A man identified as Suleiman Abu Ghaith appears in this still
image
BBC
A man described as a spokesman for Osama Bin Laden has been arrested
and will be tried in New York City, the US has confirmed.
Abu Ghaith is Bin Laden's son-in-law and played a role in plotting the
attacks of 9/11, US officials said.
Bin Laden was killed in a May 2011 raid on his hideout in Pakistan by a
team of US commandos, reports the BBC.
Abu Ghaith is scheduled to appear in a federal court on Friday on
charges of conspiracy to kill United States nationals.
"Sulaiman Abu Ghaith held a key position in al-Qaeda, comparable to the
consigliere in a mob family or propaganda minister in a totalitarian
regime," said FBI Assistant Director-in-Charge George Venizelos in a
statement.
"He used his position to threaten the United States and incite its
enemies."
A teacher and mosque preacher in Kuwait, Abu Ghaith was stripped of his
Kuwaiti citizenship after 9/11.
Justice department officials say Abu Ghaith served alongside Bin Laden
from May 2001 to 2002, speaking on behalf of al-Qaeda and warning that
attacks similar to 9/11 would continue.
Specifically, on 12 September 2001, he appeared with Bin Laden and
Ayman al-Zawahiri to warn the US that a "great army is gathering against
you" and called upon "the nation of Islam" to do battle against "the
Jews, the Christians and the Americans," according to court records.
He was reportedly smuggled to Iran sometime in 2002.
A Jordanian security official told the Associated Press that Abu Ghaith
was handed over last week to US officials under both countries'
extradition treaties.
King called the arrest a "very significant victory" in the fight
against al-Qaeda.
"One by one, we are getting the top echelons of al-Qaeda," the
Republican congressman said. "I give the administration credit for this.
It's steady and it's unrelenting and it's very successful."
Abu Ghaith's trial will mark one of the first prosecutions of senior
al-Qaeda leaders on US soil.
Since 9/11, 67 foreign terror suspects have been convicted in US
federal courts, according to data obtained by the group Human Rights
First.
Some US lawmakers disagreed with the decision to try Abu Ghaith in New
York.
"When we find somebody like this, this close to Bin Laden and the
senior al-Qaeda leadership, the last thing in the world we want to do,
in my opinion, is put them in a civilian court," said Republican Senator
Lindsey Graham on Thursday.
"This man should be in Guantanamo Bay," he said.
A senior administration official told the BBC that Obama's national
security team "unanimously agreed" that prosecution of Abu Ghaith in
federal court was in the US' national security interests.
"The administration is seeking to close Guantanamo, not add to its
population," the official said
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