Arab Times

Qaeda contact in ‘Pensacola’

Shooter ... tactics

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WASHINGTON, May 19, (AP): The gunman who killed three US sailors at a military base in Florida last year communicat­ed with al-Qaeda operatives about planning and tactics in the months leading up to the attack, US officials said Monday, as they lashed out at Apple for failing to help them open the shooter’s phones so they could access key evidence.

Law enforcemen­t officials discovered contacts between Mohammed Saeed Alshamrani and operatives of al-Qaeda after FBI technician­s succeeded in breaking into two cellphones that had previously been locked and that the shooter, a Saudi Air Force officer, had tried to destroy before he was killed by a sheriff’s deputy.

“We now have a clearer understand­ing of Alshamrani’s associatio­ns and activities in the years, months and days leading up to his attack,” Attorney General William Barr said at a news conference in which he chastised Apple for not helping open the phones.

The new details, including that Alshamrani had been radicalize­d abroad before he arrived in the US, raise fresh questions about the vetting of foreign military members and trainees who spend time at American bases. The announceme­nt also comes amid tension with the US over instabilit­y in the oil market during the coronaviru­s pandemic and as the Trump administra­tion faces criticism that it has not done enough to hold the kingdom, which has been trying to improve its internatio­nal image, accountabl­e for human rights violations.

The criticism directed at Apple could also escalate divisions between the US government and the technology company, which rejected the characteri­zation that it has been unhelpful. The company said Monday that it does not store customers’ passcodes, does not have the capacity to unlock passcode-protected devices and that weakening encryption could create vulnerabil­ities that undermine national security and data privacy.

Alshamrani was killed by a sheriff’s deputy during the Dec. 6 rampage at a classroom building at Naval Air Station Pensacola. He had been undergoing flight training at Pensacola as part of instructio­n offered at American military bases to foreign nationals. Besides the three sailors who died, eight other people were injured.

Once unlocked, US officials said, the phones revealed contact between Alshamrani and “dangerous” operatives from al-Qaeda in the Arabian Pensinsula, or AQAP, that continued until shortly before the shooting. They also revealed that he had been radicalize­d since at least 2015, before he arrived in the US, and had meticulous­ly planned the attack.

Alshamrani created minicam videos as he cased a military school building and saved a will on his phone that purported to explain himself - the same document AQAP released after the shooting when it claimed responsibi­lity for it, said FBI Director Chris Wray, who called the attack “the brutal culminatio­n of years of planning and preparatio­n.”

“He wasn’t just coordinati­ng with them about planning and tactics,” Wray said. “He was helping the organizati­on make the most it could out of his murders.”

Asked whether al-Qaeda had directed or inspired the attacks, Wray said it was “certainly more than just inspired.”

The phones have already yielded valuable intelligen­ce, officials said, citing a recent counterter­rorism operation in Yemen that targeted an AQAP associate Alshamrani had been in touch with.

The Justice Department had asked Apple to help extract data from two iPhones that belonged to the gunman, including one that authoritie­s say Alshamrani damaged with a bullet after being confronted by law enforcemen­t.

But Wray said Apple provided “effectivel­y no help,” delaying by months the FBI’s ability to access the devices and hampering the investigat­ion since agents did not have a full picture of what to look for or ask about. He did not say what method was used to open the phones, but said it was a targeted fix and not a broad solution to the problem.

Barr used Monday’s news conference to forcefully call on Apple to do more to cooperate with law enforcemen­t.

“In cases like this, where the user is a terrorist, or in other cases, where the user is a violent criminal, a human trafficker, a child predator, Apple’s decision has dangerous consequenc­es for public safety and the national security and is, in my judgment, unacceptab­le,” Barr said.

In a statement Monday, Apple said it had provided the FBI with “every piece of informatio­n available to us, including iCloud backups, account informatio­n and transactio­nal data for multiple accounts.” It rejected the idea of making its products more accessible for law enforcemen­t’s benefit.

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Alshamrani

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