|
Steven Emerson,
Executive Director
|
February 5, 2018
|
|
Al-Arian
Calls U.S. 'Our Enemy' At Turkish Conference
by John Rossomando
IPT News
February 5, 2018
|
|
|
Share:
|
Be the
first of your friends to like this.
Deported Palestinian
Islamic Jihad (PIJ) board member Sami Al-Arian denounced the United States as "our enemy"
last Tuesday at an Istanbul conference on Jerusalem sponsored by Turkey's
Directorate of Religious Affairs.
Ali Erbas, president of Turkey's Directorate of Religious Affairs,
denounced President Trump's decision to move the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem
and recognize it as Israel's capital in December.
"The Presidency of Religious Affairs is with the suffering
Palestinian Muslims who have been serving as the guardians of al-Aqsa for
years despite any kind of invasion and violence, and will continue to be by
their side and provide any kind of support for them," Erbas said in his message.
Al-Arian kept his role as a PIJ official secret while working as a
University of South Florida (USF) professor and Palestinian nationalist. He
founded a charity called the Islamic Committee for Palestine (ICP) that
raised money for the Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ) and featured PIJ
officials as speakers. He also formed a Tampa--based think tank called the
World and Islam Studies Enterprise (WISE), which provided cover in the early 1990s for Ramadan Abdullah
Shallah, who would later become the PIJ secretary general, as director
of the think tank. Shallah taught at USF as an instructor through a cooperative agreement. WISE made it possible for
Shallah to get an
entry visa into the U.S.
The ICP served as PIJ's "active arm," a 1991 videotaped fundraiser shows. Called "a master
manipulator" by the federal judge presiding over his case, Al-Arian pleaded guilty in 2006 to conspiring to make or receive
contributions of funds, goods or services to or for the benefit of the Palestinian
Islamic Jihad (PIJ), a Specially Designated Terrorist."
He was deported to Turkey in 2015 as part of that plea
agreement and directs of the Center for Regional Politics at Istanbul's Sabahattin
Zaim University. He has addressed several conferences, including one held in conjunction with Georgetown University's Awaleed
bin Talal Center for Christian Muslim Understanding in Istanbul last
September.
At the Istanbul conference, Al-Arian said the 1993 Oslo Accords that had established the Palestinian
Authority and theoretically led to the Palestine Liberation
Organization (PLO) recognizing Israel and renouncing violence, are
unacceptable.
"The United States, which gives Israel so much confidence, is our
enemy," Al-Arian said, telling the conference Muslims needed to stand
against the U.S. That includes
an embargo on the United States by Muslim nations, he said, according
to exiled Turkish journalist Abdullah Bozkurt.
Israel, Al-Arian said, wants to control the entire region.
"He is carrying the wood to fire of anti-American euphoria Erdogan
has lighted in Turkey," Bozkurt told the Investigative Project on
Terrorism in a Twitter exchange. "Moreover, Erdogan uses operatives
like him to make inroads into [the] Palestinian community abroad as well
back in Gaza/Ramallah."
While Turkey seems happy to give Al-Arian a base to stir up anti-Israel
and anti-American sentiment, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan also is finding
allies within the United States. Council on American Islamic Relations (CAIR) leaders
met Erbas last month at the Turkish government-supported
Diyanet Center of America in Lanham, Md.
Subscribing to a fundamentalist interpretation of Islamic law, Erbas's
Diyanet has said that children as young as 12 can marry. "The
other critical issue we need to fight is Islamophobia," Erbas said
last month, the Anadolu News Agency reported. "The efforts to show Islam as a
minacious and dangerous religion have been increasing day by day.
United States Council of Muslim Organizations (USCMO) Secretary General Oussama Jammal also attended last month's Diyanet event in Maryland. Jammal
pledged his support to Erdogan last month due to the
Turkish president's effort to unite Muslims.
Likewise, Mahmoud ElSharkawy, spokesman for the Muslim
Brotherhood-linked Egyptian Americans for Freedom and Justice (EAFJ), attended a "special
meeting and breakfast" with Erbas at the Maryland Diyanet Center
during last month's visit. ElSharkawy has a close relationship with exiled Muslim Brotherhood
leaders living in Turkey. Egypt's Al-Bawaba newspaper identifies
him as a member of the "International Organization of the Muslim
Brotherhood."
CAIR also held its
weeklong "Leadership Development Program" for the leaders of
its various chapters in conjunction with Georgetown University at the
Maryland Diyanet Center last week.
"[The meeting with Erbas] was part of Erdogan government's
systematic and deliberate campaign of wooing U.S. Muslim leaders, mainly
Brotherhood figures, with a view of creating a proxy group so that he can
mobilise (sic) them for political goals when he needs it down the
road," Bozkurt said.
"I think it undermines the national security of the US when a
foreign power, especially a dangerous Islamist like Erdogan, tries to
meddle into communal affairs, support proxy groups and provide sanctuary
when Islamists kicked out of the U.S.," Bozkurt said.
Related Topics: Sami
Al-Arian, The
Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) | John
Rossomando, Turkey,
Recep
Tayyip Erdogan, Ali
Erbas, WISE,
ICP,
Ramadan
Shallah, Sabhahattin
Zaim University, Diyanet
Center of America, Oussama
Jammal, USCMO,
Mahmoud
ElSharkawy, Abdullah
Bozkurt
|
The IPT accepts no funding from
outside the United States, or from any governmental agency or political or
religious institutions. Your support of The Investigative Project on
Terrorism is critical in winning a battle we cannot afford to lose. All
donations are tax-deductible. Click here to donate online. The
Investigative Project on Terrorism Foundation is a recognized 501(c)3
organization.
202-363-8602
- main
202-966-5191
- fax
|
|
No comments:
Post a Comment