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The Guantanamo Arrests -- What Do They Mean?
danielpipes.org ^ | October 1, 2003 | Daniel Pipes

Posted on 10/01/2003 4:01:50 PM PDT by WaterDragon

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The Guantánamo Arrests – What Do They Mean? Fox News: The O'Reilly Factor September 30, 2003 O'REILLY: Thanks for staying with us. I'm Bill O'Reilly.

In the "FACTOR Follow-Up" segment tonight, there are currently 12 Muslim chaplains on active duty in the U.S. armed forces, ministering to about 4,200 American-Muslim military personnel. That's causing some controversy because of the arrest at Guantánamo Bay, which we mentioned earlier in the broadcast. The arrest of a man named Abdurahman Alamoudi, who was authorized by the Pentagon to nominate Muslim chaplains, has now been charged with possible terrorist financing. We'll hear both sides.

First, here in the studio, Daniel Pipes, author of the book Militant Islam Reaches America.

All right. How is it - with I'm stunned that they could have this kind of security breach in Guantánamo Bay. I'm not so stunned about the Muslim chaplains, because that's—you know, these guys are nominated by Muslim organizations, right?

DANIEL PIPES, MIDDLE EAST FORUM DIRECTOR: Right. But there are three individuals connected in Guantánamo who are now under arrest, one chaplain and two translators. I think Colonel [David] Hunt did a great job in setting it up [in a preceding segment on the show]. He talked about the lack of training, counterintelligence, and so forth. But I think there is one more element which I'd like to bring in, which is the fact that the U.S. government war sees itself in a on terrorism. My view is that terrorism is a tactic, not an enemy. Terrorism is what the enemy uses against us. We're not really defining the enemy when we talk about terrorism. We have to go a step further and talk about the enemy himself. And that is, I would say, those who support militant Islam. And that would apply to Khomeini, that would apply to Bin Laden, to al Qaeda...

O'REILLY: I don't think anybody would disagree with that, that militant Islam is the driving force behind terrorism. But why is it so hard for the U.S. military to keep out militants?

PIPES: Because if you don't acknowledge that it's militant Islam, then you can't go looking for it. You're just looking for terrorists....(snip)

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The Guantánamo Arrests – What Do They Mean? Fox News: The O'Reilly Factor September 30, 2003 O'REILLY: Thanks for staying with us. I'm Bill O'Reilly.

In the "FACTOR Follow-Up" segment tonight, there are currently 12 Muslim chaplains on active duty in the U.S. armed forces, ministering to about 4,200 American-Muslim military personnel. That's causing some controversy because of the arrest at Guantánamo Bay, which we mentioned earlier in the broadcast. The arrest of a man named Abdurahman Alamoudi, who was authorized by the Pentagon to nominate Muslim chaplains, has now been charged with possible terrorist financing. We'll hear both sides.

First, here in the studio, Daniel Pipes, author of the book Militant Islam Reaches America.

All right. How is it - with I'm stunned that they could have this kind of security breach in Guantánamo Bay. I'm not so stunned about the Muslim chaplains, because that's—you know, these guys are nominated by Muslim organizations, right?

DANIEL PIPES, MIDDLE EAST FORUM DIRECTOR: Right. But there are three individuals connected in Guantánamo who are now under arrest, one chaplain and two translators. I think Colonel [David] Hunt did a great job in setting it up [in a preceding segment on the show]. He talked about the lack of training, counterintelligence, and so forth. But I think there is one more element which I'd like to bring in, which is the fact that the U.S. government war sees itself in a on terrorism. My view is that terrorism is a tactic, not an enemy. Terrorism is what the enemy uses against us. We're not really defining the enemy when we talk about terrorism. We have to go a step further and talk about the enemy himself. And that is, I would say, those who support militant Islam. And that would apply to Khomeini, that would apply to Bin Laden, to al Qaeda...

O'REILLY: I don't think anybody would disagree with that, that militant Islam is the driving force behind terrorism. But why is it so hard for the U.S. military to keep out militants?

PIPES: Because if you don't acknowledge that it's militant Islam, then you can't go looking for it. You're just looking for terrorists. Nobody says that the chaplain or the translators were terrorists. They were not people lobbing grenades. Nonetheless, they, in their own capacity, may have been part of the militant Islamic infrastructure. We don't know for sure. It's alleged. But should those allegations be true, it could be that they are part of the infrastructure.

O'REILLY: It looks like they are. Again, they are innocent until proven guilty. But look, you've got most American Muslims are law-abiding people. They're not militant and they're not looking to hurt us. So out of that pool, you have to select people to be military chaplains. And it looks like they made a mistake with one guy. Is that a larger issue?

PIPES: I think so. Because, look, the response of the military when the arrest took place last week, was we've got no problem with our hiring practices. Then two senators, Kyl and Schumer, said you do have problems; we're going to look into this. The military said well, maybe we do have problems, in which case we will look at all 2,800 of the military chaplains in the armed services. To which I say that's not going to work. You have to look at the twelve [Muslim chaplains].

O'REILLY: They're not acknowledging that they have a problem in the Muslim area, they want to just look at all of them. Isn't it just a failure to vet these people? That's what it is...

PIPES: It's a conceptual failure. It's an unwillingness and an inability...

O'REILLY: A political correctness. That's what you're talking about.

PIPES: Col. Hunt talked about political correctness; I'm spelling it out. The political correctness is an unwillingness to say "We have a problem with the Muslim chaplains," as opposed to the Christian and Jewish ones.

O'REILLY: But only one Muslim chaplain. Is it fair to define it across the board?

PIPES: Well, but you have a problem now, it appears, with two translators. I have documented that there are six other servicemen in the U.S. forces who have been in some way implicated in violence connected to militant Islam in the last few years.

O'REILLY: Six out of 4,200. That's not a lot, though?

PIPES: That's a lot. Six have engaged in violence.

O'REILLY: We remember the one guy in Kuwait who killed his own people.

PIPES: That's one of the six.

O'REILLY: All right. I got it. I got it. We'll get the other side, now. Mr. Pipes, thank you.

Let's go now to Los Angeles where Sarah Eltantawi, the communications director for the Muslim Public Affairs Council joins us. What say you, Miss Eltantawi?

SARAH ELTANTAWI, COMMUNICATIONS DIRECTOR, MUSLIM PUBLIC AFFAIRS COUNCIL: I actually did the division with Daniel Pipes' number. I read his article. I don't understand what it is he's trying to do with extracting this large theory. I mean, I took the number six that he spelled out. I added it with the three. I come up with nine. Divided that by 4,200. And I got .21, which is less than a quarter of a percentage of American Muslims who are even being accused of wrongdoing.

And you know what, Bill, before I came on today, I called up some friends of mine, American Muslims who served in the military, and they are outraged. They put their lives on the line. They served as translators, cultural interpreters, served their time in the United States Army with honor and distinction as tens of thousands of other American Muslims have done for their country, and they do not appreciate political pundits like Daniel Pipes who have not served in the military coming in and trying to disparage their efforts on behalf of their country.

O'REILLY: All right. Is it fair, is it fair, Miss Eltantawi, in this age where—and I think Mr. Pipes is right in this regard—our enemy, are fanatical Islamists. That's our enemy. That's who is after us. Is it fair to vet Muslims a little bit more than anybody else being that circumstance?

ELTANTAWI: I don't think so, Bill. Because, if you look again at the numbers. The number is too statistically small to vet American Muslims. And there's a problem here. Who is going to choose how to vet?...(snip)

(Excerpt) Read more at danielpipes.org ...


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Extended News; Foreign Affairs; Government; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: danielpipes; gitmo; interview; islamist; muslims; orielly; pipes; spyring; usmilitary

1 posted on 10/01/2003 4:01:51 PM PDT by WaterDragon
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To: WaterDragon
Pipes included the following in the emailed transcript this afternoon.....

Dear Reader:

I usually send out transcripts without commentary, but I feel impelled to say a few words to introduce the transcript that follows:

Eltantawi and I are interviewed sequentially here because I refuse to debate her or other representatives of the militant Islamic lobby. Who the television producers put on after me, however, I do not attempt to control.

Eltantawi says some pretty interesting things. Perhaps most so is her nonchalance that "less than a quarter of a percentage of American Muslims" serving in the U.S. military are accused of criminal violence.

The most amusing point is when Eltantawi gravely insists that "the Defense Department and the FBI know more about this [problem of Muslim criminality] than people like Daniel Pipes" and O'Reilly laughingly replies "Obviously they don’t. We have three people arrested at Guantánamo Bay at the terrorist camps. Obviously, the FBI doesn’t know."

And the most inaccurate point is when Eltantawi ascribes to me the view that "all American Muslims be suspended from their positions until they can, quote, prove their loyalty." What I wrote in my column this week was that "presently employed Muslim personnel who got their jobs through those [suspect] institutions" should be suspended until their loyalty can be confirmed. Even after O'Reilly demurred from her version of what I said, she insisted "It’s a quote from his article, Bill. It is a quote from the article."

Yours, Daniel Pipes

2 posted on 10/01/2003 4:05:06 PM PDT by WaterDragon
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To: WaterDragon
They mean that the Muslim-Saudi conspiracy to destroy/weaken the US is far broader than previously thought. It explains why the neocommunists and America-hating traitors "know" that Saddam had nothing to do with 9-11. They want to divert attention from the conspiracy and try to hold that each action against us is independent. THEY AREN'T!!!

They want us to fragment our response. There are Muslim terrorists coming across the border from Mexico and, probably, from Canada. They are all funded, directly and indirectly, with Saudi money. WE MUST STOP THEM!

3 posted on 10/01/2003 4:34:01 PM PDT by Tacis
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