Tunisia arrests Ansar al Sharia member in connection with US Embassy assault

Bilel-Chaouachi.jpg

Bilel Chaouachi. Courtesy of Kapitalis.

The Tunisian government arrested Bilel Chaouachi, a Salafist imam who has openly praised Osama bin Laden and Ayman al Zawahiri, earlier this week. Chaouachi was allegedly involved in the storming of the US Embassy in Tunis days after terrorists struck the US Consulate in Benghazi, Libya.

“Bilel Chaouachi is suspected of involvement in the September 14 events of the attack on the embassy and the American school, but before that there is another case pending against him for incitement to violence,” Tunisian Interior Ministry spokesman Khaled Tarrouche explained, according to Kapitalis.

The 26-year-old Chaouachi has been cited as a theology “student” in various press accounts because he attended a theological graduate school in Tunis. But Magharebia.com identifies him as a “a member of the salafist Ansar al Sharia group.”

The rabblerousing Chaouachi has garnered more influence in recent months, culminating in a shocking appearance on Ettounsiya TV shortly before his arrest.

Salafists have clashed with the Ennahda government in recent weeks, leading to an escalation in violence. Chaouachi was unapologetic, however, claiming that the government was at fault. He also stunned viewers by openly praising al Qaeda’s leaders.

“We, the jihadist salafist movement with our scholars and theoreticians headed by Sheikh Osama bin Laden, may Allah have mercy on him, and Sheikh Ayman al-Zawahiri, may God protect him, say that this country is a land of preaching and not a land of war, even when it is not ruled according to Islamic law,” Chaouachi said during his television appearance, according to Magharebia.com.

Tunisian officials maintain that Chaouachi’s television appearance was not the reason for his arrest, with the Interior Ministry saying it was “a simple coincidence.”

Chaouachi has advocated for jihad against Bashar al Assad’s regime in Syria. “It is the duty of all Muslims to support the struggle of the Syrian people against despotism,” the Associated Press quoted Chaouachi as saying earlier this year.

Chaouachi is not the only Ansar al Sharia member implicated in the storming of the US Embassy in Tunis.

The head of Ansar al Sharia Tunisia is Seifullah Ben Hassine (a.k.a. Abu Iyadh), who is also wanted in connection with the Sept. 14 assault. Hassine has longstanding ties to al Qaeda. In 2000, Hassine co-founded the Tunisian Combatant Group (TCG) “in coordination with” al Qaeda, according to the United Nations.

The TCG helped execute the Sept. 9, 2001 assassination of Northern Alliance leader Ahmed Shah Massoud, who was killed by two Tunisians pretending to be journalists. Massoud’s assassination was an integral part of al Qaeda’s Sept. 11, 2001 plot, as it removed an influential adversary from the battlefield before American-led forces set foot inside Afghanistan.

Hassine formed a fighting group in late 2001 that was dedicated to defending Osama bin Laden at the Battle of Tora Bora. And the TCG was connected to several significant terrorist plots in Europe, including a planned attack on the US Embassy in Rome. [See LWJ report, Al Qaeda ally orchestrated assault on US Embassy in Tunisia.]

Thomas Joscelyn is a Senior Fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies and the Senior Editor for FDD's Long War Journal.

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1 Comment

  • mike merlo says:

    one can’t help but wonder if some of these arrests are actually preemptive moves on the part of various governments to protect the person arrested

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