http://www.investigativeproject.org/4238/alleged-kansas-bomber-wanted-to-be-obedient-slave
An FBI sting has led to the arrest of a Wichita, Kan. man who thought
he was about to die in a suicide car bombing that targeted a terminal
at the city's Mid-Continent Airport.
Terry Lee Loewen, 58, worked at the airport as an avionics
technician. This gave him access to airport grounds. He was arrested
before dawn Friday after he tried to open a security gate and get on the
tarmac, the Kansas City Star reports.
According to a three-count complaint,
Loewen discussed his view of faith as a Muslim. That included
expressing "his desire to engage in violent jihad on behalf of al Qaeda"
during an online conversation with someone whom, unbeknownst to him,
was an FBI employee.
"I don't understand how you can read the Qur'an and the sunnah of the
Prophet (saw) and not understand that jihad and the implementation of
Sharia is absolutely demanded of all the Muslim Ummah," Loewen allegedly wrote
Aug. 5. "I feel so guilt-ridden sometimes for knowing what's required
of me but yet doing little or nothing to make it happen. I love my
Muslim brothers and sisters, whether they agree with me or not, it's
just hard to deal with the denial that some of them appear to be going
through."
Osama bin Laden and American-born al-Qaida cleric Anwar al-Awlaki
"are a great inspiration to me, but I must be willing to give up
everything (like they did) to truly feel like a (sic) obedient slave of
Allah (swt)," he wrote a few days later.
Later that month, he asked for help
finding "someone who is active in jihad and could use an occasional
influx of 'help' ... I just hate the kaffar government and those who are
following it to the Hellfire, and the sooner it and its followers get
there, the better."
Loewen was trying to drive a van packed with explosives to a terminal
as part of a plan he spent months developing, a Department of Justice statement says. He "talked about his commitment to trigger the device and martyr himself."
The explosives were rendered inert by the FBI and the public was
never in danger. Agents were drawn to Loewen early last summer after he
made statements about jihad. He is with trying to use a weapon of mass
destruction, and attempting to provide material support to al-Qaida in
the Arabian Peninsula, a designated foreign terrorist organization.
Many national Islamist groups have criticized similar sting operations,
arguing the FBI is manufacturing a terrorist threat where it might not
exist. If Loewen's correspondence in the complaint proves accurate,
however, he was a man with the motivation and access to pull off a
horrific attack. Left alone, he might have found ways to make his own bomb.
At one point, Loewen acknowledged not knowing whether he could trust
his contact. But it wasn't enough to discourage him from pursuing an
attack. "my greatest fear is not being able to complete an operation
because I was set up," he wrote.
"I hate this government so much for what they have done to our brothers
and sisters, that to spent (sic) the rest of my life in prison without
having taken a good slice out of the serpents head is unacceptable to
me."
If convicted, Loewen could face life in prison.
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