Last week, ISIS-K terrorist Mohammed Sharifullah admitted his involvement in multiple terror attacks. He admitted that he conducted surveillance for a suicide bombing at the Canadian embassy in Kabul, Afghanistan in 2016. He admitted that he trained the attackers who killed 130 people in Moscow, Russia last year. And he admitted that he strategized for the Abbey Gate suicide bombing that occurred during the 2021 withdrawal of American troops from Afghanistan—an attack that took the lives of 13 American service members, including Nebraska’s own Corporal Daegan Page.
Sharifullah admitted all this. And as President Trump said in his address to Congress last week, he will “face the swift sword of American justice” for his crimes.
Earlier this month, Pakistani authorities acted on Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) information to detain Sharifullah in their country. They coordinated with the American government—the FBI, CIA, and Department of Justice (DOJ)—to extradite him to the United States to answer for his crimes. Just last week, a court charged Sharifullah with providing and conspiring to provide material support for terrorism. His fate will soon be determined by the American justice system.