Cuspert recorded three albums and flirted with stardom before leaving Germany to join ISIS. |
Source: Fox News
A German-born rapper who traded in the life of a MC for a
life of terror with ISIS was killed earlier this month in a U.S. airstrike in
Syria, multiple news outlets reported Thursday.
The Daily Beast, citing two U.S. officials, reported that
Denis Cuspert, aka Deso Dogg, was killed Oct. 17 while traveling in a car with
two other people. The website reported that Cuspert was the target of the
strike, though he was not considered to be a high-value member of the terror
group.
Reuters, citing a U.S. official, reported that airstrike was
believed to have taken place on Oct. 16. The discrepancy could not immediately
be reconciled.
In February, Cuspert was formally designated as a terrorist
by the State Department, a rare step against a European citizen, after he
appeared in numerous grisly propaganda videos on behalf of ISIS. In one
particularly gruesome video, dating from this past November, Cuspert was seen
with other fighters who shot one person and beheaded another. Cuspert was not
shown killing anyone, but holds the severed head and announces that the dead
were enemies of ISIS.
"That's why they've received the death sentence,"
Cuspert announced in German on the video.
German law enforcement and intelligence officials had long
marked Cuspert out as a leader of ISIS' German-speaking contingent.
"Denis Cuspert stands in the focus of security circles
because of his essential role for Islamic State,” a German law enforcement
official told FoxNews.com in February. “He is propagandist of IS."
The son of a Ghanian father who left Cuspert’s German
mother, he recorded three albums for a Berlin-based gangsta rap label, toured
with American rapper DMX and scored a minor hit with "Willkommen in meiner
Welt" (Welcome to my World) in 2010.
“Welcome to my world full of hate and blood,” went part of
the song. “Children’s souls weep softly when the black angels sing.”
According to a Vice.com report, he converted to Islam in
2010 following a near-fatal car accident. It was then that his music began
advocating violent jihad.
In 2011, Berlin prosecutors charged him with illegal
possession of weapons after Cuspert appeared brandishing weapons as "Abou
Maleeq" in a YouTube video. A police raid on his home yielded weapons and
ammunition, and although it did not result in jail time, he was squarely on the
radar of German counter-terrorism investigators.
In 2012, Cuspert left Germany for Egypt, before eventually
making his way to Syria where he joined Al Qaeda. When Islamic State broke away
from the terror group behind 9/11, Cuspert pledged his loyalty to ISIS leader
Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.
"Cuspert is emblematic of the type of foreign recruit
ISIL seeks for its ranks," the State Department, using another acronym for
the terror group, wrote in February, "individuals who have engaged in
criminal activity in their home countries who then travel to Iraq and Syria to
commit far worse crimes."
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