Frank Gaffney, Jr.
The
cumulative effect of such actions has been to encourage events and a
vacuum of power that predictably would redound primarily to the benefit
of the most organized, disciplined and ruthless faction. In Egypt
- as in much of the Muslim world - that is the Muslim Brotherhood.
It
seems that Team Obama's enthusiasm for the Ikhwan in Egypt
is neither an isolated event nor an accident.
As the Center for Security
Policy's recently released Shariah: The Threat to
America illuminates, the Brotherhood has since 1963
operated a growing number of front organizations tasked with mounting
highly effective influence operations in the United States. According
to the MB's own strategic plan, their mission here is "a kind of grand
jihad in eliminating and destroying the Western civilization from
within."
In
the past week, we have been given chilling insights into the success of
such operations by Justice Department officials who spoke on condition
of anonymity to one of Shariah: The Threat's co-authors,
counter-terrorism expert Patrick Poole. In two
different articles
published at Pajamas Media, we
learn how U.S. government "outreach" to the Muslim-American community
has become a vehicle for empowering and protecting enemies of this
country - and affording them opportunities they systematically exploit
with the goal of "destroying [us] from within."
Of
particular concern is Poole's revelation that political appointees in
the Obama-Holder Justice Department have been responsible for
"quashing" the prosecution of some of the Brotherhood's operatives and
organizations. According to one DoJ source, the reason the U.S. Attorney in Dallas was not allowed to
pursue the planned indictment of MB individuals and entities previously
listed as Unindicted Co-Conspirators in the Holy Land Foundation trial
was "a political decision from the get-go." The source added:
"The administration would look like absolute fools. It's kind of hard
to prosecute someone on material support for terrorism when you have pictures of them getting handed
awards from DoJ and FBI leaders for their supposed counter-terror
efforts."
This
act of what appears, at best, to be obstruction of justice may not be
an isolated incident. In his April 16 column at National Review
Online, Andy McCarthy surmises
that the suppression of the Holy Land 2.0 prosecution and the absence
subsequently of any similar efforts to stop material support for
terrorism could have their roots in the President's 2009 paean to
Islamists and other Muslims in Cairo.
On
that occasion, Mr. Obama promised to ease U.S. "rules on charitable
giving [that] have made it harder for Muslims to fulfill their
religious obligation" of zakat (or tithing). Yet,
McCarthy rightly notes the only "rules" that might fit that description
are ones prohibiting funding of
terrorism - a "charitable" contribution shariah requires its adherents
to make - and it appears that Team Obama no longer will enforce them.
If
there is any good news, it is that Rep. Sue Myrick (R-NC) last week
became the latest congressional leader to launch a series of hearings
aimed at examining the Muslim Brotherhood, abroad and here. In an
interview on Secure Freedom Radio Monday, she made clear her intention
to have the Terrorism Subcommittee of the House Intelligence Committee
clarify the true nature of the Ikhwan and to explore, if
necessary in classified sessions, its successes in penetrating and
influencing our government. Chairman Myrick said, "I am very concerned
how this is all playing out internally....This something that most
people don't have a clue...it's not on their radar screen....This will
undermine our way of life if we don't get a handle on it."
It
is indeed time to "get a handle" on the Muslim Brotherhood and the
threat it poses to "our way of life." The place to start is with
rigorous congressional investigations of the Ikhwan's myriad
front organizations and the effectiveness of their influence operations
in warping our understanding of the threat they pose and in thwarting our efforts to defeat it.
FamilySecurityMatters.org
Contributor Frank J. Gaffney, Jr. is President of the Center
for Security Policy,
a columnist for the Washington
Times
and host of the syndicated program, Secure
Freedom Radio,
heard in Washington on weeknights at 9:00 p.m. on WRC
1260 AM.
You can find this online at: http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/publications/id.9287/pub_detail.asp
The views expressed in the articles
published in FamilySecurityMatters.org are those of the authors. These
views should not be construed as the views of FamilySecurityMatters.org
or of the Family Security Foundation, Inc., as an attempt to help
or prevent the passage of any legislation, or as an intervention in any
political campaign for public office.
COPYRIGHT 2011 FAMILY SECURITY MATTERS
INC.