Somali-born teen arrested in U.S. car bomb sting

PORTLAND, Oregon, (Reuters) – A Somali-born teenager  was arrested today for attempting to detonate what he  thought was a car bomb at a Christmas Tree lighting ceremony in  Oregon, officials said.
Mohamed Osman Mohamud, 19, was charged with attempting to  use a weapon of mass destruction in connection with an alleged  plot to bomb the annual event in downtown Portland, the Justice  Department said late yesterday.

The bomb was a fake and had been provided to Mohamud as part  of a long-term sting by the FBI and other law enforcement  agencies, federal officials said in a statement.
Officials said Mohamud had been in contact with an unnamed  individual believed to be in northwest Pakistan and involved in  terrorist activities.

Mohamed Osman Mohamud
Mohamed Osman Mohamud

“The threat was very real,” said Arthur Balizan, a senior  FBI agent in Oregon. “Our investigation shows that Mohamud was  absolutely committed to carrying out an attack on a very grand  scale.”
Thousands of people attended the tree lighting in a popular  Portland square lined with shops and offices. Officials said the  public had never been in danger at any time during the sting  operation, which lasted months.
Mohamud, a naturalized U.S. citizen and student at Oregon  State University, was taken into custody near the square after  he attempted to use a cellphone to trigger what he believed was  a car bomb, according to a U.S. government complaint.
He lashed out at agents, yelling and kicking them, and had  to be restrained, it said.
Agents had shadowed Mohamud and met him several times as the  plot developed, the U.S. government said. He told FBI agents  that he had thought of waging violent jihad, or holy war, since  the age of 15, federal officials said.
Mohamud proceeded with the plot despite opportunities to  back away, according to the complaint, which quotes him praising  the Sept. 11, 2001 attack on New York City and expressing a  desire to see “body parts and blood” in Portland.
“I want whoever is attending that event to leave, to leave  either dead or injured.”
The Mogadishu-born Mohamud planned to flee the United States  after exploding his car bomb, the government said.
He is expected to make his initial appearance in a federal  court in Portland on Monday. He faces a maximum sentence of life  in prison and a $250,000 fine if convicted of the charge of  attempting to use a weapon of mass destruction.
His arrest came a day after Americans celebrated the  Thanksgiving holiday, and it was less than a year after a young  Nigerian man was charged with attempting to detonate plastic  explosives hidden in his underwear aboard a passenger jet from  Amsterdam to Detroit on Christmas Day.