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US military flies American released from Syrian prison to Jordan, officials say

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US military flies American released from Syrian prison to Jordan, officials say
News

News

US military flies American released from Syrian prison to Jordan, officials say

2024-12-14 07:24 Last Updated At:07:30

WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. military has transported out of Syria an American who had disappeared seven months ago into former President Bashar Assad’s notorious prison system and was among the thousands released this week by rebels, U.S. officials said Friday.

Travis Timmerman, 29, was flown to Jordan on a U.S. military helicopter, according to two U.S. officials who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss an ongoing operation.

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This image provided by Mouaz Moustafa shows Travis Timmerman, center, standing with a member of the U.S. military and representatives of Syria's transitional government and opposition activists near the Syria-Jordanian border Friday, Dec. 13, 2024. U.S. forces flew Timmerman out of Syria Friday after rebels freed him following seven months in a Syrian government prison. (Mouaz Moustafa via AP)

This image provided by Mouaz Moustafa shows Travis Timmerman, center, standing with a member of the U.S. military and representatives of Syria's transitional government and opposition activists near the Syria-Jordanian border Friday, Dec. 13, 2024. U.S. forces flew Timmerman out of Syria Friday after rebels freed him following seven months in a Syrian government prison. (Mouaz Moustafa via AP)

This image from the Missouri State Highway Patrol bulletin that shows Pete Travis Timmerman, who went by Travis, had been missing since June and turned up in Syria on Thursday, Dec. 12, 2024, who said he had been detained after crossing into Syria on foot seven months ago while on a Christian pilgrimage. (Missouri State Highway Patrol via AP)

This image from the Missouri State Highway Patrol bulletin that shows Pete Travis Timmerman, who went by Travis, had been missing since June and turned up in Syria on Thursday, Dec. 12, 2024, who said he had been detained after crossing into Syria on foot seven months ago while on a Christian pilgrimage. (Missouri State Highway Patrol via AP)

Stacey Collins Gardiner holds a picture of her son, Travis Timmerman, in her home in Urbana, Mo., Thursday, Dec. 12, 2024. Timmerman, an American citizen, was found outside Damascus, Syria, and had been imprisoned for months after crossing from Lebanon into Syria on a Christian pilgrimage. (AP Photo/Nick Ingram)

Stacey Collins Gardiner holds a picture of her son, Travis Timmerman, in her home in Urbana, Mo., Thursday, Dec. 12, 2024. Timmerman, an American citizen, was found outside Damascus, Syria, and had been imprisoned for months after crossing from Lebanon into Syria on a Christian pilgrimage. (AP Photo/Nick Ingram)

In this undated photo, Travis Timmerman sits on a porch swing in Urbana, Mo. (Stacey Collins Gardiner via AP)

In this undated photo, Travis Timmerman sits on a porch swing in Urbana, Mo. (Stacey Collins Gardiner via AP)

Stacey Collins Gardiner reacts to seeing her son, Travis Timmerman, on the news Thursday, Dec. 12, 2024, in her home in Urbana, Mo. Timmerman, an American citizen, was found outside Damascus, Syria, and had been imprisoned for months after crossing from Lebanon into Syria on a Christian pilgrimage. (AP Photo/Nick Ingram)

Stacey Collins Gardiner reacts to seeing her son, Travis Timmerman, on the news Thursday, Dec. 12, 2024, in her home in Urbana, Mo. Timmerman, an American citizen, was found outside Damascus, Syria, and had been imprisoned for months after crossing from Lebanon into Syria on a Christian pilgrimage. (AP Photo/Nick Ingram)

Stacey Collins Gardiner holds a picture of her son, Travis Timmerman, in her home in Urbana, Mo., Thursday, Dec. 12, 2024. Timmerman, an American citizen, was found outside Damascus, Syria, after having been imprisoned for months after crossing from Lebanon into Syria on a Christian pilgrimage. (AP Photo/Nick Ingram)

Stacey Collins Gardiner holds a picture of her son, Travis Timmerman, in her home in Urbana, Mo., Thursday, Dec. 12, 2024. Timmerman, an American citizen, was found outside Damascus, Syria, after having been imprisoned for months after crossing from Lebanon into Syria on a Christian pilgrimage. (AP Photo/Nick Ingram)

It’s unclear where Timmerman may go next. He thanked his rescuers for freeing him but has told American officials that he would like to stay in the region, according to another person familiar with the matter who was not authorized to comment publicly.

Timmerman was detained after he crossed into Syria while on a Christian pilgrimage from a mountain along the eastern Lebanese town of Zahle in June.

He told The Associated Press in an interview earlier Friday that he was not ill-treated while in Palestine Branch, a notorious detention facility operated by Syrian intelligence.

In his prison cell, Timmerman said, he had a mattress, a plastic drinking container and two others for waste. He said the Friday calls to prayers helped keep track of days.

Timmerman said he was released Monday morning alongside a young Syrian man and 70 female prisoners, some of whom had their children with them, after rebels seized control of Damascus and forced Assad from power in a dramatic upheaval.

He said he was freed by “the liberators who came into the prison and knocked the door down (of his cell) with a hammer.” He had been held separately from Syrian and other Arab prisoners and said he didn’t know of any other Americans held in the facility.

Timmerman is from Urbana, Missouri, about 50 miles (80 kilometers) north of Springfield in the southwestern part of the state. He earned a finance degree from Missouri State University in 2017.

His mother, Stacey Gardiner, said she was told that he was being taken to a military base in Jordan. The family still had not spoken to him.

Mouaz Moustafa, a U.S.-based Syrian opposition activist who worked with rebels to arrange Timmerman’s transfer back to safety, tweeted a photo of the freed American standing next to a man in U.S. military uniform in the flat desert of the region.

“Safe and sound and back in American hands,” Moustafa wrote.

U.S. officials, meanwhile, are continuing their search for Austin Tice, an American journalist who disappeared 12 years ago near Damascus.

Nizar Zakka, president of the U.S.-based Hostage Aid Worldwide that was commissioned by Tice's family to search for him, said he called Tice’s mother and sister after receiving a tip Thursday from a Syrian near where Timmerman was found. The caller thought the foreigner was Tice.

“We asked them for videos, we ask them for voice (recordings) to make sure,” Zakka said. “We had the feeling from the minute, especially from the age, that it’s not correct. But we sent it to the mom. It was 3 a.m. (in the U.S.), and we woke the sister, and she said to me one thing. She said that definitely it’s not Austin.”

In the search for Tice, Zakka said he had visited detention centers and the houses of prominent figures in Assad’s circle, but the search had so far not produced results.

The three possible scenarios, Zakka said, are that “we will find him somewhere in Damascus, in the jail that he was left in or in the house, in the safe house where he is”; that a high-ranking member of Assad’s circle took Tice along while escaping the country “as a security for his life”; or that Tice’s captors killed him and other prisoners to erase evidence of their crimes.

He criticized the U.S. for announcing a $10 million reward for information leading to Tice, saying that it had led to a flood of false tips and caused confusion.

AP writers Abby Sewell in Damascus, Eric Tucker in Washington, Matthew Lee in Aqaba, Jordan, and Nick Ingram in Urbana, Missouri, contributed to this report.

This image provided by Mouaz Moustafa shows Travis Timmerman, center, standing with a member of the U.S. military and representatives of Syria's transitional government and opposition activists near the Syria-Jordanian border Friday, Dec. 13, 2024. U.S. forces flew Timmerman out of Syria Friday after rebels freed him following seven months in a Syrian government prison. (Mouaz Moustafa via AP)

This image provided by Mouaz Moustafa shows Travis Timmerman, center, standing with a member of the U.S. military and representatives of Syria's transitional government and opposition activists near the Syria-Jordanian border Friday, Dec. 13, 2024. U.S. forces flew Timmerman out of Syria Friday after rebels freed him following seven months in a Syrian government prison. (Mouaz Moustafa via AP)

This image from the Missouri State Highway Patrol bulletin that shows Pete Travis Timmerman, who went by Travis, had been missing since June and turned up in Syria on Thursday, Dec. 12, 2024, who said he had been detained after crossing into Syria on foot seven months ago while on a Christian pilgrimage. (Missouri State Highway Patrol via AP)

This image from the Missouri State Highway Patrol bulletin that shows Pete Travis Timmerman, who went by Travis, had been missing since June and turned up in Syria on Thursday, Dec. 12, 2024, who said he had been detained after crossing into Syria on foot seven months ago while on a Christian pilgrimage. (Missouri State Highway Patrol via AP)

Stacey Collins Gardiner holds a picture of her son, Travis Timmerman, in her home in Urbana, Mo., Thursday, Dec. 12, 2024. Timmerman, an American citizen, was found outside Damascus, Syria, and had been imprisoned for months after crossing from Lebanon into Syria on a Christian pilgrimage. (AP Photo/Nick Ingram)

Stacey Collins Gardiner holds a picture of her son, Travis Timmerman, in her home in Urbana, Mo., Thursday, Dec. 12, 2024. Timmerman, an American citizen, was found outside Damascus, Syria, and had been imprisoned for months after crossing from Lebanon into Syria on a Christian pilgrimage. (AP Photo/Nick Ingram)

In this undated photo, Travis Timmerman sits on a porch swing in Urbana, Mo. (Stacey Collins Gardiner via AP)

In this undated photo, Travis Timmerman sits on a porch swing in Urbana, Mo. (Stacey Collins Gardiner via AP)

Stacey Collins Gardiner reacts to seeing her son, Travis Timmerman, on the news Thursday, Dec. 12, 2024, in her home in Urbana, Mo. Timmerman, an American citizen, was found outside Damascus, Syria, and had been imprisoned for months after crossing from Lebanon into Syria on a Christian pilgrimage. (AP Photo/Nick Ingram)

Stacey Collins Gardiner reacts to seeing her son, Travis Timmerman, on the news Thursday, Dec. 12, 2024, in her home in Urbana, Mo. Timmerman, an American citizen, was found outside Damascus, Syria, and had been imprisoned for months after crossing from Lebanon into Syria on a Christian pilgrimage. (AP Photo/Nick Ingram)

Stacey Collins Gardiner holds a picture of her son, Travis Timmerman, in her home in Urbana, Mo., Thursday, Dec. 12, 2024. Timmerman, an American citizen, was found outside Damascus, Syria, after having been imprisoned for months after crossing from Lebanon into Syria on a Christian pilgrimage. (AP Photo/Nick Ingram)

Stacey Collins Gardiner holds a picture of her son, Travis Timmerman, in her home in Urbana, Mo., Thursday, Dec. 12, 2024. Timmerman, an American citizen, was found outside Damascus, Syria, after having been imprisoned for months after crossing from Lebanon into Syria on a Christian pilgrimage. (AP Photo/Nick Ingram)

Tampa Bay (7-6) at Los Angeles Chargers (8-5)

Sunday, 4:25 p.m. EST, FOX

BetMGM NFL odds: Chargers by 3.

Against the spread: Buccaneers 8-5; Chargers 9-4.

Series record: Chargers lead 8-4.

Last meeting: Chargers beat Buccaneers 38-31 in Tampa, Fla., on Oct. 4, 2020.

Last week: Buccaneers beat Las Vegas 28-13; Chargers lost to Kansas City 19-17.

Buccaneers offense: overall (3), rush (8), pass (6), scoring (5).

Buccaneers defense: overall (28), rush (11), pass (30), scoring (22).

Chargers offense: overall (24), rush (19), pass (25), scoring (13).

Chargers defense: overall (11), rush (T-14), pass (8), scoring (1).

Turnover differential: Buccaneers minus-2; Chargers plus-11.

QB Baker Mayfield is trying to lead Tampa Bay to a fourth consecutive NFC South title. He’s already matched a career-best for touchdown passes with 28, but also hasn’t done as good a job of taking care of the football as a year ago. He threw for 295 yards and three TDs in last week’s 15-point win over Las Vegas. He also turned the ball over three times in the first half to help the Raiders stay close until the fourth quarter.

WR Quentin Johnston bounced back from a couple of tough performances to make five catches for 48 yards and a touchdown against the Chiefs. But inconsistency has been the defining trait of the slow start to Johnston’s NFL career, so being able to follow it up will be telling. The Chargers needed the 2023 first-round pick to step up with rookie Ladd McConkey sidelined because of knee and shoulder injuries last week. With McConkey's status to play Sunday uncertain, Johnston could be called on again.

Chargers RB Kimani Vidal vs. Buccaneers LB Lavonte David. Vidal, a rookie from Troy, seems to have increased his standing in the Chargers’ backfield that definitely missed J.K. Dobbins (knee). Vidal had eight carries for 34 yards while playing 53% of the offensive snaps in Kansas City, more than starter Gus Edwards. The Chargers are going to stick to the run under coach Jim Harbaugh, which means the newcomer Vidal will have to outfox a 13-season veteran in David. At 34, David remains a force, making seven tackles, a sack, a tackle for loss and recovering a fumble against the Raiders. He is eight tackles away from his 11th season of triple-digit stops.

Bucs S Antoine Winfield Jr. left last week’s game with a knee sprain and is expected to be sidelined a couple of weeks. S Mike Edwards (hamstring), OLB Markees Watts (knee), LB K.J. Britt (ankle) and WR Kameron Johnson (ankle) will also miss Sunday's game. Leading rusher Bucky Irving has a back injury and is listed as questionable. … Chargers QB Justin Herbert is dealing with a sprained left ankle, but was a full participant in practice Friday. TE Will Dissly (shoulder) and WR Jalen Reagor (finger) are out.

While the Chargers won eight of the first nine meetings between the franchises, Tampa Bay took the past three. … This will be the Buccaneers’ third trip to Los Angeles and second to SoFi Stadium, where they lost 34-24 to the Rams in September 2021.

The Bucs are 7-1 in December/January regular-season games going back to last season. They’re 19-5 in those games going back to 2020, the first of Tom Brady’s three years with Tampa Bay. … WR Mike Evans needs 17 receptions and 426 yards over the next four games to finish with his 11th consecutive season with at least 60 catches and 1,000 yards receiving. … Evans had seven receptions for 122 yards and a TD the previous time Tampa Bay faced the Chargers (Oct. 4, 2020). … The Bucs have rushed for 100-plus yards in 10 of 13 games. That’s after doing it just nine times over 34 games the past two regular seasons. … With leading rusher Bucky Irving sitting out most of last week’s game against Las Vegas with a back injury, starter Rachaad White took up the slack with 90 yards rushing on 17 attempts — both season highs. He also scored two TDs, one receiving. … White’s rushing TD was the 14th for Tampa Bay. That’s more than the Bucs scored on the ground in 2022 (five) and 2023 (eight) combined. … The Chargers have turned the ball over a league-low six times. The franchise record for fewest giveaways in a season is 15, which they did in 2006 and 2017. … Herbert hasn’t thrown an interception in 11 straight games. That is tied with Brady for the longest streak in NFL history. Brady closed out the 2010 regular season for New England without being picked off after Week 5. … S Derwin James Jr. has three tackles for loss and two sacks in his past three games. … PK Cameron Dicker has made 65 of 66 field goals under 50 yards in his career, with his 98.5% success rate the best in league history. Dicker has made all 30 attempts inside of 50 yards at home. … The Chargers defense allowed 17 of 31 third down conversions (54.8%) in two games against the Chiefs. They have held their other 11 opponents to 45 of 146 (30.8%).

The Buccaneers find ways to play shootouts, with eight of their games seeing the winner score 30 or more points. The Chargers find ways to play grinding affairs, with only two of their games seeing the winner score 28 or more points. Whoever dictates the style of play will determine how much fantasy value comes out of this game.

AP NFL: https://apnews.com/hub/NFL

Los Angeles Chargers head coach Jim Harbaugh speaks during a news conference following an NFL football game against the Kansas City Chiefs Sunday, Dec. 8, 2024, in Kansas City, Mo. (AP Photo/Ed Zurga)

Los Angeles Chargers head coach Jim Harbaugh speaks during a news conference following an NFL football game against the Kansas City Chiefs Sunday, Dec. 8, 2024, in Kansas City, Mo. (AP Photo/Ed Zurga)

Tampa Bay Buccaneers head coach Todd Bowles walks on the sidelines during the first half of an NFL football game against the Las Vegas Raiders, Sunday, Dec. 8, 2024, in Tampa, Fla. (AP Photo/Jason Behnken)

Tampa Bay Buccaneers head coach Todd Bowles walks on the sidelines during the first half of an NFL football game against the Las Vegas Raiders, Sunday, Dec. 8, 2024, in Tampa, Fla. (AP Photo/Jason Behnken)

Los Angeles Chargers running back Kimani Vidal (30) struggles for yardage during the second half of an NFL football game against the Kansas City Chiefs Sunday, Dec. 8, 2024, in Kansas City, Mo. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)

Los Angeles Chargers running back Kimani Vidal (30) struggles for yardage during the second half of an NFL football game against the Kansas City Chiefs Sunday, Dec. 8, 2024, in Kansas City, Mo. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)

Tampa Bay Buccaneers linebacker Lavonte David (54) sacks Las Vegas Raiders quarterback Aidan O'Connell (12) during the first half of an NFL football game, Sunday, Dec. 8, 2024, in Tampa, Fla. (AP Photo/Jason Behnken)

Tampa Bay Buccaneers linebacker Lavonte David (54) sacks Las Vegas Raiders quarterback Aidan O'Connell (12) during the first half of an NFL football game, Sunday, Dec. 8, 2024, in Tampa, Fla. (AP Photo/Jason Behnken)

Los Angeles Chargers quarterback Justin Herbert (10) runs with the ball as Kansas City Chiefs safety Chamarri Conner (27) and defensive end Mike Danna (51) defend during the first half of an NFL football game Sunday, Dec. 8, 2024, in Kansas City, Mo. (AP Photo/Ed Zurga)

Los Angeles Chargers quarterback Justin Herbert (10) runs with the ball as Kansas City Chiefs safety Chamarri Conner (27) and defensive end Mike Danna (51) defend during the first half of an NFL football game Sunday, Dec. 8, 2024, in Kansas City, Mo. (AP Photo/Ed Zurga)

Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback Baker Mayfield (6) passes in the pocket against the Las Vegas Raiders during the second half of an NFL football game, Sunday, Dec. 8, 2024, in Tampa, Fla. (AP Photo/Chris O'Meara)

Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback Baker Mayfield (6) passes in the pocket against the Las Vegas Raiders during the second half of an NFL football game, Sunday, Dec. 8, 2024, in Tampa, Fla. (AP Photo/Chris O'Meara)

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