Posted on 08/06/2011 4:17:23 AM PDT by markomalley
The White Houses new plan to curb home-grown Islamic extremism calls for partnerships between local governments, various non-profits, and U.S. communities of Muslims. But critics say those partnerships often include Islamic groups whose ideology spurs terrorism.
Federal agencies are already using their convening power to help build a network of individuals, groups, civil society organizations, and private sector actors to support community-based efforts to counter violent extremism, according to the new strategy document, titled Empowering Local Partners to Prevent Violent Extremism in the United States.
But administration policymakers have not worked with pro-American Muslim groups, said Zuhdi Jasser, president of the Phoenix-based America Islamic Forum for Democracy. The [groups] they work with are the wrong ones, Jasser told TheDC.
Muslims in the United States tend to be pro-Western and pro-American [but] the leadership of the mosques and the Islamic centers tend to be influenced by Islamists overseas, said Andrew McCarthy, who successfully prosecuted Sheik Omar Abdel Rahman and eleven other terrorists in 1995. Rahman had earlier created a terror group in Egypt.
Instead of partnering with Islamic groups, the federal government should use routine policing and civil-rights laws to protect individuals in Muslim communities from being intimidated by politicized Muslims, many of whom are tied to the Egypt-based Muslim Brotherhood, McCarthy said.
Federal protection would ease assimilation by people from Muslim countries and also undermine Muslim ideologies that spur terrorism, adds McCarthy, who now runs the Center for Law and Counterterrorism at the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies.
The White Houses new strategy was applauded by advocacy groups including the Muslim Public Affairs Council, and the Council on American-Islamic Relations. The way the plan is rolling out is very much in line with a community partnership model, and we believe that is very useful, said Salam Al-Maryati, president of MPAC
According to a statement from CAIRs executive director, Nihad Awad,Programs that build trust between law enforcement authorities and the communities they serve are crucial Our government must also engage with American Muslim institutions and individuals proven to enjoy community support.
The U.S. Department of Justice designated CAIR an unindicted conspirator in the successful 2008 prosecution of several U.S.-based Muslims for smuggling funds to the Hamas terror group.
The administrations strategy comes almost 10 years after Al Qaedas attack on New York, and after what MPAC says were at least 48 additional attacks or terrorist plots by observant Muslims.
The terror threat is not coming from the [Muslim] communities, Al Maryati insists, but from individuals that communities can help us detect and rehabilitate.
U.S. government officials have bent over backwards to be respectful to Islamists, which is not helpful, McCarthy argues. And Americans would be safer if government policy encouraged a natural assimilation of pro-Western Muslims there are many in the United States and [made] clear that the law of the United States is the supreme law, and were not ceding territory or legal jurisdiction to local Islamic activists.
A recent survey of Gallup polling data showed a large segment of Americans with a Muslim background actually have few connections to Muslim groups. Only about half of self-identified Muslims in the United States go to a mosque, and almost half 48.5 percent declined to name a Muslim advocacy group that most represented their interests.
Only 11.5 percent of Muslim respondents said CAIR most represented their interests, 3.5 percent chose MPAC, and 13 percent cited groups that the report did not identify. The Abu Dhabi Gallup Center, which is supported by the Crown Prince Court of Abu Dhabi, issued the survey on Tuesday.
The administrations new policy document offers no details on implementation plans, but is closer to Al Maryatis preferences for federal cooperation with Islamic groups than to McCarthys recommendations for a focus on individuals rights.
For example, the report says the federal government must use a wide range of good governance programs including those that promote immigrant integration and civic engagement, protect civil rights, and provide social services that may help prevent radicalization that leads to violence.
Communities that do try to discourage terrorism should be praised and be given extra government support, said the report. Where communities have been active in condemning terrorism and confronting violent extremism, we must recognize their efforts; help them build upon their work; and connect them with other communities and stakeholders in order to share best practices.
The report is silent about criteria for choosing U.S. groups to be supported by the government.
It also discourages criticism of Muslim groups, even when they share common beliefs with terrorists. Strong religious beliefs should never be confused with violent extremism [and] officials and the American public should not stigmatize or blame communities because of the actions of a handful of individuals.
The report does not discuss the ideologies or motives of Islamic terrorists, except in noting that Al Qaeda terrorists all believe: (1) the United States is out to destroy Islam; and (2) this justifies violence against Americans.
The government needs to think through how and with whom it partners sometimes we do that well, and more often, we have not, said Matthew Levitt, director of the counterterrorism program at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. Sometimes the largest and loudest groups get most attention, but the most grassroots and effective groups do not, he said.
Advocates from MPAC, CAIR and other Muslim advocacy groups have met with Obama administration officials during the last two years, but leaders in Jassers council of Western-oriented Muslim groups say they were frozen out of government discussions.
In July the American Islamic Leadership Council urged the administration to engage non-Islamist Muslim groups to help develop and implement effective counter-radicalization programs, which affirm the principles of liberty and individual rights, within an Islamic narrative.
The July draft of the administrations strategy provides no criteria for determining with which Muslim groups the Administration will conduct its outreach programs
[and] focuses narrowly upon al-Qaida as the enemy, said the councils recommendations. Council members include Jassers organization and 24 other individuals and groups, few of which have staff or offices.
‘The White Houses new plan to curb home-grown Islamic extremism calls for partnerships between local governments, various non-profits, and U.S. communities of Muslims.’
Good luck with that!
We have Elected the ENEMY!!!
Are you affiliated with Al Qaeda in any way?
Er, no.
Ok.
The non-profits that this Administration decides to work with on this will reveal whether they seriously have a clue and seriously want to do anything.
My guess is, they’ll end up with the typical ‘diverse’ group that all liberals strive for and will accomplish nothing toward their supposed goals, and in fact will further enable the home-grown terrorism they’re trying to prevent.
This is the failed concept of “community policing” where the police are immersed into the neighborhood where trust was supposed to increase.
Instead, the neighborhoods moved further away from the police and turned more towards the gangs and criminals.
Only a fool believes the police and criminals will have trust. If the police get nicer, the criminals get nastier. If the police become timid, the criminals become bold.
In most inner cities, the police have lost control because they are not tough enough. Community policing is and was a joke to the criminals. It was a free pass to be criminals.
It will be the same with the terrorists.
Even Bush used the FOXes to guard the henhouse
now Obama gave the FOXes the keys to the home, not just the henhouse
Sad
WE ARE DOOMED!
Insanity !
The police are tough enough. It is the court system and the Judges who are not tough.
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.