Posted on 01/16/2005 8:22:16 PM PST by JFK_Lib
After terrorists gunned down 49 unarmed Iraqi army recruits on a highway near Baquoba on October 24, authorities have tried to determine whether moles within the Iraqi army provided information that led to the massacre. Due to the strategically orchestrated attack, investigators believe the killers must have received inside information about the soldiers' movements. If infiltrators did play a role in the attack, it would just be the latest example of a long history of Islamic terrorists penetrating military forces throughout the world.
Recognizing the tremendous intelligence value of placing operatives within enemy ranks, terrorists have placed a premium on this strategy.
Al Qaeda, whose training manual instructs members to "gather as much information as possible about the enemy," has consistently succeeded in inserting a fifth column inside enemy armies. A recently uncovered Al Qaeda document reveals the group's aims: "The Jama'ah (group) must prepare the cadres to occupy all sensitive and important posts.They should be in the army command and among staff officers...There should be a commander and a deputy in all brigades, battalions, and columns. They should be in all regiments and the Special Forces. They should be in the four branches of the armed forces."......
But the most troubling case of infiltration of the U.S. Army is that of Ali Mohammed, a sergeant who taught classes on the Middle East at the Special Operations Warfare School at Fort Bragg between the end of the 1980's and the mid 1990's. When he was not lecturing American soldiers on Islamic fundamentalism, Mohammed was one of Bin Laden's most trusted lieutenants, teaching terrorists the tactics he had learned at Fort Bragg in Al Qaeda's camps in Sudan and Afghanistan. .....
(Excerpt) Read more at frontpagemag.com ...
This is like having the fox guard the hen-house!
Does Front Page require excerpting? I thought that e mag was freeper influenced and allowed for posting?
Front Page is an EXCELLENT resource.
We don't know what happened to him, but we sure know about one of our boys getting 10 years...
NEWS: Muslim Army Chaplain Investigation September 26, 2003 Episode no. 704 http://www.pbs.org/wnet/religionandethics/week704/news.html BOB ABERNETHY, anchor: A Muslim U.S. Army chaplain who served at the Guantanamo naval base prison camp remains in military detention. His arrest is said to be part of an espionage investigation, but no charges have been filed. The case has raised a number of questions -- most of them unanswered. Paul Miller has our report. PAUL MILLER: Bob, the widening investigation of security breaches at Guantanamo, amid suggestions of espionage, aid to Islamist extremists, or a possible prisoner breakout, became public after the detention of U.S. Army chaplain, Captain James Yee. James Joseph, or Youssef, Yee was raised a Lutheran in New Jersey but became a Muslim after graduating from West Point in 1990. After completing military service, he studied Islam and Arabic in Syria, then rejoined the army, becoming a chaplain in 2000. Last November, Chaplain Yee was assigned to Guantanamo Bay, where more than 650 Muslims are detained as enemy combatants suspected of ties to Al Qaeda or the Taliban. He was the Islamic advisor to the commander at the camp and had daily contact with the detainees. He counseled them, arranged for the call to prayer to be broadcast on loudspeakers in the camp, and tried to be sure their food met Islamic dietary laws. Captain JAMES YEE (U.S. Army Chaplain): I don't get into whether or not they are terrorists. That's not my job. My job is to look at each individual and assist them in any way that I can in order to improve their ability to worship, to perform the Islamic rites. MILLER: Friends and colleagues say Chaplain Yee may simply have provided humanitarian assistance to fellow Muslims, but in a maximum-security facility that alone might be a violation of the rules. The military says when Chaplain Yee left the camp September 10, he was improperly carrying diagrams of the base and papers relating to detainees and their interrogators. He is in the brig in Charleston, South Carolina. No charges have yet been filed. The military has 120 days to bring him to trial. The Council on American-Islamic Relations has called for the presumption of innocence and due process of law for Yee as well as for airman Ahmed Halabi, a translator at the prison camp accused of spying for Syria. Four other people are reportedly the subjects of an expanding investigation. And the government is now said to be investigating the backgrounds of all the military's 13 Muslim chaplains. Military chaplains we spoke with expressed shock at Captain Yee's detention. They also said they were worried that this will hurt the credibility of all military chaplains, especially other Muslims. ABERNETHY: Paul, how does the military screen all chaplains? MILLER: Bob, there is a definite procedure. As officers, they all have to undergo security background checks. They have to meet certain educational requirements. And they need the endorsement of recognized religious organizations, either through certification or training. The Pentagon has endorsed two such Muslim organizations. They are the American Muslim Armed Forces and Veteran Affairs Council and the Graduate School of Islamic and Social Sciences. But both of those organizations are now reported to be under investigation by both the FBI and the Pentagon. ABERNETHY: Paul, many thanks. |
||
|
||
|
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.