A young American man accused of fighting for ISIS
said it was a "bad decision" to go to Iraq and that he was trying to
get home when he was captured by Kurdish forces earlier this week.
Speaking to the Kurdish news outlet K24,
the man identified by Kurdish officials as 26-year-old Mohamad Jamal
Khweis of Virginia, said he ended up in Mosul, a large ISIS-controlled
city in Iraq, after meeting a woman.
“At
the time I made the decision, I was not thinking straight. On the way
there I regretted, and I wanted to go back home after things didn’t work
out and saw myself living in such an environment," he said. Khweis said
conditions in Mosul are "very difficult."
"I
stayed there about a month, and I found it very, very hard to live
there. I decided to return back home,” he said. According to Khweis, he
regretted "going off with Daesh," an alternate term for ISIS, and was
trying to make contact with Kurdish forces when he was captured Monday.
Khweis
said he attended a mosque in the U.S. “but not that frequently." As for
how he got to ISIS-controlled territory, Khweis said he left the U.S.
in December and went to Europe. "I first went to London. I stayed
there not that long. From there, I moved to Amsterdam, where I stayed
about a week.”
Later, Khweis went to Turkey and there he met an Iraqi girl. He
stayed there for some time, he said. “We spent some time together, and
she said that she is from Mosul, Iraq. I don’t know the exact places we
passed by, but we arrived in Mosul on January 16," he said.At the end of the interview, Khweis addressed the American people directly and said, "Life in Mosul is really, very bad. The people who control Mosul don't represent a religion."
A
video posted on social media Monday appeared to show the young man’s
surrender. In it, he tells Kurdish military officials he is American.
Earlier this week Kurdish officials said the 26-year-old had been among a
small group of ISIS fighters with whom they exchanged fire a day before
the surrender.
U.S.
government officials for the most part declined to comment on the
development Monday, beyond acknowledging media reports. Late Monday a
U.S. counter-terrorism official told ABC News the young man had not been
on the radar of American security or intelligence agencies. U.S.
officials have said they suspect some 250 Americans have traveled to, or
have attempted to travel to Iraq or Syria to join extremists groups.
Reached
by telephone Monday, a woman who identified herself as the mother of
Mohamad Jamal Khweis told ABC News she had seen the news reports but
later declined to watch the video. She said she had last seen her son a
couple months ago and said she was shocked by the idea he was in Iraq.
With
television cameras outside the Virginia home Monday, two men,
apparently Khweis’ father and younger brother, arrived and the older man
struck some of the cameras. Both yelled at the media present, the
younger man shouting, “You’re wrong, you’re wrong.” At one point the
father sprayed the cameramen with a water hose shortly before police
arrived.
“This has nothing to
do with you guys,” the older man said a few minutes later, addressing
reporters outside. “I ask you to leave please, and I have not any
information… I don’t know what you guys bring this information, okay?
And I guess you bringing the wrong information. This is not the right
name for my son... This is wrong, this is not my son, the information
you’ve given me, I don’t know where my real son is at.”
Court
records for Mohammad Jamal Khweiss show several minor traffic offenses
as well as a public drunkenness charge in 2009. That charge was later
downgraded to a version of trespassing and dismissed on appeal.[abc news]
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