CAIR-TV

Hannity’s America: Staged Stunt?

Sean Hannity interviews M. Zuhdi Jasser on the implications of the flying imams lawsuit.

Islamism on Trial

The verdict in the federal prosecution against the Holy Land Foundation and many in its leadership was finally read by Judge Joe Fish this week after 19 days of jury deliberation by the Dallas jury. To listen to the press conferences and read the press releases of American Islamist organizations, one would think that the defendants were unanimously exonerated �with prejudice.� The Dallas Morning News reported that Muslim American Society Freedom Foundation Executive Director Mahdi Bray stated that �the government failure to get any convictions was evidence of the power of religious freedom.� He went on to say, �Feeding people is not a crime, and we aren�t going to let the American government make it a crime.� Mr. Bray must be counting on the fact that most citizens, like the jury in the trial, will be so dazed by the sheer volume of evidence that they will lazily swallow the propaganda of the Islamist spin machine. The Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) then distributed a blast e-mail to its mailing list, authored on its behalf by M. Cherif Bassioumi of DePaul University, exploiting every possible remote aspect of victimology possible in the case: Such intimidation and harassment leveled against American Muslims and their religious, civic and charitable organizations by this administration is yet another manifestation of the recent erosion of American constitutional freedoms. The fear-mongering campaign opted for by many in this administration � and supported by avowedly anti-Muslim groups – has created a climate of Islamophobia that is contrary to the basic values of this otherwise tolerant country. But it is the assault upon constitutional freedoms under the guise of terrorist-related prosecutions that is most shocking� In no other area of prosecution has the Department of Justice produced such an extraordinarily high percentage of dismissed cases and cases resulting in guilty pleas on unrelated charges. This, in itself, raises concerns that these prosecutions were informed by the fear-mongering claims of the current administration that terrorism �-la 9/11 may become an indigenous product and that American Muslims may be a new clear and present danger�. If the present tactics of the Department of Justice continue, it will not be long before American Muslims suffer the same fate Japanese-Americans did in World War II. Demonizing an entire minority group based on suspicion and fear-mongering was wrong then, and it is wrong now. We cannot allow such a blot on our history to be repeated. His entire letter sent to CAIR�s e-list is linked here. Are we to understand that the 19 days of deliberation and the hung jury is now an erosion of Constitutional freedoms? Hardly. The volumes of evidence now thankfully in the public record about the political connections, the penetration of the Muslim Brotherhood, and the shared Islamist ideologies of all of the involved organizations was �a fear-mongering campaign�supported by anti-Muslim groups.� How about this more accurate depiction from this writer, a devout anti-Islamist Muslim without the spin: �The government is not acting out of fear of a faith but rather fear from Islamist groups that support an Islamist ideology currently threatening American security. The understanding of this legitimate fear is supported by avowedly anti-Islamist groups which also include many moderate devout Muslims.� The irresponsible comments from the professor at DePaul are incredulous in the setting of a jury which not once mentioned its decision as �clear cut� or its time as �wasted.� To look at the evidence submitted by the prosecution and imply that this was a �witch hunt� is the summit of deception and propaganda. To compare the plight of the Japanese during WWII to the courtroom challenges against Islamists does all Muslims, most of whom are repelled by the Islamist agenda, a disservice. For Mr. Bassioumi to take it upon himself and CAIR to equate the plight of these apologists for terrorism to the �entire minority group� of Muslims is not only a stretch, but pathognomonic of the malignant nature of Islamism and its political collectivism. Escaping conviction by a hung jury and subsequent mistrial, these Islamists even have the temerity to rub the government�s face in it. A quick study of the primary evidence presented in the trial shows that these HLF directors were not benign apolitical �Mother Teresas� only seeking to feed the poor as Muslims, Christians, Jews and all people of faith should be free to do. Many of these individuals were revealed in open court over and over again to have demonstrated ideological support for the organization or mission of HAMAS and to have articulated apologies for the acts of terror committed by HAMAS. They were found to be associated with meetings in the U.S. related to HAMAS leadership and the Muslim Brotherhood. Even on the one verdict which wasn�t voided due to dissent and ended in the acquittal of Mohamed El-Mezain, the jurors still could not agree on whether Mr. El-Mezain �conspired to provide material support to a designated Foreign Terrorist Organization.� Moussa Abu Marzook, a high-ranking HAMAS official designated HLF a primary fundraising arm for HAMAS in the United States in 1994. Yet, somehow, the associations could not be made clear enough for the jury to unanimously convict. While the government is almost certain to retry the case, it will need to reassess the volume of material and approach to its arguments. But the Islamists� response that their ability to leave the courtroom free of conviction is synonymous with victory demonstrates their blindness to the ideological hypocrisy with which they approach militant Islamist, terrorist, organizations like HAMAS. Some Americans may be unable to convict them on criminal grounds, but most Americans will not tolerate civilly the lack of moral clarity from Islamists unwilling to articulate a counter-Jihad against militant Islamism. Most Americans will not tolerate apologists for terrorism and the attempts by Islamists to articulate a moral equivalency of intentional acts of terror by Muslims against noncombatants and collateral damage by uniformed soldiers of free states in an act of war. Until Muslims and their zakat organizations are able to have the moral courage to make this distinction and stand unequivocally against organizations and individuals by name which condone or apologize for terror, may the justice department not relent in its adjudication of supporters of Islamist terror to the letter of the law. When the U.S. made the funding of HAMAS illegal by designating it a terrorist organization, we must have known that eventually in a court of law we were going to have to prove why such a law makes sense for the security of our homeland. My sense is that this argument still needs to be brought home outside and within the courtroom. Funding HAMAS is a threat to Americans not only because it is illegal on the books but because of the ideologies at stake � HAMAS condones and believes in acts of terror against noncombatants to achieve a political goal. Most Americans know that for militant Islamists HAMAS� target may be Israelis today and could be Americans tomorrow. For those who say that ideology should not matter, imagine where this case would have been if the HLF leadership had, in addition to their desire for zakat (charity), also formed committees of �Muslims against HAMAS� and �Muslims against terror in Israel.� The real intentions of their funding for Palestinians would have been clearer. But this supposed charity was led by politicians who lived and breathed Islamism, the Muslim Brotherhood, and its associated transnational political movements. Ideology and moral courage does matter. And it�s my sense that the prosecutors needed to make that point clearer to the jury. What remains most interesting is the bizarrely hyperbolic response of Islamist groups like the MAS and CAIR. There is a great deal to learn from their spin. They claim a victory for religious freedom when in fact it was simply a close call for Islamism their political lifeblood. No reading of the volumes of evidence shows that simple Muslim charity and religious freedom was put on trial as the Islamists claim. Certainly, organizations which use our Muslim practice of charity as a cover for a global political movement was on trial. But there is no evidence that the agenda of HLF, CAIR, or MAS for that matter equates with the agenda of the majority of Muslims in America. Regular Americans who may sit on future juries should one day understand, unanimously, that free speech and freedom of religion does not entitle individuals to blind support of organizations which condone and enact terrorism. A fair jury may deliberate for days on the verifiability of the connection of HLF ideology to the HLF money trail. But, when that ideology is not joined by a counter-Jihad condemning HAMAS terror and condemning the endemic corruption and oppressive ideology of HAMAS, the connection should remain even clearer. Islamism is borne not only from direct ideological support for Islamist movements around the world but it is also more subtly manifested by a refusal of those who promote political Islam to condemn or actively counter Islamist movements like HAMAS by name or publicly. Islamists will thrive in the incredulous exaggeration of their narrow losses into victories in an effort to rally Muslim victimology and their political collectivism. Even their attempts at charity as Islamists do not seem to be about helping the poor, but rather about political one-upmanship. Contrarily in Islam, charity is encouraged to be done with no personal or public notoriety � and certainly, Islamic charity at its most spiritual core is not about using charity as a means for a transnational collectivist politico-religious movement � whether nonviolent or violent, for that matter. The result of this long Dallas trial, minus the Islamist spin, was no victory but was simply a prosecutorial �Mulligan.� The issue at hand here was not the intent of most donors to the HLF, but rather the intent of the named HLF leadership and its knowledge of and assistance of HAMAS whether its social or militant wing. The confusion from the jury in this case carries many lessons for government, media, and anti-Islamist Muslims on the frontline in the war of ideas against militant and non-violent Islamism. While speech and faith practice is certainly protected by our First Amendment, it cannot insulate individuals from accountability for the financial support of organizations which execute and employ acts of terror. I am counting on a retrial and on the DOJ making its case more convincingly and with less confusion. Success in this national and global war of ideas depends upon making this case clearly inside and outside the courtroom. Uninformed Americans should be able to become informed relatively quickly and easily and ultimately make the clear connection between apologists for terrorism, open support by Islamists for specific illegal terrorist organizations like HAMAS, and their associated financial support for the social arm of the same illegal organization. If their ideology is irrelevant and protected and if the financing has enough degrees of separation to feign ignorance, what tools are left to hold leaders of American non-profits accountable for the organizations and transnational politico-religious movements they fund? Either this case just needs to be tightened and clarified the next time around, or our federal legislators need to work on revisiting and tightening the rule of law which is supposed to protect us.

Why Are More American Muslims Not Enlisting in Our Military?

A story out of Reuters this week, carried by the mainstream media (MSM), and then soon thereafter distributed widely by American Islamist organizations makes the pronouncement that a ”Fear of bias keeps U.S. Muslims out of the military,” (February 6, 2007 by Bernd Debusmann).

This dismissal of American Muslim responsibility for military service is preposterous. Reuters found immediate approval from Ibrahim Hooper of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR). He is always too willing to confirm all claims of anti-Muslim bias substantiated or not from a naïve reporter. Why then have American Muslims not rushed to enlist in the frontlines of our national defense? If not ‘fear of bias’ then what is it? CAIR, and its victim echo chambers including the ADC (Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee), MPAC (Muslim Public Affairs Council), and MAS (Muslim American Society), to name a few, have made a franchise industry, since 9-11, out of the amplification and exploitation of Muslim minority fears real or not. Mr. Hooper irresponsibly deflects the realities blaming the military and not Muslims stating, “The military have the same problem as civilian government agencies, such as the FBI; there is a general reluctance to join because Muslims think there is bias against them and career prospects are limited.” The piece notes that Muslim military numbers barely exceed Wiccans in the Marines but not in the Air Force.

The approach by CAIR and the MSM enablers obfuscates the realities of Muslim disenchantment with the American military. As a nation, we cannot exaggerate the importance of understanding all of the cultural and ideological barriers to military enlistment from within the American Muslim community. Understanding this problem intimately relates to how we conduct public diplomacy, ideological engagement of our enemies, and the battle of ideas. Our greatest asset in this war are the nationalistic American Muslims who identify the enemy by name and by ideology. We cannot allow the propagation of deception which attributes Muslim absence in our national defense erroneously to a ‘fear of bias’. There is no way to substantiate the fear since it is conveniently induced by its mere suggestion. And in fact, there is virtually no evidence to substantiate the premise that anti-Muslim bias in our armed forces exceeds in any way that seen in everyday America.

In fact, my eleven year experience until 1999 at over six duty stations in the United States Navy speaks to the contrary. Things may have changed post 9-11, but so did civilian America. Muslims are not leaving America, yet they are avoiding the military. In today’s post 9-11 climate, a frank conversation on military enlistment is sure to be quite challenging. We need to certainly always be wary of generalizing some realities upon the entire faith community. For example, American Muslims will fear the label of disloyalty if they owned up to the internal reasons for not joining. And American non-Muslims may unfairly seek to associate the religion with what is manifestly a political and cultural conflict which continues to exploit the Islamic faith. The following analysis is offered as just one Muslim opinion regarding internal barriers from within the community.

The seeds of nationalism are planted in youth The first step to understanding why American Muslims would or would not enlist is to look genuinely at what molds the minds and national consciousness of American Muslim youth. Most Americans who serve will tell you that they felt the call to serve long before the time to enlist came. My own family escaped to the United States in the mid-1960’s away from the horrible oppression of the despotic Baathists of Syria. They came seeking personal and religious freedom which the nation of Syria was in no way able to provide them. Syria’s unchanged government to this day only provides its people with oppression, corruption, and despotism.

I have always been raised understanding that I can practice my faith more freely and more personally here in America than in any other nation on this planet. This American nationalism was cultivated and instilled in me as a youth by my Syrian-Muslim American parents who yearned to be American for ideological reasons. This nationalism was never in conflict with the pluralistic ideology of the devout Muslim faith which they taught me or with my Arabic culture. I was raised with the understanding that America was all about being pluralistic and respecting our nation under the Constitution and its laws. These laws provide the opportunity for all faiths to maintain their traditions and worship God free of government coercion. I was taught conversely that Islamist theocracy is in conflict with this and with Islam. In my youth, references to ‘home’ always meant the United States not ‘back home’. It never referred to our Syrian motherland whether or not our extended family had remained there. Syrian nationalism was left in the motherland from where my parents came and it was entirely exchanged upon their arrival on American soil for an even stronger nationalism for the United States. This was natural for anyone who left Syria for political reasons and was given a road to citizenship in the United States.

While I was born in the United States, this type of American immigrant bonding was integral in planting the seeds which led to my own sense of need to serve in the U.S. Navy. These seeds were planted early and no ‘fear of anti-Muslim bias’ would have ever changed that. Analyzing the real barriers to American Muslim enlistment

From my own personal story as an American Muslim, and a lifetime of living among the Arab-American and Muslim-American community, I see a number of key areas contributing to the dearth of American Muslim enlistment.

1-Often, immigrants do not manifest sole nationalistic identification with the United States but rather have a mixed identification between their nation of origin and America—almost a dual ‘cultural home’. The breaking of that bond with their cultural ‘home’ may actually only often occur in those who came seeking political protection from their homeland. The remainder who came to the U.S. for economic reasons may take many generations to engender a deep-seeded nationalism. Muslim organizations spend little time internally cultivating this deep understanding of the ideology which is America and the freedom it embodies and separates it from every other nation in the world. At their best, these organizations only remind Muslims, in a lip service, to separate Americans from their government and its policies. What more can one say than to look at the name of CAIR (Council on American-Islamic Relations) and see that they view America and Islam as two entities which have relations much as foreign nations do, rather than as simply Americans who happen to be Muslim.

2-Most American Muslim immigrants will expound ad nauseum about the complete distrust they had for the governments and their military in the nations from which they emigrated. In fact, many Muslim nations suffered from repeated coup d’états because the militaries of those nations had been abandoned by the leading families of society. The discipline of service to nation via military service was lost to generations in the Middle East. Thus, from Libya to Syria to Iraq and Afghanistan to name a few, the military apparatuses taken over by thugs decimated the societies. They became laboratories of corruption and oppression. This interestingly makes the persistence of Arab nationalism despite its production of oppression an inexplicable paradox. This paradox is only rooted in a very deep sense of an Arab, Persian, or Indo-Pakistani tribal identity– right or wrong. The reality is that this deep-seeded distrust of government, this tribalism, and some corruption has not been shed by many Muslim immigrants despite all that the United States has given them. And the transplanted distrust magnified by conspiracy theories carries over into a similar distrust of America’s national defense forces.

3-One should not underestimate the depth of penetration of conspiracy theories and association of all that is bad in the Muslim world, right or wrong, with American foreign policy. This is not only brought over during immigration, but is fortified and magnified with the continued daily appetite of most Muslim immigrants for mainly Middle Eastern Arabic satellite media from LBC to Al Jazeera to Syrian government television to name a few. These channels are hardly media which are going to carry sentiments that stimulate the enlistment of American Muslims in our armed forces. This is not to mention the anti-American sentiment which is pervasive in so many of the immigrant American Muslim media. For example, here in Phoenix we monitor the local Islamist publication, the Muslim Voice at the Arizona Islamist Watch to expose the ideas disseminated insularly to the Muslim community. It is the only local printed Muslim media. In April 2006, AIFD highlighted this piece, “Military forces criticized as persistent problem for everyday youth”, distributed by the Muslim Voice, at every local mosque in Phoenix. This featured article warned Muslim youth to avoid all military recruiters because they are deceptive and dishonest. It is naïve to minimize the impact which such anti-American propaganda has upon enlistment or the lack thereof. This is especially true when these negative images are virtually unopposed from other Muslims. When we talk about the battle for ‘hearts and minds’, those battles should begin with Muslims in the U.S. which are exposed to one-sided anti-American media from within.

4-Current American Islamist organizations (CAIR, MPAC, MAS) intentionally focus upon victimization and cultural division. They are incrementally creating an atmosphere which leads to a self-fulfilling prophecy. As they declare and fabricate bias and prejudice at every corner in America that will listen, they drive impressionable American Muslim youth away from deeper participation. They drive the youth away from non-Muslim activities toward insularity and toward Islamism. As these organizations advance their religio-political movement (quasi-religious political parties), impressionable youth are only left with a religious identity upon which to enter politics rather than a national one which respects the separation of religion from politics.

This is only the beginning of a needed analysis of why many, but not all, American Muslims have shied away from military service. American Muslims would do well to look back at American history and witness the contributions of the 100th Infantry Battalion/ 442nd Regimental Combat Team—the most decorated unit in military history. This unit was made up of 4,500 nisei —second generation Japanese Americans. The unit distinguished itself by fighting in eight campaigns and two beachhead assaults in Italy and France. They captured a submarine and opened the gates of Dachau prison. It is said that in the climate of domestic Japanese internment of the time, that this heroic unit of nisei did more to combat bias against Japanese-Americans in the United States during WWII than any other program. We in the Muslim community need new organizations and institutions which understand this type of forward American Muslim approach of integration and military service rather than division and victimization. A few more years of the Islamist agenda and their fabricated fears will become a self-fulfilling prophecy.

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M. Zuhdi Jasser is the founder and Chairman of the American Islamic Forum for Democracy based in Phoenix Arizona. He is a former U.S. Navy Lieutenant Commander, a physician in private practice, and a community activist. He can be reached at Zuhdi@aifdemocracy.org

THIS commentary appeared at Family Security Matters.

Glenn Beck CNN HNN- After an Attack on our Schools and Children (The Perfect Day)

Glenn discusses with Zuhdi Jasser, Brad Thor, and Bernard Kerick the day after an attack on our schools.