AMERICAN APPEARS IN NEW AL-QAIDA
TAPE 09-02-06
By LEE KEATH, Associated Press Writer September 2, 2006
CAIRO, Egypt - An American
thought to be an al-Qaida activist appeared in a videotape with the terror group's deputy leader Saturday and called on his
countrymen to convert to Islam and for U.S. soldiers to switch sides in the Iraq and Afghan wars.
The 48-minute video, posted
on an Islamic militant Web site, had footage of al-Qaida's No. 2 leader, Ayman al-Zawahri, and of Adam Yehiye Gadahn, a 28-year-old
American who the FBI believes attended al-Qaida training camps in Pakistan and served as an al-Qaida
translator.
It was the second time Gadahn
appeared in the same video with al-Zawahri. In a July 7 video marking the one-year anniversary of the terror attack on London
commuters, Gadahn appeared briefly, saying no Muslim should "shed tears" for Westerners killed by al-Qaida attacks.
But Saturday's video —
and the length of Gadahn's speech — suggested al-Qaida has found in him someone who can communicate effectively with
Americans.
Appearing days before the
fifth anniversary of the Sept. 11 terror attacks on the U.S., Gadahn spoke for nearly the entire
video, wearing a white robe and a white turban, sitting in front of a desk with a computer and Islamic religious books in
a room with a white wall.
The video included no direct
threats of terror attacks.
Gadahn delivered a lecture
on Islam and the "errors" in Christianity and Judaism. He also said the United States is losing the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and told U.S. soldiers they are fighting President Bush's "crusades."
"Instead of killing yourself
for Bush ... why not surrender to the truth (of Islam), escape from the unbelieving army and join the winning side. Time is
running out so make the right choice before it's too late," he said.
Al-Zawahri gave only a brief
introduction to the video, calling on Americans to convert to Islam.
"To the American people
and the people of the West in general ... God sent his Prophet Muhammad with guidance and the religion of truth ... and sent
him as a herald," he said.
The CIA
said it had conducted a technical review on the videotape and concluded the voice is al-Zawahri's. A CIA spokeswoman said
the agency is not authorized to conduct such analysis on U.S.
citizens such as Gadahn.
White House spokeswoman
Christie Parell said the message reflects al-Qaida's "continued attempts to subjugate the world under its twisted view of
Islam, which labels as enemies and infidels those who do not have the same beliefs."
Little is known about Gadahn's
role in al-Qaida. A Californian who converted to Islam, he disappeared soon after the Sept. 11 attacks. In 2004, the FBI announced
it was seeking Gadahn in connection with possible terrorist threats against the U.S.,
but adding it did not have information linking him to any specific terror activities.
"You know that if you die
as an unbeliever in battle against the Muslims you're going straight to Hell without passing 'Go,'" Gadahn said on the video,
addressing American soldiers. "You know you're considered by Bush and his bunch of warmongers as nothing more than expendable
cannon fodder ... You know they couldn't care less about your safety and well-being."
"We send a special invitation
(to convert to Islam) to all of you fighting Bush's crusader pipe dream in Afghanistan,
Iraq and wherever else 'W' has sent you
to die. You know the war can't be won," he said, using Bush's nickname.
Gadahn also urged other
Americans to convert to Islam.
"It is time for the unbelievers
to discard these incoherent and illogical beliefs," he said. "Isn't it the time for the Christians, Jews, Buddhists and atheists
to cast off the cloak of the spiritual darkness which enshrouds them and emerge into the light of Islam?"
Gadahn and al-Zawahri appeared
in separate parts of the video, which was released by al-Qaida's production wing, As-Sahab. Gadahn spoke with his face uncovered,
resembling FBI photos, with his name and nom de guerre — "Azzam the American" — written in titles in Arabic and
English next to him. Arabic subtitles translated his comments.
Besides the July 7 video,
Gadahn is believed to be a masked figure who appeared in two previous videos not officially from al-Qaida, one given to ABC
television in 2004 and another a few days before the fourth anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks.
In the 2005 tape, the speaker
— who had black cloth draped over his face, leaving only his eyes visible — threatened new terror attacks in Los
Angeles and Melbourne, Australia. The 2004 tape praised the Sept. 11 attacks and said a new wave of attacks could come at
any moment.
Much of Gadahn's latest
speech was dedicated to urging Americans to convert to Islam, and he dotted it with fluently recited Arabic verses from the
Quran and stories from Islamic history.
He denounced Christianity
as a "hollow shell of a religion, whose followers cling to an empty faith and a false conviction in their own salvation."
"It is time for the unbelievers
to discard these incoherent and illogical beliefs," he said. "We invite all Americans and other unbelievers to Islam, wherever
they are."
Gadahn grew up in rural
simplicity on a ranch southwest of Hemet, Calif.
His father, Philip, said he moved there in the 1970s to escape the noise and traffic of the city, changing the family name
from Pearlman because he was starting a new life. The family tried raising goats as a business, but it wasn't profitable and
they now keep them just to eat the grass around the home as fire protection.
Gadahn did not attend college,
choosing instead to move to the suburbs of Los Angeles where
he became a Muslim and worshipped at the Islamic Society of Orange County. The mosque later expelled him for attacking one
of its leaders.
The new video had been advertised
on militant Web sites for several days. Al-Zawahri last appeared in a video July 27, calling for Muslims to unite in a holy
war against Israel and to join the fighting in
Lebanon and Gaza.
Nancy Pearlman, Gadahn's
aunt, declined to comment about the tape when contacted by The Associated Press, saying she had not seen it. She declined
to talk about anything else regarding Gadahn.