Al-Shabaab has also found
supporters in places as diverse as Seattle, St. Louis, San Diego,
Minnesota, Maryland, Ohio and Alabama.
Al-Shabaab had particular success recruiting Somali-Americans to its cause after the Ethiopian army invaded Somalia in 2006, which Al-Shabaab cast as Somalia being taken over by a "crusader" army. Ethiopia is a majority Christian nation.
The largest group of
American citizens and residents who have provided manpower and money to
Al-Shabaab reside in Minnesota. According to a count by the New America
Foundation, 22 residents of Minnesota have funded or fought with
Al-Shabaab during the past four years.
Three of them provided
funds to Al-Shabaab, and 19 have been indicted for traveling to fight in
Somalia or have died in the war there.
The story of Minnesotan
support for Al-Shabaab began in late 2007, when Cabdulaahi Ahmed Faarax,
an American citizen of Somali descent in his early 30s, and several
other men met at a Minnesota mosque and discussed traveling to Somalis
to fight for Al-Shabaab.
Faarax told the group
that he had "experienced true brotherhood" while fighting in Somalia and
that "jihad would be fun" and they would "get to shoot guns," according to the U.S. Justice Department.
That meeting resulted in seven men traveling from Minnesota to Somalia to fight for Al-Shabaab in late 2007.
One was Shirwa Ahmed,
a 26-year-old naturalized American citizen. Ahmed became the first
American to conduct a suicide attack when he drove a truck loaded with
explosives toward a government compound in Puntland, northern Somalia,
blowing himself up and killing 20 other people in October 29, 2008. He
is buried in a cemetery in Burnsville, a suburb of Minneapolis.
Other American suicide
attackers would follow. In early June 2011, Farah Mohamed Beledi, 27, of
Minneapolis detonated a bomb, becoming one of two suicide attackers
responsible for killing two African Union soldiers in Somalia, according to the FBI.
The third American
to conduct a suicide attack was Abdisalan Hussein Ali, a 22-year-old
from Minneapolis who took part in a strike on African Union troops in
the Somali capital of Mogadishu on October 29, 2011.
There may even have been
a fourth American suicide attacker in Somalia. On September 17, 2009,
two stolen U.N. vehicles loaded with bombs blew up at the Mogadishu
airport, killing more than a dozen peacekeepers of the African Union.
The FBI suspects that 18-year-old Omar Mohamud of Seattle was one of the bombers.
For those Americans who
have traveled to Somalia to fight for Al-Shabaab, it has often proved to
be a one-way ticket. A 2011 report by the U.S. House of Representatives
Committee on Homeland Security found that at least 15 Americans had
died while fighting for Al-Shabaab (as well as three Canadians).
Some of the young men
who volunteered to fight in Somalia had grown up in the Cedar-Riverside
neighborhood of Minneapolis, which is one of the poorest places in the
United States. In recent years, Somali-American family incomes there
averaged less than $15,000 a year, and the unemployment rate was 17%.
Al-Shabaab's American support network also extended well beyond Minnesota.
Basaaly Saeed Moalin, a cabdriver in San Diego who was in contact with an Al-Shabaab leader, was convicted of sending funds to the group along with three co-conspirators this year.
In St. Louis, Mohamud Abdi Yusuf pleaded guilty in 2012 of providing funds to Al-Shabaab.
A resident of Ohio, Ahmed Hussain Mahamud, was indicted in 2011 for funding Somali-Americans traveling to join Al-Shabaab.
Al-Shabaab's support network in the United States has reached beyond the Somali-American community. Ruben Shumpert, an African-American convert to Islam from Seattle, was killed in Somalia in 2008.
A former U.S. soldier, Craig B. Baxam, 24, of Laurel, Maryland, was arrested by
Kenyan authorities in December 2011 as he tried to make his way to
Somalia to join Al-Shabaab, which he told FBI agents he considered to be
a religious duty.
Omar Hammami of Daphne, Alabama, grew up Baptist and converted to Islam
when he was in his teens. In a lengthy autobiography that Hammami
posted online last year entitled "The Story of an American Jihadi," he
explained his long journey from growing up Christian in a small town in
Alabama to fighting on the front lines in Somalia with Al-Shabaab.
The journey began with a
life-changing trip to Syria, the homeland of his father, when he was 15
that sparked his interest in Islam. Hammami wrote in his autobiography (PDF), "when I came back from that vacation, I had become a different person."
Over the past several
years, Hammami rose up the ranks in Al-Shabaab, becoming an important
leader. Disputes with other Al-Shabaab leaders led him to split off from
the group. He was killed this month, probably by members of Al-Shabaab, according to Islamist websites.
In the wake of many of
these developments, for the past three years, the Justice Department and
the FBI have engaged in a serious effort to crack down on U.S. support
for Al-Shabaab, in particular in Minnesota, in an effort codenamed Operation Rhino.
This seems to have had
some success, as the number of Americans indicted for supporting
Al-Shabaab on the front lines or with their wallets has dropped sharply
since the launch of Operation Rhino.
Over the weekend,
Al-Shabaab issued a list of nine names it claimed were among the
attackers who carried out its deadly assault on the upscale Westgate
Mall in Nairobi, Kenya. Al-Shabaab alleged that three of the attackers
were from the United States. The FBI is looking into whether these
claims are true.
Whether or not any
Americans played a role in the massacre in Nairobi that has claimed 62
lives, there is a deadly history of American support for Al-Shabaab.
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