Major Nidal Malik Hasan, the US Army psychiatrist, accused of killing 13 fellow soldiers at a military base in Texas was on a "jihadist mission," a US lawmaker said on Tueday, contending it was too early to rule out that he was a "lone wolf" acting alone.
"This man was on a mission, on a mission that he believed was from his God, a jihadist mission," Congressman Michael McCaul from Texas said in the House of Representatives. Citing the information he received from soldiers who survived the November 5, massacre, the Congressman pointed out that Hasan shouted 'Allah ho Akbar' before opening fire.
"It is a common terminology in the jihad world to shout before you kill others. I think he fully expected to die that day," McCaul said. "He gave away his material possessions. He was seen wearing a Pakistani garb at a local store that morning. He was preparing himself. He was premeditating the death of others and preparing himself for his own death," McCaul said.
The Congressman said it was important to probe whether Hasan "infiltrated or was he a 'lone wolf' acting
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