Syria's government has freed an American who was seized after entering the country in 2012, U.S. officials said Friday.
The Washington Post
"We can confirm and welcome the news that a U.S. citizen was released by Syrian authorities," State Department spokesman John Kirby said, without identifying Dawes by name.
It was not clear what he was doing in Syria.
The FBI has described Dawes
A year earlier,
NPR spoke with Dawes in western Libya
"I had to debride some of these blast injuries. And also actually start an IV, [that] was the most complicated thing that I've done by myself. Generally speaking though, I offer, I assist. I'm more of an ambulance guy than anything else," Dawes said in October 2011, two months after Gadhafi was overthrown.
Dawes went on to say that he eventually became a combatant.
"We actually had an entire ambulance crew dragged out of their ambulance and executed. It was at that point we decided we had no choice. It was either this, or perish here," Dawes said.
Dawes said he had never served in the U.S. military, but was trained as a marksman.
Asked why he decided to go to Libya, he said, "See the world, experience new things, get in way over my head, but, you know, ultimately survive. Do well here, I think."
Syria never acknowledged holding Dawes and his case has received relatively little media attention, though
GQ magazine had this profile on him in January.
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