Ayoub El Khazzani, a Moroccan national, boarded a high-speed train in Brussels Friday armed with a Kalashnikov assault rifle and 270 rounds of ammunition, as well as a Luger pistol, a bottle of petrol and a box-cutter, said Paris prosecutor Francois Molins.
The 25-year-old walked out of a toilet cubicle armed and topless before being wrestled to the floor and subdued by two young American off-duty servicemen, their friend and a 62-year-old British consultant who have since been given France's top honour, the Legion d'Honneur.
Khazzani's claims to investigators that he was only planning to rob passengers were "barely credible", said Molins, adding that he had grown increasingly evasive in his responses to police and stopped responding entirely on Monday.
Molins outlined a raft of evidence indicating why Khazzani was being probed for "attempted murder" as part of a terrorist plot.
This included the fact that Khazzani flew back in June from a town in southern Turkey -- "a possible passageway into Syria" -- and that he watched a video "calling for violent acts in the name of radical Islam" on his phone prior to launching the attack.
Ticket sellers at the station have told investigators that Khazzani paid in cash and turned down an earlier journey where seats were available, which Molins said was an indication the target had been carefully chosen in advance.
He also dismissed as "absurd" claims by the suspect that he found the stash of weapons and mobile phone in a park where he was sleeping rough the night before.
And he said that Khazzani's Facebook page had mysteriously been disabled on Saturday -- the day after the foiled attack.
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