The 200-page redacted
documents, which contained information obtained from Mr Abdulmutallab through
extensive interviews, was released to the newspaper after two years of legal
struggle.
The documents containing
detailed accounts of how slain Al Qaeda leader, Anwar al-Awlaki, mentored a
Nigerian, Farouk Abdulmutallab, who tried to explode a bomb hidden in his
underpants, on a flight from Amsterdam in the Netherlands to Detroit, United
States, on Christmas Day in 2009, has been revealed.
The Federal Bureau of
Investigation, FBI, had kept the account a secret and rejected a request made
by an author of a 2015 book on the life of Mr Al-Awlaki, an American-born
islamic cleric, forcing the New York Times to sue to obtain the documents.
Last December, a federal
judge, Ronnie Abrams, ordered the FBI to release the document to the newspaper.
Mr Al-Awlaki was killed by
a drone strike ordered by former President Barack Obama in 2011. He was the
first American to be killed by the deliberate order of a U.S. president since
the Civil War.
In a series of interviews
with the FBI, Mr Abdulmutallab, a wealthy 23-year-old studying engineering at
the University College, London, revealed his journey towards radicalisation and
how he sought out Mr al-Awlaki, who mentored him into becoming a terrorist.
Mr Abdulmutallab told FBI
agent about how he first encountered the Al-Qaeda leader through a recorded
lecture he bought from an Islamic store in the United Kingdom in 2005. He
became enamored by his teachings
After a trip to the United
Arab Emirates in 2009, he said he felt “God was guiding him to jihad.” He
travelled to Yemen to meet the Mr al-Awkali, who then had fully embraced
violence and was a rising Al Qaeda leader.
From then Mr al-Awkali
transcended from being his religious hero into his tutor on how to become a
jihadist. Mr Abdulmutallab told agents that the cleric did not only oversee his
training in Yemen, but also conceived the plot leading to the failed bomb
attack.
According to the report, Mr
Abdulmutallab in series of interviews described every person he remembered
meeting from Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsul, as the Yemen branch of the
terrorist group is known.
He also provided agents
with vivid description of the layout of training camps, Mr al-Awlaki’s house
and many other Qaeda buildings. According to the New York Times, his
descriptions were so precise that they may have aided the U.S.in its drone
campaign in Yemen.
He said Mr al-Awlaki, who
was called “sheikh” out of respect, introduced him to other Al Qaeda trainers
and bomb makers. The American, Mr Abdulmutallab told the FBI, taught him how to
prepare a martydom video, advising him to “keep it short and reference the
Quran.”
Mr al-Awkali told Mr
Abdulmutallab to hide his trail by first traveling from Yemen to an African
country before booking a flight on which he planned to detonate the bomb.
Mr Abdulmutallab flew from
Ghana to Amsterdam before joining Northwest Airlines Flight 253 to Detroit.
He said the choice of the
date for the attack had no special significance and was mainly dictated by
ticket prices and flight schedules.
Before he departed, Mr
al-Awlaki sent him a final reminder: “Wait until you are in the U.S., then
bring the plane down.”
He said he followed the
progress of the flight on the seat-back screen. He waited until he approached
the US border and went to the plane’s bathroom to make final preparations for
the attack.
He thought of detonating
the bomb in the bathroom but wanted to be certain that he was doing so over US
soil, so he returned to his seat to check the map for a final time before
igniting the explosives.
Maybe due to excess
moisture, the bomb did not explode but let out a flame. As he tried to get his burning
pants off, passengers pounced on him. One passenger punched him and a crew
member threatened to throw him out of the plane.
He began confessing to the
terror act even before leaving the plane. He said he was a member of Al Qaeda
and that he had tried to set off a bomb. He later stopped talking and needed
the presence of his relatives who were flown by U.S. authorities from Nigeria
to persuade him to become cooperative again.

Innocent boy turned terror sad
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