Shamsud-Din Jabbar, the 42-year-old Texas man accused of crashing a truck into New Year’s Day revellers in New Orleans, killing 15 and injuring dozens of people, served in the US Army for 13 ...
Shamsud-Din Jabbar, a U.S.-born citizen who lived in Texas and an Army Veteran, drove a pickup truck with an ISIS flag into ... concern that the new governing body in Afghanistan would be unable ...
Jabbar, a 42-year-old U.S. citizen from Texas, plowed a rented pickup truck with an ISIS flag attached to the trailer hitch into a crowd on Bourbon Street in New Orleans during the early morning ...
"The terrorists get a vote, and they're voting to keep fighting," former Trump counterterrorism envoy Nathan Sales told ...
The organisation owes its origin to the ill-advised and ill-conceived invasion of Iraq by the United States in 2003.
On New Year's Day ... Texas resident and Army veteran who served in Afghanistan for six years. Jabbar appeared to be carrying an ISIS flag. Authorities said Thursday it appeared that he acted ...
A man carrying an ISIS flag drove a pickup through New Year’s revelers ... With jihadist groups running Afghanistan and Syria, among other countries, they are back in control of vast areas ...
New Orleans Coroner Dr. Dwight McKenna ... a U.S. citizen from Texas who once served in Afghanistan, was flying an Islamic State flag during the assault. U.S. President Joe Biden said that the ...
A U.S. Army veteran with an ISIS flag on his truck swerved around makeshift barriers and plowed into New Orleans' crowded ... from Texas who once served in Afghanistan, was killed in a shootout ...
US Army veteran flying an ISIS flag from his truck swerved around makeshift barriers and plowed into New Orleans' crowded ... from Texas who once served in Afghanistan, was killed in a shootout ...
The suspect, identified as Shamsud-Din Jabbar, 42, a US citizen from Texas who once served in Afghanistan ... ISIS flag from his truck swerved around makeshift barriers and plowed into New ...
Most countries declined to negotiate with the Taliban in a way that might have promoted women’s rights and other international norms, choosing instead to wait and see whether Afghanistan’s new leaders ...