Anas Al Kandari


Anas al-Kandari was a Kuwaiti terrorist. He died in a firefight on Failaka Island, with United States Marines on October 8, 2002. A U.S. Marine was also killed in the incident as was al-Kandari's fellow fighter Jassem al-Hajiri.

Career

Al-Kandari grew up in Salwa, Kuwait. Stewart Bell, author The Martyr's Oath, reports that his father invested in the Souk al-Manakh, which Bell described as "Kuwait's unofficial stock exchange". Anas al-Kandari's father made millions, until the stock bubble burst and he went bankrupt.
Al-Kandari is reported to have spent 18 months in Afghanistan. He is reported to have returned to Kuwait a few days before al-Qaeda's attacks on the U.S. on September 11 attacks.
Al-Kandari is reported to have fasted before the attack—which was triggered by recent broadcasts of the dead and wounded in a town in the Gaza Strip that had been bombarded by Israel.
Bell reports that Mohammed Mansour Jabarah, an important source on al-Qaeda's operation, stopped cooperating with his interrogators when he learned that his best friend Anas al-Kandari had been killed.
Bell reports that Jabarah had traveled to Afghanistan with Anas al-Kandari in 2000.