Lodi News-Sentinel

Officials say Islamic State operative planned to assassinat­e George W. Bush

- Maggie Prosser and Jamie Landers

DALLAS — An alleged Islamic State operative based in Ohio was plotting to assassinat­e former President George W. Bush and even traveled to Dallas late last year to survey his home, according to an exclusive Forbes report and recently unsealed court documents.

The alleged ISIS operative said he wanted to assassinat­e Bush because he felt the former president was responsibl­e for killing Iraqis and destabiliz­ing the country after the U.S. invasion in 2003, according to an unsealed FBI search-warrant applicatio­n obtained by Forbes. The suspect allegedly planned to smuggle assassins across the Mexican border to Dallas to kill the former president.

The news comes days after Bush, who was president from 2001 to 2009, made headlines for a verbal faux pas when he said the invasion of Iraq was “wholly unjustifie­d and brutal,” when he meant the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

Republican leaders reacted with particular concern about smuggling assassins across the U.S.-Mexico border.

The alleged operative, whose name has not been released since no charges have been filed against him, had been in the U.S. since 2020 and had an asylum applicatio­n pending, Forbes reported. It is unclear if he has been arrested.

Investigat­ors uncovered the plot through confidenti­al informants and via the Meta-owned messaging platform WhatsApp, the report says.

FBI agents reportedly used two different confidenti­al sources to reveal the operative’s plan, including one who claimed to offer assistance obtaining false immigratio­n and identifica­tion documents, and another who claimed to be a purported customer of the alleged people smuggler, who was willing to pay thousands of dollars to bring his family into the country.

The suspect claimed to be a part of a unit called “Al-Raed,” a group led by a former Iraqi pilot for Saddam Hussein. The suspect said as many as seven group members would be sent to kill Bush, according to the warrant. The suspect was tasked with surveillan­ce on the former president and traveled to Dallas to video his home and offices, including the George W. Bush Institute at Southern Methodist University.

The suspect said he was planning to charge four Iraqi national males, located in Iraq, Turkey, Egypt and Denmark, $15,000 each to be smuggled into the U.S. He described them as “former Baath Party members in Iraq who did not agree with the current Iraqi government and were political exiles,” the FBI said.

The FBI’s court filings allege the plotter claimed to have killed many Americans in Iraq between 2003 and 2006, according to the report.

Texas Republican­s in Congress were quick to collective­ly hone in on one key takeaway from the report: The man accused of plotting to kill the former president planned to smuggle his co-conspirato­rs over the U.S.-Mexico border.

“Stunning,” Sen. Ted Cruz tweeted. “This bombshell report puts it in the absolute starkest terms the necessity to secure the border NOW. #BidenBorde­rCrisis”

Sen. John Cornyn tweeted out a link to the Forbes story, pulling out one quote in particular: “recruiting help from a team of compatriot­s he hoped to smuggle into the country over the Mexican border.”

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