials are meeting on Monday with the three, as well as a French citizen who first came across the gunman near a train bathroom and a British man who joined to help tie up the assailant.
The gunman, identified as 26-year-old Moroccan Ayoub ElKhazzani, is being questioned by French counterterrorism police outside Paris.
French and Spanish authorities say El-Khazzani is an Islamic extremist who may have spent time in Syria.
El-Khazzani’s lawyer said on Sunday that he was homeless and trying to rob passengers on the train to feed himself.
His case raises questions about train security as well as how a man who had been on the radar of all three countries managed to board the train loaded with weapons.
Skarlatos said El-Khazzani “clearly had no firearms training whatsoever,” but if he “even just got lucky and did the right thing he would have been able to operate through all eight of those magazines and we would’ve all been in trouble, and probably wouldn’t be here today, along with a lot of other people.
“We just kind of acted. There wasn’t much thinking going on,” he said, “at least on my end,” Stone said with a chuckle, “None at all.”
Stone and Skarlatos moved in to tackle the gunman and take his gun. The third young man, Anthony Sadler, 23, moved in to help subdue the assailant.
“All three of us started punching” him, Stone said.
Stone said he choked him unconscious. A British businessman then joined in the fray.
Stone, of Carmichael, Calif., spoke at a live news conference at the U.S. ambassador’s residence in Paris along with Sadler, a senior at Sacramento State University in California, and Skarlatos, of Roseburg, Ore.
Stone is also credited with saving a French-American teacher wounded in the neck with a gunshot wound and squirting blood. Stone described matter-of-factly that he “just stuck two of my fingers in his hole and found what I thought to be the artery, pushed down, and the bleeding stopped.”
El-Khazzani boarded in Brussels with what France’s interior minister said was an arsenal of weapons that included a Luger pistol, numerous loaded magazines and a box cutter.
He was subdued while the train travelled through Belgium but was taken into custody in the northern French town of Arras, where the train was rerouted.
El-Khazzani’s lawyer said her client doesn’t understand the suspicions, media attention or even that a person was wounded. For him, there were no gunshots fired, Sophie David said.
“He is dumbfounded that his action is being characterized as terrorism,” she said.
He described himself as homeless and David said she had “no doubt” this was true, saying he was “very, very thin” as if suffering from malnutrition and “with a very wild look in his eyes.”
He claims to have found the weapons in a park near the Brussels train station where he had been sleeping, stashed them for several days and then decided to hold up train passengers.
A French official close to the investigation said a watch-list signal “sounded” on May 10 in Berlin, where El-Khazzani was flying to Turkey.
The French transmitted this information to Spain, which advised on May 21 that he no longer lived there but in Belgium.
The French then advised Belgium, according to the official close to the investigation, but it wasn’t clear what, if any, action was taken after that.
Asked if there were lessons, Sadler had one for all who find themselves in the face of a choice.
“Do something,” he said. “Hiding, or sitting back, is not going to accomplish anything. And the gunman would’ve been successful if my friend Spencer had not got up. So I just want that lesson to be learned, going forward, in times of, like, terror like that, please do something. Don’t just stand by and watch.”