ISIS in America - Full Report
ISIS in America - Full Report
ISIS in America - Full Report
All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted
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retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
2015 by Program on Extremism
Program on Extremism
2000 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Suite 2210
Washington, DC 20052
www.cchs.gwu.edu/program-extremism
Contents
Acknowledgments v
Foreword vii
Executive Summary ix
Introduction 1
A Snapshot of ISIS in America 5
From Keyboard Warriors to Battlefield Commanders:
Understanding the Spectrum of ISIS in America 15
Conclusion 33
Appendix 35
Illustrations
1. Young (left) and Dakhlalla 1
2. Youngs Twitter account 1
3. ISIS Recruits in the U.S. Legal System 6
4. Excerpt from missing persons report filed by family of the Somali-American
teens 8
5. Tweet posted by the 16-year-old Denver girl 8
6. Reposted by one of the Denver girls on Tumblr on the anniversary of their
failed trip 8
7. Hoda Muthanas high school yearbook portrait 9
8. Muthana on life in the caliphate, January 2015 9
9. El Gammal, December 2013 10
10. Samy identifies himself: excerpt from El Gammals criminal complaint 10
Illustrations, continued
11. Soofi (left) and Simpson 10
12. Usaamah Abdullah Rahim 11
13. Amiir Farouk Ibrahims American passport 11
14. Douglas McCain, aspiring rapper turned jihadist 12
15. Hanad Abdullahi Mohallims Twitter profile 12
16. Abdullah Ramo Pazara (right) in Syria 12
17. Abu Muhammad al Amriki explains his defection to ISIS 13
18. One of Abu Khalid al Amrikis final tweets 13
19. News of Abu Khalid al Amrikis death circulates on Twitter 13
20. Abu Abdullah al Amriki 14
21. ISIS announces Abu Abdullah al Amrikis death 14
22. Moner Abu Salha, a.k.a. Abu Hurayra al Ameriki 16
23. Ariel Bradley celebrates the Chattanooga shootings 16
24. Snapshot of life in the caliphate: image from Ariel Bradleys Instagram account 17
25. Mohammed Hamzah Khan on Twitter 20
26. Elton Simpson pledges allegiance to ISIS before his attack 21
27. The Radicalization Echo Chamber 22
28. Examples of ISIS supporters imagery on social media 23
29. Clockwise: A user announces a new account; examples of node, shout-out, and
amplifier accounts 24
30. Clockwise: Interjecting in the #BlackLivesMatter conversation; sharing a quote from
Anwar al Awlaki; dismissing ISIS critics as coconuts 25
31. From the U.S. to Syria: Abdullah Ramo Pazara 27
32. Nader Saadeh 28
33. Alaa Saadeh 28
34. Samuel Topaz on Facebook 28
35. Facebook post by Mohamed Saeed Kodaimati 29
36. Mohamed Saeed Kodaimati 29
37. Shannon Maureen Conley 30
38. Christopher Lee Cornell 31
Acknowledgments
T HIS REP ORT was made possible by the dedicated work of the Program on Extremisms staff, including
its Research Associates, Sarah Gilkes and Patrick Hoover, who played an integral role in developing the
research methodology, collecting the data, and contributing to written analysis; and the Programs team of
Research Assistants: Audrey Alexander, Brooklyn Granowicz, Seth Harrison, Netanel Levitt, Raed Mourad,
and Nicole Rickard. Thank you to Larisa Baste for her assistance in formatting the report.
The views expressed in this publication are solely those of the authors, and not necessarily those of the
George Washington University.
Foreword
by Jane Harman
IN 2007, as a Member of Congress, I introduced the
Violent Radicalization and Homegrown Terrorism
Prevention Act. We were just starting to understand how
terrorists could manipulate the InternetTwitter was one
year oldand my bill would have established a national
commission to study the issue and advise Congress. After
passing the House by an overwhelming bipartisan vote,
the proposal was blocked in the Senate over claims it
would reestablish J. Edgar Hoovers COINTELPROa
huge distortion.
Eight years later, the issue couldnt be more urgent.
The new radicalization crosses borders. Loners dont
have to leave their basements to find extremist messages.
Some radical Islamists coordinate complex attacks using
PlayStations, while some hatch plots without ever contacting a known terrorist. Paris, Beirut, a Russian jet downed
over Sinai: these are just the most recent outbreaks of a
terrorist pandemic.
In a democracy like ours, the expression of radical
views is protected by the Constitution. Violent action
inspired by those beliefsis not. Our challenge is to
identify the triggers for violence and intervene at just the
right moment to prevent it. But as ISIS in America makes
clear, one size doesnt fit all. Homegrown terrorists dont
fit a single profile. Using social media, our enemies can
micro-target their audiences, selling a narrative we need
to learn to counter.
Efforts like George Washington Universitys Program
on Extremism have a critical role to play. Based on extensive interviews, court records, and media reports, ISIS
in America: From Retweets to Raqqa is a comprehensive
study of known ISIS recruits in the United States. More
Executive Summary
Introduction
1. WAPT News, 2 Mississippi Residents Charged with Trying to Join ISIS: Jaelyn Delshaun Young, Muhammad Oda Dakhlalla
Arrested, August 12, 2015.
2. United States of America v. Jaelyn Delshaun Young and Muhammad Oda Dakhlalla, Criminal Complaint (August 8, 2015).
3. Ibid.
4. Ibid.
5. Ibid.
GWU Program on Extremism | 1
6. WAPT News, 2 Mississippi Residents Charged with Trying to Join ISIS: Jaelyn Delshaun Young, Muhammad Oda Dakhlalla
Arrested, August 12, 2015.
7. An inherently controversial and arguably improper term, jihadism refers to the ideology adopted by groups such as al Qaeda and
ISIS. The authors are aware that the term jihad has a number of meanings and that most Muslims use the term in ways different
than these groups.
8. J.M. Berger, Jihad Joe: Americans Who Go to War in the Name of Islam (Washington DC: Potomac Books, 2011).
9. See Lorenzo Vidino, Homegrown Jihadist Terrorism in the United States: A New and Occasional Phenomenon?, Studies in Conflict
& Terrorism 32, no. 1 (January 2009): 1-17.
10. For more on jihadist networks in the U.S., see Brian Michael Jenkins, Stray Dogs and Virtual Armies Radicalization and Recruitment
to Jihadist Terrorism in the United States Since 9/11, RAND Corporation, Occasional Paper, 2011.; Risa A. Brooks, Muslim
Homegrown Terrorism in the United States: How Serious Is the Threat? International Security 36, no. 2 (Fall 2011): 747.; Charles
Kurzman, Muslim-American Terrorism in the Decade Since 9/11, Triangle Center on Terrorism and Homeland Security, February
2012.; Scott Matthew Kleinmann, Radicalization of Homegrown Sunni Militants in the United States: Comparing Converts and
Non-Converts, Studies in Conflict and Terrorism 35, no. 4 (2012): 278-297.; Jerome P. Bjelopera, American Jihadist Terrorism:
Combating a Complex Threat, Congressional Research Service, January 23, 2013.; Charles Kurzman, Muslim-American Terrorism:
Declining Further, Triangle Center on Terrorism and Homeland Security, February 1, 2013.; Jessica Zuckerman, Steven P. Bucci, and
James Jay Carafano, 60 Terrorist Plots Since 9/11: Continued Lessons in Domestic Counterterrorism, The Heritage Foundation,
July 2013.; and Lorenzo Vidino, From KSMs Genius to Sheer Amateurism: The Post-9/11 Evolution of the Terrorist Threat in the
United States, in Bruce Hoffman and Fernando Reinares, eds., The Evolution of the Global Terrorist Threat: From 9/11 to Osama bin
Ladens Death (Columbia University Press, 2014), 3-28.
11. Testimony of Robert S. Mueller, III, Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, United States Senate, Annual Worldwide Threat
Assessment, Select Committee on Intelligence, February 5, 2008.
2 | ISIS in America: From Retweets to Raqqa
Introduction
12. Jack Cloherty and Pierre Thomas, Attorney Generals Blunt Warning on Terror Attacks, ABC News, December 21, 2010.
13. Charles Kurzman, Muslim-American Terrorism in 2013, Triangle Center on Terrorism and Homeland Security, February 5, 2014, p. 2.
14. Scott Shane, Homegrown Extremists Tied to Deadlier Toll than Jihadists in U.S. Since 9/11, The New York Times (NYT), June 24, 2015.
15. United Nations Security Council, Action Against Threat of Foreign Terrorist Fighters Must be Ramped Up, Security Council Urges
in High-Level Meeting, 7453rd Meeting (AM), May 29, 2015.
16. Peter R. Neumann, Foreign Fighter Total in Syria/Iraq Now Exceeds 20,000; Surpasses Afghanistan Conflict in the 1980s, The
International Centre for the Study of Radicalisation and Political Violence (ICSR), January 26, 2015.
GWU Program on Extremism | 3
17. Testimony of Michael B. Steinbach, Assistant Director of the FBI, Terrorism Gone Viral: The Attack in Garland, Texas and Beyond,
House Homeland Security Committee, June 3, 2015.
18. Barbara Starr, A Few Dozen Americans in ISIS Ranks, CNN, July 15, 2015.
19. Tom Vanden Brook, ISIL Activity Drives up Pentagon Threat Level, USA Today, May 8, 2015.
20. Kevin Johnson, Comey: Feds have Roughly 900 Domestic Probes about Islamic State Operatives, USA Today, October 23, 2015.
4 | ISIS in America: From Retweets to Raqqa
CHAPTER 1
The youngest U.S. person arrested for ISIS-related activities was an unnamed 15-year-old boy. Two others were minors, ages 16 and 17 at the time of their arrests. The oldest
was Tairod Pugh, a former Air Force officer who was 47 at
the time of his arrest. The average age of the American ISIS
supporter at the time of charges is 26.
Mirroring a pattern witnessed in most Western countries, the age of those arrested in connection with ISIS
is on average lower than that of individuals arrested on
terrorism-related charges in the past. As U.S. Assistant
Attorney General John Carlin has noted, In over 50 percent of the cases the defendants are 25 years or younger,
GWU Program on Extremism | 5
Numbers by State
= 1 person
1517
1820
2123
2426
2729
3032
3335
3638
res
ide
3941
4244
nt
un k
11
13
nown
86%
are male
Approximately 40%
of those arrested
are converts
Over half
of arrests involved
an informant or law
enforcement sting
51%
attempted to or
successfully traveled
abroad
73%
were not involved in
plotting domestic
terrorist attacks
4547
56 individuals
were arrested in
2015, the largest
number of terrorism
arrests in a
single year since
September 2001.
and in over a third of the cases they are 21 years or younger. ... That is different than the demographic we saw who
went to support core al Qaida in the Afghanistan FATA
(Federally Administrated Tribal Areas) region.21
Gender
While the FBI has stated that there are active ISIS-related
investigations in all 50 states, to date only 21 states have
had at least one arrest within their borders. New York
saw the highest number of cases (13), followed closely by
Minnesota (11).
Legal Status
Fifty-one percent of those charged with ISIS-related activities attempted to travel abroad or successfully departed
from the U.S. In October 2015, FBI Director Comey revealed that the Bureau had noted a decline in the number
of Americans seeking to travel overseas, although he did
not elaborate on what elements triggered this shift.25
Domestic Terror Plot
21. Department of Justice, Transcript of Assistant Attorney General John P. Carlins Briefing at the Foreign Press Center on the Foreign
Terrorist Threat and Other National Security Issues, September 28, 2015.
22. See, for example, Saltman and Smith, Till Martyrdom Do Us Part, ISD and ICSR, May 2015. See also Edwin Bakker and Seran
de Leede, European Female Jihadists in Syria: Exploring an Under-Researched Topic, International Centre for Counter-Terrorism
The Hague (ICCT), April 2015.
23. Erin Marie Saltman and Melanie Smith, Till Martyrdom Do Us Part: Gender and the ISIS Phenomenon, Institute for Strategic
Dialogue (ISD) and ICSR, May 2015, p. 70.
24. Pew Research Center, Converts to Islam, July 21, 2007.
25. Johnson, Comey: Feds have Roughly 900 Domestic Probes about Islamic State Operatives, USA Today, October 23, 2015.
GWU Program on Extremism | 7
15 and 17, and their 16-year-old friend of Sudanese descent. The trio lived a normal and comfortable life among
their unsuspecting families and peers. Over a number of
months, the girls engaged with ISIS supporters online,
posting ISIS propaganda and expressing their desire to
travel to Syria. One of their online contacts was Umm
Waqqas, an influential recruiter within ISISs online network. The nom de guerre Umm Waqqas, which allegedly
belongs to a woman, is one of only three accounts listed
as a contact from those seeking to travel to Syria in ISISs
2015 guidebook Hijrah to the Islamic State.26
One morning in October 2014 the sisters left home under the guise of going to the library while their Sudanese
FIG. 4Excerpt from missing persons report filed by family of the Somali-American teens.
26. Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), Hijrah to the Islamic State: What to Packup, Who to Contact, Where to Go, Stories &
More, 2015.
8 | ISIS in America: From Retweets to Raqqa
27. Ellie Hall, Inside The Online World Of Three American Teens Who Allegedly Wanted To Join ISIS, BuzzFeed News, October 27, 2014.
28. Jesse Paul and Bruce Finley, Parents Reported $2,000 Missing as Teens Headed to Join Islamic State, The Denver Post, October 21, 2014.
29. Ellie Hall, Gone Girl: An Interview With An American In ISIS, BuzzFeed News, April 17, 2015. Information in the proceeding
article was integrated with interviews conducted by the Program on Extremisms staff.
30. Jon Anderson, Hoover Woman Joins ISIS: Meet Hoda Muthana who Fled U.S. to Syria, AL.com, April 20, 2015.
31. Ashley Fantz and Atika Shubert, From Scottish Teen to ISIS Bride and Recruiter: The Aqsa Mahmood Story, CNN, February 24, 2015.
32. Hall, Gone Girl, BuzzFeed News, April 17, 2015.
33. Ibid.
34. Ibid.
35. Ibid.
GWU Program on Extremism | 9
Middle East in 2014.36 He began discussing his views online, where he engaged a fervent Muslim Brotherhood supporter from Arizona, 42-year-old Ahmed Mohammed
El Gammal. Within a matter of months, El Gammal visited Samy in New York. Three
months later, El Gammal allegedly facilitated the young mans journey to Syria.
Once he joined ISIS in Syria, Samys phone and computer were temporarily confiscated to prevent contact with the outside world. During a break from his training, he
reached out to his brother to apologize for his sudden disappearance and to reassure
him that everything is normal and safe.37 After completing three weeks of intense religious training with ISIS, Samy told his brother excitedly that he would begin a month
of military training, after which he would become a regular employee [of ISIS].38 A
Facebook message posted in the spring of 2015 suggests that Samys experience with
ISIS was everything he thought it would be: I
live in bilad al Islam now, the real bilad al Islam,
and its [sic] beautiful.39
Killed in America
36. United States of America v. Ahmed Mohammed El Gammal, Criminal Complaint, (August 20, 2015).
37. Ibid.
38. Ibid.
39. Ibid.
40. Matt Pearce and Nigel Duara, Texas Gunmans Mother: He Just had a Normal American Upbringing, Los Angeles Times, May 5, 2015.
41. Eugene Volokh, Why Elton Simpson, One of the Texas Shooters, had Been Acquitted of an Earlier Terrorism-Related Offense, The
Washington Post, May 4, 2015.
42. Eliott C. McLaughlin, ISIS Jihadi Linked to Garland Attack has Long History as Hacker, CNN, May 7, 2015.
them with a knife.43 Authorities allege that prior to the incident Rahim conspired with his nephew, David Wright, and
Rhode Island resident Nicholas Rovinski, as well as additional unnamed conspirators, to assassinate individuals within
the U.S. on behalf of ISIS. On the morning of June 2, 2015,
Rahim changed his plans and called Wright to explain that
he wanted to act imminently and target the police. Once law
enforcement approached him in the parking lot of the CVS
drugstore where he worked, he lunged at them with a knife
and was shot and killed.44
resident Guled Omarwho was later arrested and indicted on material support chargesand another individual.
But the trio delayed their plans in light of pushback from
Omars family.51 Additionally, Jama lived with Mohamed
Osman, whom authorities believe traveled to Somalia in
July 2012 to join al Shabaab.52 Although the circumstances surrounding Jamas death are unknown, his family was
notified of his death in December 2014.53
FIG. 12Usaamah
Abdullah Rahim
43. United States of America v. David Wright and Nicholas Rovinski, Criminal Complaint, (June 12, 2015). See also Susan Zalkind and
Katie Zavadski, Bostons Wannabe Beheader Liked ISIS Enough to Kill, The Daily Beast, June 3, 2015.
44. Ibid.
45. United States of America v. Asher Abid Khan, Arraignment/Detention Hearing, (June 1, 2015).
46. Ibid.
47. Ibid.
48. Betsy Hiel and Carl Prine, Pittsburgh Man Reportedly Dead in Syria, WPXI.com, July 26, 2013.
49. Bill Roggio, American Passport Found at al Qaeda Base in Northern Syria, The Long War Journal, July 23, 2013.
50. Laura Yuen, Mukhtar Ibrahim and Sasha Aslanian, Called to Fight: Minnesotas ISIS Recruits, Minnesota Public Radio (MPR)
News, March 25, 2015.
51. Ibid.
52. Yuen, Ibrahim and Aslanian, Called to Fight, MPR News, March 25, 2015.
53. Ibid.
GWU Program on Extremism | 11
54. Cassandra Vinograd and Ammar Cheikh Omar, American Douglas McAuthur McCain Dies Fighting for ISIS in Syria, NBC News,
August 26, 2014.
55. Ibid.
56. Mukhtar Ibrahim, Jihad in Syria Lures Somalis from Minnesota, MPR News, June 12, 2014.
57. Ibid.
58. Michael Walsh, ISIS Terrorist from Minnesota Worked at Major American Airport: Report, New York Daily News, September 3,
2014. See also Mukhtar Ibrahim and Peter Cox, Douglas McArthur McCain, A Man with Minnesota Ties, Killed in Syria, MPR
News, August 7, 2014.
59. Laura Yuen, Mukhtar Ibrahim and Sasha Aslanian, From MN Suburbs, They Set out to Join ISIS, MPR News, March 25, 2015.
60. Andrea Huncar, 3 ISIS Recruits from Edmonton Believed Killed, Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) News, January 16, 2015.
61. United States of America v. Hodzic, et al., Indictment, (February 5, 2015).
62. Robert Patrick, Allegations of St. Louis Terrorism Support Rooted Back in Bosnian War, St.LouisToday.com, April 11, 2015. See also
Radio Sarajevo, U Siriji Poginuo Ramo Pazara, Komandant Dihadista iz BiH, September 25, 2014.
63. SAFF, U Siriji Poginuo I Ramo Pazara iz Teslia, September 24, 2014.; Radio Sarajevo, U Siriji Poginuo Ramo Pazara, Komandant
Dihadista iz BiH, September 25, 2014.; Slobodna Bosna, Ramo Abdullah Pazara: Sprski Ratnik i Islamski Fanatik, February 19, 2015.
12 | ISIS in America: From Retweets to Raqqa
The Program on Extremism uncovered videos and information on individuals identified as Americans in ISIS propaganda who reportedly died either fighting or as suicide
bombers. It was not possible to ascertain the real identity
of these individuals, nor were researchers able to verify
the authenticity of the information provided by ISIS. Yet
some appear to have intriguing stories, having allegedly
occupied important positions within ISIS or having carried out suicide attacks.
One of these individuals is a man who identified
himself with the kunya Abu Muhammad al Amriki
(Abu Muhammad the American) and claimed to have
lived in the U.S. for ten or eleven years prior to leaving with his family to join Jabhat al Nusra ( JN) in Syria
(before changing his allegiance to ISIS). Featured in
a nine minute video titled Revealing the Treachery of
Jabhat al Nusra posted on numerous video sharing
sites, Abu Muhammad al Amriki recounted how he
left the al Qaedalinked group because he believed it
was working with the Free Syrian Army, as it allowed
a convoy of arms bound for the outwardly secular
and tacitly Western-supported rebel group to enter
Syria.64Speaking in English in front of the black ISIS flag,
the man recalled how the incident led him to switch his
allegiance to ISIS, with which he became a local emir in
an area near the border with Turkey. Though details are
sparse, in early 2015 news of his death began circulating
on ISIS-linked websites.65
Another American to have reportedly died in Syria is
Abu Khalid al Amriki. A known personality in the ISIS
English-language social media scene, Abu Khalid al Amriki
used at least five distinct Twitter accounts to spread his
views. The little that is known about his offline persona
comes from an interview he gave to an Australian paper,
in which he revealed that his wife, whom he left behind in
the U.S., was arrested on terrorism charges shortly after
64. YouTube, Revealing the Treachery of Jabhat al Nusra, February 10, 2014.
65. Alastair Jamieson, Alleged American ISIS Commander Abu Muhammad Al-Amriki Killed: Reports, NBC News, January 28, 2015.
GWU Program on Extremism | 13
66. Lauren Williams, Meeting a Daesh jihadist in Syria, The Saturday Paper, July 18, 2015. Our research team attempted to identify
Abu Khalids alleged American wife but was unsuccessful. According to court records, he did at some point communicate with
Keonna Thomas, an American arrested in the U.S., but there is no indication that their relationship was anything more than an
online friendship.
67. Aaron Y. Zelin, al-Hayta Media Center Presents a New Video Message from The Islamic State: Stories From the Land of the
Living: Ab Khlid al-Kambd, Jihadology.net, April 21 2015.
68. Assabah.com, American Suicide Bomber Abu Dawoud in the Ranks of Daesh: The Iraqi Army Takes on the Battle to Retake
Tikrit, March 4, 2015.
69. Ibid.
70. ISIS says American suicide bomber carried out Iraq attack, Al Arabiya, August 19, 2015.
14 | ISIS in America: From Retweets to Raqqa
CHAPTER 2
71. Colonel John M. Matt Venhaus, U.S. Army, Why Youth Join al-Qaeda, United States Institute of Peace, May 2010.
GWU Program on Extremism | 15
and personal fulfillment.72 A search for belonging, meaning, and/or identity appears to be a crucial motivator for
many Americans (and other Westerners) who embrace
ISISs ideology.
This search for meaning was perfectly encapsulated in
the words of Moner Abu Salha, the 22-year-old Floridian
who is the first American known to have died in a suicide
mission in Syria on behalf of Jabhat al Nusra. I lived in
America, stated Abu Salha in a 2014 video. I know how
it is. You have all the fancy amusement parks and the
restaurants and the food and all this crap and the cars. You
think youre happy. Youre not happy. Youre never happy.
I was never happy. I was always sad and depressed. Life
sucked.73 In contrast, he described life fighting in Syria as
the best Ive ever lived.74
Despite coming from a quite different background, a
fellow American who made the journey to Syria has reportedly displayed a similar malaise. Ariel Bradley was born
in an underprivileged family in the Chattanooga suburb
of Hixson (the same suburb where the perpetrator of the
July 2015 Chattanooga shooting Mohammad Abdulazeez
lived). Bradley was homeschooled by her evangelical
72. Testimony of Nicholas J. Rasmussen, Director, National Counterterrorism Center, Countering Violent Extremism: The Urgent Threat
of Foreign Fighters and Homegrown Terror, House Homeland Security Committee, February 11, 2015.
73. Mona El-Naggar and Quynhanh Do, Video Released of U.S. Bomber in Syria, New York Times, July 31, 2014.
74. Ibid.
75. Ellie Hall, How One Young Woman Went From Fundamentalist Christian to ISIS Bride, BuzzFeed News, July 20, 2015.
76. Ibid.
16 | ISIS in America: From Retweets to Raqqa
FIG. 24Snapshot of life in the caliphate: image from Ariel Bradleys Instagram account.
77. Hall, How One Young Woman Went From Fundamentalist Christian to ISIS Bride, BuzzFeed News, July 20, 2015.
78. Ibid.
GWU Program on Extremism | 17
they can also become part of a virtual (Muslim) community, exchanging ideas and blowing off steam by
expressing their frustration with other like-minded
individuals who share their fate.80
Officials in the U.S. have expressed similar concerns.
The 2007 National Intelligence Estimate, titled The Terrorist
Threat to the US Homeland, observes:
The spread of radicalespecially SalafiInternet
sites, increasingly aggressive anti-U.S. rhetoric
and actions, and the growing number of radical,
self-generating cells in Western countries indicate
that the radical and violent segment of the Wests
Muslim population is expanding, including in the
United States. The arrest and prosecution by law
enforcement of a small number of violent Islamic
extremists inside the U.S.who are becoming more
connected ideologically, virtually, and/or in a physical sense to the global extremist movementpoints
to the possibility that others may become sufficiently radicalized that they will view the use of violence
here as legitimate.81
In May 2008, the U.S. Senate Committee on
Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs published
a report titled Violent Islamist Extremism, the Internet,
and the Homegrown Terrorist Threat in which the committee warns about the increased frequency with which
U.S.-based militants are active online.82 A 2010 report
by NCTC contends that the Internet and related information technologiessuch as Web forums, blogs, social
networking sites, and e-mailthat serve as platforms
for extremist propaganda and discourse can enable and
advance the radicalization process and help mobilize
79. Tim Stevens and Peter R. Neumann, Countering Online Radicalisation: A Strategy for Action, ICSR, March 16, 2009, p. 12.
80. Netherlands Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en Koninkrijksrelaties (Ministry of International Affairs and Kingdom Relations),
Jihadis and the Internet, Netherlands National Coordinator for Counterterrorism, February 2007, p. 91.
81. United States Office of the Director of National Intelligence, National Intelligence Council, The Terrorist Threat to the US
Homeland, National Intelligence Estimate, July 2007.
82. U.S. Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs (HSGAC), Violent Islamist Extremism, the Internet,
and the Homegrown Terrorist Threat, May 8, 2008.
18 | ISIS in America: From Retweets to Raqqa
individuals who may not be geographically near key extremist figures or significant events.83
U.S. officials have repeatedly highlighted how ISIS
uses social media to reach a significantly wider audience
much faster than any group in the past. ISIL blends
traditional media platforms, glossy photos, in-depth articles, and social media campaigns that can go viral in
a matter of seconds, argued FBI Director Comey in a
July 2015 testimony before the U.S. Senate. No matter
the format, the message of radicalization spreads faster
than we imagined just a few years ago.84 He continued,
Social media has allowed groups, such as ISIL, to use
the Internet to spot and assess potential recruits. With
the widespread horizontal distribution of social media,
terrorists can identify vulnerable individuals of all ages in
the United Statesspot, assess, recruit, and radicalize
either to travel or to conduct a homeland attack. The
foreign terrorist now has direct access into the United
States like never before.85 Comey further elaborated on
the novelty of ISIS social media use:
Your grandfathers al Qaeda, if you wanted to get
propaganda, you had to go find it. Find where
Inspire magazine was and read it. If you want to
talk to a terrorist, you had to send an email into
Inspire magazine and hope that Anwar al Awlaki
would email you back. Now all thats in your
pocket. All that propaganda is in your pocket,
and the terrorist is in your pocket. You can have
direct communication with a terrorist in Syria all
day and night, and so the effect of thatespecially
on troubled minds and kidsit works! Its buzz,
An archetypal case of ISISs online radicalization and recruitment campaign was chronicled in an illuminating
New York Times story on Alex, a 23-year-old girl from
rural Washington state.87 Alex lived with her grandparents
from an early age, after her mother lost custody due to
drug addiction. A college dropout who, in her own words,
lived in the middle of nowhere and had no connection
to Islam, Alex was motivated by a horrified curiosity to
seek out ISIS supporters after reading news of the execution of American journalist James Foley.88
Within several months, she was exchanging messages
and conversing over Skype with various ISIS-linked recruiters.89 Over time, Alex, who had previously expressed
a desire to live a faith more fully, was meticulously
groomed online, her new friends showering her with
money, books, gift cards, and chocolate. She soon converted to Islam and slowly embraced ISISs ideology. Her
new friends offered Alex a previously lacking sense of
83. Similar findings were reached in this report. See also National Counterterrorism Center, Radicalization Dynamics: A Primer,
September 2010, p. 18; HSGAC, Zachary Chesser: A Case Study in Online Islamist Radicalization and Its Meaning for the Threat
of Homegrown Terrorism, February 16, 2012.
84. Testimony of James B. Comey, Director, Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), Senate Select Committee on Intelligence,
Counterterrorism, Counterintelligence, and the Challenges of Going Dark, July 8, 2015.
85. Ibid.
86. Ryan J. Reilly, If Youre Trying To Join ISIS Through Twitter, The FBI Probably Knows About It, Huffington Post, July 9, 2015.
87. Rukmini Callimachi, ISIS and the Lonely Young American, NYT, July 27, 2015.
88. Ibid.
89. Ibid.
GWU Program on Extremism | 19
to change her Twitter and email passwords. But the companionship her like-minded friends provided was apparently too
good to give up. The Times claims that, despite her promise,
Alex has continued to be active in the online ISIS scene.91
Travel Agents
90. Rukmini Callimachi, ISIS and the Lonely Young American, NYT, July 27, 2015.
91. Ibid.
92. Janet Reitman, The Children of ISIS, The Rolling Stone, March 25, 2015.
93. Ibid.
94. United States of America v. Mohammed Hamzah Khan, Criminal Complaint (October 6, 2014).
20 | ISIS in America: From Retweets to Raqqa
95. Kevin Sullivan, Three American Teens, Recruited Online, Are Caught Trying to Join the Islamic State, The Washington Post,
December 8, 2014.
96. Jethro Mullens and Ted Rowland, Who is Mohammed Hamzah Khan?, CNN, October 7, 2014.
97. Scott Shane, Texas Attacker Left Trail of Extremist Ideas on Twitter, NYT, May 5, 2015.
98. Jim Sciutto, Pamela Brown, Paul Cruickshank and Paul Murphy, Texas attacker tweeted with overseas terrorists, CNN, May 5, 2015.
99. Rita Katz, The Power of a Tweet: Elton Simpson and the #TexasAttack, SITE Intelligence Group (SITE), May 5, 2015.
100. Katz, The Power of a Tweet SITE, May 5, 2015.
101. Pierre Thomas, Mike Levine, Jack Date and Jack Cloherty, ISIS: Potentially Thousands of Online Followers Inside US Homeland,
FBI Chief Warns, ABC News, May 7, 2015. The term has also been used by Assistant Attorney General John Carlin: United
States Department of Justice, Assistant Attorney General John P. Carlin Delivers Remarks on Domestic Terrorism at an Event
Co-Sponsored by the Southern Poverty Law Center and the George Washington University Center for Cyber and Homeland
Securitys Program on Extremism, October 14, 2015.
GWU Program on Extremism | 21
102. McNeil tweeted a screenshot of his Twitter suspension (at the time, his 14th suspension). He neglected to remove a small part of his
Google ID, which led to a number of Google+ pages. After reviewing the videos on each page, a link was found to a video posted on
YouTube, which was subsequently linked to a Facebook profile with his real name and location. One of his Facebook status updates
from last year matched with materials from his 10th Twitter account prior to suspension.
103. The term green bird indicates is a status one reaches when he or she dies (becomes a shaheed, or martyr) and reaches jannah, or
heaven. It is a scriptural reference from a hadith, or reported saying from the prophet Mohammad, that celebrates the virtues of
martyrdom. Jihadists term fallen comrades green birds to eulogize them as pious, faithful Muslims.
GWU Program on Extremism | 23
primarily introduce new, pro-ISIS accounts to the community and promote newly created accounts of previously
suspended users, allowing them to quickly regain their
pre-suspension status. Although they tweet little substantive content, shout-out accounts tend to have the largest
followings in the Twitter landscape and therefore play a
pivotal role in the resilience of ISISs Twitter community.
While American ISIS accounts are suspended with
some frequency, these suspensions have become a badge
of honor and a means by which an aspirant can bolster his
or her legitimacy. In most suspension cases, a new (and
often more than one) account with a variation of the previous username is created within hours. As American ISIS
supporters are continuously suspended from Twitter, creating a new account becomes increasingly difficult, leading
some to turn to others for assistance. The users first tweet
is often an image of the Twitter notification of suspension,
proving that they are the owner of the previous account,
along with a request for shout-outs. The new accounts are
then retweeted by others, allowing the user to regain his
or her previous online following.
FIG. 29Clockwise: A user announces a new account; examples of node, shout-out, and
amplifier accounts.
FIG. 30Clockwise: Interjecting in the #BlackLivesMatter conversation; sharing a quote from Anwar al Awlaki;
dismissing ISIS critics as coconuts.
104. Our researchers include a number of Arabic speakers who reviewed Arabic-language accounts for individual who self-identified as
American and found a small contingent of Americans using Arabic as their primary language.
105. Justine Drennan, Islamic State Supporters Urge Baltimore Rioters to Join Extremist Cause, Foreign Policy, April 28, 2015.
GWU Program on Extremism | 25
106. B. Todd Jones, Operation Rhino, Office of the United States Attorneys, July 8, 2015.
26 | ISIS in America: From Retweets to Raqqa
107. Paul McEnroe, Abby Simons and Libor Jany, From the Heartland to Jihad: How a Group of Young Men from Minnesota Were
Drawn Into ISILs Campaign of Terror, Minnesota StarTribune, September 20, 2015.
108. McEnroe, Simons and Jany, From the Heartland to Jihad, Minnesota StarTribune, September 20, 2015.
109. Yuen, Ibrahim and Aslanian, Called to Fight, MPR, March 25, 2015.
110. Robert Patrick, Allegations of St. Louis Terrorism Support Rooted Back in Bosnian War, St. Louis Post-Dispatch, April 11, 2015.
111. Patrick, Allegations of St. Louis Terrorism Support Rooted Back in Bosnian War, St. Louis Post-Dispatch, April 11, 2015. See also
Radio Sarajevo, U Siriji Poginuo Ramo Pazara, Komandant Dihadista iz BiH, September 25, 2014.
112. Robert Patrick, Woman Pleads Guilty in Terror Funding Case with St. Louis Ties, St. Louis Post-Dispatch, September 28, 2015.
GWU Program on Extremism | 27
email, the group also purchased United States military uniforms, tactical combat boots, surplus military
goods, tactical gear and clothing, firearms accessories,
optical equipment and range finders, rifle scopes, equipment, and supplies for Pazaras battalion in Syria.113
Authorities dismantled the ring in February 2015, arresting six individuals (three men and three women)
on terrorism-related charges. Pazara was reported killed
while fighting against Kurdish forces in Kobane in the fall
of 2014.114
While the Minneapolis and St. Louis clusters each revolved around an ethnic bond, a separate cluster in the
greater New York City area came together in a different
113. United States of America v. Ramiz Zijad Hodzic, et. al., Indictment (February 5, 2015).
114. Associated Press (AP), Bosnian Immigrants Plead Not Guilty in Terror Financing Case, Yahoo! News, February 11, 2015; Radio
Sarajevo, U Siriji Poginuo Ramo Pazara, Komandant Dihadista iz BiH, September 25, 2014.; SAFF, U Siriji Poginuo i Ramo
Pazara iz Teslia, September 24, 2015.; Slobodna Bosna, Ramo Abdullah Pazara: Srpski Ratnik i Islamski Fanatik, February 18, 2015.
115. United States of America v. Alaa Saadeh, Criminal Complaint (June 26, 2015).
116. Ibid.
117. The Program on Extremism has decided not to disclose details about these cases so as not to compromise any potential investigation.
28 | ISIS in America: From Retweets to Raqqa
118. United States of America v. Mohamad Saeed Kodaimati, Criminal Complaint (April 23, 2015).
119. Kristina Davis, San Diegan Accused of Hiding ISIS Links, The San Diego Union-Tribune, April 23, 2015.
120. United States of America v. Mohamad Saeed Kodaimati, Criminal Complaint (April 23, 2015).
121. Ibid.
122. Ibid.
123. Ibid.
124. Ibid.
GWU Program on Extremism | 29
Conley showed up one day and began sketching the layout of the churchs campus, causing church officials to
ban her from the premises.132
In one of her many interviews with law enforcement,
Conley stated she wanted to wage jihad against kafir in
order to protect Muslim lands.133 A certified nurse, she
expressed the desire to become a housewife and camp
nurse for ISIS militants in Syria.134 Obsessed with guerilla warfare, she became a U.S. Army Explorer to learn
American combat tactics that she could then teach to ISIS
fighters and admitted to owning Al Qaidas Doctrine for
Insurgency: Abd Al-Aziz Al-Muqrins A Practical Course for
Guerilla War.135 She began communicating with a Tunisian
ISIS fighter on Skype, who pushed her to join him in Syria
as his wife.136 The invitation prompted the FBI to contact
125. United States of America v. Mohamad Saeed Kodaimati, Criminal Complaint (April 23, 2015).
126. Ibid.
127. Ibid.
128. Ibid.
129. Ibid.
130. United States of America v. Shannon Maureen Conley, Criminal Complaint (April 9, 2014).
131. Ibid.
132. Ibid.
133. Ibid.
134. Ibid.
135. Ibid.
136. Ibid.
30 | ISIS in America: From Retweets to Raqqa
137. Michael Martinez, Ana Cabrera and Sara Weisfeldt, Colorado Woman Gets 4 Years for Wanting to Join ISIS, CNN, January 24,
2015.
138. AP, Teachers: Ohio Man Accused in Terror Plot a Typical Student, WHSV.com, January 15, 2015.
139. Ben Brumfield, Pamela Brown and Dana Ford, FBI Says Plot to Attack U.S. Capitol was Ready to Go, CNN, January 15, 2015.
140. Brumfield, Brown and Ford, FBI Says Plot to Attack U.S. Capitol was Ready to Go, CNN, January 15, 2015.
141. Kimball Perry and Patrick Brennan, Father: Terror Plot Suspect was a Mommas Boy, Cincinnati.com, January 23, 2015.
142. United States of America v. Christopher Lee Cornell, Criminal Complaint (January 14, 2015).
143. Ibid.
144. Ibid.
145. Jonathan Dienst and Miguel Almaguer, Mohammad Youssef Abdulazeez Downloaded Recordings from Radical Cleric, Officials
Say, NCB News, July 21, 2015.
146. Greg Jaffe, Cari Wade Gervin and Thomas Gibbons-Neff, Tenn. Gunman Used Drugs, Stuggled with Clash of Faith, The
Washington Post, July 18, 2015.
147. Abby Ohlheiser, What we Know about Alton Nolen, Who as been Charged with Murder in the Oklahoma Beheading Case, The
Washington Post, September 30, 2014.
GWU Program on Extremism | 31
the acts modalities and the fact that Nolen, while having
no known contact with ISIS, was an avid consumer of jihadist propaganda online, suggest that the case could be
more than an ordinary incident of workplace violence.148
Similarly unclear is the case of Zale Thompson, who
attacked four New York Police Department officers with
a hatchet in October 2014.149 His online search history
shows an interest in jihadist videos, some of which included ISIS material.150 However, Thompson, who was
described by law enforcement as a loner with possible
mental problems, also consumed black nationalist and
other anti-government propaganda online, making an
148. Michael Pearson, Who is Oklahoma Beheading Suspect Alton Nolen?, CNN, September 30, 2014.
149. Agence France-Presse, New York Police Brand Hatchet Attack Terrorist Act, Yahoo News!, October 24, 2015.
150. Caitlin Nolan, Kerry Burke, Rocco Parascandola, Joseph Stepansky and Thomas Tracy, Hatchet-wielding Man Shot Dead by
NYPD Cops in Queens; Police Eye Possible Terrorism Motive, New York Daily News, October 24, 2014.
151. Garrett Pelican, Orange Park Man, 20, Indicted in 9/11 Memorial Bomb Plot, First Coast News, September 15, 2015.
152. Katie Zavadski, Terrorist Troll Pretended to be ISIS, White Supremacist, and Jewish Lawyer, The Daily Beast, September 11, 2015.
153. United States of America v. Joshua Ryne Goldberg, Criminal Complaint (September 10, 2015).
32 | ISIS in America: From Retweets to Raqqa
Conclusion
154. Lorenzo Vidino and Seamus Hughes, Countering Violent Extremism in America, Program on Extremism, June 2015.
GWU Program on Extremism | 33
Appendix
The 71 individuals charged for ISIS-related activities (as of November 12, 2015)
Abdi Nur
Abdirahman Yasin Daud
Abdul Malik Abdul Kareem
Abdullahi Mohamud Yusuf
Abdurasul Hasanovich Juraboev
Abror Habibov
Adam Dandach
Adnan Abdihamad Farah
Ahmed Mohammed El Gammal
Akba Jihad Jordan
Akhror Saidakhmetov
Akmal Zakirov
Alaa Saadeh
Alexander Ciccolo
Alexander E Blair
Ali Saleh
Ali Shukri Amin
Arafat Nagi
Armin Harcevic
Asher Abid Khan
Asia Siddiqui
Avin Marsalis Brown
Bilal Abood
Christopher Lee Cornell
David Wright
Dilkhayot Kasmiov
Donald Ray Morgan
Fareed Mumini
Guled Ali Omar
Hamza Naj Ahmed
Hanad Mustafe Musse
Harlem Suarez
Hasan Edmonds
Heather Elizabeth Coffman
Jaelyn Delshaun
Jasminka Ramic
John T Booker
Jonas Yunus Edmonds
Joshua Ray Van Haften
Justin Nojan Sullivan
Keonna Thomas
Leon Nathan Davis III
Mediha Medy Salkicevic
Michael Todd Wolfe
Miguel Moran Diaz
Mohamad Saeed Kodaimati
Mohamed Abdihamid Farah
Mohamed Abdullahi Hassan
Mohammad Hamza Khan
Mufid Elfgeeh
Muhammad Oda Dakhlalla
Muhanad Badawi
Munther Omar Saleh
Nader Elhuzayel
Nader Saadeh
Nicholas Rovinski
Nicholas Teausant
Nihad Rosic
Noelle Velentzas
Ramiz Zijad Hodzic
Reza Niknejad
Robert C. McCollum
Samuel Rahamin Topaz
Sedina Unkic Hodzic
Shannon Maureen Conley
Tairod Nathan Webster Pugh
Terrence McNeil
Unnamed minor (PA)
Unnamed minor (SC)
Yusra Ismail
Zacharia Yusuf Abdurahman