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TERROR WARS
Air strikes 'killed' French bombmaker in Syria: US
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Nov 06, 2014


'Dead' French bombmaker: a football fan turned jihadist
Paris (AFP) Nov 06, 2014 - From football stadiums to international jihad, the 24-year-old Frenchman who was likely killed in US air strikes in Syria converted as a teen to Islam before joining increasingly radical groups.

David Drugeon is thought to have been travelling in a car in Syria's Idlib province when a drone strike hit the vehicle and likely killed him and the driver, a US official and media reports said Thursday.

Born in 1989 in the western city of Vannes into a middle-class family, he became passionate about football and would travel to the southern city of Marseille with his father to see his favourite team, OM, play.

When his parents divorced in 2002, Drugeon and his brother Cyril drew close to ultraconservative Salafist Muslims who would gather in their district.

The two brothers quickly converted to Islam and David became known as "Daoud", started learning Arabic and studied the Koran.

On his page on "Copains d'avant", a Facebook-style French website, he is seen posing in a white shirt, unsmiling.

On his list of "countries I dream of going to", he wrote: "Afghanistan, Algeria, Saudi Arabia, Ethiopia, Iraq, Israel, Morocco, Pakistan, Somalia, Sudan, Syria."

"He was a really nice guy who didn't cause trouble. A football enthusiast," a former classmate in Vannes who wanted to remain anonymous told AFP.

A woman whose daughter was in his class added: "His father was a bus driver. The boy studied hard. We don't understand what went through his head."

After having worked and saved money, Drugeon eventually went to Egypt and studied in religious schools where he deepened his knowledge of the Koran and of Arabic.

He returned to France and at the start of 2010, and told his family he was going back to Egypt. But like many other international volunteers, he went down the jihad route and travelled to tribal zones in Pakistan.

There he met a Belgian man of Tunisian origin, jihad veteran Moez Garsallaoui who was considered as an important member of Al-Qaeda in Europe and then in the Pakistan-Afghanistan region.

He taught "Daoud" how to handle explosives and make bombs.

A security source, who asked not to be identified, said he became a "relatively good" explosives expert.

- 'I have prepared myself' -

But unlike what previous media reports about Drugeon said, "he is not a former soldier nor a former member of domestic or external intelligence services," according to a top-level French official.

"He is well known to our intelligence services and those of the United States, he is quite important in his organisation, with some technical knowledge. But you don't learn to handle bombs in the French army."

As the conflict in Syria progressed and the country became a "land of jihad", Drugeon -- like many middle-ranking Al-Qaeda operatives fed up of constantly living under the treat of US drones and their missiles -- left the Pakistan-Afghanistan area and set up shop in Idlib.

There, he was likely killed by the strike, a US defence official told AFP Thursday on condition of anonymity.

"He was among the targets. We think we got him," the official said, adding it would take time to confirm his death with absolute certainty.

Drugeon is suspected of working with Al-Qaeda veterans in what Washington calls the Khorasan Group, which American officials say is a dangerous militant cell plotting to attack Western countries.

His father Patrice Drugeon told French weekly L'Express late last month: "I have prepared myself. Every evening, I expect to see two police officers knock on my door to deliver terrible news."

US air raids in Syria overnight targeted and likely killed a French bombmaker who was a leader of an Al-Qaeda offshoot accused of plotting attacks on the West, a defense official said Thursday.

David Drugeon was a Muslim convert suspected of working with Al-Qaeda veterans in what Washington calls the Khorasan group, which American officials say is a dangerous militant outfit planning to attack the United States and other Western countries.

US officials have portrayed Drugeon, 24, as a dangerous figure and his death will be touted as a serious setback for the Khorasan group.

"He was among the targets," a senior US defense official who spoke on condition of anonymity told AFP. "We think we got him."

But it will take time to confirm his death with absolute certainty, particularly as there are no US troops deployed on Syrian soil, the official added.

It was only the second strike against the Khorasan group since September 23, when US-led air raids began in Syria. In that operation, Tomahawk cruise missiles targeted the Khorasan militants but US officials said it was unclear if key leaders had been taken out then.

The US military's Central Command, which oversees the air war against the Islamic State group in Iraq and Syria, said warplanes carried out air strikes against Khorasan militants, vehicles and locations used to produce homemade bombs, but did not say if Drugeon was hit.

US aircraft struck Khorasan again because they have "a history of training operatives, facilitating fighters and money, and planning attacks against US and Western targets," Central Command said in a statement.

"We're still assessing the results of those strikes," General Lloyd Austin, head of Central Command, said in Washington.

Asked if Drugeon was targeted, Austin said: "He is clearly one of the leadership elements, one of those dangerous elements in that organization. And so any time we can take their leadership out, it's a good thing."

-- Football to jihad --

While touted as a small victory, the air raids illustrated the difficulties Washington faces as it tries to carry out its fight against the IS -- and other extremists -- while avoiding being drawn into Syria's complex civil war and a direct confrontation with the Damascus regime.

The US military made a point of saying the air strikes against Khorasan "were not in response" to recent fighting in which Al-Nusra militants have pushed back moderate rebel forces.

The strikes "did not target the Nusra Front as a whole," Central Command said.

They "were directed at the Khorasan group, whose focus is not on overthrowing the Assad regime or helping the Syrian people," it said. "These Al-Qaeda operatives are taking advantage of the Syrian conflict to advance attacks against Western interests."

Born into a middle-class French family, Drugeon was an ardent football fan as a boy before becoming steadily radicalized along with his brother following his parents' divorce in 2002, adopting the name "Daoud" instead of David.

Former classmates and local families have express shock at his transformation into a hardline Islamist.

After saving his money, Drugeon traveled to Egypt to attend a religious school and to learn Arabic. After returning to France, he told his family in 2010 that he was returning to Egypt, but in fact headed to the tribal areas of Pakistan to join extremists in international jihad.

He soon learnt how to handle explosives and make bombs.

A security source who asked not to be identified said he became a "relatively good" explosives expert.

French officials have insisted Drugeon has no links to the country's military or intelligence services, as some US media alleged.

France is not taking part in the US-led air campaign in Syria but has conducted strikes in Iraq as part of the international coalition against the IS group.


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