Bangladeshi “Bin Laden” Plotted to Bomb Times Square

  1. O you who believe! When you go to war in Allah’s way, make investigation, & do not say to any one who offers you peace: “You are not a believer. Do you seek goods of this world’s life!” But with Allah there are abundant gains; you too were such before, then Allah conferred a benefit on you; therefore make investigation; surely Allah is aware of what you do.

  2. Not equal are those believers who sit (at home) & receive no hurt, & those who strive & fight in the cause of Allah with their goods & their lives. Allah hath granted a grade higher to those who strive & fight with their goods & persons than to those who sit (at home). Unto all (in Faith) Hath Allah promised good: But those who strive & fight Hath He distinguished above those who sit (at home) by a special reward:

So Allah the primitive pagan moon god tells his backward believers, referring to himself in the third person, in sura four of his ludicrous grimoire of gobbledegook, the Koran. Here is Allah instructing his benighted devotees to infiltrate other people’s countries covertly, without expressing an open intent to wage jihad upon the unsuspecting natives.

As we survey the daily news we see Muslims doing precisely this around the world: travelling to Western nations with the intention of inflicting senseless violence upon innocent people. Recently, we saw how a Bangladeshi entered Australia on a student visa, only to plunge a kitchen knife through her host’s throat. Now we see another Bangladeshi immigrant, this time to the USA, plotting carnage in New York, as reported by The New York Times yesterday:

Times Square Terror Plot: Inspired by Bin Laden, Man Planned Bombing, Officials Say
The authorities arrested Ashiqul Alam, who tried to buy illegal guns and talked to undercover agents about his desire to carry out attacks.

Around the anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks last year, Ashiqul Alam voiced his admiration for their mastermind, Osama bin Laden, and said he wanted to carry on Bin Laden’s legacy of violent extremism, court documents said. “He did what he is supposed to do,” Mr. Alam, 22, said, according to a criminal complaint. “Now it’s up to us.”

That sentiment, expressed to an undercover law enforcement agent, kicked off a series of conversations about a potential terrorist attack in New York City that ultimately led to Mr. Alam’s arrest on Thursday, the authorities said.

Mr. Alam, a green-card holder from Bangladesh who lives in Queens, was taken into custody after trying to buy two Glock pistols with defaced serial numbers from an undercover officer, officials said.

His arrest was the culmination of months of work involving three undercover agents and several law enforcement agencies, which had begun monitoring him last August, the authorities said.

In meetings with undercover agents over 10 months, Mr. Alam discussed the possibility of carrying out suicide bombings in Washington or in Times Square. He said he wanted to kill a government official, shoot police officers with AR-15 assault rifles and fire a rocket launcher at the new World Trade Center, the criminal complaint said.

Despite his intentions, he posed no immediate threat, officials said. The whole time, law enforcement was “monitoring his plans and intervening to prevent those plans from escalating into deadly violence,” Richard P. Donoghue, the United States attorney for the Eastern District of New York, said in a statement.

Two law enforcement officials, who asked that their names not be published because they were not authorized to discuss the case, characterized Mr. Alam’s statements as “aspirational.”

Mr. Alam was formally charged Friday in Federal District Court in Brooklyn with purchasing firearms with obliterated serial numbers. He was not charged with terrorism-related crimes.

He was quiet during his court hearing while his lawyer, James Darrow, asked for his client’s release on bail. “He has two jobs and is a student,” Mr. Darrow said. “He’d like to continue to do that.”

Magistrate Judge Cheryl L. Pollak ordered him permanently detained, citing the seriousness of the accusations and calling him a “danger to the community.”

The investigation of Mr. Alam began last August, when he met with an undercover agent, the complaint said. Between the initial meeting and his arrest, he repeatedly stated his interest in buying weapons and explosives for a terrorist attack in New York City. He also expressed his admiration for terrorist groups, including ISIS and Al Qaeda, the complaint said.

Last September, for instance, he told an undercover agent that Bin Laden’s violent, extremist mission during the Sept. 11 attacks was “a complete success,” according to the complaint.

Accompanied by an undercover agent, he conducted several “recon” trips to Times Square, using his cellphone to make recordings of the area while scouting potential targets, the complaint said.

The reconnaissance was crucial, Mr. Alam told agents, because he would need to be prepared, the complaint said. “Like in a war,” he explained.

In January, while traveling to a shooting range, Mr. Alam told an undercover agent that he wanted “to

In January, while traveling to a shooting range, Mr. Alam told an undercover agent that he wanted “to die fighting,” according to the complaint. On their return trip, he said he wanted to buy a gun.
The same month, he said he would likely use that gun in an attack on Times Square, pointing specifically to Duffy Square, where tourists congregate around a red staircase and the TKTS booth, the complaint said.

In subsequent meetings, Mr. Alam continued to tell the agent that he wanted to purchase firearms, officials said.

At one point, in March, an undercover agent asked Mr. Alam what would make him happy, the complaint said. Mr. Alam responded, “Seeing the flag of Islam on the Twin Towers or the Empire State Building.”

The next month, Mr. Alam said he was getting Lasik eye surgery, justifying the procedure by referencing his hypothetical attack, according to the complaint. “Let’s say we are in an attack, right, say that my glasses fall off,” he said to an undercover agent. “What if I accidentally shoot you? Imagine what the news channel would call me,” he added. “The ‘Looney Tunes Terrorist’ or the ‘Blind Terrorist.'”

Mr. Alam’s neighbors in the branching, seven-story apartment complex he called home in the Jackson Heights neighborhood in Queens, described him as a standoffish young man who tried to project a powerful image. Recently, he said he wanted to buy a gun.

The same month, he said he would likely use that gun in an attack on Times Square, pointing specifically to Duffy Square, where tourists congregate around a red staircase and the TKTS booth, the complaint said.

In subsequent meetings, Mr. Alam continued to tell the agent that he wanted to purchase firearms, officials said.

At one point, in March, an undercover agent asked Mr. Alam what would make him happy, the complaint said. Mr. Alam responded, “Seeing the flag of Islam on the Twin Towers or the Empire State Building.”

The next month, Mr. Alam said he was getting Lasik eye surgery, justifying the procedure by referencing his hypothetical attack, according to the complaint. “Let’s say we are in an attack, right, say that my glasses fall off,” he said to an undercover agent. “What if I accidentally shoot you? Imagine what the news channel would call me,” he added. “The ‘Looney Tunes Terrorist’ or the ‘Blind Terrorist.'”

Mr. Alam’s neighbors in the branching, seven-story apartment complex he called home in the Jackson Heights neighborhood in Queens, described him as a standoffish young man who tried to project a powerful image.