The FBI released
photos and video of two men identified as Suspect No. 1 and Suspect No. 2
in the deadly bombings at the Boston Marathon. They have been
identified as Dzhokar Tsarnaev, 19, and Tamerlan Tsarnaev, 26.
Authorities say
Dzhokar Tsarnaev, identified as Suspect No. 2, was captured in a Boston
suburb on Friday, April 19, after a manhunt that virtually shut down the
city.
Police say the dead suspect is the man the FBI identified as Suspect No. 1. Sources tell CNN he has been identified as Tamerlan Tsarnaev. He was killed during a shootout with police in Watertown, Massachusetts, early April 19. A man identified as Suspect No. 2 appeared in this photograph by bystander David Green, who took the photo after completing the Boston Marathon. Green submitted the photo to the FBI, he told Piers Morgan in an interview. The man identified as Suspect No. 2 appears in a tighter crop of David Green's photo. Police are searching for Suspect No. 2. Several sources tell CNN this suspect at large has been idenified as Dzhokar Tsarnaev, 19. The FBI tweeted this photo early Friday morning and urged Watertown residents to stay indoors as they searched for the second suspect. The FBI on Thursday, April 18, released photos and video of two men it called suspects in the deadly bombings at the Boston Marathon and pleaded for public help in identifying them. The two men were photographed walking together near the finish line of the marathon before the explosions that killed three people and wounded about 180. The FBI on Thursday, April 18, released photos and video of two men it called suspects in the deadly bombings at the Boston Marathon and pleaded for public help in identifying them. The two men were photographed walking together near the finish line of the marathon before the explosions that killed three people and wounded about 180. We don't yet know how or why the Tsarnaev brothers, the alleged Boston Marathon bombers, decided to carry out their attacks, but a look at how their stories correlate with those of some other terrorists living in the West could provide some answers to the questions that many are now asking about them.
Police say the dead suspect is the man the FBI identified as Suspect No. 1. Sources tell CNN he has been identified as Tamerlan Tsarnaev. He was killed during a shootout with police in Watertown, Massachusetts, early April 19. A man identified as Suspect No. 2 appeared in this photograph by bystander David Green, who took the photo after completing the Boston Marathon. Green submitted the photo to the FBI, he told Piers Morgan in an interview. The man identified as Suspect No. 2 appears in a tighter crop of David Green's photo. Police are searching for Suspect No. 2. Several sources tell CNN this suspect at large has been idenified as Dzhokar Tsarnaev, 19. The FBI tweeted this photo early Friday morning and urged Watertown residents to stay indoors as they searched for the second suspect. The FBI on Thursday, April 18, released photos and video of two men it called suspects in the deadly bombings at the Boston Marathon and pleaded for public help in identifying them. The two men were photographed walking together near the finish line of the marathon before the explosions that killed three people and wounded about 180. The FBI on Thursday, April 18, released photos and video of two men it called suspects in the deadly bombings at the Boston Marathon and pleaded for public help in identifying them. The two men were photographed walking together near the finish line of the marathon before the explosions that killed three people and wounded about 180. We don't yet know how or why the Tsarnaev brothers, the alleged Boston Marathon bombers, decided to carry out their attacks, but a look at how their stories correlate with those of some other terrorists living in the West could provide some answers to the questions that many are now asking about them.
1. How could someone who grew up in the United States become a terrorist?
Major Nidal Malik Hasan, who killed 13 people at Fort Hood Army Base in Texas in 2009, was born and raised in Virginia.
He self-radicalized, in part, over the Internet, which he used to reach out
to the Yemen-based preacher Anwar al-Awlaki for advice about whether it
is permissible for Muslim soldiers in the U.S. military to kill their
comrades in the name of jihad.
Awlaki, a leader of al Qaeda's affiliate in Yemen, was somewhat noncommittal in his responses but did not discourage the act.
Investigators will surely
be combing through the e-mail traffic of the Tsarnaev brothers to see
if they either reached out to militant Islamist clerics or downloaded
lectures by such clerics. They will also examine the brothers' Internet
usage to see if they visited jihadist forums or downloaded propaganda
from al Qaeda or other allied groups. And of course, it's possible their
decision to carry out the attacks was reached without any outside
influence.
2. How do you square the multiple descriptions of the brothers as "good guys" with the fact that they plotted mass murder?
It's worth recalling that
Mohammed Sidique Khan, the leader of the suicide attackers who bombed
the London transit system in 2005 killing 52 commuters, was a beloved
teacher at a primary school in the northern city of Leeds who taught
children with developmental problems, and the happily married
30-year-old father of a baby daughter. Colleagues and acquaintances described Khan as a gentle, kind man.
No surprise then that we are hearing some similar positive characterizations of the brothers Tsarnaev.
3. Did the brothers have any training or practice on explosives?
It seems quite unlikely
that the perpetrators would have been able to successfully set off two
deadly bombs within seconds of each other without some sort of training
or practice.
Bomb-making recipes
certainly exist on the Internet, but actually building effective bombs
is generally a skill that requires some training or practice, and even
then a successful detonation is not guaranteed.
Faizal Shahzad, for
instance, received bomb-making training from the Pakistani Taliban
before he constructed a bomb in an SUV that fizzled out rather than
blowing up as he intended in Times Square on May 1, 2010.
The older Tsarnaev
brother, Tamerlan, spent six months in Russia last year. What precisely
he did there will surely be of intense interest to investigators. Could
he have received some kind of bomb-training from Chechen militants who
are experienced in making explosives?
Also, might the brothers have done some kind of test runs of their explosive devices in the United States?
4. If the brothers' motivation had something to do with their Chechen heritage, how might that have played out in this case?
In the years after 9/11,
dozens of young Somali-American men traveled to fight in the civil war
in Somalia. Just as the Tsarnaev brothers, these Somali-Americans were
first-generation Americans.
For these new Americans,
the politics of their homeland can sometimes become more meaningful and
important than it was for their parents who fled the chaos of their
native countries for the safety of the United States, and who now want
to put those conflicts behind them.
What exactly prompted the FBI to interview
Tamerlan Tsarnaev in 2011, following a tip from an unidentified foreign
government that he was "a follower of radical Islam" and was
contemplating leaving the United States to join a clandestine
organization? And was this tip provided by the Russian government, which
has been at war in Chechnya on and off since the 19th century?
5. Did the brothers intend to die during the attacks or their aftermath?
It seems shocking to
many that the Tsarnaev brothers might have been wearing suicide vests
during their gun battle with police on Thursday night, but in reality
several U.S. citizens and residents have intended to die in terrorist
attacks.
Three of the young
Somali-American men who traveled from Minnesota to fight in civil war in
Somalia later carried out suicide attacks there.
Major Hasan undoubtedly
went into his attack on a military base full of armed U.S. soldiers
believing that it would be the last thing he did before he died. (That
prediction did not come true. He was wounded in the attack but not
killed).
Al Qaeda recruit
Najibullah Zazi, who plotted to bomb the Manhattan subway in the summer
of 2009, planned to die in this attack but was arrested before he could
pull it off.
6. Were the brothers really "lone wolves"?
Given all the mayhem the
two brothers are allegedly responsible for: Two bombings that caused
three deaths and some two hundred injuries at the Boston Marathon as
well as the subsequent murder of a policeman at MIT, did they have some
kind of additional help?
According to Boston law
enforcement officials, there is no evidence of such help and it's worth
recalling that Hasan was entirely a lone wolf who nonetheless managed to
kill 13 on a U.S. military base with heavy security.
7. How unusual is it for brothers to carry out terrorist attacks together?
More frequent than you
might think. The deadliest terrorist attack in U.S. history on 9/11
involved three pairs of brothers among the 19 hijackers: brothers Waleed
and Wail al-Sheri, Hamza and Ahmed al-Ghamdi and Nawaf and Salem
al-Hazmi.
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