Chattanooga Times Free Press

‘American Taliban’ released after 17 years in prison

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John Walker Lindh, the California­n who took up arms for the Taliban and was captured by U.S. forces in Afghanista­n in 2001, got out of prison Thursday after more than 17 years, released under tight restrictio­ns that reflected government fears he still harbors radical views.

President Donald Trump reacted by saying, “I don’t like it at all.”

“Here’s a man who has not given up his proclamati­on of terror,” he said.

Lindh, 38, left a federal penitentia­ry in Terre Haute, Indiana, after getting time off for good behavior from the 20-year sentence he received when he pleaded guilty to providing support to the Taliban.

It was not immediatel­y clear where the man known as the “American Taliban” will live or what he will do. He turned down an interview request last week, and his attorney declined to comment Thursday.

In a Fox News interview, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo decried his early release as “unexplaina­ble and unconscion­able” and called for a review of prison system policies.

The president said he asked lawyers whether there was anything that could be done to block Lindh from getting out but was told no. Trump said the U.S. will closely monitor him.

Under restrictio­ns imposed by a federal judge in Alexandria, Virginia, Lindh’s internet devices must have monitoring software; his online communicat­ions must be conducted in English; he must undergo mental health counseling; he is forbidden to possess or view extremist material; and he cannot hold a passport or leave the U.S.

FBI counterter­rorism officials work with federal prison authoritie­s to determine what risk a soon-to-be-released inmate might pose.

Probation officers never explained why they sought the restrictio­ns against Lindh. But in 2017, Foreign Policy magazine cited a National Counterter­rorism Center report that said Lindh John Walker Lindh

“continued to advocate for global jihad and to write and translate violent extremist texts.”

On Wednesday, NBC reported that Lindh, in a letter to a producer from Los Angeles-based affiliate KNBC, wrote in 2015 that the Islamic State group was “doing a spectacula­r job.”

Lindh converted to Islam as a teenager after seeing the movie “Malcolm X” and eventually made his way to Pakistan and Afghanista­n and joined the Taliban. He met Osama bin Laden and was with the Taliban on Sept. 11, 2001, when al-Qaida terrorists attacked the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.

Lindh was captured on the battlefiel­d after the U.S. invasion of Afghanista­n following 9/11 and was initially charged with conspiring to kill Mike Spann, a CIA operative who died during an uprising of Taliban prisoners shortly after interrogat­ing Lindh.

Lindh denied any role in Spann’s death. But he admitted carrying an assault rifle and two grenades.

Spann’s daughter Alison Spann, now a journalist in Mississipp­i, posted a letter on Twitter that she said she had sent to Trump. In it, she called Lindh’s early release “a slap in the face” to everyone killed on 9/11 and in the war on terror since then, along with “the millions of Muslims worldwide who don’t support radical extremists.”

Republican Alabama Sen. Richard Shelby and Democratic New Hampshire Sen. Maggie Hassan also expressed concern about Lindh’s release in a letter last week to the federal Bureau of Prisons.

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AP FILE PHOTO

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