Mohamad Jamal Khweis, the 26-year-old from Alexandria, Virginia, spoke just days after he claims to have fled from the IS-held city of Mosul. Kurdish forces saw him wandering near the northern Iraqi city of Sinjar Monday and fired upon him before he surrendered. During the heavily edited version of the interview released by Kurdistan24 television, Khweis seems relaxed and, at times, smokes a cigarette, something he said is prohibited in the terror groupâs self-declared caliphate. âI made a bad decision to go with [a] girl and go to Mosul,â Khweis said in English. âI wasnât thinking straight.â
Journey to Mosul
He described how the Iraqi girl, the sister of a woman married to an IS fighter, made arrangements for the fairly uneventful journey. âFirst, we took a bus from Istanbul to a city, Gaziantep,â he said. âFrom there, a driver picked us up and took us to the border and then [we went] from Syria to Iraq.â U.S. intelligence officials hope to learn more about Khweisâ travels and, if possible, to validate his accounts of IS, including information on foreign fighters in the Mosul area. For now, current and former intelligence officials, as well as analysts, are approaching the account with caution. âThere are a ton of holes in his story,â said Daveed Gartenstein-Ross, a senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies. âThe answers he is giving don't appear to be satisfactory,â he added. âThe question then becomes whether he's lying, obfuscating, or just doesn't want to talk about aspects of his story. And then the next question is why?â
How did he get ID and cash?
One of the âred flagsâ is Khweisâ account of his escape. In the interview, he described how upon arriving in IS territory he was stripped of his identification papers. âAll the foreigners had to give their IDs and passports to one of the person in charge there,â Khweis said. âFrom there, after we gave all our IDs and passports, we got picked up⌠we drove into Raqqa.â Yet when Khweis surrendered to Kurdish forces, he was carrying his Virginia driverâs license, as well as a stack of what appears in photos to be U.S. $100 bills, Turkish money, debit and credit cars and three cell phones. One former intelligence officer who watched the interview called that part of Khweisâ story â âmagically getting his docs and cashâ â odd. âIt doesnât make sense,â said Patrick Skinner, now with The Soufan Group, a strategic security intelligence consultancy. âI've interviewed lots of people like that and if you don't ask for details you don't get them -- get the old 'every time frame is a week' spiel and generic 'went to a house'.â he said. âBut odd from an educated person.â
A driver's license of an American identified as Mohamed Jamal Khweis, accused of being a member of the Islamic State group, who has surrendered to Kurdish Peshmerga forces in northern Iraq.
Why was his escape so easy?
Skinner also wondered why Khweis never speaks to a basic question. âWhat made him travel in the first place, not just to Mosul but the whole trip?â Skinner asked. The ease of Khweisâ escape also raises questions given ISâs reputation for executing fighters and others who try to flee. âAbout a month [after] I was there, I decided to return back home,â Khweis said. âAt first [a friend] said he could help me, but then he said it will be difficult to take me all the way to Turkey,â he said. âHe told me he will take me close to Turkeyâs border.â According to his account, though, his escape from Mosul is seamless.
The Iraqi girl?