Story highlights
- Peter Bergen: A married couple, committed to radical ideology, did not arouse suspicion as they planned deadly attack
- They fit a profile of ISIS sympathizers in U.S. who often are middle class, well-educated
By Peter Bergen, CNN National Security Analyst Updated 12:00 PM ET, Sat December 5, 2015
Story highlights
Peter Bergen is CNN's national security analyst, a vice president at New America and a professor of practice at Arizona State University. He is the author of the forthcoming book "United States of Jihad: Investigating America's Homegrown Terrorists."
(CNN)The San Bernardino massacre is the most lethal terrorist attack in the United States since 9/11.
Before she died in a hail of police bullets, the female attacker, Tashfeen Malik, posted on Facebook, pledging allegiance to ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, employing an account that did not use her real name, three U.S. officials familiar with the investigation told CNN on Friday. This news helps move the investigation away from the notion that the San Bernardino attack was, perhaps, an act of workplace violence and makes it an act of terror. Indeed, on Friday the FBI announced that it is investigating it as an "act of terrorism." It never made much sense that the attack could be commonplace workplace violence, as some had initially speculated. After all, Malik and her husband Syed Farook had set up a bomb factory at their house where they had constructed a dozen pipe bombs; they had acquired two assault rifles and two handguns as well as 4,500 rounds of ammunition, and they wore "tactical" military-style clothing and black masks during their assault. The couple went to great lengths to hide their tracks; destroying the hard drive in their computer; smashing their cell phones and maintaining almost no presence on social media.They were able to maintain perfect operational security because as a married couple they had no need to send each other emails or make phone calls to discuss their plot. They were so-called "clean skins" who were not known to law enforcement. Farook and Malik, in short, appeared to be planning some kind of deadly campaign. Now, we know it was on behalf of ISIS. (Also arguing against the notion that this was an ordinary mass shooting of the type that is all-too-frequent in the States is the fact that they almost invariably involve only one person. According to the FBI, of the 160 "active shooter" incidents in the United States between 2000 and 2013, only two involved more than one shooter. )
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New America has assembled a database of more than 300 militants charged with some kind of terrorism crime in the States since 9/11. Who are they? Their average age is 29; more than a third are married, and more than a third have children. They are, on average, as well-educated as the typical American. Given these facts: What puts these American militants on the path to radicalization and how might what we know about Farooq and his wife fit into this pathway? An influential study of the radicalization process was published by the New York Police Department in 2007. The report, "Radicalization in the West: The Homegrown Threat," laid out a taxonomy of jihadist terrorists in the West: "unremarkable" male Muslims between the ages of 15 and 35, generally well-educated and middle class, many of whom grew up as nonobservant Muslims or were converts to Islam. Many of the plotters had no links to formal terrorist organizations. Some kind of personal crisis (the loss of a job, the experience of racism, moral outrage caused by the way Muslims were being treated in international conflicts, or the death of a close family member) provided a "cognitive opening" for a turn to Salafism -- a fundamentalist form of Sunni Islam -- beliefs, demonstrated by wearing traditional Islamic clothing and growing beards. This was not in itself alarming; these were simply fundamentalist practices. In the next stage of their radicalization, however, as their views became more politicized, the militants separated themselves from society, spending more and more time only with similar, radicalized individuals. The report describes the final stage before people turn to terrorism as "jihadization": the point at which a militant decides to perform jihad. This often takes the form of travel abroad for training.
Syed Rizwan Farook and Tashfeen Malik.
After trips he made to Saudi Arabia in 2013 and 2014, Farook seemed to become more devout, according to co-workers who noted he had grown a long beard. In Saudi Arabia, he also married Malik, who presumably shared his fundamentalist religious views to the point that she was willing to effectively commit suicide alongside him. Malik, originally of Pakistani origin, arrived in the United States on a visa as Farook's fiancee. She later became a lawful permanent resident. Could the trip to Saudi Arabia have been Farook's "jihadization?" We don't know at this point, but his trips there seemed to have turned him in a more fundamentalist direction and it was also where he met and married his future partner-in-crime. Opinion: Don't collectively punish Muslims