Socialist mayoral nominee Zohran Mamdani appears to defend al-Qaeda fiend Anwar al-Awlaki — and blame America for turning the prostitution-loving cleric into a terrorist — in newly surfaced tweets.
Al-Awlaki, who was born in New Mexico to Yemeni parents, became a prominent imam at mosques in San Diego and Virginia, eventually interacting with three of the heinous Sept. 11, 2001, hijackers there, US officials have said.
He was put under surveillance by the FBI after 9/11 — a probe that uncovered among other things the fact that the conservative family-values-preaching Muslim cleric was frequenting prostitutes at hotels.
Al-Awlaki moved to Yemen in 2004 — where he joined al Qaeda and hatched numerous international terrorist plots while preaching jihad in videos and on CDs.
The cleric was considered so dangerous that then-President Barack Obama approved the drone strike that killed him in 2011 — an unprecedented assassination of an American citizen who had not been charged with a crime.
“He directed the failed attempt to blow up an airplane on Christmas Day in 2009. He directed the failed attempt to blow up US cargo planes in 2010,” Obama said at the time.
“And he repeatedly called on individuals in the United States and around the globe to kill innocent men, women and children to advance a murderous agenda.”
But Mamdani, in a series of tweets in 2015, bizarrely criticized the FBI’s surveillance of al-Awlaki — and claimed the G-Men actually pushed him into terrorism — after reading a New York Times account of the snooping, which revealed the cleric’s hooker fetish.
“Why no proper interrogation of what it means for FBI to have conducted extensive surv. into Awlaki’s private life?,” wrote Mamdani, then 23.
“How could #Awlaki have ever trusted@FBI to not release surveillance esp. if he continued to critique [the] state? Why no further discussion of how #Awlaki’s knowledge of surv. eventually led him to #alqaeda? Or what that says about [the] efficacy of surv?” Mamdani said.
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The comments have enraged 9/11 victims’ families and US anti-terror officials.
“To blame the United States for al-Awlaki is like blaming the Jews for Hitler,” seethed retired Long Island Rep. Peter King, who chaired the House Homeland Security Committee and served on the Intelligence Committee that received confidential briefings on al-Awlaki.
Fetired FDNY Lt. Jim McCaffrey — whose brother-in-law-law, FDNY Battalion 7 Chief Orio Palmer, rushed into the World Trade Center’s south tower to try to help people before the building collapsed on him and hundreds of others during the hijacked-plane strike — called Mamdani’s comments “very offensive to 9/11 victims and their families.
“It’s offensive to all New Yorkers and all Americans,” he said.
“It’s an absolutely ridiculous assertion on Mamdani’s part. The FBI agents were doing their job,” said McCaffrey, who himself spent many days participating in search and recovery efforts at Ground Zero. “This guy al-Awlaki had connections to al Qaeda. But [Mamdani’s] blaming the FBI?”
McCaffrey said it was “eye-opening” and “frightening” that Mamandi, a 33-year-old Queens state assemblyman, is now the favorite to be elected the next mayor of New York City.
Tom Von Essen, the city fire commissioner during 9/11, said, “Just what NYC needs — another mayor who blames the government for creating criminals.
“We tried this with Bill de Blasio. It can not end well,” he said, referring the lefty former mayor roundly criticized for his disastrous soft-on-crime policies.
King added, “Mamdani is making excuses and rationalizing al-Awlaki joining al Qaeda.
“He’s trying to blame the US for him becoming a terrorist. It’s an absolute disgrace. It should disqualify Mamdani from being mayor of New York City.
“Al-Awlaki was an evil man. It was a great victory to eliminate him from the face of the Earth,” King said.
Intelligence sources claimed al-Awlaki’s disciples had been linked to about a quarter of the Islamists convicted of terrorism-related offenses in the United States from 2007 until his death.
Mamdani’s other slick, savvy and cheeky videos on social media helped power his victory over ex-Gov. Andrew Cuomo in the Democratic primary.
But he has also gotten blowback for some controversial postings in his digital footprint.
A Jewish advocacy group, StopAntisemitism, slammed the Democratic socialist mayoral candidate for posting a separate “sick” video mocking Hannukah and “cosplaying Jews.”
Mamdani shared a video on his X account last year from the Geeta Brothers Duet Group showing two men wearing wigs dancing behind a menorah, playing with dreidels and celebrating with Punjabi-style music.
Mamdani was also shown in a video in 2021 leading “BDS” chants in a push to boycott Israel during a pro-Palestinian protest outside the Israeli Consulate in Manhattan.
The pol’s camp did not respond to a Post request for comment on his 2015 tweets.