US soldier ‘planned to join IS’

In this courtroom sketch, Jonas M Edmonds, left, and Hasan R Edmonds, right, stand in front of an FBI agent as they appear at a hearing at federal court in Chicago following their arrests on charges of conspiring with the Islamic State group. Picture: Tom Gianni

In this courtroom sketch, Jonas M Edmonds, left, and Hasan R Edmonds, right, stand in front of an FBI agent as they appear at a hearing at federal court in Chicago following their arrests on charges of conspiring with the Islamic State group. Picture: Tom Gianni

Published Mar 27, 2015

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Chicago -

A state militia soldier vowed to bring “the flames of war to the heart” of America if he was unable to get to the Middle East to join the Islamic State group, and his cousin bragged he could kill up to 150 people in a terrorist attack in the US, federal prosecutors said on Thursday in announcing men's arrests.

Hasan R Edmonds, a 22-year-old member of the Illinois Army National Guard, was arrested on Wednesday evening at Chicago Midway International Airport trying to board a plane on the first leg of a journey to Egypt.

Jonas M Edmonds, 29, was arrested a few hours later at home, the US attorney's office in Chicago said.

Both men are US citizens from suburban Aurora.

The National Guard is a component of the US Armed Forces that state governors can call up in times of emergencies.

An unsealed federal complaint says the plan was for Jonas Edmonds to carry out an attack in the US after Hasan Edmonds left the country, donning Hasan's uniform to gain better access to soldiers.

The complaint says they plotted an armed attack against a US military facility in northern Illinois where Hasan Edmonds had trained.

The complaint did not name the facility.

A spokesman for the Illinois National Guard, Lt Col Brad Leighton, said Hasan Edmonds was member of Golf Company 634th Brigade Support Battalion, based in Joliet.

In Internet messages to an undercover FBI agent in January, Hasan Edmonds said that if he was unable to make it to the Middle East, he would help bring “the flames of war to the heart” of America and “cause as much damage and mayhem as possible,” the complaint says.

On Tuesday, the cousins drove to a military installation with an undercover agent to discuss an attack, according to the complaint.

Hasan Edmonds described the rooms inside and talked about which ones should be hit.

In other messages, Hasan said his knowledge of the US military and American psychology would prove helpful in terrorising Americans, prosecutors contend.

“If we can break their spirits, we will win,” he said, according to the complaint.

He allegedly spoke admiringly of the terrorist attack in Paris on the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo.

“Honestly, we would love to do something like the brother in Paris did,” he allegedly wrote.

Both men face a count of conspiring to provide material support to a foreign terrorist organisation, the Islamic State. The conspiracy includes terrorist plots in the US A conviction carries a maximum 15-year prison sentence.

The made initial appearances in a courtroom in Chicago later on Thursday. Jonas Edmonds kept swivelling in his chair, stroking his beard and, at one point, yawned loudly. Hasan Edmonds sat still.

Hasan Edmonds' sister, Manchinique Bates, told the Chicago Sun-Times, “They aren't terrorists. ... Just because they choose to worship as Muslims does not make them terrorists.”

Jonas Edmonds allegedly communicated to an undercover agent that it may be difficult for him to get travel documents. Therefore, he said he would stage attacks in the US using AK-47s to kill up to 150 people, prosecutors allege.

If he couldn't secure guns, he said he would use anything he could get his hands on, the complaint says.

“I can unleash a lion,” he says. “What I would need ... honestly nothing. I am prepared to go even if it's with a rock.”

Sapa-AP

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