Libyan Witness Implicates Abu Khattala in Benghazi Attacks

On trial for the 2012 Benghazi attacks on US facilities in Libya, Ahmed Abu Khattala is shown in a courtroom sketch listening to a translation of an opening statement Oct. 2. (Dana Verkouteren/AP)
On trial for the 2012 Benghazi attacks on US facilities in Libya, Ahmed Abu Khattala is shown in a courtroom sketch listening to a translation of an opening statement Oct. 2. (Dana Verkouteren/AP)
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Libyan Witness Implicates Abu Khattala in Benghazi Attacks

On trial for the 2012 Benghazi attacks on US facilities in Libya, Ahmed Abu Khattala is shown in a courtroom sketch listening to a translation of an opening statement Oct. 2. (Dana Verkouteren/AP)
On trial for the 2012 Benghazi attacks on US facilities in Libya, Ahmed Abu Khattala is shown in a courtroom sketch listening to a translation of an opening statement Oct. 2. (Dana Verkouteren/AP)

Libyan informant who was paid $7 million by US authorities to help capture Ahmed Abu Khattala testified that the accused ringleader of the 2012 attacks on US facilities in Benghazi repeatedly implicated himself in the assaults that killed four Americans, including Ambassador J. Christopher Stevens.

Appearing near the end of the government’s sixth week of trial in Washington, the witness identified Abu Khattala on surveillance video from the nighttime attack on a US diplomatic post, and testified that Abu Khattala said given the chance, he would have killed even more Americans at the post, at a nearby CIA annex and at Benghazi’s airport.

“I intended then to kill everybody there — even those who were at the airport — if it was not for [the head of Benghazi’s ruling Islamist council] who stopped me,” the informant, who is a thickly bearded, 40-year-old Libyan businessman, quoted Abu Khattala telling him in 2013 after another person urged more bloody attacks like those carried out by al-Qaeda of Iraq.

The testimony tying the attacks to Abu Khattala provided a crucial element for the prosecutor’s case against the accused.

The Libyan informant appeared under the pseudonym of Ali Majrisi to tell the 15-member jury Abu Khattala acknowledged to him that he was a lead US suspect in the Sept. 11-12, 2012, attacks, and kept company with a team of hit-men and “killers.” Abu Khattala also confided in a late-night drive that he was so weary of having so many enemies pursuing him that if captured, he would “talk about everything, all of these people involved in the case of the US embassy.”

US commandos captured Abu Khattala, now 46, in Libya in June 2014 — aided in part by the informant, who over two days of testimony discussed being contacted and later paid for his role in befriending and betraying Abu Khattala.

He acknowledged being paid $7 million as a reward by the Defense and State departments in March 2015 and in 2016, plus more than $100,000 since 2013 in monthly salary and living expenses in Libya and now the United States, at least some of that time in Texas.

As he spoke in Arabic via an English interpreter, Abu Khattala listened stone-faced, stroking his beard.

Abu Khattala has pleaded not guilty to 18 charges including conspiracy to support terrorism, murder, attempted murder and damaging US facilities in the deaths of Stevens and three other ­Americans.

Abu Khattala’s attorney, assistant federal defender Michelle Peterson, challenged Majrisi’s credibility given his employment and payment by the government.

The informant, who said he had studied information technology at a Canadian university before returning to his native Benghazi, told jurors he became so anxious over his 18-month undercover operation that he offered his unidentified US Defense Department handlers to kill the suspect himself.

His testimony followed weeks of parsing grainy videos and wrangling over cellphone records, and capped a prosecution case that included damaging testimony from three Libyans, all appearing under fake names, to tie Abu Khattala to violence described dramatically at trial by CIA and State Department security operators who survived.

Majrisi also named a second suspect who was captured on Oct. 29 of this year and brought to Washington: Mustafa al-Imam. Majrisi identified him in court in surveillance video, and an FBI agent had testified last week Abu Khattala, while in custody, had also named al-Imam.

Under questioning by Assistant US Attorney John Crabb, Jr., Majrisi said he had fought with revolutionaries against Moammar Gaddafi’s regime and administered a post-revolutionary Benghazi governing coalition.

At the end of 2012, he was approached by Americans he identified only as reporting to the US defense secretary for help identifying suspects in the attacks. He agreed to become an informant, he said, because of US assistance in the revolution and because he is “against extremism, and I try and do everything in any way to help my city.”

Asked what information he collected about Abu Khattala, he replied, “Everything.”

Prosecutors acknowledged that Majrisi’s interactions with his US handlers before Abu Khattala’s capture were not recorded in a manner that could be shared with his defense team due to the secret nature of the exchanges.

Without that first-hand information, the defense will explore limited, declassified summaries, cables and documents next week when it presents its case.

Majrisi also acknowledged that he was the person who lured Abu Khattala to the seaside villa where he was captured in a nighttime raid.After turning over the defendant, the witness said his own handgun was taken, and he was told, “Go your way,” he testified. He drove away, was handed an installment of $40,000 by US officials in Tripoli, and left from Tunisia for a third country that day.

The informant said he asked for an introduction to Abu Khattala, who knew him through the revolution and as “a successful businessman.” Abu Khattala “was always requiring the kind of . . . financial support,” he could provide.

The witness said Abu Khattala kept mortar shells and a shoulder-fired missile launcher in a garage, and suggested piles of papers, folders and old computers in his private quarters came from the attacks because they enabled him to “personally” know “all of these field leaders who visited the US ambassador.”

As planned by the Americans, the informant bought the villa and gave it Abu Khattala as a “safe haven” from his life on the run.

The Washington Post



Australian Lawmakers Back Stricter Gun, Hate Crime Laws

A visitor places a pebble at a memorial site in remembrance to the lives lost during the Bondi Beach mass shooting on December 14, 2025, in Sydney, Australia, January 16, 2026. (Reuters)
A visitor places a pebble at a memorial site in remembrance to the lives lost during the Bondi Beach mass shooting on December 14, 2025, in Sydney, Australia, January 16, 2026. (Reuters)
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Australian Lawmakers Back Stricter Gun, Hate Crime Laws

A visitor places a pebble at a memorial site in remembrance to the lives lost during the Bondi Beach mass shooting on December 14, 2025, in Sydney, Australia, January 16, 2026. (Reuters)
A visitor places a pebble at a memorial site in remembrance to the lives lost during the Bondi Beach mass shooting on December 14, 2025, in Sydney, Australia, January 16, 2026. (Reuters)

Australian politicians voted in favor of tougher hate crime and gun laws Tuesday, weeks after gunmen targeting Jewish people on Bondi Beach killed 15 people.

Lawmakers in the House of Representatives backed the legislation in response to the December 14 shooting at the famous Sydney beach.

Sajid Akram and his son Naveed allegedly targeted a Jewish Hanukkah celebration in the nation's worst mass shooting for 30 years.

The attack has sparked national soul-searching about antisemitism, anger over the failure to shield Jewish Australians from harm, and promises to protect the country with stiffer legislation.

The hate crime and gun control legislation must still be approved by the upper house Senate, which was expected to vote later in the day.

"The terrorists had hate in their hearts, but they also had high-powered rifles in their hands," Prime Minister Anthony Albanese told parliament.

"We're taking action on both -- tackling antisemitism, tackling hate, and getting dangerous guns off our streets."

Legislative reforms on guns and hate speech were voted on separately.

The hate speech legislation would toughen laws and penalties for people seeking to spread hate and radicalization, or to promote violence.

It creates aggravated offences for offenders who are preachers, other leaders, or adults seeking to radicalize children.

The reform would also make it easier to reject or cancel visas for people suspected of terrorism or espousing hatred on the basis of race, color, or origin.

On firearms, Australia would set up a national gun buyback scheme, tighten rules on imports of firearms and expand background checking for gun permits to allow input from intelligence services.

The legislation was debated in a special session of parliament, ahead of a national day of mourning on Thursday for the Bondi Beach victims.

Gunman Sajid Akram, 50, was shot and killed by police during the Bondi Beach attack. An Indian national, he entered Australia on a visa in 1998.

His 24-year-old son Naveed, an Australian-born citizen who remains in prison, has been charged with terrorism and 15 murders.

Police and intelligence agencies are facing difficult questions about whether they could have acted earlier.

Naveed Akram was flagged by Australia's intelligence agency in 2019, but he slipped off the radar after it was decided that he posed no imminent threat.


Macron Sent Message to Trump Offering to Host G7 Meeting in Paris Thursday

French President Emmanuel Macron wears sunglasses as he speaks as he leads a meeting on New-Caledonia at the Elysee Palace in Paris, France, 19 January 2026. EPA/STEPHANE DE SAKUTIN / POOL MAXPPP OUT
French President Emmanuel Macron wears sunglasses as he speaks as he leads a meeting on New-Caledonia at the Elysee Palace in Paris, France, 19 January 2026. EPA/STEPHANE DE SAKUTIN / POOL MAXPPP OUT
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Macron Sent Message to Trump Offering to Host G7 Meeting in Paris Thursday

French President Emmanuel Macron wears sunglasses as he speaks as he leads a meeting on New-Caledonia at the Elysee Palace in Paris, France, 19 January 2026. EPA/STEPHANE DE SAKUTIN / POOL MAXPPP OUT
French President Emmanuel Macron wears sunglasses as he speaks as he leads a meeting on New-Caledonia at the Elysee Palace in Paris, France, 19 January 2026. EPA/STEPHANE DE SAKUTIN / POOL MAXPPP OUT

Emmanuel Macron has sent a "private message" to Donald Trump offering to organize a G7 summit in Paris on Thursday in which Russia could be invited on the sidelines, the French president's entourage confirmed.

Trump posted this message on his Truth Social network in which Macron also proposes inviting Ukraine to the meeting as well as Denmark to discuss disagreements over Greenland.

The offer comes as Europe is weighing countermeasures after Trump threatened to impose tariffs on eight European countries in a bid to pressure the EU over Greenland.

"My friend, we are completely aligned on Syria. We can do great things in Iran. I don't understand what you are doing in Greenland," Macron said in his message.

"I can organize a G7 meeting in Paris on Thursday afternoon after Davos," Macron wrote, referring to the gathering of global elites in Switzerland where the US president is set to be in attendance.

"I can invite the Ukrainians, the Danes, the Syrians and the Russians on the sidelines" of the meeting, he added.

Trump's relations with Macron hit a new low Monday when the US president threatened 200 percent tariffs on French wine over France's intention to decline an invitation to join his "Board of Peace".

"Tariff threats to influence our foreign policy are unacceptable and ineffective," a source close to Macron told AFP on Tuesday.


ISIS Claims Deadly Blast at Chinese-run Restaurant in Afghan Capital

Security forces stand at the site of an explosion in Kabul, Afghanistan, 19 January 2026. EPA/SAMIULLAH POPAL
Security forces stand at the site of an explosion in Kabul, Afghanistan, 19 January 2026. EPA/SAMIULLAH POPAL
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ISIS Claims Deadly Blast at Chinese-run Restaurant in Afghan Capital

Security forces stand at the site of an explosion in Kabul, Afghanistan, 19 January 2026. EPA/SAMIULLAH POPAL
Security forces stand at the site of an explosion in Kabul, Afghanistan, 19 January 2026. EPA/SAMIULLAH POPAL

ISIS claimed an explosion that officials said killed a Chinese national and six Afghans, while injuring several more as it tore through a Chinese-run restaurant in a heavily guarded part of Afghanistan's capital.

Monday's blast took place in the commercial Shahr-e-Naw area that is home to offices, shopping complexes and embassies, police spokesperson Khalid Zadran said.

It is considered one of the safest neighborhoods in the city.

According to Reuters, the Afghan branch of ISIS claimed responsibility, saying in a statement it ‌was carried out ‌by a suicide bomber.

The restaurant serving the Chinese ‌Muslim ⁠community was jointly run ‌by a Chinese Muslim man, Abdul Majid, his wife, and an Afghan partner, Abdul Jabbar Mahmood, Zadran said.

"The nature of the explosion is unknown so far and is being investigated," he said.

A Chinese national, identified only as Ayub, and six Afghans were killed in the blast near the restaurant's kitchen, while several others were injured, Zadran added.

The Amaq news agency said the domestic arm of ISIS had put Chinese citizens on its list of targets, citing "growing crimes by the Chinese government against ‌Uyghurs".

Rights groups accuse Beijing of widespread abuses of Uyghurs, ‍a mainly Muslim ethnic minority group ‍numbering about 10 million who live in China's far western region of ‍Xinjiang.

Beijing denies any abuse and has accused Western countries of interference and peddling lies.

The blast injured five Chinese nationals, and China has requested that Afghanistan spare no effort to treat the injured, Guo Jiakun, a spokesperson for China's foreign ministry, said at a press briefing on Tuesday.

China also requested that Afghanistan take effective measures to protect the safety of ⁠its citizens and investments, and investigate, Guo said.

On Monday, videos shared on social media showed smoke billowing from a large hole torn in the facade of the restaurant building, while debris littered the street outside.

"We have received 20 people at our hospital," Dejan Panic, the Afghanistan director of humanitarian group EMERGENCY, said in a statement, adding that seven were dead on arrival. "Among the wounded are four women and a child."