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Published: Friday, December 11, 2009

U.S. men tried to join Afghan fight, Pakistanis say

ISLAMABAD — Five young American men now detained in Pakistan had sought to fight a holy war against U.S. troops in Afghanistan and were in contact with an Islamic militant in the border region of Waziristan, a suspected al-Qaida sanctuary, Pakistani officials said Thursday.

The militant booked hotel rooms for the Americans in Lahore, the capital of Punjab province, then broke off e-mail contact, possibly after learning that security agents were watching them, a senior Pakistani official said.

“These guys were actually planning to go to Afghanistan (to fight),” the official said. “He (the Waziristan contact) kind of dropped off the scene after booking them into a hotel in Lahore.”

The men, all residents of suburban Washington, D.C., included two Pakistani Americans, two Ethiopian Americans and an Egyptian American, the official said, adding that earlier reports that one was a Yemeni American were inaccurate. Their families had reported them missing late last month.

A FBI special agent and two U.S. diplomatic security officials questioned the men Thursday in the jail in Sargodha, about 120 miles south of Islamabad. Police arrested them Wednesday in a raid on a home belonging to the uncle of Umar Farouq, one of the Pakistani Americans, according to U.S. officials in Washington.

American officials declined to give details of the meeting or other aspects of the case. They emphasized that the five hadn’t yet been charged with a crime.

FBI investigators were also reviewing a video that featured one of the men and quoted passages from the Quran, the Muslim holy book, expressing anger at Muslims being victimized in conflicts overseas, according to Islamic leaders in the Washington area.

The video didn’t give a plan of action or destination, said Nihad Awad, the national executive director of the Washington-based Council on American-Islamic Relations, who viewed it. He declined to specify how he got it, citing the ongoing investigation.

“We are in the information-gathering phase of this,” State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said. “We’ve drawn no conclusions. All we really know is that these individuals were in the United States until recently. And beyond that ... we are trying to talk to them, find out, you know, what they were up to.”

The FBI said four of the men were carrying U.S. passports. Discussions with Pakistani officials on the group’s return to the U.S. were “still under way,” the FBI said.

Usman Anwar, the police chief in Sargodha, said the five men were seeking a link to an ultra-radical jihad group.

“It’s above Jaish. It’s something more serious than that,” Anwar said, referring to Jaish-e-Mohammad, the group that has been implicated in the 2002 murder of American journalist Daniel Pearl.

“They came to Pakistan for the specific purpose of doing jihad (holy war) ... They wanted to go to heaven, perhaps.”

Waziristan, where they were alleged to have had a contact, is in the remote northwest tribal area bordering Afghanistan and is the stronghold of the Pakistan Taliban movement and a suspected refuge of al-Qaida.

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Afghanistan War
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