By Maryam Qarehgozlou
US Attorney General Pam Bondi announced on Friday that Zubayr al-Bakoush, a suspect in the 2012 attack on the US embassy in Benghazi, Libya, has been arrested and transferred to the United States.
Bondi claimed that al-Bakoush played a central role in the attack that killed four Americans and will face charges including murder, arson, and terrorism-related offenses.
He is the third individual to be criminally charged in connection with the Benghazi attack.
Two others – Ahmed Abu Khatallah and Mustafa al-Imam – are currently serving lengthy prison sentences, while another suspect, Ali Awni al-Harzi, was killed in a US airstrike in Iraq in 2015.
Al-Bakoush faces an eight-count indictment, including murder, attempted murder, arson, and conspiracy to support terrorism, according to Jeanine Pirro, the top US prosecutor in the District of Columbia.
Following al-Bakoush’s arrest, FBI Director Kash Patel said that killing an American citizen is an act of terrorism, and perpetrators will be prosecuted in the United States.
“I’m extremely thankful to the CIA and director [John] Ratcliffe and our other law enforcement partners for making sure that the world knows that if you kill an American citizen in an act of terrorism, we will hunt you down, we will bring you to justice, and you will face justice here in America, not in another court, and not in any other proceeding around the world, but here,” he said.
After Patel shared a video of his remarks on X, formerly Twitter, users quickly pointed out a glaring exception: the Israeli regime.
From Rachel Corrie, crushed by an Israeli military bulldozer in 2003, to Khamis Ayyad, who died from smoke inhalation during a settler arson attack in 2025, at least thirteen American citizens have been killed by Israeli regime forces over the past two decades.
These victims included journalists reporting from the field, aid workers delivering food, peace activists protesting home demolitions, teenagers shot at checkpoints, and a 78-year-old grandfather detained and left to die.
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Nor are Palestinian Americans the only ones at risk. Several US citizens who are not Palestinian have also been subjected to lethal force by Israeli forces and illegal settlers on Palestinian land.
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Rachel Corrie

On March 16, 2003, an Israeli military bulldozer crushed to death 23-year-old US peace activist Rachel Corrie as she attempted to prevent the demolition of Palestinian homes in Rafah, southern Gaza Strip.
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Furkan Dogan

Furkan Dogan was just 19 years old when Israeli forces killed him on May 31, 2010, during the attack on the Mavi Marmara, a Turkish humanitarian aid ship sailing in international waters.
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Orwah Hammad

Orwah Hammad, a 14-year-old Palestinian American from New Orleans, Louisiana, was killed by Israeli forces on October 24, 2014, in the village of Silwad near Ramallah in the occupied West Bank.
Hammad was shot in the neck and head during a demonstration protesting the killing of another Palestinian earlier that week.
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Mahmoud Shaalan

Mahmoud Shaalan was a 16-year-old high school student born and raised in Florida.
On February 26, 2016, Israeli soldiers shot him four times at a checkpoint near the Beit El settlement, close to the occupied West Bank city of Ramallah.
After shooting Shaalan, soldiers stripped his body, left him bleeding on the road for more than two hours, and prevented a Palestinian ambulance from taking him to a hospital.
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Omar Assad

Omar Assad, a 78-year-old Palestinian American, died on January 12, 2022, after being detained by Israeli soldiers at a checkpoint in his home village of Jiljilya, near Ramallah in the occupied West Bank.
According to witnesses and his family, Assad was forced out of his car, gagged, blindfolded, and dragged along the ground. He became unresponsive, and soldiers left him in the cold at a construction site without medical assistance.
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Shireen Abu Akleh

Veteran Palestinian journalist Shireen Abu Akleh was killed by a single shot to the head on May 11, 2022, while covering an Israeli military raid on the Jenin refugee camp in the occupied West Bank.
After she was shot, Israeli soldiers prevented bystanders from reaching her, ensuring that she bled to death. Abu Akleh was wearing a clearly marked press vest and standing with a group of journalists when she was killed in cold blood.
Eyewitness testimony and video evidence showed she was targeted deliberately.
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Tawfiq Ajaq

Tawfiq Ajaq, a 17-year-old Palestinian American born and raised in Gretna, Louisiana, was killed on January 19, 2024, in the occupied West Bank village of al-Mazra’a ash-Sharqiya.
Ajaq had traveled to Palestine in May 2023 to visit family near Ramallah and to “reconnect with their roots.”
According to his family and Defense for Children International–Palestine (DCI-P), Ajaq was riding in a truck with a friend near a highway when gunfire erupted.
The shots came from an Israeli settler in a vehicle roughly 100 meters away. As Ajaq and his friend tried to drive off, the settler pursued them.
An Israeli military vehicle then “appeared from the opposite direction” and began firing from a distance of 50 to 70 meters, according to DCI-P documentation.
As Ajaq lay bleeding, Israeli forces blocked emergency responders for approximately 15 minutes. He was later taken to a hospital in Silwad, where he was pronounced dead from a gunshot wound to the head.
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Mohammad Khdour

Less than a month later, on February 10, 2024, 17-year-old Palestinian American Mohammad Khdour, born in Florida, was shot in the head and killed by an Israeli soldier.
Khdour was killed west of the Palestinian town of Biddu, northwest of occupied al-Quds.
Israeli forces opened fire on a car in which Mohammad was traveling with a relative in a wooded area near the town of Qattana. As gunfire erupted, the vehicle overturned while attempting to flee.
Mohammad sustained gunshot wounds to the head. He was transported by ambulance to the Palestine Medical Complex in Ramallah, where medical staff attempted to resuscitate him.
He was later pronounced dead.
According to his family, Khdour and his cousin were driving home from a picnic when a gunman on the Israeli side of a nearby border fence, whom they described as a guard, opened fire on their car. The cousin was unharmed.
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Jacob Flickinger

Jacob Flickinger, a dual US-Canadian citizen, was among the humanitarian workers killed on April 1, 2024, when Israeli forces bombed a World Central Kitchen convoy in Gaza amid Israel’s genocidal war.
Flickinger, 33, and six other aid workers were killed shortly after delivering humanitarian food assistance to the people in Gaza.
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Ayşenur Ezgi Eygi

Ayşenur Ezgi Eygi, a 26-year-old American Turkish woman and resident of Seattle, Washington, was shot in the head by an Israeli sniper on September 6, 2024, in the occupied West Bank.
Eygi had been participating in a peaceful protest against settlement expansion near Nablus, a town in the occupied West Bank.
She had arrived in the occupied West Bank just three days earlier to volunteer with Palestinian communities facing violence from Israeli soldiers and settlers.
An Israeli military investigation concluded within days that it was “highly likely” Eygi had been struck “indirectly and unintentionally by [the Israeli military] fire which was not aimed at her,” claiming the soldiers had been targeting others, allegedly throwing rocks.
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Amer Rabee

On April 6, near the West Bank village of Turmus Aya, where many residents hold US citizenship, Israeli soldiers killed Amer Rabee, a 14-year-old Palestinian American born in New Jersey.
According to his family, Israeli regime forces handed over Amer’s naked, bullet-riddled body several hours later in a blue body bag.
Amer had been shot at least 11 times, his father, Mohammed Rabee, said.
Photographs taken on a cellphone by a family friend who accompanied the family to retrieve Amer’s body appeared to show multiple entry wounds, including one in the center of his forehead and others in his neck and upper torso.
The Israeli military claimed Amer and two friends were throwing rocks at a highway and described the boys as “terrorists,” saying soldiers had “eliminated” one and shot the others.
Amer’s family and one of the surviving boys rejected the claim, saying the children had been picking almonds and jokingly throwing dried almonds at each other.
Even if stones had been thrown, Rabee said, soldiers could have fired warning shots or detained the boys.
“He was 14 years old,” he said. “It takes no special training to catch a little kid.”
At the time, US Senators Andy Kim and Cory Booker called for an American-led investigation into Amer’s killing, but the Trump administration declined to commit to any such action.
US State Department spokeswoman Tammy Bruce said at an April press briefing that the Israeli military believed it had been preventing an act of terrorism.
“We need to learn more about the nature of what happened on the ground,” she added.
Sayfollah Musallet

On July 11, 2025, Sayfollah Musallet, a 20-year-old Palestinian-American from Florida, was beaten to death by illegal Israeli settlers while visiting relatives in his village near occupied al-Quds.
The attack took place on land belonging to his family’s farm.
According to witnesses and family members, Israeli soldiers blocked ambulances from reaching Musallet for three hours.
During that time, Sayfollah, known as Saif to his family, remained conscious, gasping for air and vomiting as he was held in the arms of his younger brother.
Another young man, 23-year-old Razek Hussein al-Shalabi, was shot during the same attack and left to bleed to death. When ambulances finally arrived, settlers attacked the medics.
Saif was pronounced dead before reaching the hospital. He died in his brother’s arms.
The Israeli military claimed the incident began after stones were thrown at Israeli settlers and said it was investigating the attack.
For Musallet’s family, the devastation has been compounded by what they describe as indifference from the US government to the killing of a US citizen.
Mike Huckabee, the US ambassador to Israeli-occupied territories, called on Israel to investigate the killing but offered no public support to the family.
The family is acutely aware that the arrest and prosecution of violent settlers is rare, considering the Trump administration’s rescission of the Biden-era sanctions on Israeli settler groups for attacking Palestinians in the occupied West Bank.
Despite this record, Musallet’s family has called on the US State Department to open its own investigation into Saif’s killing. There has been no follow-up.
The killing was not the family’s only ordeal.
Saif’s 16-year-old cousin, Mohammed Zaher Ibrahim—also an American citizen—has been held for months in Israel’s Megiddo prison. His family says he has been accused of throwing stones, an allegation they reject.
They say he has lost nearly 30 pounds and developed a severe skin infection while incarcerated, with no family visits or phone calls permitted.
Khamis al-Ayyad

Khamis al-Ayyad, a 40-year-old father of five and a resident of Chicago, died from smoke inhalation on July 31, 2025, after Israeli settlers attacked the town of Silwad, east of Ramallah.
The assault took place around 2:30 a.m., when approximately ten settlers set homes and cars on fire.
Residents rushed outside to extinguish the flames but were met with tear gas fired by Israeli soldiers, according to Silwad’s mayor, Raed Hamed.
The Israeli military acknowledged that an attack had occurred but said it was unable to identify any suspects. Israeli police said an investigation had been opened.
No one has been held accountable for Ayyad’s death.
“The government should protect citizens, this is what is written on the American passport. Why do they do nothing when it comes to their own citizens who live in the West Bank?” said Ayyad’s brother, Anas al-Ayyad, 39.
Ayyad was the latest Palestinian American killed in the occupied West Bank. Since October 7, 2023, five US citizens have been killed there, with Ayyad the second in July alone.
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Via https://www.presstv.ir/Detail/2026/02/09/763771/fbi-chief-vows-hunt-down-those-who-kill-american-citizens-except-israel