Tag Archives: Osama Bin Laden

Taking down Bush

For months, Democratic partisans have made one thing perfectly clear: While they hoped to run for, and win, the White House based on domestic issues, to defeat George W. Bush they were going to have to diminish public confidence in the President’s wartime leadership. Nothing would appear better suited to advance this agenda than the highly publicized defection this weekend of one of Mr. Bush’s former senior national security staffers, Richard Clarke.

At this writing it is not entirely clear whether Mr. Clarke is a witting tool of the Democrats’ Bush take-down agenda, or whether he has simply written his new book, Against All Enemies: Inside America’s War on Terror, in such a way that it lends itself to the effort to discredit President Bush’s stewardship as Commander-in-Chief. Whichever may be the case, it would seem unwise to cast Richard Clarke in the role of poster-boy for the national security critique of the Bush presidency.

Getting It Wrong

For one thing, Mr. Clarke’s central argument namely, that Bush was obsessed with Iraq and indifferent to al Qaeda from the get-go of his Administration is highly debatable. Not surprisingly, a number of those who had worked with Clarke when he served as this President’s National Counterterrorism Coordinator challenge his facts.

For example, in an op.ed. article in Monday’s Washington Post, Clarke’s boss at the National Security Council, Condoleezza Rice, wrote that a paper devising “a strategy to eliminate al Qaeda — which was expected to take years” was developed in the Spring and Summer of 2001. It was designed to “marshal…all elements of national power to take down the network, not just respond to individual attacks with law enforcement measures….This became the first major foreign-policy strategy document of the Bush administration — not Iraq, not the ABM Treaty, but eliminating al Qaeda.”

Unfortunately, although this strategy was deemed ready for the President’s approval at the time of the 9/11 attacks, it had yet to be addressed by him. Still, it is wrong to suggest that the threat from al Qaeda was being ignored by the Bush team.

To their credit, even some prominent Democrats have taken exception to one part or another of the Clarke thesis. For instance, in response to Clarke’s contention that Bush shifted focus prematurely to Saddam Hussein after the acts of terror on September 11, 2001, Senator Joe Lieberman of Connecticut told Fox News Sunday: “The charge, if I hear it correctly, that Dick Clarke has made, that the Bush administration was more focused on Iraq in the days after September 11th, than on September 11th and getting back at the terrorists, I see no basis for it.”

Meanwhile over on ABC’s This Week, Democratic Senator Joe Biden of Delaware, disputed Clarke’s claim that the war in Iraq “strengthened the fundamentalist, radical Islamic terrorist movement worldwide.” Sen. Biden declared, “I think it’s unfair to blame the President for the spread of terror and the diffuseness of it. Even if he had followed the advice of me and many other people, I still think the same thing would have happened.”

Ignoring the Linkage

More troubling still is Dick Clarke’s confidence back in 2001 (and, apparently, today), as quoted in the Washington Post on Monday, that “no foe but al Qaeda poses an immediate and serious threat to the United States.'” So, too, is his ill-concealed contempt for those who were concerned before and after 9/11 about links between Osama bin Laden’s terrorist network and a weapon of mass destruction-equipped state-sponsor of terror like Saddam Hussein.

Even CIA Director George Tenet who was, like Mr. Clarke, a Bill Clinton appointee retained by Bush 43 has recognized that there were myriad connections between bin Laden operatives and the Iraqi dictator’s senior intelligence and military personnel. As the Weekly Standard noted in its March 22nd edition:

    In [an unclassified October 7, 2002 letter to the Senate Intelligence Committee],Tenet wrote of “senior level contacts between Iraq and al Qaeda going back a decade.” He wrote of “solid evidence of the presence in Iraq of al Qaeda members, including some that have been in Baghdad.” The same “credible reporting” reveals that “Iraq has provided training to al Qaeda members in the areas of poisons and gases and making conventional bombs.” Most striking, Tenet reported that “Baghdad’s links to terrorists will increase, even absent U.S. military action.”

Last year, the Department of Defense augmented this assessment by submitting to the congressional intelligence panels some 50-pages filled with various reported sightings and other information concerning meetings between these two avowed enemies of the United States. Further light was recently shed on the duration and extent of this cooperation when a top-secret 1993 document was found in Iraqi intelligence files calling “the Saudi Osama bin Laden” one of the service’s “collaborators.”

The Bottom Line

It is to be hoped that Democrats will resist the temptation to exploit Richard Clarke as a means of attacking President Bush for one other reason: Doing so will only further encourage retaliatory attacks aimed at discrediting a man who has rendered valuable service over a long time to his country. Unfortunately, such attacks have been invited by the tone and contents of Mr. Clarke’s book and the comments he has made to promote it all of which seem to be a striking departure from his usual, professional comportment. Although the Center for Security Policy has not always agreed with Dick’s judgment or policy prescriptions, and most especially those he is currently espousing, it is to be earnestly hoped that the debate can focus on the true substance of the War on Terror, and not on this retired civil servant and his seemingly skewed views thereof.

NBC shows how Kerry’s ‘law enforcement’ approach to terrorism saved bin Laden’s life

Presidential candidate John Kerry, along with the majority of the Democratic establishment, believes that “The war on terror is less of a military operation and far more of an intelligence-gathering and law enforcement operation.”

Unfortunately for Kerry, a March 16 report by NBC’s Lisa Meyers illustrated how that mindset saved Osama bin Laden’s life prior to 9/11.

NBC aired classified surveillance footage of Osama bin Laden that was shot by an Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) while flying over al-Qaeda training camps in Afghanistan sometime in the fall of 2000.

According to NBC, the footage “illustrates an enormous [missed] opportunity the Clinton administration had to kill or capture bin Laden.”

More significantly, NBC’s Meyers reported that “A Democratic member of the 9/11 commission says there was a larger issue. The Clinton administration treated bin Laden as a law enforcement problem.”

Meyers was referring to former Senator Bob Kerrey who told NBC that “The most important thing the Clinton administration could have done would have been for the president, either himself or by going to Congress, asking for a congressional declaration to declare war on al-Qaeda, a military political organization that had declared war on us.”

Senator John Kerry, however, insists that the fight against terrorism will require “primarily an intelligence and law enforcement” approach. By that logic, he would have waited until after 9/11 before trying to capture bin Laden.

It is a Global War on Terror

(Washington, D.C.): The terror attacks in Madrid today which left over 170 rush hour commuters dead have yet to be claimed by any terrorist organization. While the Spanish government was ready to blame ETA – a terrorist group which seeks to separate the Basque region from Spain – American intelligence agencies are reportedly looking into possible al-Qaeda involvement.

It is entirely possible as the following article from NCM Online, 1 October 2001 suggests, that this attack can be attributed to both al-Qaeda and ETA, as is evidenced below. Such cooperation would benefit both terror outfits, as al-Qaeda can strike back at Spain for participating in the war in Iraq by supporting ETA with arms and money, and ETA can strengthen its strike capabilities and credibility through an alliance with al-Qaeda, in the hope of achieving its ultimate goal of separation from Spain.

No country can afford to treat the Madrid explosions as an internal problem. The terrorism Madrid has suffered today is part and parcel in the War on Terrorism, and needs to be treated as such. The United States and other freedom loving nations must redouble their efforts to destroy terrorist organizations and their allies and sponsors wherever they are to be found.

In Spain: ETA and Al-Qaeda forge new anti-EU alliance
by Paolo Pontoniere
NCM Online, 1 October 2001

The Basque terrorist organization ETA and bin Laden’s al-Qaeda cells have joined forces. Their shared goal: to organize and carry out an attack on the EU meeting scheduled for March 2002 in Barcelona, according to two Spanish publications, Tiempo and El Mundo.

According to the reports, which have been confirmed by Italian and French media, representatives of the two terrorist organizations have already met together three times in Brussels in December 2000; in Malaga, Spain in February 2001; and in Barcelona last July.
According to the European reports, the terrorists have planned a suicide attack on the meeting that would entail the use of five car bombs provided by ETA, and delivered by five al-Qaeda suicide drivers. European authorities consider this news credible, and have disclosed that Mohammed Atta–one of the terrorists responsible for the early September attack on the World Trade Center–may have also attended the July meeting between ETA and al-Qaeda in Barcelona.

In its report, Tiempo revealed that, thanks to a tip-off by US Navy intelligence, Spanish authorities were able to prevent another al-Qaeda attack last December. This one would have involved striking American aircraft carriers with suicide vessels filled with the deadly explosive C-4. The attack–like the assault on the USS Cole in a Yemeni port–was scheduled to take place as the two aircraft carriers would have readied to moor at NATO’s Rota navy base near Cadiz. The suicide motor boats would have departed from the nearby coast of Morocco, a country with a significant Muslim population.

Spain, because of its proximity to Morocco and Algeria, has experienced a significant influx of Muslim immigrants. According to authorities, there are now about 500,000 Muslim immigrants living in Spain. Experts estimate that, among these emigres, are about 100 al-Qaeda agents ready at any moment to hit a Spanish or American target.
Since 1996, the Spanish police have formed a special unit dedicated to investigating the activities of these terrorists. In addition, Spanish prime minister Jos-Maria Azanar has pledged troops to any American-led coalition to fight international terrorism. Azanar has also allowed the US to use NATO navy bases in Rota and Moron to carry out air strikes against terrorist targets.

Although enjoying broad-based support at home for his commitment to the US, Azanar may find that his position could cause troubles for Spain abroad. In fact, neighboring Morocco, separated from Spain by the narrow strait of Gibraltar, is home to 4.5 million Islamic fundamentalists, who may become angered at Spain’s generous support of America.
Such a development could push young Moroccan king Mohammed VI into the fray, forcing him to face Islamic fundamentalist terrorism, as in neighboring Algeria. There, the government has been embroiled in a bloody and protracted war with indigenous Islamic terrorists for years.

http://www.ncmonline.com/content/ncm/2001/oct/1001spain.html

Misleadership

Retired General Wesley Clark, we are told endlessly, is running on his record. Never mind that he has no record to speak of on most domestic policy matters. What is really troubling is that, when it comes to his putative area of expertise – national security, Clark seems perfectly prepared to run away from his record, or at least to dissemble about it.

A War-time President?

A prime example is Clark’s position on the war in Iraq. He got into trouble on this score as soon as he announced his candidacy by saying that, had he been in Congress, he would “probably” have voted for the congressional resolution authorizing military action against Saddam Hussein. Within hours, he was denying that was his view and insisting that he opposed the war all along.

In fact, as the race has tightened, Gen. Clark has become in some ways even more strident than Howard Dean, the most vociferous anti-war candidate among the mainstream Democratic presidential hopefuls. Citing his authority as a professional military officer, Clark has made a signature issue of what he regards as George W. Bush’s diversion of firepower and intelligence capabilities from the real war on terror – the pursuit of Osama bin Laden and al Qaeda – to the needless overthrow of Saddam Hussein.

Along the way, Gen. Clark has also raised questions about President Bush’s integrity, lending weight to charges that the latter deliberately misled the American people about the threat posed by Saddam, the status of his weapons of mass destruction (WMD) programs and the Iraqi dictator’s actual ties to terror.

The ‘Record’ Speaks for Itself

Unfortunately for General Clark, if voters do judge him on his record, they are likely to be deeply troubled by serious questions it raises about his integrity and conduct.

Such questions were notably prompted by the revelation last week that Gen. Clark gave testimony on the eve of congressional action on the Iraq war resolution that sounded virtually indistinguishable from the views of the Bush Administration. For example, on September 26, 2002, the General told the House Armed Services Committee:

  • “[Saddam Hussein] does retain his chemical and biological capabilities to some extent and he is, as far as we know, actively pursuing nuclear capabilities, though he doesn’t have nuclear warheads yet. If he were to acquire nuclear weapons, I think our friends in the region would face greatly increased risks, as would we. Saddam might use these weapons as a deterrent while launching attacks against Israel or his other neighbors.”
  • “The problem of Iraq is not a problem that can be postponed indefinitely, and of course Saddam’s current efforts themselves are violations of international law as expressed in the U.N. resolutions. Our President has emphasized the urgency of eliminating these weapons and weapons programs. I strongly support his efforts to encourage the United Nations to act on this problem and in taking this to the United Nations, the President’s clear determination to act if…the United Nations can’t provides strong leverage for undergirding ongoing diplomatic efforts….”
  • “I think an inspection program will provide some impedance and interference with Saddam’s [WMD] efforts. I think it can undercut the legitimacy and authority of his regime at home. I think it can provide warning of further developments. I think it can establish a trigger. I think it can build legitimacy for the United States. Ultimately, it’s going to be inadequate in the main….”
  • “I think there’s no question that, even though we may not have the evidence [of contacts between Saddam and al Qaeda], that there have been such contacts. It’s normal. It’s natural. These are a lot of bad actors in the same region together. They are going to bump into each other. They are going to exchange information. They’re going to feel each other out and see whether there are opportunities to cooperate. That’s inevitable in this region, and I think it’s clear that regardless of whether or not such evidence is produced of these connections that Saddam Hussein is a threat….”
  • “There’s no requirement to have any doctrine here. I mean this is simply a longstanding right of the United States and other nations to take the actions they deem necessary in their self defense. Every president has deployed forces as necessary to take action. He’s done so without multilateral support if necessary. He’s done so in advance of conflict if necessary….Going to the United Nations was a very important part of building legitimacy for the action that we ultimately had to take. But the responsibility to deploy force is ultimately the responsibility for the United States and its leaders alone, for no one else.”
  • The ‘Scott Ritter Syndrome’

    Wes Clark can legitimately contend that he was wrong back in the Fall of 2002 and that his considered opinion is what he says today, when he effectively repudiates his previous positions. What the general cannot do – certainly not while laying a higher claim to integrity than President Bush – is to contend that what he said then and what he is saying now are the same.

    Of course, Gen. Clark’s distortion of his views on Iraq are not the only instance in which he has willfully misled the public on a vital national security matter. Arguably, an even more important example occurred on January 8, 2004, when he told the Concord Monitor that: “If I’m President of the United States, I’m going to take care of the American people. We are not going to have one of these incidents [like the 9/11 terrorist attacks].”

    No one can make such a promise. And no one who holds himself out as a responsible practitioner of security policy – let alone a trustworthy Commander-in-Chief – would assert, even for a moment, that he could.

    The Bottom Line

    Wesley Clark is running on a platform that he is uniquely qualified to provide leadership for America. His record to date – and his representations of it – suggests that what he offers instead is misleadership, something we can certainly do without.

    An insight into the fifth column

    Two days before Christmas, the Wall Street Journal published a singularly important account of one man’s journey into the world of “Islamism” – that subset of the Muslim faith that is radical, virulently intolerant and anti-Western. The Journal properly gave this long article by reporter Paul Barrett front-page/above-the-fold treatment since it offers, in the form of the spiritual and political experiences of Mustafa Saied, an insider’s view of Islamist operations in the United States. In particular, it gives insights into one of the most secretive, and potentially most dangerous, of these: the Muslim Brotherhood.

    As the article makes clear, Mr. Saied joined the ranks of the Muslim Brotherhood only after establishing, while in college, his commitment to interpretations of Mohammed’s teachings that were rabidly anti-Semitic, contemptuous of Western societies and their values and hostile to other religions. The contrast between these views and the moderate, tolerant ones to which he was exposed in childhood – and that he now apparently embraces once again, having broken with the Islamists – are striking.

    Mr. Saied’s recollections underscore: a) the dangers of allowing the Islamists to gain further footholds in our society and b) the opportunity presented to this country to counter their agenda by those who adhere to the latter to counter the Islamists’ agenda. This opportunity will require, among other things, federal, state and local governments to work exclusively with and, thereby, help to empower non-radical Muslims. (For more on the need for the Bush Administration in particular to make an urgent course correction in this regard, see: "A Troubling Infuence").

     

    Muslim Movement Founded in Egypt
    Sent Tentacles to University in Knoxville

    By Paul M. Barrett
    The Wall Street Journal, 23 December 2003

    One afternoon, Mustafa Saied, a junior at the University of Tennessee, was summoned by a friend to a nearly empty campus cafeteria. The two settled themselves in a quiet corner, and Mr. Saied’s friend invited him to join the Muslim Brotherhood.

    "Everything I had learned pointed to the Muslim Brotherhood being an awesome thing, the elite movement," says Mr. Saied of his initiation in 1994. "I cannot tell you the feeling that I felt — awesome power."

    On that day in Knoxville, Mr. Saied entered a secretive community that was slowly building a roster of young men committed to spreading fundamentalist Islam in the U.S. A movement launched 75 years ago in Egypt, the Muslim Brotherhood has inspired terrorist acts, as well as social reform, throughout the Middle East and has chapters in some European nations. Until recently, law-enforcement officials saw little evidence that the organization was active in the U.S.

    Once inside this world, Mr. Saied railed against Jews and Israel during Friday services. He attended meetings in hotels in Toledo and Chicago where radical sheiks glorified jihad. He raised money for Muslims in Bosnia and Chechnya, some of which he later learned was funneled to mujahedeen fighters.

    In recent years, especially in the wake of the terror attacks in 2001, much of this radical activity in the U.S. has been tamped down, according to law-enforcement officials. The State Department in 1999 barred the sheik Mr. Saied heard endorsing jihad from entering the country. The Treasury Department two years ago froze the accounts of the charity that sent his donations abroad, later designating it a "financier of terrorism."

    Mr. Saied, now an executive at a Florida environmental-testing firm, underwent a conversion to a less orthodox form of Islam in 1998. Today, his story offers a rare inside look at an extremist movement that flourished in the U.S. And it raises questions about how it managed to spread undetected in the U.S. and whether, since Sept. 11, it has simply moved deeper underground.

    "Anti-American sentiment is usually reserved for closed-door discussions or expressed in languages that most Americans don’t understand," says Mr. Saied. "While such rhetoric has been drastically reduced since 9/11, it is still prevalent enough to be a cause for concern."

    Mr. Saied’s roots were anything but radical. On the plane to America from India in 1990, he made a to-do list: learn to skateboard and bungee-jump, go on road trips, hang out with girls. It was his first time in the U.S., though he already spoke fluent English, learned from rebroadcasts of Sesame Street and Starsky & Hutch. He selected the University of Tennessee because its catalogue was in the library of the American consulate in his home state of Chennai and happened to include a tear-out application.

    In Knoxville he roomed with another outgoing engineering major who, like Mr. Saied, came from a highly educated Indian family. "We had many hobbies in common: basketball, football, movies, especially music," recalls Rajesh Juriasingani. Pop singers George Michael and Paula Abdul were favorites. Religion didn’t come up much, says Mr. Juriasingani, a Hindu who works for a semiconductor company in Chaska, Minn.

    When Disney recruited on campus for a work-study program, Mr. Saied leapt at the chance to spend a semester at Disney World, taking evening classes on the company’s approach to business. He left Orlando in 1993 with a photograph of himself, in a suit and tie, shaking hands with Mickey Mouse.

    Back in Knoxville, he decided on impulse one afternoon to drop by the inconspicuous mosque near campus, even though it wasn’t a Friday, the day Muslims gather to pray. In the sparsely furnished, one-story mosque, he found a small group of students discussing verses from the Quran. Never shy, Mr. Saied offered a few opinions. His listeners praised his insight and invited him back. He was deeply flattered. "I knew a couple of things, and they were so impressed," he recalls. He says he felt like he had been invited into an elite club. Within days, he had stopped shaving, in the orthodox Muslim fashion, and started praying five times a day.

    Mr. Saied had received a religious education growing up. But his father, a petroleum-plant supervisor, and his mother, an electrical engineer who stayed home to raise Mustafa and his older sister, taught their children that "Muslims weren’t better; they were just people, like Hindus and others," he says.

    Before his conversion to fundamentalist Islam, Mustafa Saied spent a semester at Disney World.

    Spurred on by his new friends, Mr. Saied reshaped his worldview according to a handful of passages from the Quran. Mr. Saied says he and other immigrant-Muslim students were drawn to verses preaching intolerance, such as one that claims that "whomsoever follows a religion other than Islam … in the Hereafter he will be among the losers."

    Within a few months of his first visit to the mosque, Mr. Saied was asked to deliver the sermon during a Friday prayer service, attended by students and other Muslims. Speaking from the mosque’s elevated pulpit to about 300 congregants seated on the carpeted floor, Mr. Saied excoriated Americans who indulged in alcohol and premarital sex, or celebrated "false" holidays such as Halloween and Christmas. He continued periodically to give sermons, often peppering his speeches with condemnations of Jews and Israel. "Our view was that suicide bombings were fine," he recalls. "Israel is the oppressor; Israel does not have the right to exist. It must be destroyed."

    Usually, a few worshippers scolded him after his talks. But Mr. Saied and his circle of a dozen or so immigrant-Muslim friends dismissed proponents of a more moderate approach to their religion.

    When a visiting religion scholar gave a talk on campus expressing skepticism of Muslim fundamentalists, "Mustafa stood up, glared around at people and announced, " ‘I’m a Muslim fundamentalist and there is only one true Islam,’ " recalls Rosalind Gwynne, the longtime faculty adviser of the University of Tennessee chapter of the Muslim Student Association. "You see this among some of the immigrant students from time to time: trying to live in this country in a box, hermetically sealed."

    Some of Mr. Saied’s former friends qualify aspects of his account. Khaled Bahjri, then a biology major of Yemeni descent, says some talks focused on Islam being the only legitimate basis for all institutions in society. He confirms that students often denounced "Israeli oppression of the Palestinians." But Dr. Bahjri, now a physician in southern California, says, "This activist involvement was not anything extremist or wrong," and it wasn’t derogatory toward non-Muslims.

    By 1994, Mr. Saied had taken to wearing the sort of keffiyah headdress favored by Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat. Mr. Juriasingani says he watched in dismay as his roommate declared he was through with pop music, movies and dating. Mr. Saied eventually dropped all of his non-Muslim friends.

    Like many activist Muslim students, Mr. Saied belonged to an Islamic study group. His often focused on the writings of Youssef Al Qaradawi, an Egyptian cleric based in Qatar who is a leading figure in the Muslim Brotherhood movement. Sheik Qaradawi is known among many Muslims as relatively moderate on such issues as relations with the West, while endorsing what he calls "martyrdom operations" against Israel and Jews.

    For months in 1994, Mr. Saied sensed that his allegiance to radical Islam was being tested by members of his study group. He wasn’t sure why he was being scrutinized, but he steadfastly expressed enthusiasm for Sheik Qaradawi’s views. Finally a friend from the United Arab Emirates asked him to join the Muslim Brotherhood, during their conversation in a campus cafeteria. "Needless to say, I said, ‘Yes,’ " Mr. Saied recalls.

    The Muslim Brotherhood began as a social-reform and religious-revival movement in the 1920s in Egypt. It resisted British domination and evolved into a sometimes-violent organization. Brutally repressed in Egypt, its members scattered throughout the Middle East in the 1950s and 1960s, spreading their influence. Some attended graduate schools in the U.S. and helped start the Muslim Student Association in 1963, as well as other Muslim social and financial groups.

    Today, the Brotherhood remains an active, controversial organization working within the political systems of some Arab countries. Its violent offshoots include the faction that assassinated Egyptian President Anwar Sadat in 1981 and the Palestinian terrorist organizations Hamas and Islamic Jihad. Another outgrowth of the Brotherhood, Egyptian Islamic Jihad, is led by Osama bin Laden’s top lieutenant, Ayman al-Zawahri, who merged his organization into the al Qaeda network in 1998.

    In the U.S., the Brotherhood has not operated openly. But federal prosecutors say they are investigating whether Brotherhood members who arrived in the U.S. decades ago have used businesses and charities here to raise and launder money for terrorism abroad.

    Mr. Saied started meeting weekly with a handful of students — a subset of Muslim fundamentalists who were deemed hardcore enough for admission to the Brotherhood. They drank tea and ate baklava or other sweets, and then discussed, theoretically and practically, how to motivate Muslims to return to a way of life entirely shaped by the Quran and Islamic law. They talked of the need to keep the movement’s existence secret.

    The leader of the group, who has since returned to the U.A.E., recounted with admiration how the Brotherhood has functioned as a wellspring of jihadist factions. The subject of using violence in the U.S. came up, but the Knoxville Brotherhood circle’s attitude was, "We don’t do that here, unless necessary," Mr. Saied says. The trigger would be "the Muslim population being in danger, as it is in Palestine," and that didn’t seem likely.

    Some meetings were hosted by Dr. Bahjri, the former biology major. But he says the participants "were not involved as a direct group with the Muslim Brotherhood." He adds: "Indirectly, we were impressed by the Muslim Brotherhood understanding of Islam, yes, and we discussed the comprehensive view of Islam. But this is not membership."

    Whatever the precise status of these students, other Muslims in Knoxville eventually became aware of the Brotherhood-influenced circle on campus, says Tarek El-Messidi. As a teenager, Mr. Messidi took religious classes from Mr. Saied on Sundays. Sitting at a table in the mosque’s library with three or four other students, he listened to Mr. Saied discuss Islamic history and sometimes ridicule other religions.

    When Mr. Messidi moved on to the university, he headed the Muslim Student Association in 2000 and 2001. "The Ikhwan influence was still there," he says, using the Arabic name for the Brotherhood. Mr. Messidi says that he considered Brotherhood ideology and strategy to be irrelevant in the U.S., and banned it being taught within the MSA.

    But for Mr. Saied and his friends, it was very relevant. In December 1994 they attended a conference at a Chicago hotel sponsored by the Muslim Arab Youth Association. The meeting attracted some 6,000 people, according to a report in the Chicago Sun-Times. Students listened to lectures, ate communal meals of lamb, chicken and rice, and worshipped in a makeshift prayer area — a portion of a large banquet room with sheets spread on the carpet to mark a sanctified zone.

    At one point, Mr. Saied says, the lights in a packed ballroom went dark, with spotlights trained only on the stage, where several speakers sat. Suddenly, six or seven masked young men dressed as Hamas militants ran down the aisles, waving the organization’s green flags and shouting, "Idhbaahal Yahood!" ("Slaughter the Jews!")

    "There were people who were ecstatic over the display, shouting in response, ‘Allahu Akbar!’ (‘God is Great!’), and there were also people who were simply shocked that something like this was going on," Mr. Saied recalls. He says his own reaction was, "Cool."

    Mr. Bahjri, who was there, plays down the significance of the Hamas display and the crowd’s response. "It was just emotional — a reaction," he says.

    In December 1995, Mr. Saied attended another Muslim Arab Youth Association conference at a hotel in Toledo, Ohio. Sheik Qaradawi, the cleric affiliated with the Muslim Brotherhood, gave a speech later transcribed and translated by the Investigative Project, a terrorism-research group based in Washington. Islam will "overcome all the religions" and dominate the world, the sheik told his audience of several hundred people. He quoted Islamic texts as saying, "You shall continue to fight the Jews, and they will fight you, until the Muslims will kill them. And the Jew will hide behind the stone and the tree, and the stone and the tree will say, ‘Oh, servant of Allah, Oh, Muslim, this is a Jew behind me. Come and kill him!’ The resurrection will not come before this happens."

    That weekend, Mr. Saied ran into Sheik Qaradawi as the luminary emerged from a crowded hotel elevator and attempted to fend off people trying to kiss his hand. Mr. Saied stepped forward and greeted the cleric and they talked briefly, he recalls. "I was awestruck because he was the biggest Muslim Brotherhood figure in the world, and I had met him," says Mr. Saied.

    In Knoxville, Mr. Saied says he was raising thousands of dollars after Friday prayers at the mosque to buy supplies for needy Muslims in Bosnia and Chechnya. Once he stood up and asked the congregation for enough money to buy 100 tents at $60 each. By the next day, he says, the full $6,000 had been donated.

    He contacted the Benevolence International Foundation, a nonprofit in Chicago that sent money to Muslims overseas, and a foundation representative periodically visited Knoxville to pick up contributions. Mr. Saied assumed the money was going to civilians, but in a 1995 conversation at his apartment, the foundation emissary explained that some was channeled to Muslim fighters. Mr. Saied says he immediately stopped raising money.

    In November 2002, the Treasury Department alleged that the foundation had extensive financial ties to al Qaeda. The charity denied the allegations, but its chief executive pleaded guilty in 2003 to illegally buying boots and uniforms for Muslim fighters in Bosnia and Chechnya. As part of the plea deal, prosecutors dropped the charges involving al Qaeda.

    Mr. Saied left the University of Tennessee in 1996, several credits shy of graduating. He moved to Florida with his new wife, Sadaf, who he had met at a Muslim student conference in Baltimore. Devoutly religious, Sadaf Saied, who is of Pakistani descent, recalls being dismayed at the arguments her husband and his friends made in favor of suicide bombing. "That was a foreign thing to me," she says. As an undergraduate at the University of Miami, Ms. Saied says she helped start a moderate Muslim group on campus as an alternative to the one dominated by Arab immigrants whose views were similar to Mr. Saied’s.

    Mr. Saied continued his activism in Florida, preaching his view of Islam at a camp for Muslim teenagers. In 1997, he brought Yasir Billoo, one of his former campers, to a meeting of about 30 men in an Orlando hotel conference room. "Leadership was the topic — how to organize and get people to follow Muslim Brotherhood members," says Mr. Billoo. Afterward, Mr. Billoo says, he was invited to join the Brotherhood. He declined. "It was way too secretive for me," says Mr. Billoo, then 18, who came to the U.S. from Pakistan as a child.

    A year later, after attending a young Muslims conference, Mr. Saied and Mr. Billoo joined a discussion in the book-lined basement of a Chicago house. Over coffee, tea and fresh fruit, Mr. Saied launched into a tirade against non-Muslims and Americans. Assim Mohammed, who was hosting the gathering at his parents’ home, had encountered the same attitudes in Muslim circles as a student at the University of Illinois.

    Mr. Mohammed, now 27, says he and another young man launched a counterattack, arguing that "the basic foundations of American values are very Islamic — freedom of religion, freedom of speech, toleration." The battle raged for four hours, as several other people listened avidly. Mr. Mohammed and his ally deployed Quranic verses that suggest an embrace of pluralism. One he quoted states, "O humankind, God has created you from male and female and made you into diverse nations and tribes so that you may come to know each other."

    Late that night, Mr. Saied says he realized that he and Mr. Billoo "were out of arguments." Mentally exhausted, he says he thought, "Oh my God, what have I been doing?" Mr. Billoo, now attending Nova Southeastern University’s law school in Fort Lauderdale, describes a similar "deprogramming experience."

    In the following months, both say they gravitated back toward the more moderate values they had learned growing up.

    Today Mr. Saied, who is applying for U.S. citizenship, helps run an environmental-testing firm in Hialeah owned by his wife’s family. He says he still feels guilty about his years of extremism. After the Sept. 11 terror attacks, he co-wrote articles for USA Today and the Christian Science Monitor calling on American Muslims to raise their voices in support of religious moderation and the West. He worries that pockets of "venomous hatred toward Western society" persist on some campuses and in certain Islamic communities.

    He continues to participate in online Islamic forums, trying to spark debate about how to be a "progressive Muslim." He attends mosque but has shed his head covering and trimmed his beard short. These days he listens to music, both American pop and traditional Indian. He and his wife send their children to public school during the week and religious classes on the weekend. "Religion," as he now sees it, "gets you close to your spiritual connection with God, and that’s about it."

    The threat at home

    (Washington, D.C.): This holiday season, the U.S. government has been warning that foreign aircraft might be hijacked and used to attack American targets, leading to cancellations of some flights from France and demands that sky marshals be aboard certain other planes coming to this country. Worrisome as the intelligence-intercepted chatter that prompted such actions might be, a much more ominous problem may not be getting the attention it deserves the danger arising from radical Muslims (known as Islamists) already here in the United States.

    A Personal Journey

    On December 23rd, the Wall Street Journal rendered an important public service with a lengthy, front-page article offering insights into the nature and extent of the Islamist presence in America. Under the headline, The Brotherhood: A Student Journeys Into a Secret Circle of Extremism, reporter Paul Barrett describes the personal experiences of Mustafa Saied, a young Muslim who became radicalized while studying at the University of Tennessee. His story is an object lesson in the way in which one of the most dangerous of the Islamist organizations, the Muslim Brotherhood, is indoctrinating and recruiting in our midst.

    According to the Journal, before his embrace of extremist, intolerant Islam, Saied was someone whose parents taught their children that Muslims werent better; they were just people like Hindus and others. As he fell under the radicals sway, however, Mr. Saied railed against Jews and Israel during Friday services. He attended meetings in Toledo and Chicago where radical sheiks glorified jihad. He raised money for Muslims in Bosnia and Chechnya, some of which he later learned was funneled to mujahedeen fighters.

    During this period, Saied would give sermons at a mosque near campus that catered to students. He recalled that Our view was that suicide bombings were fine. Israel is the oppressor; Israel does not have the right to exist. It must be destroyed.

    The Muslim Brotherhood

    Saied recounts his recruitment into the Muslim Brotherhood an organization that started in Egypt in the 1920s as a social-reform and religious-revival movement, but that has become a wellspring of violent Islamist activity around the world. Ayman al-Zawahri, Osama bin Ladens right hand man, headed one wing of the Brotherhood, Egyptian Islamic Jihad, before merging it into Al Qaeda. The Journal notes that Brotherhood members helped start the Muslim Students Association in 1963, as well as other Muslim social and financial groups.

    In the early 1990s, Saied participated in an Islamic study group that focused on the writings of Sheik Youssef Al Qaradawi, a prime mover in the Brotherhood who endors[ed] martyrdom operations against Israel and Jews. During this period, Saied sensed that his allegiance to radical Islam was being tested by members of his study group….Finally, a friend from the United Arab Emirates asked him to join the Muslim Brotherhood.

    Then, Mr. Saied started meeting weekly with a handful of students a subset of Muslim fundamentalists who were deemed hardcore enough for admission to the Brotherhood. They…discussed how to motivate Muslims to return to a way of life entirely shaped by the Quran and Islamic law. They talked of the need to keep the movements existence secret.

    In December 1994, Saied participated in a Muslim Arab Youth Association convention in Chicago attended by some 6,000 people. At one point, Mr. Saided says, the lights in a packed ballroom went dark….Suddenly, six or seven masked young men dressed as Hamas militants ran down the aisles waving the organizations green flags and shouting Idhbaahal Yahood! (Slaughter the Jews!)

    Its Not Just the Jews They Hate

    Barrett quotes Saied as saying, Anti-American sentiment is usually reserved for closed-door discussions or expressed in languages that most Americans dont understand. While such rhetoric has been drastically reduced since 9/11, it is still prevalent enough to be a cause for concern. He added that pockets of venomous hatred toward Western society persist on some campuses and in certain Islamic communities.

    Mustafa Saieds personal testament is deeply worrying for what it suggests about an enemy within an Islamist Fifth Column operating inside our own country with the inherent capability to exploit the vulnerabilities, and the civil liberties, of our society with potentially murderous effect.

    Saieds own story, however, also suggests our best antidote to the poisonous effects of those like the Muslim Brotherhood seeking to radicalize and otherwise to dominate their co-religionists around the world and to subject the rest of us to a way of life entirely shaped by the Quran and Islamic law. According to Barrett, he has gravitated back toward the more moderate values [he] learned growing up and seeks to encourage others to become what he calls progressive Muslims.

    The Bottom Line

    No one should underestimate the difficulty of this task. National Public Radio reported on Monday that three teams of the Southern California Muslim Football League have called themselves Intifada, Soldiers of Allah and Mujahedeen. Still, every effort should be made most especially by President Bush and his team to reject the claims of pro-Islamist groups to lead and speak for Muslim-Americans. Instead, legitimacy and help must be extended to genuinely tolerant, peaceable and pro-American Muslims, who have as much as stake as the rest of us in defeating the Muslim Brotherhood and its ilk, here and abroad.

    Grover Norquist: A Troubling Influence

    This article appeared originally at Front Page Magazine with the following statement from David Horowitz:

     

    Why We Are Publishing This Article

    The article you are about to read is the most disturbing that we at frontpagemag.com have ever published. As an Internet magazine, with a wide circulation, we have been in the forefront of the effort to expose the radical Fifth Column in this country, whose agendas are at odds with the nation’s security, and whose purposes are hostile to its own. In his first address to Congress after 9/11, the President noted that we are facing the same totalitarian enemies we faced in the preceding century. It is not surprising that their domestic supporters in the American Left should have continued their efforts to weaken this nation and tarnish its image. Just as there was a prominent internal Fifth Column during the Cold War, so there has been a prominent Fifth Column during the war on terror.

    By no means do all the opponents of America’s war policies (or even a majority) fit this category. Disagreement among citizens is a core feature of any democracy and respect for that disagreement is a foundational value of our political system. The self-declared enemies of the nation are distinguished by the intemperate nature of their attacks on America and its President – referring to the one as Adolf Hitler, for example, or the other as the world’s “greatest terrorist state.” They are known as well by their political choices and associations. Many leaders of the movement opposing the war in Iraq have worked for half a century with the agents of America’s communist enemies and with totalitarian states like Cuba and the former USSR.

    We have had no compunction about identifying these individuals and groups. America is no longer protected by geographical barriers or by its unsurpassed military technologies. Today terrorists who can penetrate our borders with the help of Fifth Column networks will have access to weapons of mass destruction that can cause hundreds of thousands of American deaths.  One slip in our security defenses can result in a catastrophe undreamed of before.

    What is particularly disturbing, about the information in this article by former Reagan Defense official, Frank Gaffney, is that it concerns an individual who loves this country and would be the last person to wish it harm, and the first one would expect to defend it. I have known Grover Norquist for almost twenty years as a political ally. Long before I myself was cognizant of the Communist threat – indeed when I was part of one of those Fifth Column networks – Grover Norquist was mobilizing his countrymen to combat it. In the early 1980s, Grover was in the forefront of conservative efforts to get the Reagan Administration to support the liberation struggles of anti-Communists in Central America, Africa and Afghanistan.

    It is with a heavy heart therefore, that I am posting this article, which is the most complete documentation extant of Grover Norquist’s activities in behalf of the Islamist Fifth Column. I have confronted Grover about these issues and have talked to others who have done likewise. But it has been left to Frank Gaffney and a few others, including Daniel Pipes and Steven Emerson, to make the case and to suffer the inevitable recriminations that have followed earlier disclosures of some aspects of this story.

    Up to now, the controversy over these charges has been dismissed or swept under the rug, as a clash of personalities or the product of one of those intra-bureaucratic feuds so familiar to the Washington scene. Unfortunately, this is wishful thinking. The reality is much more serious. No one reading this document to its bitter end will confuse its claims and confirming evidence with those of a political cat fight. On the basis of the evidence assembled here, it seems beyond dispute that Grover Norquist has formed alliances with prominent Islamic radicals who have ties to the Saudis and to Libya and to Palestine Islamic Jihad, and who are now under indictment by U.S. authorities. Equally troubling is that the arrests of these individuals and their exposure as agents of terrorism have not resulted in noticeable second thoughts on Grover’s part or any meaningful effort to dissociate himself from his unsavory friends.

    As Frank Gaffney’s article recounts, Grover’s own Islamic Institute was initially financed by one of the most notorious of these operatives, Abdurahman Alamoudi, a supporter of Hamas and Hezbollah who told the Annual Convention of the Islamic Association of Palestine in 1996, “If we are outside this country we can say ‘Oh, Allah destroy America.’ But once we are here, our mission in this country is to change it.” Grover appointed Alamoudi’s deputy, Khaled Saffuri to head his own organization. Together they gained access to the White House for Alamoudi and Sami al-Arian and others with similar agendas who used their cachet to spread Islamist influence to the American military and the prison system and the universities and the political arena with untold consequences for the nation.

    Parts of this story have been published before, but never in such detail and never with the full picture of Islamist influence in view. No doubt, that is partly because of Grover Norquist’s large (and therefore intimidating) presence in the Washington community. Many have been quite simply afraid to raise these issues and thus have allowed Grover to make them seem a matter of individual personality differences. This suits his agendas well, as it does those of his Islamist allies. If matters in dispute reflect personal animosity or “racial” prejudice, as Grover insists, then the true gravity of these charges is obscured. The fact remains that while Grover has denied the charges or sought to dismiss them with such arguments on many occasions, he has never answered them. If he wishes to do so now, the pages of frontpagemag.com are open to him.

    Many have been reluctant to support these charges or to make them public because they involve a prominent conservative. I am familiar with these attitudes from my years on the Left. Loyalty is an important political value, but there comes a point where loyalty to friends or to parties comes into conflict with loyalty to fundamental principles and ultimately to one’s country. Grover’s activities have reached that point. E.M. Forster, a weak-spirited liberal, once said that if he had to choose between betraying his country and his friends, he “hoped [he] would have the guts” to betray his country.

    No such sentiment motivates this journal. In our war with the Islamo-fascists we are all engaged in a battle with evil on a scale that affects the lives and freedoms of hundreds of millions people outside this nation as well as within it. America is on the front line of this battle and there is no replacement waiting in the wings if it fails, or if its will to fight is sapped from within. This makes our individual battles to keep our country vigilant and strong the most important responsibilities we have. That is why we could not in good conscience do otherwise, than to bring this story to light.

     

    A Troubling Influence

    By Frank Gaffney

     

    At a black-tie dinner on November 5th [2003], nearly 300 conservative activists and politicians gathered at Washington’s Mayflower Hotel to recognize a prominent fixture in their community: tax-advocate and conservative coalition-builder Grover Norquist.

    The talk that evening was of the honoree’s tireless efforts to advance his libertarian objective of down-sizing federal, state and local governments by reducing their revenues.  He was toasted for organizing nationwide initiatives to memorialize Ronald Reagan, notably with the renaming of the capital’s National Airport after the former President.

    Most in the audience were surely unaware that the effect of their tribute – if not its organizers’ intended purpose – was to provide urgently needed political cover for a man who has been active on another, far less laudable and, in fact, deeply problematic front: Enabling a political influence operation to advance the causes of radical Islamists, and targeted most particularly at the Bush Administration. The growing influence of this operation – and the larger Islamist enterprise principally funded by Saudia Arabia – has created a strategic vulnerability for the nation, and a political liability for its President.

     

    The Islamist Connection: Abdurahman Alamoudi

    The association between Grover Norquist and Islamists appears to have started about five years ago, in 1998, when he became the founding chairman of an organization called the Islamic Free Market Institute, better known as the Islamic Institute.1  The Institute’s stated purpose was to cultivate Muslim-Americans and Arab-Americans whose attachment to conservative family values and capitalism made them potential allies for the Republican Party in advance of the 2000 presidential election.

    If successful, such an outreach effort could theoretically produce a windfall in votes and campaign contributions. Consequently, it enjoyed the early support of Karl Rove, when he was then-Governor Bush’s political advisor, and who knew Norquist from their days in the College Republicans.

    Unfortunately, some associated with the Islamic Institute evidently had another agenda.  Abdurahman Alamoudi, for one, a self-described “supporter of Hamas and Hezbollah,”2 the prime-mover behind the American Muslim Council (AMC) and a number of other U.S.-based Islamist-sympathizing/supporting organizations, saw in the Islamic Institute a golden opportunity to hedge his bets.

    For years, Alamoudi had cultivated ties with the Democratic Party and its partisans, and contributed significant amounts to its candidates. These donations had given Alamoudi access to the Clinton White House and enabled him and his associates to secure the right to select, train and certify Muslim chaplains for the U.S. military.3

    By the end of the 1990s, an AMC spin-off called the American Muslim Armed Forces and Veterans Affairs Council and a like-minded organization, the Islamic Society of North America, were responsible for selecting all U.S. Muslim chaplains. 4  One of these appointees – Army Captain Yousef Yee – has lately been in the news.  Yee has been removed from his duties ministering to Taliban and al-Qaeda detainees at Guantanamo pending military judicial proceedings for, among other alleged misconduct, mishandling classified material.

    For an Islamist-sympathizer like Alamoudi, the opportunity to determine who would minister to Muslims in the U.S. military was an important strategic prize. It built upon a Saudi-sponsored initiative dating back to the time of Operation Desert Storm to convert members of the American armed forces to Wahhabi Sunnism,5 the religious doctrine of the Islamic radicals. It has been reported that Saudi Arabia provided more than 100 such service personnel6 – including Captain Yee7 – with free trips to Mecca to make the hajj. (The nature and implications of these Islamist initiatives are under investigation by the Senate Judiciary Committee’s Terrorism Subcommittee, chaired by Senator Jon Kyl, R-AZ, and by the Defense Department’s Inspector General.)

    In the mid-1990s, Alamoudi also had a hand in the recruitment and placement of another 75-100 so-called “Islamic lay leaders” for the U.S. military.  According to the Wall Street Journal, he arranged for “an arm of the Saudi government” called the Institute of Islamic and Arabic Sciences to train “soldiers and civilians to provide spiritual guidance when paid Muslim chaplains aren’t available.”  The Journal also reports that there are signs that “the school…disseminates the intolerant and anti-Western strain of Islam espoused by the [Saudi] kingdom’s religious establishment.” 8

    The right to select military chaplains not only offered Alamoudi and his colleagues the chance to recruit still more Islamists with specialized and highly useful skill-sets.  It also was an invaluable legitimating credential to be wielded against those who might otherwise regard the American Muslim Council and its leader with suspicion, or worse.

    It would, therefore, have been important to retain this role even if the Democratic presidential candidate, Al Gore, were to lose and Republicans come to power.  Hence, Abdurahman Alamoudi took an interest in one of the GOP’s most assiduous and influential networkers, Grover Norquist.

    It seems unlikely that even in Alamoudi’s wildest dreams he could have imagined the extent of the access, influence and legitimacy the American Muslim Council and allied Islamist organizations would be able to secure in Republican circles, thanks to the investment they began in 1998 in a relationship with Norquist.

     

    Alamoudi and Norquist

    The investment began when Alamoudi wrote two personal checks (a $10,000 loan and what appears to be a $10,000 gift) to help found Norquist’s Islamic Institute.9 In addition, Alamoudi made payments in 2000 and 2001 totaling $50,000 to Janus-Merritt Strategies, a lobbying firm with which Norquist was associated at the time.10

    Questions about the original source of this seed money would seem to be in order. In particular, it would be instructive to know whether it came from Saudi Arabia or a pedigreed terrorist state like Libya. Last month, Alamoudi was arrested and charged with engaging in illegal financial transactions with the Libyan government. According to an affidavit filed at the time, he admitted to trying to take $340,000 in sequentially numbered $100 bills to Syria, en route to Saudi bank accounts.11When apprehended, Alamoudi declared that the funds had been delivered to him after extensive interactions with officials of Muammar Qadhafi’s government by a man “with a Libyan accent.” Its source is alleged to be a charity used by Qadhafi to finance terrorist operations.

    According to the affidavit, Alamoudi told authorities in Britain that once the Libyan funds were in Saudi banks, he would then draw upon them in roughly $10,000 increments to defray the expenses of organizations with which he was associated in the United States. He admitted to having undertaken “other, similar transactions involving amounts in the range of $10,000 to $20,000.”  He also acknowledged that he had first approached representatives of the Libyan government in 1997 – the year before Norquist’s Islamic Institute was founded.

    It is unclear exactly how much money Alamoudi received from Libya and precisely when, or who were the beneficiaries. What is known, however, according to published tax returns and foundation records, is that the overwhelming majority of the Norquist Institute’s funds from its inception have come from Persian Gulf states and their U.S. funding mechanisms, a number of which have been raided by federal anti-terrorism task forces.12

    Whatever the provenance of Alamoudi’s seed money for the Islamic Institute, an even more significant contribution to its future course came in the form of the placement of his deputy, Khaled Saffuri, as the founding director of Norquist’s new organization. This placement is consistent with a practice long employed by Islamist-associated groups in the United States and, for that matter, other tightly controlled and non-transparent enterprises (e.g., the Soviet KGB’s operations overseas and Mafia business empires).

    This disciplined approach has guided the Saudi-funded global Islamist network starting back in the 1960s. At that time, the Saudi Ministry of Religious Affairs established the Muslim World League (MWL) – headed by the minister himself – to promote radical Islamist agendas around the globe.

    Of particular concern has been the MWL’s effort in America where four layers of front organizations have been spawned to recruit, indoctrinate, train and employ new adherents in furtherance of the Islamists’ overarching objectives: dominating the Muslim world and, in due course, forcing the non-Muslim world as well to submit to Islamic law.13

    A surprisingly small number of trusted individuals run and financially control the roughly 40 groups that make up this radical Islamic front. For years, Abdurahman Alamoudi has been the most prominent leader of this front in America, and is involved in no fewer than 16 Islamist organizations.

    As in the case of Grover Norquist’s Islamic Institute, control of the operations of these front organizations is usually given to a protégé of one of the godfathers or another trusted cadre member. Funds then flow from the same network.

    Hence, in addition to the seed money from Alamoudi, the Islamic Institute has also received funding from organizations described by the Washington Post as a “secretive group of tightly connected Muslim charities, think tanks and businesses based in Northern Virginia [and] used to funnel millions of dollars to terrorists and launder millions more” – a number of whom are currently part of the “largest federal investigation of terrorism financing in the world.”14

     

    Point Man: Khaled Saffuri

    The founding director of Grover Norquist’s Islamic Institute, Khaled Saffuri, is a Muslim Palestinian by birth. Prior to joining Alamoudi’s group (where he served for almost three years15), Saffuri was active in Muslim-support operations in Bosnia,16 a hot-bed for Islamic radicals from Afghanistan, Saudi Arabia and elsewhere anxious to establish a beachhead on the continent of Europe. In recent years, he has acknowledged personally supporting the families of suicide bombers – even though, in public settings, he strenuously denies having done so.17 He denounced President Bush for shutting down the Holy Land Foundation, a Saudi charity that the U.S. government determined was funneling American Muslims’ donations to terrorist organizations overseas.18

    I first had occasion to observe Saffuri in the late 1990s, when I became a regular attendee of Grover Norquist’s “Wednesday Group” meetings, weekly gatherings of conservative movement activists and libertarians.  Troubled that many of the participants rarely, if ever, addressed national security matters – certainly before 9/11 and, arguably, even afterwards – I viewed these conclaves as an opportunity to promote awareness of and renewed support for robust foreign and defense policies. With a view to doing that on a routine basis, I accepted Norquist’s invitation to move my Center for Security Policy into new office space he had acquired. In the summer of 1999, I relocated to the space which was also occupied by his primary organization, Americans for Tax Reform, which also housed the Wednesday Group meetings and the Saffuri-headed Islamic Institute.

    Since the Institute was located inside the ATR suite next to ours, we wound up sharing a large conference room, Xerox room, bathrooms, elevator bank and hallway.  Consequently, I had a ring-side seat as Saffuri and his colleagues became ever more prominent fixtures at the Wednesday Group meetings, usually underscoring their close relationship with the host by sitting next to Norquist (or near him) in the center of the room.

    From time to time, one or another of the Islamic Institute’s associates would make a presentation to the generally standing-room-only crowds of influential Washington conservatives, would-be politicians, think-tank denizens, journalists, and an increasing number of lobbyists. Over the years, topics they addressed included: the plight of Palestinians under Israeli occupation; the much-maligned and badly misunderstood Islamist government of Sudan (in fact, a designated state-sponsor of terrorism); the innocent nature of the process whereby Muslim chaplains have been selected for the armed forces; the honored status of women in the Muslim world; and efforts to promote Islamic causes and candidates in Republican circles.

    Whenever possible, I tried to interject or make presentations to counter what I considered to be an ill-concealed and ominous influence operation. On one occasion, which occurred a few weeks after 9/11, I made an intervention to decry the fact that Alamoudi’s American Muslim Council was among the groups invited to the White House. I observed that on the same day its representatives were meeting with the President and his senior subordinates to talk about how Muslims could help with the war on terror, the AMC’s website featured a box headlined “Know Your Rights.” A click on the proferred hyperlink took you to a joint statement urging Muslims not to talk to the FBI. The statement was issued in the name of an organization of which the AMC was a member: the National Coalition to Protect Political Freedom (NCPPF) – a virtual legal aid office for terrorists.  At the time, a South Florida University professor named Sami al-Arian was the NCPPF’s president. As will be discussed below, he was also Secretary of the worldwide governing council of a terrorist organization called Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ), responsible for 99 suicide-bombing victims.

    I suggested to the Wednesday Group that the White House would surely have been astonished to discover that it was dignifying so-called Muslim leaders who were urging their co-religionists not to cooperate with law enforcement. I also pointedly observed – without mentioning names – that those responsible for facilitating the President’s Muslim outreach, who profess to support him and wish him success, should take pains to avoid including such groups in the future. I circulated a column I had written making similar points and that had been published the day before in the Washington Times.19

    No sooner had I finished speaking than Norquist left his seat to consult with Saffuri’s deputy and successor as director of the Islamic Institute, Abdulwahab Alkebsi (another former Deputy Director of Alamoudi’s AMC).20 After the consultation, Norquist came over to me and whispered that he had checked and that there was no such box on the AMC website. I, in turn, consulted with one of my colleagues, who produced a copy of the webpage in question and sequential images as it was removed from the site in the wake of my column’s publication. (This was not an isolated phenomenon; in fact, in the post-9/11 period, webmasters for a number of pro-Islamist organizations evidently were directed to sanitize their internet sites.)

    I reported this to Grover and showed him the original item. Shortly thereafter, I had to leave the meeting. Only later did I discover that he had taken advantage of my absence to disinform the group by announcing that what I had told them about the AMC website was wrong and that it featured no such encouragement to obstruct justice.

     

    Penetrating The Bush Campaign

    In 2000, thanks to Grover Norquist’s influence with the White House political operation, Khaled Saffuri was named the George W. Bush presidential campaign’s National Advisor on Arab and Muslim Affairs.21Holding out the promise of votes and donations in key battleground states with significant Muslim populations (notably, Michigan, Florida and New Jersey), Saffuri and Norquist were able to persuade the Bush campaign’s chief strategist, Karl Rove, essentially to contract-out to them responsibility for identifying the groups and individuals upon whom the Governor should rely to elicit such support. Insight Magazine reported in February 2001:

    [In September 2000], on [Karl Rove’s] way to the airport to catch his flight back to Texas, Khaled Saffuri, executive director of the Islamic Institute, joined Rove in his car.  Saffuri explained to him that the vote of the Arab-American community, which includes both Muslims and Christians, still was up for grabs. The community is prosperous and could be the source of considerable campaign contributions. If Bush would mention in public just a few of the issues that concern Arab-Americans, Saffuri told Rove, he would win their hearts, their minds and their support.22

    While the thrust of this report sounds right, the evidence suggests Saffuri’s car ride with Rove was by no means the first time such a proposition had been discussed with the Bush campaign. Indeed, the lure of such political dividends induced Governor Bush to hold a meeting in his mansion in Austin on May 1, 2000, not only with Alamoudi and Saffuri, but with other, immoderate Muslims, as well. As the National Journal reported:

    It was the summer of 2000, and for George W. Bush, the meeting held the promise of an unusual but important endorsement for his presidential bid. Conservative activist Grover Norquist had persuaded the Republican nominee to sit down with leaders of the Muslim American Political Coordinating Committee, a confederation of four Muslim community groups.23

    In addition to Alamoudi’s American Muslim Council, the group included the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR). CAIR’s executive director, Nihad Awad is another self-professed Hamas-supporter and, as will be discussed further below, its radical agenda and ties have recently been the focus of sharp, bipartisan criticism in Sen. Kyl’s Judiciary subcommittee.

    Saffuri had also arranged for the Bush campaign to enlist Sami al-Arian, a well-known Florida-based activist – despite the fact that the professor made little secret of his radical Islamist sympathies – to help engender Muslim support in his state.24A photograph of Mr. Bush taken with al-Arian in March 2000 subsequently received considerable attention after the professor was arrested last February on 40 terrorism-related counts. Of particular concern are those alleging his functional direction over the past 19 years of Palestinian Islamic Jihad, one of the most murderous terrorist organizations in the Middle East.25

     

    Obstructing Justice

    Al-Arian’s arrest was made possible by the USA-PATRIOT Act. With this legislation’s enactment after 9/11, it became possible for the first time in decades, for U.S. law enforcement and intelligence agencies to share sensitive information – such as the voluminous wiretaps of Sami al-Arian coordinating Palestinian Islamic Jihad operations from his professor’s office in Tampa.

    Not surprisingly, the Islamist front recognizes the threat this and other provisions of the PATRIOT Act represent to their operations in America. They are determined to rescind it and, if possible, remove its principal architect and most effective defender, Attorney General John Ashcroft.  Accordingly, they have become an integral part of the left-wing coalition, which includes the ACLU, the pro-Castro National Lawyers Guild and many Islamic “solidarity” groups, in waging a national campaign against the PATRIOT Act.  It seems hardly coincidental that the preeminent conservative figure to join the campaign and lead the recruitment of other conservatives is Grover Norquist.

    In fact, Norquist was also a prime-mover behind efforts to secure one of the Islamists’ top pre-9/11 agenda items: the abolition of a section of the 1996 Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act that permits authorities to use what critics call “secret evidence.”  This is a rarely employed practice whereby prosecutors can withhold classified information from foreign suspects.  To do so, however, the authorities must have reason to believe the disclosure of such information could compromise – and, thereby, eliminate – the sensitive intelligence “sources and methods” by which it was obtained.

    As it happens, one reason why banning secret evidence was an Islamist priority was that  undisclosed classified information linking Sami al-Arian’s brother-in-law, Mazen al-Najjar, to terrorist activities was used to detain the latter from 1997 to 2000. Ultimately, that same information was used to deport him.

    Thus, secret evidence was a personal priority for one of the Bush campaign’s Muslim-outreach operatives – and corrective action became a price of his and other Islamists’ support. In the second presidential debate with Al Gore, Governor Bush responded to the demand that, as Saffuri put it, he “mention in public just a few of the issues that concern Arab-Americans.” The Republican candidate formally pledged that, if elected, he would prohibit the use of secret evidence.26

    In recognition of this stunning exercise in political influence and his instrumental role in achieving it, Grover Norquist was an honoree at an event held by Sami Al-Arian’s National  Coalition to Protect Political Freedom in July 2001, two months before 9/11. The award was for being a “champion of the abolishment movement against secret evidence.” Such recognition was certainly deserved. But for the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon that followed, Norquist’s efforts would by now almost certainly have denied law enforcement this important anti-terrorism tool.

    Ironically, pro-Islamist groups had been scheduled to meet with President Bush on the morning of September 11 to hear what he planned to do to deliver on his secret evidence campaign pledge.27 But that day, the executive mansion complex was shut down, for fear that a fourth hijacked aircraft was headed its way. I watched bemused as Grover Norquist and the White House official responsible for Muslim outreach, Suhail Khan, escorted the displaced Islamists into the conference room we share. (Al-Arian had arranged to participate in the presidential meeting via phone. According to his website, his teaching schedule at the University of South Florida would not allow him to be there in person.)28

     

    Penetrating the White House

    Suhail Khan was one of at least three Muslim outreach gatekeepers at the White House with whom Norquist has been associated over the years. I became aware of the intensity of the attachment when Norquist verbally assaulted me one day in the hallway outside our offices with the accusation that I had been calling Khan a terrorist. I assured him that I had done no such thing. Evidently, somebody else, though, had stumbled onto the fact that Khan’s late father, Mahboob Khan, was a prominent figure in the Islamist enterprise in America. It turns out that, among other things, he was the founder of a large Wahhabi center, mosque and school in Orange County, California.29

    The New York Times revealed on October 23, 2001, that, in that capacity, Khan Sr. had hosted Ayman al-Zawahiri, reportedly Osama bin Laden’s right-hand-man in the al-Qaeda organization – not once, but twice in the 1990s.30 The first time, Zawahiri came under his own name, the second time he used an alias.  In the course of his trips, the terrorist chief reportedly not only raised funds for al-Qaeda’s operations at Khan’s mosque but also purchased satellite communications equipment while in the United States.31

    After Khan’s family ties to terror became a focus of press attention, Suhail left the White House staff to go to work at the Department of Transportation. Grover Norquist closed a Wednesday Group meeting by tearfully apologizing to Suhail Khan for the injury caused him by “racists and bigots” and, by example, encouraging the assembled company to join him in a standing ovation to Khan. Most hadn’t a clue what he was talking about but went along. Mindful that Norquist had me in mind, I sat it out.

    If White House security procedures had worked across the board as they were supposed to, it seems unlikely that President Bush and his senior subordinates would ever have met with some of those sponsored by Norquist and Saffuri. Sami al-Arian and Abdurahman Alamoudi, for example, would probably never have gotten inside the White House compound.

    What happened at the Wednesday Group meeting after Khan’s move to Transportation was unfortunately not an isolated incident, but part of an already established pattern. In July 2001, the Secret Service evicted Sami al-Arian’s son, Abdullah, from a meeting in the White House. The President had affably dubbed Abdullah “Big Dude” after first meeting him and his family on the campaign trail in Florida in March 2000.32  Evidently, the Service acted on the basis of the law enforcement community’s longstanding suspicion of the father’s ties to international terror.

    Norquist’s friends immediately raised a ruckus. Other participants in the meeting walked out in solidarity. It became a cause celebre, trumpeted as an egregious example of the racial profiling about which the Islamists and their leftwing allies incessantly complained. In short order, the Deputy Director of the Secret Service was obliged to issue a written apology to “Big Dude” al-Arian. And the President himself personally called the evictee’s mother to express regret and to assure her that no such thing would be allowed to happen again.

     

    Access to the White House

    Notice had been served on the Secret Service and other security-vetters:  Their job was to provide for the President’s physical security – the threat of would-be assassins – not to protect him from the political embarrassment (or worse) that might result from meetings with terrorist-apologists, or possibly terrorists themselves. If unarmed Islamists were able to secure access to Mr. Bush and his subordinates (e.g., the Secretaries of the Treasury, State and Energy, the Attorney General, the directors of Homeland Security and the FBI), law enforcement and intelligence professionals got the message that they were not to interfere.

    Consequently, over the years, and particularly as the Bush Administration’s Muslim outreach effort ramped up in the aftermath of 9/11, Grover Norquist was able to gain extraordinarily high-level access for a number of troubling individuals and groups. An undated White House memo, evidently prepared by Suhail Khan in early 2001 and intended to coordinate Muslim and Arab-American public liaison events, shows that Norquist’s Islamic Institute was instrumental in establishing Islamist connections with the Bush administration. The Islamic Institute provided the White House with a list of Muslim invitees, with the name, date of birth and Social Security number of each. As the founder of the Islamic Institute, Grover Norquist tops the list.33

    A leading Arab-American pollster, John Zogby, told The New Republic, “[Grover]’s played the role of interlocutor. With all respect, many of the leaders are immigrants and don’t have years and years of experience. Grover has filled that void.” He went on to say that “absolutely, [Grover is] central to the White House outreach.”34

    Among the dubious characters included in this outreach – in addition  to al-Arian, Alamoudi and his deputy, Saffuri – were the following:

     

    Nihad Awad, executive director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) 

    Awad was among those first introduced by Norquist and Saffuri to Bush during the presidential campaign and his access continued after September 11th. In fact, the front page of the Washington Post featured a photograph of Nihad Awad and Khaled Saffuri flanking Mr. Bush as he toured the Washington Islamic Center.

    This public relations coup was an early indication of the strategy Norquist’s Islamist friends would follow in the wake of the hijackings:  Exploit the President’s laudable – and strategically sensible – desire to show that neither he nor the American people would hold all Muslims responsible for the murderous actions of the few. This would be done by proposing that President Bush (or his surrogates) attend events in Washington, Detroit, and other cities with Muslim populations, sponsor meetings, host White House iftar dinners to break the Ramadan fast, and so forth. Evidently Norquist, Saffuri and the gatekeepers they had placed inside the White House would work to ensure that representatives of the pro-Islamist organizations would be invited as the exclusive representatives of the Muslim-American and Arab-American communities and – just as important – that non-Islamist Muslims would be excluded.

    In this fashion, improbable though it may seem, the Wahhabi agenda of access, influence and legitimacy could actually be advanced in the post-9/11 environment. That people like Nihad Awad could pull this off is a tribute to the skill of the influence operators. After all, he had personally declared that he was a “supporter of the Hamas movement,”35 and his organization raised money for terrorist fronts (including the Holy Land Foundation, the Benevolence International Foundation, and the Global Relief Fund).36 One month after these organizations were raided by the U.S. government, CAIR spokesman Ibrahim Hooper lamented: “The Holy Land Foundation, Global Relief International, Benevolent International Foundation [sic] — these were our major relief organizations, and they’ve all been shut down.”37

    Even more astounding is the fact that Awad and CAIR have continually attacked the President and his Administration. They have even sued Attorney General Ashcroft and FBI Director Robert Moeller.38 They have strenuously objected to Bush policies on Homeland Security and the War on Terror.  And they have played a leading role in national campaigns aimed at undoing the PATRIOT Act and preventing the liberation of Iraq.

    As noted above, CAIR’s pro-Islamist sympathies and conduct have been the object of bipartisan criticism from the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Terrorism. In the course of the subcommittee’s hearing, even one of the organization’s go-to guys on Capitol Hill, Sen. Dick Durbin, D-IL, observed that the committee should hear from more “mainstream” Muslim groups in the future, since CAIR and its rhetoric were too “extreme” and its associations “suspect.”39

    Such an assessment has certainly been reinforced by the fact that since September 11, 2001, three CAIR figures have been arrested by U.S. federal authorities on terrorist-related charges:

    • In December 2002, Ghassan Elashi, a founding board member of CAIR-Texas, was arrested on a number of charges including export violations, making false statements on export declarations, dealing in the property of designated terrorist, conspiracy and money laundering.40
    • Bassem K. Khafagi, the Community Affairs Director for CAIR at the time of his January 2003 arrest,41 pled guilty on September 10, 2003, to charges of bank and visa fraud.42 He remains under investigation for his alleged role in the terrorist funding group Islamic Assembly of North America and is expected to be deported to Egypt.43
    • Randall Todd “Ismail” Royer, former communications specialist and civil rights coordinator at CAIR, was arrested in late June 2003 for his alleged involvement in the Pakistani terrorist organization, Lashkar-e-Taiba.44 The Justice Department upgraded Royer’s charges in September 2003 to include providing material support to al-Qaeda and the Taliban.45 At the time of his arrest, Royer was spokesman for the National Liberty Fund, a legal defense fund for the PIJ leader Sami al-Arian.

     

    Shaykh Hamza Yusuf

    According to the Washington Post, on September 9, 2001, at a rally to support cop-killer and former American Muslim Council executive Jamil Al-Amin (a.k.a. H. Rap Brown), Shaykh Yusuf declared, “This country is facing a terrible fate…This country stands condemned. It stands condemned because of what it did – and lest people forget Europe suffered two world wars after conquering the Muslim lands.”46 At this same rally, the Post reported, Shaykh Yusuf lamented that Sheikh Omar Abdel Rahman, the blind Egyptian cleric convicted of plotting to bomb Manhattan’s Lincoln and Holland tunnels, was “unjustly tried, was condemned against any standards of justice in any legal system.”47

    The FBI went to interview Yusuf to determine whether this inflammatory statement was indicative of prior knowledge of the attacks that occurred two days later. When agents knocked on the door of his San Francisco home on September 20th, they were incredulous to hear his wife explain that Yusuf was absent because he was meeting with the President.48 Upon checking, the FBI discovered that he had indeed been included in an ecumenical meeting in the Oval Office with then-Cardinal Law and a Jewish rabbi – a meeting that was, according to the Wall Street Journal, arranged by Grover Norquist’s White House surrogate, Suhail Khan.49

    The website of Yusuf’s organization promised to send a percentage of all sales of tapes of his pro-Islamist sermons to Benevolence International Foundation, even after its director was indicted for funneling money to bin Laden and al-Qaeda.50

     

    Muzammil Siddiqi

    In September 2001, when Siddiqi met twice with Mr. Bush, he was president of the Board of the Islamic Society of North America (ISNA). This Saudi-funded organization is, as will be discussed below, used by the Muslim World League (MWL)to finance and exercise control over most of the mosques in the United States.  Siddiqi’s ties to Saudi Arabia are even deeper.

    Before heading up ISNA, Siddiqi was previously a top figure in the MWL itself, whose American headquarters was raided in March 2002 on suspicion of ties to terrorism during the U.S. government’s Operation Green Quest.51 He has also served as the Chairman of the Religious Affairs Committee of the Muslim Students Association (see below) in the United States and Canada. In addition, he is a member of the Fiqh Council, another raided entity.52

    Despite these troubling connections to Islamist causes and organizations, someone got the White House to call on Siddiqi to represent the Muslim faith in the inter-religious prayer service for the 9/11 victims that was held at the National Cathedral on September 14, 2001. As syndicated columnist Charles Krauthammer noted afterwards, Siddiqi could not bring himself to condemn terrorism in remarks delivered to a worldwide audience, as well as four Presidents and hundreds of dignitaries.53

    Even after a performance that was, to say the least, disappointing, Siddiqi was allowed to be photographed with President Bush in the Roosevelt Room of the White House and to present him with a Koran.

    Agha Saeed, founder and president of the American Muslim Alliance

    Saeed was invited to participate in the Bush campaign’s Muslim outreach meeting engineered by Norquist and Saffuri at the Governor’s mansion in 2000. He also has been given access to the White House since the 9/11 attacks.54

    As noted previously, Saeed created an umbrella group, the American Muslim Political Coordination Council (AMPCC), to unite other members of the “Wahhabi Lobby,” including the American Muslim Council (AMC), the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), and the Muslim Public Affairs Council (MPAC).

    Interestingly, in June 2000, Hillary Clinton felt constrained to return $50,000 in AMA checks for her Senatorial campaign because Saeed had spoken in favor of Palestinians’ right to “resist by armed force.” He had also allegedly served as head of the Pakistani Communist Party.55

    AMA’s Annual Dinner in April 2002 honored the alleged Palestinian Islamic Jihad terrorist leader Sami al-Arian, now in federal prison awaiting trial, as a “civil rights” leader, sponsoring a civil rights award in his name.56

     

    Eric Vickers, then-director of Alamoudi’s American Muslim Council.57 

    Vickers is a black radical who converted to the Muslim faith. While many black Muslims follow a divergent strain of Islam, Vickers found a home in the Wahhabi-connected AMC and served as its executive director from June 2002 until February 2003, after he left the American Muslim Alliance. Vickers was also an incorporator and board member of the Islamic African Relief Agency (IARA). The organization had two grants worth $4.2 million revoked by the U.S. Agency for International Development at the State Department’s request because of the group’s ties with terrorist-sponsoring Sudan (including the alleged provision by IARA officials of intelligence equipment to al-Qaeda).58

    Like Nihad Awad, Vickers was a particularly outspoken critic of the Bush Administration and its policies in the War on Terror. He participated prominently in antiwar rallies, was a visible presence in campaigns against the PATRIOT Act and repeatedly assailed President Bush and Attorney General John Ashcroft, among others. Vickers made no secret either of his sympathy for Islamists and their organizations. In June 2002, I debated Vickers in an MSNBC “Hardball” program concerning the AMC’s pro-Islamist record – and the inappropriateness of FBI Director Robert Mueller addressing its annual convention that year. In the course of the show, Vickers refused to renounce or otherwise to disassociate himself or his organization from Hamas, Hezbollah or even al-Qaeda. When pressed, the most he would say is that al-Qaeda is a “resistance movement.”59

     

    Mahdi Bray, executive director, Muslim American Society Freedom Foundation.60

    Bray, a former member of the radical Students for a Democratic Society (SDS), is a leader of several pro-Islamist organizations in this country. His role typically is that of a coordinator for political activism. By mid-October of this year, Bray had overseen the training of nearly 1,000 Islamic activists.61  Bray also served as the political director of another pro-Islamist group based in Los Angeles, the Muslim Public Affairs Council, and as a founding board member of the National Coalition to Protect Political Freedom.62 He hosts a radio talk-show sponsored largely by – and reflecting the views of – Wahhabi Saudi Arabia.63 

    In March 2003, Bray testified at the bond hearing of indicted Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ) leader Sami al-Arian, claiming responsibility for “mentoring [al-Arian] about the civil rights movement.”64 He also claimed that he and al-Arian were “kindred spirits” on the issue of Muslim political activism.65

    Through public statements and demonstrations, Bray has vehemently protested Bush administration policies in the War on Terror, claiming that they are injurious to innocent American Muslims. For instance, in May 2003, Bray said:

    The recent barbaric and illegal invasion of Iraq has emboldened the Bush administration in its actions to target the Muslim and immigrant community and to violate the rights of Muslims, immigrants, and all Americans with impunity. We must continue to forge a coalition of conscience to resist the Bush administration’s belligerent and destructive policy which is the greatest impediment to global peace today.66

     

    The Tulbah Controversy

    By 2002, the White House job of coordinating Muslim outreach had apparently fallen to Ali Tulbah, a Muslim-American Norquist protégé who formerly headed the Washington office of the Young Republicans. Tulbah’s official position was that of an Associate Director in the White House Office of Cabinet Affairs. In that capacity, he was responsible for liaison with three of the most sensitive federal agencies in the War on Terror: the Departments of State, Defense and Justice.67

    An American Muslim Council press release issued on January 17, 2003, explicitly thanked Tulbah for getting representatives of the AMC – and other Islamist organizations, such as CAIR – into the White House to meet with senior Administration officials. As was true of many other such meetings, the Islamist groups used the occasion to mau-mau their interlocutors about perceived government insensitivity to Muslim concerns and to demand that they be afforded opportunities to promote corrective action.

    The AMC’s January 2003 press release exemplified one further use to which the Islamists’ sympathizers usually put such official meetings: They were exploited to validate otherwise debatable claims to be leaders of America’s Muslim and Arab populations – as noted above, a key objective of Wahhabis bent on domination of the faithful.

    A few days after receiving this press release, I referred to it in the course of a debate at this year’s Conservative Political Action Conference. My main point was that the wartime task of striking the right balance between privacy rights on the one hand and national security on the other was made more complicated by the presence in our country of Islamist organizations adept at exploiting our civil liberties and institutions. In particular, I warned that some such groups – notably Alamoudi’s American Muslim Council and CAIR – were conducting a worrisome political influence operation against the Bush Administration.

    Noting that the two groups had specifically thanked Ali Tulbah for affording them their most recent access to the White House, I observed that his perspective on these matters might have been influenced by an unsettling connection: His father had served as treasurer of a large Wahhabi complex in Texas, the Islamic Society of Greater Houston, which is made up of 29 mosques and related schools.68 Perhaps, I surmised, Tulbah was accustomed to being in the company of pro-Islamists at home.

    The following Wednesday, Norquist arrived in my office brandishing an open letter citing my remarks at CPAC as evidence of “racism and bigotry” that have “no place in the conservative movement.”69 I responded with a lengthy letter of my own,70 describing my concerns about the role Norquist and his Islamic Institute had been playing in enabling and facilitating Islamist political influence activities aimed at the Bush Administration and other Republicans. I urged him to cease and desist, lest he do real damage, not only to the President and the Party, but to the nation’s security.

    In the days and months that followed, Grover Norquist followed a strategy more typical of the hard-Left than of a fellow conservative. He made repeated ad hominem attacks on Fox TV and elsewhere against me and anyone else (including noted experts like Daniel Pipes and Steve Emerson) who dared to warn about the dangers of Islamism. More often than not, he portrayed such warnings as bigoted, racist denunciations of all Muslims.

    This charge is made all the more untenable since I assiduously underscore in every discussion of the Islamist threat the distinction between the intolerant, jihadist, Islamo-fascism they promote and the views of peaceable, law-abiding Muslims. My Center and I espouse making common cause with tolerant Muslims against the Islamists who brand them as “apostates” and threaten them as every bit as much as they do us “infidels.”

    The Wahhabi Footprint in America

    My beef has never been a personal one with Grover Norquist, as should be obvious from the data assembled in this article which comes from many sources, all of them reputable and unchallenged on the facts. Rather, my concern is with a far larger, Islamist enterprise in this country that has achieved, particularly over the past ten years, considerable success in creating the makings of a Saudi-funded Fifth Column in America. This point has been recognized by a number of the most thoughtful and influential conservative commentators of our day, including Cal Thomas, Mona Charen, Michelle Malkin, Kenneth Timmerman; David Frum and David Keene.71

    In addition to their penetration of the military chaplain corps and the military ranks, the Wahhabi-connected clergy has been able to penetrate the penal system. Federal and state prisons have been the focus of intensive recruitment by the Islamists. Abdurahman Alamoudi’s American Muslim Council spun off an organization called the National Islamic Prison Foundation precisely for the purpose of ministering to incarcerated Muslims and expanding their ranks. As mentioned above, its president, Mahdi Bray, has been among those who have in the past been included in Bush Administration outreach efforts engineered by Khaled Saffuri and Grover Norquist.

    While estimates vary widely, it seems safe to say that, over the years, large numbers of felons particularly among the black and Hispanic prison populations have been converted to Wahhabi Islam by these imams. At the very least, this has permitted the identification of individuals who, upon their release from prison, could become foot-soldiers for anti-American jihad.  It would appear, for example, that alleged dirty-bomber Jose Padilla may have been recruited in such a manner.72 

    On another front, the radical Muslim Students Association has established a vast presence on American college and university campuses. According to the group’s website, there are today hundreds of MSA chapters in the United States.73 A number of the pro-Islamist leaders Norquist and Saffuri have helped gain access to the Bush Administration cut their political eye-teeth as prominent figures in the MSA. As with other enterprises tied to Wahhabi Islam, the Muslim Students Association is in the business of recruiting and indoctrinating its target audience – young Americans – to join a radical and violent sect. While the most visible activities sponsored by MSA chapters are anti-Bush, anti-war and anti-Israel (e.g., divestment) campaigns, and the suppression of opposing views on campus, there is reason to believe that – on the margins – the organization is encouraging more active involvement in jihad. Not surprisingly, a number of MSA figures have ended up arrested on terrorist related charges or high-profile targets in the War on Terror, including Wael Jelaidan, the co-founder of al-Qaeda.

    The Islamists’ attempt to dominate the Muslim faith and community is even more evident in the nation’s mosques. By some estimates, as many as 70 percent of them are now controlled by Wahhabis, thanks to Saudi-associated organizations holding their mortgages. This is done through the Islamic Society of North America, a spin-off of the Muslim Students Association, and its financial arm, the North American Islamic Trust (NAIT).  Yet, as we have seen, ISNA’s then-head, Muzammil Siddiqi, was the one of the Islamists most prominently featured in the Bush Administration’s post-9/11 Muslim outreach efforts.

    Not surprisingly, along with the financing comes control over many, if not all, aspects of the mosque. For example, Saudi/Wahhabi authorities are able to influence the selection of imams, their training, the Korans and other materials they disseminate, their sermons and curricula for madrassas (mosque schools).

     

    No Longer Welcome?

    Until recently, ISNA representatives were among the pro-Islamists included in many of the Bush Administration meetings organized or facilitated by Norquist and Saffuri. When some of these self-styled “Muslim community groups” were finally excluded from the White House iftar dinner last month (presumably due to the pall cast by the aforementioned arrests of some of their associates), ISNA joined CAIR, the Muslim Public Affairs Council, the Muslim Students Association and several other Wahhabi-backed groups in denouncing such events as devoid of substance, ones in which Muslims were said to be nothing more than props shamelessly used by the Bush Administration.74 

    While the exclusion at last of such groups from meetings with the President is heartening, Yahya Basha, the AMC’s president, and Saffuri, who now serves as the chairman of the Islamic Institute, were still included as attendees at this year’s Iftar dinner.75 The FBI, moreover, has yet to take similar corrective action; its Director and supervisory agents continue to meet with representatives of the AMC, CAIR and ISNA, even though associates of each have been the object of law enforcement action.76  As noted above, the Bureau also uses such groups to provide “sensitivity” instruction at its agent training facility at Quantico, Virginia. In addition, it has been relying on these sorts of pro-Islamist organizations for “community outreach,” as well – much to the dismay of several case agents, field operatives and U.S. Attorneys’ offices.

    Granting pro-Islamists access to senior U.S. officials and government-sponsored activities has one other down-side:  Just as they use this sort of access to demonstrate to other Muslims their power and influence, the Islamists’ sympathizers exploit their relationships with federal agencies as protection. For example, when a hearing was held to consider whether alleged terrorist operative Sami al-Arian was a flight risk if granted bail, multiple witnesses from the above-mentioned groups pointed to the work they were doing for the FBI, the U.S. military chaplain corps, the White House, in the prison system, etc., to establish their bona fides. Fortunately, notwithstanding such representations, al-Arian remains in custody after being denied bail.77

     

    Norquist’s Continuing Role and the Problem It Presents

    In this larger context Grover Norquist’s highly publicized assault on Attorney General John Ashcroft78 and the USA PATRIOT Act is extremely troubling. The Act’s very effectiveness has certainly made it the target of Norquist’s Islamist allies, some of whom – as we have seen – are in jail today or under active investigation thanks to its provisions. Grover Norquist’s willingness to associate with, and front for, groups like the National Coalition to Protect Political Freedom in a joint effort to weaken and if possible repeal the PATRIOT Act, has made him the darling not only of the pro-Islamists but of the radical Left, with whom they make common cause.  He was, for example, the featured speaker (one of only two with conservative coloration) at a day-long NCPPF event held outside Washington last month.79 

    In a scathing report of the proceedings,80 National Review‘s Byron York described how Norquist joined actor Alec Baldwin and Democratic uber-agitator Ralph Neas.81 According to York, when Neas indulged in a pointed, and factually incorrect, attack on the PATRIOT Act – charging that it authorizes activities not subject to constitutionally necessary judicial oversight – Norquist associated himself completely by saying simply, “Ditto.”  The immoderate moderator, Alec Baldwin, reportedly then turned to the crowd and enthused, “Can’t you feel the love?”

    Grover Norquist’s efforts to legitimate and open important doors for pro-Islamist organizations in this country must be brought to an immediate halt. They have already created political vulnerabilities for this President and his Administration. But for the influence exerted by Norquist and his friends, President Bush might long ago have reached out to peaceable, tolerant, pro-American Muslims. In particular, the past 26 months could have been spent building up Muslim spokesmen and groups who share this President’s vision of a world in which democracy, liberty and freedom of religion prosper – and who could help cultivate those values in Muslim lands and communities overseas.

    Instead, the President has been put in the position of repeatedly embracing individuals and organizations who are part of the problem. They have capitalized on their preferred treatment to exclude non-Islamist Muslims from meetings with the Bush team, to secure government contracts and favors, to raise funds and to dominate other Muslim- and Arab-Americans. We have thus been denied allies and strengthened our foes in what the President calls “the Battle of Ideas.”

    Grover Norquist has been confronted many times over his activities in behalf of the radical Islamic front in this country. He has responded by denouncing his critics as racists and ducking the issue. Even now and despite all the foregoing evidence to the contrary, Norquist insists that he has not helped or in any other way facilitated the Islamists political influence operations. Indeed, he denies that there is such a subset of the Muslim population. And, to this day, he demeans any who challenge him on that score as “racists and bigots.” It is evident that Grover Norquist will not voluntarily do the right thing by the President, the movement or the country, which would mean terminating his ties to a network that has shown itself to be dangerous, and by ceasing to work on behalf of the radical Islamic front. Because he will not do this himself, conservatives must act to see that he is politically isolated so that the damage he can do is minimized.

     

    Frank J. Gaffney Jr. formerly held senior positions in the Reagan Defense Department.  Since 1988, he has been the President of the Center for Security Policy in Washington. Since 9/11, Gaffney has been one of the most prominent and consistent defenders of the President’s War on Terror – at home and abroad.

     

     

    NOTES.

    Franklin Foer, “Fevered Pitch; Grover Norquist’s strange alliance with radical Islam,” The New Republic, 12 November 2001; and J. Michael Waller, “D.C. Islamist Agent Carried Libyan Cash,” Insight Magazine, 10 November  2003.

    2  According to the U.S. Government’s “Affidavit in Support of Criminal Complaint,” USA v. Abdurahman Alamoudi, Brett Gentrup, a Special Agent with the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), acknowledged reviewing “the transcript of a video tape of Alamoudi speaking at a rally in Lafayette Park, Washington, D.C. on October 28, 2000.”  It was during this rally that Alamoudi proclaimed: “…we are all supporters of Hamas! Allah Akbar. I wish to add here I am also a supporter of Hezbollah.”  According to this same affidavit, Alamoudi also said in 1996 during the Annual Convention of the Islamic Association of Palestine that,”If we are outside this country we can say, ‘Oh, Allah destroy America.’  But once we are here, our mission in this country is to change it.” (See, http://news.findlaw.com/hdocs/docs/terrorism/usalamoudi93003cmp.pdf).

    3  Testimony of Dr. J. Michael Waller, Annenberg Professor of International Communication at the Institute of World Politics, before the Senate Judiciary Committee’s Terrorism Subcommittee on October 14, 2003.   (http://judiciary.senate.gov/testimony.cfm?id=960&wit_id=2719).

    4  ibid.

    “Interview with Dr. Bilal Philips, a Jamaican-born Canadian, by Mahmud Khalil in Dubai,” Global News Wire ( FBIS/NTIS, U.S. Dept of Commerce).  The original source was the London-based Arabic publication Al-Majallah, a Saudi-owned weekly.  For additional details, see Waller testimony, op.cit.

    6  “Pilgrims from U.S. Military leave for Saudi Arabia,” Saudi Arabian Information Resource,  March 1, 2001, http://www.saudinf.com/main/y2187.htm.

    7  According to an article entitled “Army Chaplain in Detention Sought to Teach About Islam,” published in the September 24, 2003 editions of the New York Times, “In 1993… the Saudi Air Force and the Saudi royal family paid for [Yee] and other Americans to make the pilgrimage to Mecca that is known as the hajj, a trip that every Muslim is required to make at least once.”

    Glenn Simpson, “Suspect Lessons: A Muslim School Used by Military Has Troubling Ties,” Wall Street Journal, December 3, 2003.

    9  The New York Sun reported on October 20, 2003, that Saffuri distanced himself and the Islamic Institute from Alamoudi on the margins of the Arab American Institute “Leadership Conference” in Dearborn last month (Ira Stoll, “Anger over Israel Erupts at Arab American Parley”): “[When] asked about a $10,000 donation from Mr. Alamoudi to the Institute, Mr. Saffuri said, ‘We gave the money back about two yeas ago.'”

    10  Janus-Merritt’s December 17, 2001 lobbying disclosure form can be accessed at www.sopr.senate.gov.  The February 17, 2001 edition of National Journal described Janus-Merritt as a “government relations firm David Safavian founded with Grover Norquist, who is head of Americans for Tax Reform.

    11  “Affidavit in support of Criminal Complaint,” op.cit.

    12  IRS Form 990s filed by foundations supporting charitable organizations can be found on www.guidestar.com.

    13  These sentiments are, for example, evident in materials produced by the Saudi Arabian government’s Islamic Affairs Department (IAD), some of which appear on the official website of its embassy in the United States.  A newly released special report by the respected Middle East Media Research Institute (MEMRI) http://www.memri.org/bin/opener_latest.cgi?ID=SR2303 notes that, “Officials of the Saudi government working at the IAD in Washington, D.C. and its worldwide offices have been mentioned in media reports in 2002 and 2003 for suspected connections with terrorist activities.  During the past week, it was reported that the FBI has subpoenaed records and documents of Saudi government bank accounts in the U.S., including accounts from the IAD.”

    The MEMRI report goes on to make the following points:

    The IAD explains the concepts of Jihad and martyrdom in Islam.  Excerpts from the Qur’an and Hadiths are provided as evidence to foster these concepts in the contemporary Muslim world.  “The Muslims are Required to Raise the Banner of Jihad in Order to Make the Word of Allah Supreme in this World.”

    The IAD explains that any system opposed to Islam must be fought by Jihad:  “The Muslims are required to raise the banner of Jihad in order to make the Word of Allah supreme in this world, to remove all forms of injustice and oppression, and to defend the Muslims.  If Muslims do not take up the sword, the evil tyrants of this earth will be able to continue oppressing the weak and [the] helpless….”

    14 Douglas Farah, “Terror Probe Points to VA. Muslims; Local Network Provided Millions in Financing, Agency Charges,” Washington Post, 18 October 2003, A6.

    15  Note that according to Stoll, op.cit.: “Mr. Saffuri said that, while he had worked for Mr. Alamoudi at the American Muslim Council for a year-and-a-half before starting the Islamic Free Market Institute, he was ‘hardly in touch with him’ recently.” [Emphasis added.]

    16  According to the American Task Force for Bosnia, Inc.’s 1997 filing with the Internal Revenue Service (Form 990), Khaled Saffuri was the organization’s executive director.  For more on the Saudis’ Islamist operations in Bosnia, see David Kaplan, “The Saudi Connection: How Billions in Oil Money Spawned a Global Terror Network,” U.S. News and World Report, December 15, 2003 (http://www.usnews.com/usnews/issue/031215/usnews/15terror.htm)

    17  The Center for Security Policy obtained an affidavit from a former staffer for U.S. Representative Dana Rohrabacher (R-CA) in December 2001.  It described a conversation she had had with Khaled Saffuri in the Congressman’s offices in which he acknowledged “sponsor[ing] the child of a suicide bomber.”  Redacted excerpts of the affidavit appeared in Insight Magazine (http://www.insightmag.com/main.cfm?include=detail&storyid=246199).  Shortly thereafter, Rep. Rohrabacher appeared at the Wednesday Group meeting to provide a personal endorsement for Saffuri.

    18  According to the affidavit mentioned in Footnote 15, Saffuri vehemently criticized President Bush for his action on the Holy Land Foundation, as well – an organization to which Saffuri said he had also contributed.

    19  Frank Gaffney Jr., “A Time to Choose,” Washington Times, 2 October 2001, p. A14.

    20  According to the Center for the Study of Islam & Democracy, Alkebsi “developed AMC’s Legislative Agenda, and AMC’s policy position on the Faith-based Initiative.” See, http://www.islam-democracy.org/alkebsi_bio.asp.

    21  Franklin Foer, “Fevered Pitch; Grover Norquist’s strange alliance with radical Islam,” The New Republic, 12 November 2001.

    22  Catherine Edwards, “Arab Americans Rise in Influence,” Insight Magazine, 19 February 2001.

    23  Shawn Zeller, “Tough Sell,” National Journal, 14 December 2002.

    24  Saffuri’s relationship with al-Arian continued long after the campaign ended.  My staff and I were witnesses when, on July 17, 2002, al-Arian spent two-and-one-half hours in the Americans for Tax Reform/Islamic Institute suite.  Al-Arian had evidently dropped by after participating in a National Press Club press conference with Abdurahman Alamoudi in which several Islamist groups announced that they were suing the President, Secretary of State Powell, Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon and others.

    As it happened, on my way to the men’s room that afternoon, I observed al-Arian standing in the elevator after leaving Norquist’s offices.  Moments later, I ran into Saffuri, who had seen al-Arian out then proceeded to the bathroom.  As we stood at adjacent urinals, I asked him whether that was Sami al-Arian I had just seen getting onto the elevator.  He responded by choking.  Not having gotten an intelligible answer, I asked again.  He then lied, saying, “I don’t think so.”  When subsequently queried about the al-Arian visit by a reporter, he acknowledged that it had occurred, then offered a different falsehood – claiming that the professor had merely stopped by to drop off some literature, an action that generally does not take two-and-a-half hours to perform.

    25  Federal Grand Jury Indictment, USA v. Sami al-Arian (http://www.usdoj.gov/usao/flm/pr/022003indict.pdf), February 20, 2000.

    26  On October 23, 2000, the American Muslim Political Coordinating Council Political Action Committee (AMPCC-PAC) issued a press release announcing its “endorsement of George W. Bush for president, citing his outreach to the Muslim community and his stand on the issue of secret evidence.”  It noted that the endorsement was made by the AMPCC-PAC chair, Dr. Agha Saeed, whose pro-Islamist sympathies are discussed below.

    27 “Healing the Nation: The Arab American Experience After September 11,” The Arab American Institute, http://www.aaiusa.org/PDF/healing_the_nation.pdf.

    28 Grace Agostin, “Sept. 11 hurt aliens’ rights,” USF’s The Oracle Newspaper, 9 September 2002, http://www.academicfreespeech.com/fea_oracle_0909.html.

    29 http://www.musalman.com/newstrack/biodata.html

    30 Susan Sachs and John Kifner, “A Nation Challenged: Bin Laden’s Lieutenant; Egyptian Raised Terror Funds in U.S. in 1990’s,” New York Times, 23 October 2001.

    31 ibid.

    32 Lynette Clemetson and Keith Naughton, “‘Big Dude’ Gets Profiled,” Newsweek, July 16, 2001, p. 24.

    33 J. Michael Waller, “Alamoudi and Those Bags of Libyan Cash,” Insight, October 23-November 10, 2003, p. 32.

    34 Franklin Foer, “Fevered Pitch; Grover Norquist’s strange alliance with radical Islam,” the New Republic, 12 November 2001.

    35 Nihad Awad speaking to a symposium at Barry University on the topic of “The Road to Peace: The Challenge of the Middle East” on March 22, 1994, as quoted in Stephen F. Hayes, “Uncle Sam’s Makeover; The State Department’s answer to Osama bin Laden is to ‘Redefine America,'” Weekly Standard,  June 3, 2002.

    36 The New York Daily News reported only weeks after the September 11th attacks that “…CAIR is very specific about how the public should respond to the attacks on America: Send money. It recommends contributing to three organizations — the Red Cross, the Holy Land Foundation and the Global Relief Foundation.” (Zev Chafets, “Beware the wolves among us,” Daily News, September 28, 2001.

    37 Alan Cooperman, “Crisis in Middle East Spurs U.S. Fundraisers; Pleas Include Help For Hospitals,” Washington Post, April 6, 2002.

    38 See CAIR press release of July 30, 2003 entitled “CAIR Joins First Legal Challenge to Patriot Act.”

    39 Hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee, Subcommittee on Terrorism, Technology and Homeland Security, “Terrorism Two Years After the 9/11 Attacks,” 10 September 2003.

    40 CAIR-Texas, Articles of Incorporation, September 15, 1998 obtained from the office of the Texas Secretary of State.  See also, “Senior Leader of Hamas and Texas Computer Company Indicted for Conspiracy to Violate U.S. Ban on Financial Dealings with Terrorists,”  U.S. Department of Justice, December 18, 2002, http://www.usdoj.gov/opa/pr/2002/December/02_crm_734.htm.

    41 Bill Morlin, “Egyptian with UI Ties Held in Probe,” Spokesman Review, March 14, 2003.

    42 “Former head of Islamic charity accused of terror links pleads guilty to bank, visa fraud,” Associated Press, September 10, 2003.

    43 “Former head of Islamic charity sentenced in fraud case,” Associated Press, November 13,  2003.

    44 See, Karen Branch-Brioso, “Area Man Found Path with Islam; He is Charged with Conspiring to Fight with Muslims Abroad,” St. Louis Post-Dispatch, June 29, 2003; Edward Jay Epstein, “U.S. at Junction of War, Faith,” San Francisco Chronicle, December 6, 2002; and “Jihad Suspect on Trial,” Washington Times, May 29, 2003.

    45 “Indictment Expands ‘VA Jihad’ Charges,” Washington Post, September 26, 2003.

    46 Hanna Rosin and John Mintz, “Muslim Leaders Struggle With Mixed Messages,” Washington Post, October 2, 2001.

    47 ibid.

    48 ibid.

    49 Jonathan Kaufman, “Islamerican: Meet Hamza Yusuf, ‘Rock Star’ of a Leader Among U.S. Muslims,” The Wall Street Journal, February 15, 2002.

    50 “Buy Shaykh Hamza Yusuf Tapes — and Help BIF!,” see: http://web.archive.org/web/19990502183338/www.benev  olence.org/hamza.html.

    51 “Guest CV: Dr. Muzammil H. Siddiqi,” IslamOnline.net, http://www.islamonline.net/livedialogue/english/Guestcv.asp?hGuestID=uY6w39.

    52 “Guest CV: Dr. Muzammil H. Siddiqi,” IslamOnline.net, http://www.islamonline.net/livedialogue/english/Guestcv.asp?hGuestID=uY6w39.

    53 Charles Krauthammer, “The Silent Imams,” Washington Post, November 23, 2001.

    54 Mary Rourke, “A Stronger Voice for Muslims ;Several American Muslim leaders in California are at the forefront of an emerging political movement,” Los Angeles Times, October 29, 2001.

    55 John Berlau, “Moran Can’t Keep His Tongue Tied,” Insight Magazine, April 28, 2003.

    56 “AMA Honors Community Leaders,” Pakistan Link, April 5, 2002, www.pakistanlink.com

    57 According to the affidavit in support of the criminal complaint, USA v. Abdurahman Alamoudi, Special Agent Brett Gentrup of the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has stated that “beyond 2000… Alamoudi remained in a leadership capacity with AMC,” even after his public statements of support for Hamas and Hezbollah obliged him to lower his profile at the AMC.

    58 Judith Miller, “U.S. Contends Muslim Charity is Tied to Hamas,” New York Times, August 25, 2000 p. A21.

    59 Segment entitled, “Should FBI Director Robert Mueller deliver the keynote address to the American Muslim Council tomorrow?” Hardball with Chris Matthews, MSNBC, June 27, 2002.

    60 “Guest CV: Mahdi Bray,” IslamOnline.net, http://www.islamonline.net/livedialogue/english/Guestcv.asp?hGuestID=jD6a1X.

    61 “MAS Freedom Near to Reaching Goal of 1,000 Trained Activists,” Freedom Foundation Press Room, October 16, 2003, http://masnet.org/pressroom_release.asp?id=560.

    62 See, http://www.ncppf.org/NCPPFstaffandboardpage.html.

    63 “Muslim Radio a Workout for 1st Amendment,” Washington Post, December 4, 2001.

    64 USA v. Sami Al-Arian, Transcript of Bond Hearing, Tampa, Florida, March 25, 2003.

    65 op.cit.

    66 MAS Press Release posted on International ANSWER’s website, May 13, 2003, http://www.iacenter.org/mas_2003.htm.

    67 Ali Tulbah left the White House Office of Cabinet Affairs last Spring to assume new duties in liberated Iraq.  Currently, he is responsible for coordinating international cooperation in the reconstruction of that country.

    68 “Banking on Faith; Created in Former Downtown Bank, New Mosque Serves as Worship and Learning Center,” Houston Chronicle, December 28, 2002.

    69 See, http://www.centerforsecuritypolicy.org/norquistletter.pdf.

    70 See, http://www.centerforsecuritypolicy.org/gaffneyletter.pdf.

    71 See, http://www.townhall.com/columnists/calthomas/ct20030225.shtmlhttp://www.townhall.com/columnists/monacharen/mc20030218.shtml; http://www.jewishworldreview.com/michelle/malkin102203.asp; Kenneth Timmerman, Preachers of Hate: Islam and the War on America (Crown Forum, October 2003); David Keene, “Muslim extremists denounce their critics as ‘racists,’ ‘bigots,'” The Hill, 19 February 2003; David Frum, “The strange case of Sami Al-Arian,” National Review Online, 21 February 2003.

    72 Waller testimony, op.cit.

    73 See, http://www.msa-national.org/.

    74 Julia Duin, “Muslims scold Bush over outreach,” Washington Times, October 29, 2003.

    75 Jim Lobe, “Muslims snub Bush’s Ramadan invitation,” Inter Press Service, 29 October 2003.

    76 Not surprisingly, others in the Bureau have followed Director Mueller’s lead.  For example, the FBI’s Civil Rights Division chief, Tom Reynolds, attended the AMC’s 3rd Leadership/Imam Conference in June 2003. According to an AMC press release at the time, Reynolds reportedly “choked back tears while talking about the internment of the Japanese-Americans during World War II.  He promised that it would never happen again. He stressed the need for cooperation from the Muslim community in fighting terrorism.”

    77 USA v. Sami Al-Arian, Transcript of Bond Hearing, op.cit.

    78 For example, in July 2002, a front-page article in the New York Times (Neil Lewis, “Traces of Terror: The Attorney General; Ashcroft’s Terrorism Policies Dismay Some Conservatives,” New York Times, July 24,2002) quoted Norquist prominently in a hit-piece on the Attorney General.  Although Norquist is not generally regarded as a religious conservative, he nonetheless characterized their views in a way that was unfriendly, to say the least:

    Many religious conservatives who were most instrumental in pressing President Bush to appoint John Ashcroft as attorney general now say they have become deeply troubled by his actions as the leading public figure in the law enforcement drive against terrorism….More significantly, they say privately that he seems to be overstating the evidence of terrorist threats.

    Most striking, however, is how some conservatives who were Mr. Ashcroft’s biggest promoters for his cabinet appointment after he lost his re-election to the Senate in 2000 have lost enthusiasm. They cite his anti-terrorist positions as enhancing the kind of government power that they instinctively oppose.

    “His religious base is now quite troubled by what he’s done,” said Grover Norquist, a conservative strategist and president of Americans for Tax Reform.  Mr. Norquist, who holds regular lunches with a cross-section of conservative leaders and is influential with White House and Congressional Republicans, said, “If there hadn’t been this big-government problem, Ashcroft would have been talked about as the Bush successor.  Instead, the talk is that ‘[it is] too bad we pushed for him.'”

    After this article appeared, leading religious conservatives, including notably Paul Weyrich, disputed Norquist’s assertion that the Attorney General had lost their confidence.  While some of them – like other conservatives – do have concerns about the PATRIOT Act, the rift described in the Times article appears to have been more a reflection of Norquist’s “spin” than real.

    79 See, http://www.grassroots-america.org/brochure.pdf to view the Grassroots America brochure announcing the event, giving Norquist top billing among the speakers and asking that registration fees be sent to the National Coalition to Protect Political Freedoms.

    80 Byron York, “Norquist and Keene Join Baldwin and Neas,” National Review Online http://www.nationalreview.com/york/york200310201247.asp.

    81 Promotional material circulated by the conference organizers included the following, illuminating quote:

    Ralph Neas says of Grover, “[He] and I agree on very little. However, we both believe that the Bill of Rights is endangered by the excesses of the USA PATRIOT Act and other Department of Justice initiatives post 9/11. We will seize this opportunity and demonstrate that people from across the ideological spectrum agree that the rights of innocent people are at risk from unnecessary and unwarranted invasions of privacy and loss of basic constitutional rights.”

     

     

    Waging the ‘War of Ideas’

    In recent weeks, senior Bush Administration officials have begun talking about a heretofore largely neglected, and arguably decisive, front in the War on Terror: the battlefield of "ideas." Unfortunately, as a powerful cover story in this week’s U.S. News and World Report makes clear, the United States has for years remained essentially disarmed in this arena.

    ‘Armed’ to the Teeth

    By contrast, its enemies – notably an array of Saudi princes, charities, businessmen and front organizations – have been spending some $70 billion to recruit, train and arm adherents around the world in the name of the central idea being wielded against us, namely jihad or "holy war."

    This U.S. News article was reported by one of the magazine’s most highly regarded investigative reporters, David Kaplan. Entitled, "The Saudi Connection: How Billions in Oil Money Spawned a Global Terror Network," Kaplan’s article documents the extent to which successive American administrations turned blind eyes towards mounting evidence of Saudi involvement in Osama bin Laden’s al Qaeda terror organization and its counterparts.

    According to Kaplan, "U.S. officials now say that key [Saudi government and affiliated] charities became the pipelines of cash that helped transform ragtag bands of insurgents and jihadists into a sophisticated, interlocking movement with global ambitions. Many of those spreading the Wahhabist doctrine abroad, it turned out, were among the most radical believers in holy war, and they poured vast sums into the emerging al Qaeda network."

    Kaplan quotes the Center for Security Policy’s Distinguished Fellow, Dr. Alex Alexiev, as saying, "The Saudi funding program is ‘the largest worldwide propaganda campaign ever mounted’ – dwarfing the Soviets’ propaganda efforts at the height of the Cold War."

    If Saudi Arabia’s investment in the weaponry and infrastructure of the war of ideas has been staggering, so have its results. Kaplan cites the Saudi weekly Ain al-Yaqeen as saying the funds produced "some 1,500 mosques, 210 Islamic centers, 202 colleges, and nearly 2,000 schools in non-Islamic countries."

    Fifth Column

    Unfortunately, many of these Saudi-bankrolled institutions are in the United States. The Kingdom’s investments in this country have produced the base for radical, intolerant and violent Muslims – known as Islamists – to mount a Fifth Column threat from within.

    Last week, a new example of the potentially devastating gravity of this threat was revealed by the Wall Street Journal. It has previously been reported that Abdurahman Alamoudi, a prominent Washington-based activist who made no secret of his pro-Islamist sympathies, was able to secure the right for his own and a like-minded institution to train at least 9 of 14 Muslim chaplains for the U.S. military.

    The Journal discovered that Alamoudi – who is currently in jail on charges of laundering $340,000 in Libyan terrorist-related funding – was able to secure a similar arrangement for between 75 and 100 so-called "Islamic lay leaders." Their job was to minister to Muslims in the armed forces when the chaplains were unavailable. The institutions used to train chaplains received Saudi funds. The lay leaders got their training from an Institute for Islamic and Arabic Studies described by the Journal as "an arm of the Saudi government." All of these organizations appear to have engaged in Islamist indoctrination.

    Kaplan’s article suggests that the Saudi government is now cracking down on the monster its ideas and funds have created around the world. They may indeed be doing so at home, for reasons that have more to do with preserving the House of Saud’s hold on power than with any real conversion about the unacceptability of the Islamofascism that they have enabled elsewhere. Apart from ostensibly disowning the Institute for Islamic and Arabic Studies after the Journal story ran, however, there is not much evidence that they have abandoned the war of ideas they and their clients have been waging elsewhere.

    Will We Remain ‘Disarmed’?

    Meanwhile, the United States government remains woefully ill-equipped to fight back in the war of ideas. Shortly after 9/11, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld – who has understood the importance of this front from the get-go of the War on Terror – tried to give the Pentagon a focal point for such efforts. Regrettably, the Office of Strategic Influence was taken down within months by unfounded rumors it would disseminate false news stories to promote American objectives.

    Last week, the newspaper that gave currency and international attention to such fraudulent claims, the New York Times, breathlessly reported that an attempt to do the same thing was being quietly done through a contract with a consulting firm, SAIC. The Times was affronted by the wording of the September 17, 2003 contract for a $300,000 study:

    "Our inability to seize the initiative in the ‘War of Ideas’ with al Qaeda is perhaps our most significant shortcoming so far in the war against terrorism. We do not fully understand Al Qaeda and its relationship to supportive communities in the Islamic world, and so are not yet able to develop an effective strategy for countering its propaganda in those communities, let alone for winning the information campaign in the war against terrorism."

    The Bottom Line

    Far from being embarrassed by or opposed to this exceedingly modest initiative – as the Times suggested several Defense Department officials were when confronted with the SAIC contract – the U.S. government should be mobilizing every available resource to alter the damning ideas about us being assiduously promoted by the Saudis and their proxies around the world. If we do otherwise, we are unlikely to be able to hold our own in the War on Terror, let alone win it.

    Terror-tied

    Most Americans were cheered by recent news of an improving economic forecast, but not the Democrats who have made blaming George W. Bush for the last few years’ downturn the primary argument for turning him out of office. One can only imagine how depressed they must feel now that their fall-back argument that Bush demonstrated his incompetence as Commander-in-Chief by engaging in an unnecessary and costly diversion from the war on terror when he went into Iraq has been shown to be no better grounded in fact.

    ‘Case Closed’

    The strategic wisdom, indeed the imperative, of putting Saddam Hussein out of business as an integral part of the part of the global effort to root out and destroy terrorist organizations has been underscored by the cover story of the November 24th edition of the Weekly Standard. Under the headline “Case Closed,” Steven Hayes reveals details from a highly classified, 16-page Defense Department memorandum sent last month to the Senate Intelligence Committee.

    The unavoidable conclusion: Saddam Hussein’s regime had been guilty as charged tied for over a decade to Osama bin Laden and his al Qaeda network (among other terrorist groups) for the purpose of waging attacks on their mutual foe, the United States.

    The Pentagon memo was compiled for Douglas Feith, the Center for Security Policy’s long-time Board chairman and current Under Secretary of Defense. It was forwarded to the intelligence panel last month in response to bipartisan questions put to him by the Committee’s top Republican and Democratic members, Senators Pat Roberts and Jay Rockefeller, respectively. The memo’s contents reflected years of reporting compiled by U.S. intelligence agencies from various sources.

    Bill of Particulars

    According to Hayes, fifty individual items (which he infers must be just the tip of the proverbial iceberg, since the bulk of materials seized from Iraqi files have yet to be analyzed) establish that Saddam Hussein collaborated extensively with bin Laden and his ilk in, for example, the following ways:

    • Top Iraqi intelligence officials and other trusted representatives of Saddam Hussein met repeatedly with bin Laden and his subordinates. Since Saddam personally insisted that the relationship between the two be kept secret, the contents of their conversations have apparently not yet been discovered. It is a safe bet, though, that operational cooperation was among the topics discussed.
    • According to the memo, U.S. intelligence received reports that Iraq provided safe havens, money, weapons and fraudulent Iraqi and Syrian passports to al Qaeda. It also provided training in the manufacture and use of sophisticated explosives. In that connection, bin Laden reportedly specifically requested that “[Brigadier Salim al-Ahmed,] Iraqi intelligence’s premier explosives maker especially skilled in making car bombs remain with him in Sudan. The Iraqi intelligence chief instructed Salim to remain in Sudan with bin Laden as long as required.”
    • A Malaysia-based Iraqi national, Ahmed Hikmat Shakir, reportedly secured a job at the airport in Kuala Lumpur thanks to help from Iraq’s embassy in Malasia. He subsequently facilitated the movement of two of the September 11 hijackers, Khalid al Midhar and Nawaq al Hamzi, through passport control and customs en route to an operational meeting in Kuala Lumpur on January 5, 2000. The memo notes that “One of the men at that al Qaeda operational meeting in the Kuala Lumpur Hotel was Tawfiz al Atash, a top bin Laden lieutenant later identified as the mastermind of the October 12, 2000, attack on the USS Cole.”
    • “Ibn al-Shaykh al-Libi [a senior al Qaeda operative] said he was told by an al Qaeda associate that he was tasked to travel to Iraq (1998) to establish a relationship with Iraqi intelligence to obtain poisons and gases training. After the USS Cole bombing in 2000, two al Qaeda operatives were sent to Iraq for [Chemical and Biological Weapons] CBW-related training beginning in December 2000. Iraqi intelligence was encouraged’ after the embassy and USS Cole bombings to provide this training.”
    • The memo indicates that there were as many as four meetings between the alleged mastermind of the September 11th hijackings, Mohamed Atta, and the former Iraqi intelligence chief in Prague, Ahmed Khalil Ibrahim Samir al Ani. “During one of these meetings, al Ani ordered the Iraqi Intelligence Service [IIS] finance officer to issue Atta funds from IIS financial holdings in the Prague office.”

    The Bottom Line

    In short, thanks to a much-maligned Pentagon effort to perform an independent review of existing intelligence on Iraq — undertaken at Secretary Feith’s initiative it is simply not possible any longer to claim that there is “no evidence” of links between Saddam and al Qaeda. It behooves most especially Senate Intelligence Committee member Carl Levin (D-MI), to stop misleading the public on this point for transparently partisan purposes.

    The Feith memo should be helpful in one other way, as well. It underscores the validity of the “drain the swamps” strategy President Bush has been pursuing from Day One in the war on terror and the unsuitability to be Commander-in-Chief of those, like General Wesley Clark, who disagree, as he derisively put it Sunday, that “these old states are central to the problem of terrorism.”

    Prosecutors: Architect of Pentagon’s Muslim chaplain program funded al Qaeda

    "The architect of the Pentagon’s program to train Islamic clerics to minister to Muslim soldiers provided financial support to both al Qaeda and Hamas through a series of Islamic charities, federal prosecutors alleged in a new court ruling," according to the Wall Street Journal.

    The Journal’sGlenn Simpson reports that Abdurahman Alamoudi (aka Abdur Rahman Alamoudi), a leading Muslim political activist in Washington who founded and funded several Islamic pressure groups, was arrested in late September after British authorities found him in London with $340,000 in cash from Libya.

    Alamoudi founded the American Muslim Council (AMC) in 1990, and persuaded the Clinton Administration to let him set up a Muslim chaplain corps in the Pentagon, whose officers his organization would approve for duty as chaplains.

    The Center for Security Policy has reported on Alamoudi and his terrorist support operations, but the new federal prosecutor filing is the first to connect him with Osama bin Laden’s organization.

    The federal allegation is likely to raise further questions about Washington-based pressure groups that Alamoudi helped start, including the Islamic Institute, founded by activist Grover Norquist and run by Alamoudi’s then-deputy, Khaled Saffuri. Alamoudi provided at least $20,000 in seed money to help start the Islamic Institute, which identifies heavily with the Republican Party.

    Norquist has been the most prominent Republican activist opposing Attorney General John Ashcroft and demanding repeal or defeat of key anti-terrorist legislation. His organization allegedly has been taking in hundreds of thousands of dollars from Wahhabi sources in the Arabian peninsula.

    According to the Wall Street Journal, one of Alamoudi’s lawyers is Stanley Cohen, who also represents a leader of Hamas and who once said he would consider defending Osama bin Laden. Another Alamoudi lawyer, Kamal Nawash, who is presently running as a Republican for the Virginia state senate, represented the alleged terrorist at the time of the arrest but is said not to be representing him any more. Shortly after the arrest, Nawash told reporters that Alamoudi "has no links whatsoever to terrorism."