Algerian-Irish extremist Ali Charaf Damache, who pleaded guilty to terrorism charges in July, was sentenced to 15 years in jail on Tuesday, prosecutors in Philadelphia said.
Damache, 53, known by the pseudonym "The black flag," was arrested in Spain in 2015, where he was suspected of plotting the murder of a Swedish cartoonist who had lampooned the Prophet Mohammed.
The plot never materialized.
He was extradited to the United States in 2017, accused of being the ringleader of a militant cell that was plotting attacks in Europe and southern Asia. Prosecutors said Damache sought to recruit light-skinned women and others who did not fit the traditional terrorist profile to wage attacks.
"Today´s sentencing marks the end of a long and arduous prosecution that has spanned more than nine years, involved four defendants and five unnamed co-conspirators, and required multiple coordinated international arrests and two extradition applications," said US Attorney William McSwain in a statement.
"Damache and his co-conspirators were motivated by hate and prejudice, and their criminal activities presented a very real danger to our country and the world," he said.
In negotiations over his agreement to plead guilty, Damache had accepted a 15-year prison sentence and renounced any appeals.
He also agreed to extradition to either Ireland or Algeria once his US sentence has been served.
Spanish officials said that when he was arrested in Barcelona in December 2015, Damache was plotting the murder of Swedish cartoonist Lars Vilks.
Another member of his cell, US citizen Colleen LaRose -- dubbed "Jihad Jane" - was sentenced in 2014 in Philadelphia to 10 years in jail for terrorism-related crimes.