Jihad experts decry White
House terror training guidelines
http://dailycaller.com/2013/05/20/jihad-experts-decry-white-house-terror-training-guidelines/#ixzz2Tw0RrW9D
2:19
AM 05/20/2013
Neil
Munro
White House Correspondent
Experts on Islam and terrorism
are decrying the Department of Homeland Security’s recently revealed
anti-terrorism training guidelines, which pressure cops to ignore Islamic
beliefs when investigating terror crimes.
The Boston bombings
demonstrated the impact of such training, Andrew McCarthy, a former New York
prosecutor, told The Daily Caller.
“The
Boston Marathon was bombed by a jihadist who had been investigated by the FBI …
[and was confirmed in 2011 to be] an Islamist, which would have been hard not to
do since he does not appear to have made any secret of it,” said
McCarthy, who persuaded a New York jury in 1995 to convict “Blind Sheikh”
Omar Abdel-Rahman for his use of Islamic teaching to spur jihad attacks,
including the 1993 attack against the Twin Towers.
But before the bombing, “the FBI closed its file [on
Tamerlan Tsarnaev] because it found this did not constitute ‘derogatory
information,’” McCarthy said.
McCarthy and other security experts,
and even members of the American Islamic community, indicate that a culture of
excessive concern for the sensibilities of Muslims supremacists is preventing
law enforcement agencies from pursuing jihadists.
The 2011 guidelines
unveiled Thursday by The Daily Caller are part of this pattern of deferring to
Islamist chauvinism. (Related: Homeland
Security guidelines advise deference to pro-Shariah Muslim
supremacists)
Under the federal
guidelines, “agents are admonished to discount the possibility that an
Islamist’s constitutionally protected abhorrence of the United States might
possibly lead to violence,” McCarthy told TheDC.
Even if FBI
officials had learned about Tsarnaev’s 2012 trip to a part of southern Russia
that is embroiled in a jihadi war, they would not have restarted their 2011
investigation, a government official told the Washington Post in
April.
“The FBI investigation into the individual in question had been
closed six months prior to his departure from the United States and more than a
year before his return. …Since there was no derogatory information, there was no
reason to suggest that additional action was warranted,” the official said in
April.
On his six-month trip, starting in January 2012, Tsarnaev visited
several militant Islamic leaders and mosques in Dagestan, where jihadis are
fighting the Russian government, according to several U.S. and Russian media
sources.
“The fiasco regarding Boston is a prime example” of how bad
training degrades security, said Robert Spencer, an authority on Islamic
doctrine who is heavily criticized by Islamic groups in the United States. He
noted that even though FBI agents had interviewed Tamerlan Tsarnaev, the FBI was
unable to identify Tsarnaev in crowd photographs taken before and after the bomb
strike.
After the attack, FBI officials also did not ask the main mosque
in Boston for help in identifying the suspects, said Nichole Mossalam, a
spokeswoman for the Islamic Society of Boston.
“We were the ones who
reached out to them … on Friday” once the picture were released, Mossalam
told TheDC.
Because of the guidelines, it would be “a ‘profiling’
scandal to show the pictures at the mosque just because it was a bombing with …
no other evidence of connection to Muslims,” he said.
The guidelines,
titled “Countering Violent Extremism (CVE) Training Do’s and Don’ts,” don’t
merely promote respect for free expression but actively promote extremist views
by telling officials to sideline experts who “venture too deep into the weeds of
[Islamic] religious doctrines and history. … [T]hese topics are not necessary in
order to understand the [Muslim] community.”
The DHS also actively discourages engagement with
moderate Muslims. “Don’t use trainers … who are self-professed ‘Muslim
reformers’ … [or who] equate radical thought [or] religious expressions … with
criminal activity,” say the training guidelines.
The guidelines
also advise cops, “Don’t use a trainer or training that has received repeated
external negative feedback … don’t use training that treats the American Muslim
community as a problem rather than as a partner … don’t use training that relies
on fear [for example, by citing convictions that show] mainstream Muslim
organizations have terrorist ties.”
The
training guidelines go so far as to urge federal officials to rely on a
political report by the Muslim
Public Affairs Committee (MPAC), a Los Angeles, California-based Islamic
advocacy group with extensive ties to jihadists and Islamist groups, including
the Egypt-based Muslim Brotherhood.
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