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Questions surround British ISIS executioner Jihadi John's path to radicalization

Feb 26, 2015, 18:51 IST

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The British Islamic State militant known as "Jihadi John" was identified Thursday as Mohammed Emwazi by a report in The Washington Post.

The Post reports that Emwazi, who is believed to be responsible for multiple executions of Western hostages, became radicalized after run-ins with British intelligence officials.

But questions remains about whether UK security services inadvertently radicalized Emwazi or simply recognized his potential for radicalization.

"Jihadi John" has appeared masked, but speaking with his British accent, in ISIS hostage-beheading videos, leading some who knew him before he left for Syria in 2012 to identify him to the newspaper.

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A senior British official confirmed his identity to The New York Times.

Emwazi, 27, was reportedly born in Kuwait. He was from a "well-to-do" family, lived in London, and was described as polite and stylish. He is also educated, with a degree in computer programming, according to the Post.

Emwazi occasionally prayed at a mosque and was known to adhere to his faith while he lived in London, but it wasn't until he planned a post-college graduation safari trip to Tanzania that he started to radicalize, sources said.

He and two friends were detained in mid-2009 once they landing in Dar es Salaam. They were then held overnight and then deported, according to the Post.

Emwazi claimed that a British intelligence officer accused him of trying to travel to Somalia, where the militant group Al Shabab, an ally of Al Qaeda, is based.

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Emwazi later returned to his native Kuwait and got a job at a computer company. He landed on the radar of British intelligence officials again in 2010, when they detained him and searched his belongings the day before he was due to fly back to Kuwait. He was prevented from returning there.

He wrote in an email to Qureshi that he felt "like a prisoner ... a person imprisoned & controlled by security service men, stopping me from living my new life in my birthplace & country, Kuwait."

One of Emwazi's friends told the Post that he was "upset and wanted to start a life elsewhere" outside of London. "He at some stage reached the point where he was really just trying to find another way to get out."

Emwazi was also reportedly unable to travel to Saudi Arabia, where he wanted to teach English.

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Around this time, other signs of his radicalization started to show. When a court in the US sentenced an Al Qaeda operative who murdered Americans in Afghanistan, Emwazi reportedly said that he "heard the upsetting news regarding our sister," noting "this should only keep us firmer towards fighting for freedom and justice!"

The last contact Qureshi reportedly had with Emwazi was in January 2012.

Qureshi said: "This is a young man who was ready to exhaust every single kind of avenue within the machinery of the state to bring a change for his personal situation." He said he thought "actions were taken to criminalize [Emwazi] and he had no way to do something against these actions."

However, some journalists and experts are raising doubts about the notion that security services were the defining factor in Emwazi gravitation toward ISIS (aka IS, ISIL, Daesh):

Yaroslav Trofimov wrote in The Wall Street Journal on Thursday that the "Islamic State's ability to lure thousands of Westerners is unprecedented in modern history."

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Trofimov explained that many of these "newly baked jihadists" are frustrated with their own countries and have "embraced Islamic State's genocidal cult simply because it is the most obvious counterpoint to the West."

Thomas Hegghammer, director of terrorism research at the Norwegian Defense Research Establishment, told the Journal: "It is fundamentally the same malaise that is also inspiring the far-left activists. A lot of young people have the same idea that the capitalism-centric Western system is not for them, and that another society is being set up."

ISIS, which has claimed large swaths of Iraq and Syria, is trying to build an Islamic state ostensibly governed by a 7th-century interpretation of sharia law.

Thousands of Westerners are thought to have traveled to the Middle East to join Islamist groups.

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