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Fort Hood shootings: soldier now able to speak, say doctors

Hasan had ‘communicated with radical imam in Yemen’, but motive still unclear

Guy Adams
Tuesday 10 November 2009 01:00 GMT
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The American soldier accused of shooting dead 13 people at an army base in Texas has regained consciousness and is able to speak to doctors, hospital officials revealed yesterday.

Major Nidal Malik Hasan, who was shot four times during Thursday's gun battle, is now breathing unaided, and is under armed guard at a military hospital in San Antonio. His condition remains critical but stable.

"He is talking. He is conversing with the medical staff," said Maria Gellegos, a spokeswoman at the Brooke Army Medical Centre. She claimed to be "unsure" whether Hasan has yet been interviewed by officials investigating last week's mass shooting.

The Army psychiatrist, a Muslim, is accused of shouting "Allahu Akbar!" – Arabic for "God is great!" – before opening fire inside a crowded building full of troops who were queueing for inoculations and eye tests prior to being sent on a tour of Afghanistan. He is believed to have fired off more than 100 rounds before civilian police shot him in the torso. Twenty-nine people were injured in the attack. Of those, 16 remain in hospital with gunshot wounds, including seven in intensive care.

Last night a US official said Hasanhad been communicating with a radical American imam now living in Yemen. Speaking under condition of anonymity, he said that Hasan had sent electronic communications to Anwar al Awlaki, once a spiritual leader at a Virginia mosque frequented by Hasan’s family.

Yesterday Mr Awlaki, who writes a blog which has often denounced US policies, praised Hasan as “a hero”. In a posting on his website Mr Awlaki said: “He is a man of conscience who could not bear living the contradiction of being a Muslim and serving in an army that is fighting against his own people.”

Hasan had in recent months made postings on internet sites used by extremists, but there is no evidence that he discussed any details of the planned attack, or had any outside help. Investigators say there are no other suspects, and that they do not believe he was part of any terrorist conspiracy. Hasan almost certainly now faces prosecution, most likely through the military courts.

Several former colleagues have reported that Hasan was devoutly religious, and strongly opposed to the so-called “War on Terror”. However President Obama has joined senior military figures in warning the public and soldiers not to “jump to conclusions” about the attack, or use it as an excuse to discriminate against the roughly 3,000 practising Muslims who serve in America’s armed forces.

Hasan's exact motives remain unclear, although he is thought to have been anxious to avoid taking in part in what he saw as a war on Islam.

Previous work with troops wounded in Iraq and Afghanistan had apparently left him concerned for his safety on what would have been his first overseas mission.

The two pistols he used, one of them automatic, are widely available in Texas, which has some of the most relaxed gun laws in the developed world.

A service for the victims of the attack will be held at 1pm today. Barack Obama and his wife, Michelle, have delayed the start of their 10-day tour of Asia so they can attend.

Over the weekend, the President faced criticism in some right-wing circles for not yet having visited Fort Hood. George W Bush, who lives near the scene of the tragedy, quietly arranged to go on Saturday night, and spent "considerable time" consoling victims.

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