F.B.I. Is Stated to Discover Hyperlinks Between Pensacola Gunman and Al Qaeda

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F.B.I. Is Stated to Discover Hyperlinks Between Pensacola Gunman and Al Qaeda

WASHINGTON — Federal investigators discovered cellphone proof that hyperlinks Al Qaeda to final 12 months’s lethal taking pictures at a United Stat


WASHINGTON — Federal investigators discovered cellphone proof that hyperlinks Al Qaeda to final 12 months’s lethal taking pictures at a United States army base in Pensacola, Fla., based on two American officers briefed on the investigation.

The F.B.I. discovered that the gunman, Second Lt. Mohammed Saeed Alshamrani, a Saudi Air Pressure cadet coaching with the American army, had communicated with a Qaeda operative who had inspired the assaults, based on the 2 officers, who weren’t licensed to talk about it publicly forward of an 11 a.m. information convention by Lawyer Common William P. Barr.

The F.B.I. uncovered the hyperlinks after lately bypassing the security measures on a minimum of certainly one of Mr. Alshamrani’s two iPhones with out assist from Apple, based on the officers. They’d not say what strategies the investigators used to entry the telephones, however the transfer is prone to ease for now tensions between Apple and regulation enforcement officers who’ve demanded entry to encrypted gadgets to research crimes.

It was not clear whether or not the Qaeda operative directed Mr. Alshamrani to hold out the December taking pictures, which killed three sailors and wounded eight individuals. In an audio recording earlier this 12 months, the chief of Al Qaeda within the Arabian Peninsula claimed that his group directed a Saudi military officer to carry out the shooting.

But Mr. Alshamrani was in touch over time with the Qaeda branch, including its leadership at times, up to the attack, according to one of the officials, who said that Mr. Alshamrani’s ties to the group went beyond simply being inspired to act based on watching YouTube videos or reading extremist propaganda.

The department said that it sought Apple’s help in opening the phones only after other agencies, foreign governments and third-party technology vendors had failed, and it accused the company of slowing the investigation and allowing leads to go cold.

While the F.B.I. has spent the last few years primarily trying to thwart international terrorism inspired by the Islamic State, Christopher A. Wray, the director of the F.B.I., said that Al Qaeda remains a potent threat. Mr. Wray told lawmakers last year that the group still wishes to conduct “large-scale, spectacular attacks.”

Even though the casualty count was relatively low by Qaeda standards, simply “pulling off a successful attack on U.S. soil can provide Al Qaeda and its affiliates with a momentum boost and allow the group bragging rights over the Islamic State, which is important in terms of recruitment, prestige, and propaganda,” Colin P. Clarke, a senior fellow at the Soufan Center, a New York-based research organization, said in an email on Monday.

Even though the gunman was thought to operate alone, the government expelled 21 other Saudi students who were training with the American military, some of whom had links to extremist movements. After announcing the expulsions, Mr. Barr said that the Saudi government had cooperated fully with the investigation.

Saudi Arabia has a complicated relationship with Yemen, where it has been embroiled in a lethal, yearslong military battle to end Iranian influence there. Amid the airstrikes, Isis and Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula have seized territory and carried out their own deadly attacks.

Mr. Alshamrani’s ability to train on the base as part of the U.S. military raises a host of thorny issues, including how the Defense Department screens potential recruits from Saudi Arabia.

Investigators believe that Mr. Alshamrani may have been under the influence of extremists at least since 2015, two years before he came to the United States and started strike-fighter training with the military.

The shooting also reignited the debate about when a technology company should be expected to help the government obtain information from encrypted messaging apps that can only be found if you can bypass the password and other security features. Apple routinely gives law enforcement lawful access to information that its users store in their iCloud accounts.

Though it was not clear how the F.B.I. got into Mr. Alshamrani’s iPhones, there are indications that Apple’s security is not as uncrackable as it used to be.

Last week, Zerodium — a company that acquires and sells weaknesses in smartphone encryption to American agencies to hack into those devices — announced it has a surplus of such exploits for Apple’s iOS mobile operating system.

The firm’s claims undermine the Justice Department’s and the F.B.I.’s assertions that Apple’s security is preventing lawful interception of data collection, especially on older model phones. Mr. Alshamrani had an iPhone 7 and an iPhone 5.

But Mr. Barr has maintained one of the department’s “highest priorities” is to find a way to get technology companies to help law enforcement gain lawful access to encrypted technology.

Nicole Perlroth and Eric Schmitt contributed reporting.



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