A Pakistani national has been charged in federal court with plotting to assassinate former President Donald J. Trump and other public officials. Federal prosecutors allege the man, named as Asif Merchant, flew to the United States from Pakistan with the intention of hiring hitmen to carry out an attack on Trump and other U.S. lawmakers. Prior to the trip, the suspect is believed to have spent extensive time in the Islamic Republic of Iran.
Merchant’s arrest, which occurred last month, became public after criminal filings were unsealed in a New York federal court on Tuesday. The complaint against Merchant does not mention Trump by name. However, an ABC News report confirms that the America First leader was the plot’s intended target.
The National Pulse reported on July 17 that federal law enforcement acknowledged they were aware of an Iranian plot to assassinate Trump before his near-assassination in Butler, Pennsylvania. The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) said at the time they had received human-sourced intelligence regarding the plot. It now appears that human-sourced intelligence was likely an FBI confidential informant—mentioned in the unsealed complaint—who had made contact with Merchant.
Iran has sought to assassinate Trump and other U.S. officials in response to a September 2020 U.S. drone strike that killed one of the Islamic Republic’s top military commanders, Qassem Soleimani. In March of this year, the FBI’s Miami Field Office announced that it was seeking information about an Iranian intelligence officer, Majid Dastjani Farahani, in connection to alleged assassination plots against current and former U.S. government officials that Iran believes are responsible for Soleimani’s death.
While the Iranian plot was foiled, former President Trump was shot in the ear by 20-year-old Thomas Matthew Crooks on July 13 in Butler, Pennsylvania. Crooks’ motives for the assassination attempt have not been made public.