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American Taliban defends terrorists in taped interview
Dizzy from morphine and weary from battle, American Taliban fighter John Walker Lindh said in an interview soon after his capture that he had been a part of Ansar, the Arab fighters funded by Osama bin Laden who fought for the Taliban. He also said he had attended an Ansar training camp.
Dizzy from morphine and weary from battle, American Taliban fighter John Walker Lindh said in an interview soon after his capture that he had been a part of Ansar, the Arab fighters funded by Osama bin Laden who fought for the Taliban.
He also said he had attended an Ansar training camp.
The interview was done Dec. 2 by a Cable News Network reporter and was aired
in its entirety for the first time Wednesday.
Walker said the Taliban fighters were organised in different branches based on ethnic groups. At first, Walker stayed with Taliban fighters from Pakistan, where he had studied for a couple of years. But then he was put with the group of Arab fighters who were funded by bin Laden because he spoke Arabic.
"Originally I came with Pakistanis," Lindh said. "They sent me to the Arabs." What Lindh did while traveling with Taliban fighters in Afghanistan could play a key role in what charges he might face in the United States.
Lindh, a 20-year-old American from San Anselmo, California, also defended the Taliban fighters in Afghanistan, saying the Quran permits Muslims to kill other Muslims in cases of holy war.
"That is a question that is addressed in the Quran itself," Lindh told CNN. "In certain cases Muslims by necessity can kill and ... there are situations in which a Muslim can be killed (by other Muslims)."
Referring to jihad, the Islamic word for holy war, he said, "It's exactly what I thought it would be."
Asked if it was the right cause, he said, "Definitely." Bureau Report
Walker said the Taliban fighters were organised in different branches based on ethnic groups. At first, Walker stayed with Taliban fighters from Pakistan, where he had studied for a couple of years. But then he was put with the group of Arab fighters who were funded by bin Laden because he spoke Arabic.
"Originally I came with Pakistanis," Lindh said. "They sent me to the Arabs." What Lindh did while traveling with Taliban fighters in Afghanistan could play a key role in what charges he might face in the United States.
Lindh, a 20-year-old American from San Anselmo, California, also defended the Taliban fighters in Afghanistan, saying the Quran permits Muslims to kill other Muslims in cases of holy war.
"That is a question that is addressed in the Quran itself," Lindh told CNN. "In certain cases Muslims by necessity can kill and ... there are situations in which a Muslim can be killed (by other Muslims)."
Referring to jihad, the Islamic word for holy war, he said, "It's exactly what I thought it would be."
Asked if it was the right cause, he said, "Definitely." Bureau Report