http://nation.foxnews.com/germany-airport-shooting/2011/03/03/obama-administ
ration-refuses-call-attack-germany-act-terrorism

 


Obama Admin. Refuses to Call Attack in Germany an Act of Terrorism, Compares
It to Giffords Shooting


U.S. State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley on whether the murder of two
U.S. airmen was a terrorist attack:

"Was the shooting of Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords a terrorist attack? I
mean, you have to look at the evidence and look at the motivation and then
you make a judgment," Crowley told the Press.

Official: Suspect in Deadly U.S. Airmen Shooting Wanted Revenge for
Afghanistan

The suspect in the murder of two U.S. airmen at the Frankfurt airport
confessed that he specifically wanted to kill Americans as revenge for the
Afghan war, a German investigator said Friday.

Prosecutor Rainer Griesbaum told reporters that 21-year-old Arid Uka from
Kosovo said he went to the airport with the intent to shoot "as revenge for
the American mission in Afghanistan."

Griesbaum also said that Uka's pistol malfunctioned during the attack,
preventing further loss of life. After shooting and injuring two more airmen
he pointed the pistol at the head of a third and pulled the trigger twice,
but the weapon jammed.

U.S. officials tell Fox News that German authorities are investigating
"substantial evidence that Uka has links to Islamic fundamentalist groups in
Germany." Officials also say evidence supports the view so far that Uka did
act alone -- which he stated -- but no final conclusions have been reached.

Hesse Interior Minister Boris Rhein told reporters Thursday in Wiesbaden
that Uka was apparently radicalized over the last few weeks by looking at
Islamist websites in Germany. U.S. officials confirm that the suspect was
extremely active on the Internet, specifically Facebook. They say they are
looking for any potential contacts with the American cleric Anwar al-Awlaki,
who is seen as the new generation of digital jihadist. 

President on murder of U.S. airmen

The U.S. Air Force released the names of the victims on Thursday: Senior
Airman Nicholas J. Alden , 25, of Williamston, S.C., and Airman First Class
Zachary R. Cuddeback, 21, of Stanardsville, Va.

A U.S. law enforcement official says the suspect was not on any American
terrorism watch list.

Rhein says that the investigation indicates that he acted alone and did not
belong to a terrorist network or terrorist cell, but German federal
prosecutors say the attack appears to have been motivated by Islamic
extremism.

Uka told investigators a YouTube video he saw the day before the incident
allegedly showing a raid on a home by U.S. soldiers in Afghanistan had
inspired him to prevent "further cruelties."

When he saw the bus clearly marked as U.S. Airforce parked outside Terminal
2, he approached an airman outside and, under the pretext of asking for a
cigarette, asked if the servicemen were on their way to Afghanistan.

"When he said yes, he shot the 25-year-old serviceman from behind in the
head," Griesbaum said.

Uka then stormed onto the bus carrying 15 other airmen, yelling "Allah
Akbar!" -- Arabic for "God is great!" -- and shot the driver in the head,
killing him as well, Griesbaum said.

He then shot a 25-year-old airman who was sitting on the bus twice, and then
turned his gun on another airman, 21 and fired once, injuring both of them,
Griesbaum said.

"Then he tried to shoot a 22-year-old," Griesbaum said. "He pointed his
pistol at his head and pulled the trigger twice, but the pistol jammed and
no shots came out."

Even though there were still six shots in the magazine, the jam prevented
any further firing and Uka fled the bus.

All of the airmen were based at the Lakenheath military base in Britain.

They were all based at the Lakenheath military base in Britain.

President Obama said he was "saddened and outraged" by the shooting.

The president says the U.S. will spare no effort in finding out how the
"outrageous" act took place and will ensure the perpetrators are brought to
justice. He called it a tragedy.

In Berlin, German Chancellor Angela Merkel said her sympathies were with the
victims and their families, and pledged that Germany would do everything in
its power to investigate the crime.

"It is a terrible event," she said.

The U.S. has drastically reduced its forces in Germany over the last decade,
but still has some 50,000 troops stationed here. It operates several major
facilities in the Frankfurt region, including the Ramstein Air Base often
used as a logistical hub for operations in Afghanistan or Iraq.

At the airport, taxi cab driver Salimi Seraidon said he was sitting at a
stand about 200 yards away when the attack took place and said it was over
quickly as police rushed onto the scene.

"We just heard the shots," he said.

The American forces in Germany have been targeted in attacks in the past,
including a 1986 bombing at a disco in then-West Berlin that was known to be
frequented by U.S. servicemen.

Two soldiers and one civilian were killed, and 230 others injured in that
attack, which a Berlin court in 2001 ruled was organized by the Libyan
secret service and aided by the Libyan Embassy in then-communist East
Berlin.

The leftist terrorist Red Army Faction was also responsible for a string of
attacks on Americans in the 1970s and 1980s before the group was disbanded
in 1998.

More recently, German police thwarted a plot in 2007 to attack U.S.
facilities by members of the extremist Islamic Jihad Union. Four men had
planning to attack American soldiers and citizens at facilities including
the U.S. Air Force's Ramstein Air Base in Germany but were caught before
they could carry out the plot.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

 



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