FBI investigates tweets purportedly from suspect in NAS Pensacola shooting that killed 3

PENSACOLA, Fla. — Barely two hours before a Saudi aviation student went on a deadly shooting spree at Naval Air Station Pensacola, tweets purportedly written by the suspect railed against the United States for its support of Israel and for stationing troops at bases in Saudi Arabia.

The FBI identified the shooter late Saturday night as Mohammed Alshamrani, 21, a second lieutenant in the Royal Saudi Air Force who was a student naval flight officer at the Naval Aviation Schools Command.

The FBI said it is working to confirm that tweets came from the Saudi military trainee.

The tweets were posted at 4:39 a.m. CT Friday with a profile photo resembling an overhead shot of NAS Pensacola. Around 6:30 a.m., the gunman fatally wounded three people at the Florida base before he was shot and killed by a local deputy sheriff.

The tweets are addressed to "O American people" and outline what the author said is a hatred of the United States for crimes against Muslims, including the detention of suspects in Guantanamo Bay.

The FBI has not yet confirmed whether or not it's investigating terrorism as a motive for the attack.

Acting Secretary of Defense Mark Esper said Saturday that it was too soon to rule the shooting an act of terrorism, and that he had ordered a review of the Department of Defense's security and vetting policies.

"No, I can’t say it’s terrorism at this time," Esper said at the annual Reagan National Defense Forum in California. "I think we need to let the investigators, the FBI, do its work, get us the facts, and we’ll move out from there."

When taking questions at the defense forum, Esper declined to comment on reports that the shooter had posted an online will praising Osama Bin Laden or that others had been arrested in connection with the killings at NAS Pensacola.

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Alshamrani was one of 852 Saudi nationals in the United States training under the Pentagon’s security cooperation agreement with the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.

An undisclosed number of people were being interviewed, according to people familiar with the matter. They cautioned that the inquiry was still in its early stages, declining to elaborate on whether any of those interviewed were considered as any more than witnesses.

Rita Katz, director of the U.S.-based SITE intelligence group that tracks jihadist activity, noted on Twitter that the tweets did not claim allegiance to any group, but they echoed the core views of Osama bin Laden in calling for support of Palestine and the departure of U.S. troops from bases in Saudi Arabia.

Katz said that all evidence points to the Twitter account belonging to the shooter.

"We have no reason to believe it is not his," Katz said. "What is important to emphasize is the preventability of the attack. Investigation into social media profiles must be a part of the vetting process. Current carte-blanche U.S. policies restricting travel from Muslim-majority countries are ineffective and create more fodder for ISIS and Al Qaeda campaigns."

The Twitter account has since been suspended.

The suspect, who fatally wounded three people, was shot and killed by one of two Escambia County deputies who rushed to the scene within minutes of the initial shootings. One of the deputies was shot in the arm and the other in the knee, and both were expected to recover, authorities said.

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“There are many reports circulating, but the FBI deals only in facts,” said Rachel L. Rojas, the FBI’s special agent in charge of the Jacksonville Field Office, at a news conference Friday night. “This is still very much an active and ongoing investigation.”

The shooter began his three-year course at the base in August 2017 with English, basic aviation and initial pilot training, said the officials, who were not authorized to speak publicly due to the ongoing investigation.

He was among 5,180 foreign students from 153 countries in the United States for military training. Many of those students operate U.S. military hardware that foreign governments buy from the United States. Saudi Arabia is the world’s largest customer for arms, and many of those are American made.

A national security expert from the Heritage Foundation warned against making an immediate link to terrorism.

“If there is some connection to terrorism, well, then, that’s that,” said Charles “Cully” Stimson, senior legal fellow at the Heritage Foundation. “But let’s not assume that because he was a Saudi national in their air force and he murdered our people, that he is a terrorist.”

Stimson said it was also possible that the shooter was “a disgruntled evil individual who was mad because he wasn’t going to get his pilot wings, or he wasn’t getting the qualification ratings that he wanted, or he had a beef with somebody, or there was a girlfriend involved who slighted him.”

Contributing: USA TODAY's Tom Vanden Brook in Washington, D.C.; Dennis Wagner in San Diego; Grace Hauck in Chicago; Mike James in McLean, Virginia.

USA TODAY's Doug Stanglin reported from McLean, Virginia; Pensacola News Journal's Annie Blanks reported from Pensacola, Florida.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Pensacola shooting: FBI investigates Mohammed Alshamrani tweets