
KILLEEN, Texas — An AWOL soldier who had weapons stashed in a motel room near Fort Hood admitted planning an attack on the Texas post, where 13 people died in 2009 in the worst mass shooting ever on a U.S. military installation, the Army said in an alert issued Thursday.
Pfc. Naser Abdo, a 21-year- old soldier who was granted conscientious-objector status this year after he said his Muslim beliefs prevented him from fighting, was arrested Wednesday. Agents found firearms and “items that could be identified as bombmaking components, including gunpowder,” in his motel room, according to FBI spokesman Erik Vasys.
The Army alert, sent via e-mail and obtained by The Associated Press, said the man arrested by Killeen police “was in possession of a large quantity of ammunition, weapons and a bomb inside a backpack.” Upon questioning, the alert said, he admitted to planning an attack on Fort Hood.
Officials have not offered details about Abdo’s possible intentions. The infantry soldier from Garland, Texas, had applied for conscientious-objector status last year.
A military review board recommended this spring that he be separated from the Army. But the discharge was delayed after he was charged with possessing child pornography and an Article 32 military hearing last month recommended he be court-martialed. He has been absent without leave from Fort Campbell, Ky., since the July 4 weekend.
Abdo’s arrest came after the owners of a local gun store — the same store where the 2009 Fort Hood shootings suspect, Maj. Nidal Hasan, bought a pistol used in the attack — called police, the Army’s alert said.
Store clerk Greg Ebert said the man arrived at Guns Galore LLC by taxi Tuesday and bought 6 pounds of smokeless gunpowder, three boxes of shotgun ammunition and a magazine for a semiautomatic pistol, paying about $250. Ebert said he became concerned when the man asked questions indicating he didn’t know much about the items.
Killeen police learned from the taxi company that Abdo had been picked up from a local motel and that he also had visited an Army surplus store where he paid cash for a uniform bearing Fort Hood unit patches, according to the Army alert.



