Adam Gadahn, American Al Qaeda Militant, Urges Attacks On U.S. Diplomats

American Al Qaeda Militant Urges Attacks On U.S. Diplomats
This video frame grab image taken from an al-Qaeda propaganda video released Tuesday May 29, 2007 and provided by the IntelCenter, shows Adam Gadahn, also known as Azzam al-Amriki, as he delivers a statement in English with Arabic subtitles, laying out the terrorists' group's justifications for conducting future attacks against the United States. Gadahn is an American originally from California. (AP Photo/IntelCenter)
This video frame grab image taken from an al-Qaeda propaganda video released Tuesday May 29, 2007 and provided by the IntelCenter, shows Adam Gadahn, also known as Azzam al-Amriki, as he delivers a statement in English with Arabic subtitles, laying out the terrorists' group's justifications for conducting future attacks against the United States. Gadahn is an American originally from California. (AP Photo/IntelCenter)

DUBAI, Aug 18 (Reuters) - An American al Qaeda militant has called for more attacks on Western diplomats in the Arab world, praising the killers of the U.S. ambassador to Libya on Sept. 11 last year, a U.S.-based monitoring group said on Sunday.

Western nations shut embassies across the Middle East and North Africa early this month, after a warning of a possible militant attack. Many have reopened, and Britain said its Yemen embassy would open on Sunday after being closed for 12 days.

Adam Gadahn, a California-born convert to Islam with a $1 million U.S. price on his head, appealed to wealthy Muslims to offer militants rewards to kill ambassadors in the region, citing bounty set for killing the U.S. ambassador to Yemen, Washington-based SITE monitoring group said.

"These prizes have a great effect in instilling fear in the hearts of our cowardly enemies," Gadahn said in the 39-minute video recording in Arabic posted on websites used by Islamist militants, according to SITE.

"They also encourage hesitant individuals to carry out important and great deeds in the path of Allah," he said, in an English transcript on SITE.

The Yemen-based branch of al Qaeda last year offered 3 kg (106 ounces) of gold for the killing of the U.S. ambassador in Sanaa or 5 million rials ($23,350) for an American soldier in the impoverished Arab state.

U.S. ambassador Christopher Stevens and three other Americans were killed in Libya's Benghazi in 2012 when dozens of Islamist gunmen attacked a loosely guarded U.S. diplomatic compound and a nearby, better-fortified CIA annex.

Gadahn has called for attacks on U.S. diplomats before. In August 2007, he said al Qaeda would target diplomats and embassies in retaliation for U.S.-led military action in Iraq and Afghanistan.

The FBI has been trying to question Gadahn - believed to be in Pakistan - since 2004 and the U.S. government has offered up to $1 million in cash for information leading to his arrest.

(This story is corrected in seventh paragraph to make clear that the Benghazi attack did not take place during a protest)

(Reporting by Mahmoud Habboush; Editing by Louise Ireland, Sami Aboudi, Angus McDowall and Kevin Liffey)

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