(AP) Arab newspaper: Suicide bomber at U.S. mess hall in Mosul was Saudi

medical student

By MAAMOUN YOUSSEF

Associated Press Writer

CAIRO, Egypt

The suicide bomber who killed 22 people when he blew himself up in a

U.S. mess hall in the northern Iraqi city of Mosul was a Saudi medical

student, an Arab newspaper reported Monday.

 

Saudi-owned Asharq Al-Awsat identified him as 20-year-old Ahmed Said

Ahmed al-Ghamdi, citing unnamed friends of the man's father. The friends

said members of an Iraqi resistance group contacted al-Ghamdi's father

to tell him his son was the suicide bomber who carried out the Dec. 21

attack, the deadliest on an American installation in Iraq.

 

The father refused to discuss the suicide bombing, but told the

newspaper his son had gone to Iraq to fight the Americans and had died

there. The family held a mourning ceremony the paper said. It did not

say when the ceremony was held or where in Saudi Arabia the family

lived.

 

The Associated Press was unable to reach Saudi security officials for

comment despite repeated telephone calls Monday.

 

The U.S.-led coalition that toppled Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein has

faced fierce resistance, most of it carried out by Saddam loyalists or

Iraqi nationalists. Some of the deadliest attacks, though, have been

blamed on non-Iraqi Muslim extremists.

 

U.S. officials have said their preliminary investigation indicates the

bomber was dressed in an Iraqi military uniform _ but was not an Iraqi

soldier _ when he slipped into a mess tent packed with soldiers eating

lunch in northern Iraq.

 

The paper did not name the Iraqi resistance group. But Ansar al-Sunnah,

a radical Islamic Iraqi group that has been active in northern Iraq,

claimed responsibility for the mess hall attack. In a videotape posted

on the Web, Ansar al-Sunnah identified the suicide bomber as Abu Omar

al-Musali _ an apparent nom de guerre meaning Abu Omar of Mosul.

 

The man identified as Abu Omar al-Musali appeared in the Web video

wearing an explosives-laden vest, but did not speak. Another man,

speaking in an Iraqi accent, described how the operation had been

planned. A subsequent segment showed what appeared to have been the

attack.

 

Ansar al-Sunnah shares the anti-Western, Quranic rhetoric of Islamic

extremist groups like al-Qaida, but has confined its fight to Iraq and

has not actively recruited foreign fighters. The group, though, has

declared that it worked with an al-Qaida-linked group in Iraq in at

least one operation in November.

 

Asharq al-Awsat said al-Ghamdi started studying medicine in Sudan when

his father worked and lived there. Al-Ghamdi stayed to complete his

studies when his family returned to Saudi Arabia, the paper reported,

without saying when the family left.

 

It said the father said he learned Dec. 16 that his son had withdrawn

all the money left in a Sudanese bank account for him and later received

a phone call from his son telling him that he was in Iraq to fight the

Americans.

 

The al-Ghamdis are a large Saudi clan, three members of which were among

the Sept. 11 hijackers.

 

Saudi Arabia has launched a crackdown on militants that started after

terrorism was brought home with an alleged al-Qaida attack on three

residential compounds in Riyadh in May 2003. The kingdom also has been

under pressure to ensure Saudi militants do not cross its border into

Iraq.



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