Rep. Peter  King’s opening statement at today’s House Committee on Homeland Security hearing  (highlights added) underscores why ACT! for America presented him our highest  legislative award at this year’s National Conference and Legislative Briefing.  
Make sure you scroll down to the end to read what he says about the  New York Times. 
 King Opens  Third Committee on Homeland Security Hearing on Radicalization, Focusing on al  Shabaab 
Washington, D.C. (Wednesday, July  27, 2011) – This morning, U.S. Rep. Peter T. King (R-NY), Chairman of the  Committee on Homeland Security, convenes the hearing entitled “Al  Shabaab: Recruitment and Radicalization within the Muslim American Community and  the Threat to the Homeland.” The prepared opening statement of Chairman King  follows: 
“Good morning. Today, we hold the third in a series of  hearings on radicalization in the Muslim-American community. 
Our focus  is the result of a lengthy investigation the Committee has conducted into the  threat the U.S. homeland faces from al-Shabaab, the Somalia affiliate of Osama  bin Laden’s al-Qaeda and Anwar al-Aulaqi’s al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula  (AQAP). 
The Committee has been briefed by intelligence agencies and we  have interviewed dozens of experts on al-Shabaab. 
I welcome our  distinguished panel of witnesses. They have some of the most extensive insights  into the problems uncovered by our Committee’s investigation and we are grateful  they are sharing their knowledge. 
You  will hear how al-Shabaab, who bin Laden called “One of the most important  armies” of Islam, is engaged in an ongoing, successful effort to recruit and  radicalize dozens of Muslim-American jihadis, who pose a direct threat to the  U.S. 
Some argue that al-Shabaab is only a Somali problem, and  that the group will never strike outside of the Horn of Africa region.  
That kind of thinking is a glaring example of what the 9/11 Commission  called a failure of imagination. 
With al-Shabaab’s large cadre of  American jihadis and unquestionable ties to al-Qaeda, particularly its alliance  with AQAP, we must face the reality that al-Shabaab is a growing threat to our  homeland. 
Our investigation into this threat has led to alarming  findings: Notably, that al-Shabaab has successfully recruited and radicalized  more than 40 Muslim-Americans and 20 Canadians, who have joined the terror group  inside Somalia. 
Of those, at least 15 Americans and 3 Canadians are  believed to have been killed fighting with al-Shabaab, the Committee has  learned. 
Not al-Qaeda, nor any of its other affiliates, have come close  to drawing so many Muslim-Americans and Westerners to jihad. 
Three  Muslim-Americans became suicide bombers, such as Shirwa Ahmed from Minneapolis  -- the first confirmed American suicide bomber in our history. 
There  also are radicalized converts like al-Shabaab commander Omar Hammami who was  raised a Baptist in Alabama, and who has repeatedly threatened the U.S.  homeland. 
Three American al-Shabaab fighters have been arrested after  returning home and one was collared in the Netherlands. 
Other  radicalized Muslims have been arrested in the U.S. and Canada before they  reached Somalia, which is now much easier to get to for jihad than Afghanistan,  Iraq, Pakistan or Yemen. 
But as many as two-dozen Muslim-Americans with  al-Shabaab -- who in many cases were trained by top al-Qaeda leaders -- remain  unaccounted for. 
The Committee found that al-Shabaab-related federal  prosecutions for funding, recruiting and attempting to join al-Shabaab are the  largest number and most significant upward trend in homegrown terror cases filed  by the Justice Department over the past two years. 
At least 38 cases  have been unsealed since 2009 in Minnesota, Ohio, California, New Jersey, New  York, Illinois, Missouri, Alabama, Virginia and Texas. 
Al-Shabaab is  recruiting inside American mosques in Somali communities like Minneapolis and  San Diego, according to the Justice Department. 
This month, an al-Shabaab recruiter pleaded guilty to  recruiting a large group of Muslims in Minneapolis, “At mosques,” and without  any known protest by mosque leaders. A top al-Shabaab leader in Somalia  supervised this recruiting. 
One Minnesotan recruited was suicide  bomber Shirwa Ahmed whose 2008 attack in northern Somalia sent a shockwave of  alarm through U.S. homeland security agencies, because of its implications.  
Another would-be bomber from Minneapolis was shot and killed in  Mogadishu by peacekeeping troops on May 30, moments before detonating his  suicide vest. 
When one cleric spoke out  against al-Shabaab inside the Minneapolis mosque where many of the missing young  Somali-American men had once worshipped, he was physically assaulted, according  to police. 
For those still skeptical that there are still jihadi  sympathizers inside that community, it’s worth mentioning that the Committee  learned of the mosque assault when an audiotape of the incident was posted on  overseas jihadi Internet forums before authorities in Minneapolis even knew  about the incident. 
There is an enormous amount of travel by  Somali-Americans between U.S. cities and East Africa. While most of this travel  is legitimate senior U.S. counterterror officials have told the Committee they  are very concerned about individuals they have not identified who have fallen in  with al-Shabaab during trips to Somalia, who could return to the U.S.  undetected. 
They fear an al-Shabaab fighter operating under law  enforcement’s radar – someone like a Zazi, a Shahzad, an Abdulmutallab – may  attempt an attack here. 
It is deeply troubling that from the very  beginning, the Muslim-Americans in Somalia were trained by top al-Qaeda  operatives, including several who were tied to Yemen’s al-Qaeda in the Arabian  Peninsula (AQAP), which is now generally considered our biggest homeland threat.  
Al-Shabaab operative Ahmed Abdulkadir Warsame was charged this month for  doing weapons deals and explosives training with AQAP in Yemen, and to, “Provide  AQAP with material support including... personnel.” 
Al-Shabaab has long  harbored top al-Qaeda leaders, such as the mastermind of the 1998 U.S. embassy  bombings in East Africa, who was gunned down this month in Somalia after a  13-year manhunt. 
Al-Shabaab has paraded in Somalia in support of AQAP  and sent fighters to battle the weakened Yemeni government this year -- as well  as flying the battle flag of al-Qaeda-in-IRAQ. 
Finally, an al-Shabaab  bombing in neighboring Uganda one year ago that targeted Westerners killed 74  people including one American. 
President Obama’s Director of National  Intelligence, James Clapper, has said the Administration remains, quote,  “Vigilant that al-Shabaab may expand its focus from fighting to control Somalia  to plotting to attack the U.S. homeland.” 
That convinced me of the  necessity to launch a careful examination of that threat. 
Dozens of  experts the Committee interviewed agreed this threat is real, and that  al-Shabaab leaders’ public calls for attacks against America -- including in  retaliation for killing bin Laden -- must be taken seriously. 
With a  large group of Muslim-Americans willing to die as “martyrs,” and a strong  operational partnership with al-Qaeda leaders in Pakistan and in Yemen,  al-Shabaab now has more capability than ever to strike the U.S. homeland.  
We look forwarding to hearing more about the rising al-Shabaab threat  from our exceptional witnesses, as well as the Minority’s distinguished witness.  
Finally, I note that certain elements  of the politically correct media — most egregiously the vacuous ideologues at the  New York Times — are shamelessly attempting to exploit the horrific tragedy in  Norway to cause me to refocus these hearings away from Muslim-American  radicalization. 
If they had even a semblance of intellectual honesty the  Times and the others would know and admit that there is no equivalency in the  threat to our homeland from a deranged gunman and the international terror  apparatus of al-Qaeda and its affiliates who are recruiting people in this  country and have murdered thousands of Americans in their jihad attacks.  
Let me make this clear to the New York Times and their acolytes in the  politically correct, moral equivalency media --- I will not back down from holding  these hearings. I will continue to hold these hearings so long as I am the  Chairman of this Committee. 
Apart from all the strategic and  moral reasons why these hearings are vital to our security, they are liberating  and empowering to the many Muslim-Americans who have been intimidated by leaders  in their own communities and are now able to come forward. 
I also owe it  to all the friends, neighbors, and constituents I lost on September 11th. I will  not back down.” 
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