Foiled Terror Plot in U.S. Reveals Turkey’s Central Role as Transit, Logistics Hub
for ISIS
For Counterterrorism Officials, the Plot Is a Chilling Reminder That While ISIS’s
‘Caliphate’ Is Gone, Its Global Recruitment Pipelines Through Turkey Have Not Been
Dismantled
18.11.2025
By Abdullah Bozkurt*
Source:https://www.meforum.org/mef-online/foiled-terror-plot-in-u-s-reveals-turkeys-central-role-as-transit-logistics-hub-for-isis
A detailed 48-page FBI criminal complaint filed in the US District Court for the
District of New Jersey lays bare how Turkey was at the heart of a transnational ISIS
recruitment and logistics network that spanned the United States, Sweden, the United
Kingdom, Finland and the Middle East.
The document, sworn by FBI Special Agent Dylan James Cochran, accuses Tomas-Kaan
Jimenez-Guzel, 19, a national of the United States, Turkey and Spain, and Saed Ali
Mirreh, 19, from Washington State, of conspiring to provide material support to the
Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) by plotting to travel through Turkey to reach
Syria.
Both were arrested on November 4, 2025 — Jimenez-Guzel at Newark Liberty International
Airport en route to Istanbul and Mirreh later that day at his home in Washington.
According to the FBI the pair and their online co-conspirators — spread across Europe
and North America — chose Turkey as their “staging area” to reach ISIS-held territory.
In encrypted chats from July to November 2025 Jimenez-Guzel described an elaborate
plan to regroup in Diyarbakır, southeastern Turkey, before being smuggled into “Sham,”
a code word for Syria.
The Diyarbakır region, the complaint says, was portrayed by Jimenez-Guzel as “the
hub” for jihad operations. He told the group that “all of the weapons, vehicles,
technology and drones are in Diyarbakır … you can buy anything you want, it’s like
a free black market.” He further claimed to have personal contacts with Turkish weapons
smugglers, boasting, “I know a weapons smuggler. I’m gonna simply ask him to smuggle
us.”
In multiple messages Jimenez-Guzel emphasized Turkey’s geographical and logistical
importance, declaring that Turkey was “the easiest” route because “people go from
Turkey to Iraq all the time — and Sham. Turkey borders both Iraq and Sham.” He insisted
that each group of foreign recruits traveling to Turkey should include at least one
Turkish-speaking member capable of “passing as a local.”
Jimenez-Guzel also speaks Turkish, as his mother, Meral Guzel, is originally from
Turkey. She was educated in Turkey and earned a degree in economics from Marmara
University in Istanbul before moving to Europe, then to Ecuador and later to the
United States. She married Jimenez-Guzel’s father, a dual Ecuadorian and Spanish
national, but the two later separated. Meral Guzel moved back to Turkey in 2014 and
subsequently returned to the United States, where she now leads the UN Women’s Entrepreneurship
Accelerator, a program under the UN’s umbrella that focuses on advancing women’s
rights and economic empowerment.
The conspirators even mapped out four potential border crossings from Turkey into
Syria and circulated photos and maps marking the routes.
The FBI affidavit shows that the two young men coordinated their flights to Istanbul,
joining other members of the cell who planned to travel from Sweden, the UK and Finland.
On October 27, 2025, Jimenez-Guzel bought a one-way ticket from Newark to Istanbul
for November 17. The next day, Mirreh booked his own flight from Seattle-Tacoma to
Istanbul on November 16.
After a connected cell in Dearborn, Michigan, was busted by the FBI for a separate
ISIS plot, the pair accelerated their plans, rebooking their Istanbul departures
for November 5. Jimenez-Guzel was arrested at Newark hours before boarding his Turkish
Airlines flight, while Mirreh was detained later that night at his Washington residence.
Throughout the summer the suspects and their co-conspirators discussed smuggling
routes and weapons procurement networks in Turkey. The conspirators planned first
to gradually bring recruits from Western countries to Egypt. From Egypt they intended
to move those recruits into Turkey. Once in Turkey the group planned to settle in
Diyarbakır to establish a presence and prepare. Finally, after settling, they intended
to cross into “Sham” to “take action,” which could include media work, armed jihad,
martyrdom operations or in-person dawah (face-to-face religious outreach).
The conspirators envisioned Diyarbakır as both a training ground and a logistical
base where “Western brothers” could meet, acquire weapons and coordinate crossings.
They explicitly discussed the use of Turkish smugglers for both weapons and personnel
movement.
Jimenez-Guzel warned the group that it was too risky to cross legally into Syria
and advised “going through smugglers at night,” using buses across Turkey to avoid
police scrutiny. “We’re mostly gonna be going very early in the morning or very late
at night,” he said during a recorded video call. They also discussed housing options
in Turkish cities, with Jimenez-Guzel circulating videos of apartments and rental
listings, suggesting they live in small rural villages “because I know some guys
there.”
The FBI affidavit notes that three members of the cell including Jimenez-Guzel spoke
Turkish and intended to use that to their advantage. One message stated, “Three of
us speak Turkish and can pass as locals.” The group viewed this as essential for
avoiding Turkish counterterrorism surveillance, saying that “Turkey used to [search
for jihadists],” implying that the perceived risk had decreased.
Jimenez-Guzel’s messages reveal a detailed understanding of Turkish geography and
transit infrastructure. He instructed others to avoid flying directly into Istanbul
and to instead purchase multi-leg flights that could conceal their true destination.
“Don’t buy tickets that have Istanbul as the final stop,” he wrote. “Buy something
that looks like transit or tourism.”
One of the most revealing sections of the FBI complaint documents how Diyarbakır
was described as a “free black market” where everything from firearms to drones could
be bought. “All of the weapons, vehicles, technology, drones are in Diyarbakır …
U can buy anything u want,” Jimenez-Guzel told the group.
This aligns with previous Western intelligence assessments that Turkey’s southeastern
borderlands remain saturated with smuggling networks connecting to Syria’s Idlib
and Raqqa regions.
The complaint also mentions plans to later shift the crossing point toward Erbil
in Iraqi Kurdistan due to Turkish border militarization, showing the cell’s adaptability
and regional contacts. Their operational plan was to fly to Istanbul and then travel
onward to Erbil in Iraqi Kurdistan, which they considered culturally similar to Diyarbakır.
Co-Conspirator 5 would already be in Erbil to meet them so they would not have to
worry about housing, food or other necessities. They agreed that otherwise “everything
else is the same” with respect to their plan, and they debated whether to purchase
one-way or return tickets, acknowledging that return tickets are safer but more expensive.
They also stressed practical cover and said members should look and behave like locals
to avoid detection.
The FBI document reveals that Jimenez-Guzel had already traveled to Turkey earlier
in July 2025, flying from Newark to Istanbul on July 4. While there, he messaged
a contact saying he had chosen “the path of jihad fi sabilillah” (in the path of
God) and urged others to follow him. He returned to the US on August 24 and resumed
university studies in New Jersey while continuing to plan a larger coordinated departure
through Turkey. His earlier trip likely served as a reconnaissance mission to test
flight paths, accommodation and border procedures.
The chats detailed plans for multiple sub-groups, based in the US, Sweden and the
UK, to converge in Istanbul before taking long-haul buses to Diyarbakır, about 1,000
kilometers southeast. “In max six months, we’re gonna link in Diyarbakır,” he told
his co-conspirators. “We’re gonna go in groups. Every group needs one Turkish-speaking
person.”
They planned to film recruitment videos in Turkey to publicize “Western Muslims making
hijrah to Dar al-Jihad,” echoing ISIS propaganda tactics from 2014–2016. “Media is
very important. We have to show the world that Western Muslims are going to dar al-jihad.
It will motivate others,” Jimenez-Guzel said.
The FBI found that the plot was organized across several countries. A Sweden-based
member identified as Co-Conspirator 3, or Bob, was elected by the group to be the
overall leader. Mirreh was the alleged “finance guy,” accused of raising thousands
of dollars to fund travel to Syria with the help of online scammer Bob. Co-Conspirator
4, based in the United Kingdom, handled logistics. Co-Conspirator 5 in Finland managed
parts of the encrypted chat infrastructure.
Co-Conspirator 6, also in the UK, claimed weapons-training experience and offered
to help with tactics. The US recruits, including Tomas-Kaan Jimenez-Guzel and Saed
Ali Mirreh, were assigned to join and meet with the European groups in Turkey. This
structure mirrored classic ISIS foreign-fighter pipelines from Western Europe to
Syria, with Turkey as the funnel point.
Despite Turkish government claims that the southern borders are sealed, the FBI complaint
confirms that US-based extremists still view Turkey as the most accessible corridor
to ISIS territory.
Intelligence experts have long pointed to the Turkish provinces of Diyarbakır, Gaziantep,
Kilis and Şanlıurfa as historical transit nodes for ISIS fighters between 2013 and
2017. Networks of local smugglers, corrupt officials and militant sympathizers facilitated
crossings into Syria’s Raqqa and Aleppo regions — routes still considered viable
by jihadist recruiters.
In this case the conspirators’ discussions reflected current smuggling practices:
moving through Turkey with forged cover stories, traveling by bus to border provinces
and using local Turkish contacts to cross at night through mountainous terrain or
unofficial checkpoints.
The FBI’s swift action stopped the two young men before they could reach Istanbul.
The complaint makes clear that they were already coordinating with overseas ISIS
facilitators and had pledged allegiance to the group. Photos recovered from their
phones showed Jimenez-Guzel posing in front of an ISIS flag with a knife, while Mirreh
sent images wearing an ISIS hat and holding a gun.
Jimenez-Guzel even posted a statement online about conducting a Boston-bombing-like
attack. “Ameeica [sic] is next. In 2 weeks, we will be all over the news in Boston,”
he said in his comments on a video sharing platform. In October 2024 the FBI interviewed
him at his residence during which time he acknowledged, among other things, that
he was the user who had made the aforementioned statement.
Both Jimenez-Guzel and Mirreh have been charged with conspiracy and an attempt to
provide material support to a designated foreign terrorist organization, with each
charge carrying up to 20 years in prison.
The case underscores how, two decades after ISIS’s rise, Turkey remains a key transit
artery for extremist networks, offering the infrastructure, geography and gray zones
that make jihadist mobility possible. Since the start of the Syrian crisis in 2011,
President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s Islamist government has facilitated, armed and provided
logistical support to various jihadist groups in Syria, including clandestine assistance
to ISIS factions. Turkish judicial and law enforcement authorities have often adopted
a lenient approach toward ISIS members, with most detentions leading to quick releases
and trials frequently ending in acquittals.
For counterterrorism officials, the Jimenez-Guzel–Mirreh plot is a chilling reminder
that while ISIS’s “caliphate” is gone, its global recruitment pipelines through Turkey
have not been dismantled. The Diyarbakır plan, as captured in the FBI’s own evidence,
shows that the same corridors once used by tens of thousands of fighters are still
being scouted, this time by digital-age radicals from America and Europe.
Published originally on November 17, 2025.
Documents referenced in this article are available in the original Nordic Monitor
version.
*Abdullah Bozkurt is a Swedish-based investigative journalist and analyst who runs
the Nordic Research and Monitoring Network. He also serves on the advisory board
of The Investigative Journal and as chairman of the Stockholm Center for Freedom.
Bozkurt is the author of the book Turkey Interrupted: Derailing Democracy (2015).
He previously worked as a journalist in New York, Washington, Istanbul and Ankara.
He tweets at @abdbozkurt.