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Steven Emerson,
Executive Director
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March 16, 2018
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Al-Arian
Tries To Play #MeToo With Anti-Semitic Conspiracy Theorist
IPT News
March 16, 2018
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When he lived in
America, Sami Al-Arian was something of a media darling. Despite
documents and recordings placing him on the board of directors of a terrorist
group – the Palestinian Islamic Jihad – Al-Arian managed to push a
narrative that he was a peaceful, "rumpled academic," and the victim of baseless
suspicion.
He still enjoys favorable media treatment, yet Al-Arian slid
over to the lunatic fringe this week in order to complain about France's
rape investigation into fellow Islamist academic Tariq Ramadan.
It was Al-Arian's second appearance on Kevin Barrett's "Truth
Jihad" radio show.
Barrett is a softer-spoken, liberal version of Alex Jones, seeing
"false flag operations" behind any terrorist attack attributed to
Islamists. In his view, virtually all the high-profile terrorist attacks by
Muslims are really orchestrated by Zionists lurking in the shadows.
- The 9/11 attacks? A "Zionist-neocon
inside job" using remote controlled aircraft. There
were no hijackers.
- The 2015 massacre
at the editorial office of Charlie Hebdo? "Another
Zionist false flag" operation.
- The San Bernardino shooting? A false flag carried
out by "three white, paramilitaries." Syed Farouk
and his wife Tashfeen Malik weren't terrorists, but "patsies
[who] were executed in handcuffs inside a police car."
- ISIS? A "'mercenary
army,' which has been organized by the Zionists."
Al-Arian, a media-savvy computer scientist, likely would have searched
the internet for background before agreeing to speak with Barrett. If he
did, he'd find Mother Jones magazine placing Barrett among the "less reputable
voices" pushing "bizarre conspiracy theories" about the Charlie
Hebdo attack in Paris.
He'd find the Anti-Defamation League showing how Barrett "invokes anti-Semitic
conspiracy theories about supposed Jewish manipulation of world events,
claiming that the West does not comprehend Israel's duplicity because of
'the extent of clandestine Zionist power; and the fact that the Holocaust
story has become the most sacred narrative of the West, despite the
questionable factual basis of some of its most important details.'"
He'd even see the liberal Political Research Associates profile of Barrett last fall, which said he "has
built a career repackaging antisemitism for the U.S. Hard Right and Left.
Unfortunately, his particular brand of antisemitism—scapegoating Israel,
Zionists, and Jews for the rise of Islamophobia—is welcome in some corners
of the U.S. Left."
Just a month before the interview, Barrett went on Iran's state-controlled Press TV to claim the San Bernardino massacre, in which 14 people were killed
and 21 wounded, was another in "a series of Zionist-neoconservative
false flag attack staged by intelligence agencies linked to the Israeli
Mossad, murdering large number of people and all of these have been falsely
blamed on 'radical Muslims.'"
Even if he didn't bother to look, Al-Arian's first conversation
made it clear what Barrett is all about. In both conversations, he listened
uncritically to Bennett's extensive conspiracy theories.
If al-Qaida wasn't responsible for 9/11, Al-Arian asked in their 2016
conversation, how do you explain the planes?
There were no hijackers, Barrett said. It was a "remote controlled
hijacking ... some researchers are not even sure that two of the planes
even flew."
"My god," Al-Arian said.
"A lot of my friends subscribe to this," Al-Arian added.
"I haven't had a chance to actually look at into it and look at the
evidence either way."
It was all done to benefit Zionists, Barrett explained. There are more
Muslims in the United States than Jews, he falsely claimed. "And if they don't terrorize us
into paralysis, their Palestine policy is going to change. The U.S. will no
longer keep propping up Greater Israel and the Likudniks."
"Unfortunately," Al-Arian said, "they have succeeded.
"Yeah," Barrett replied. "So far."
Click on the play button to hear the entire exchange.
Two years later, Barrett seemed like a good place to talk about a
Muslim's mistreatment by a Western government. Barrett's own description of the interview describes Al-Arian as
the victim of "absurdly bogus charges by more or less the same people
who had attacked the World Trade Center and the Pentagon."
Only Al-Arian knows why he, a man embraced by the academic community as a civil rights
activist and still welcomed by Georgetown University faculty, would opt
for a platform acknowledged on both the Left and the Right as blatantly
anti-Semitic with a fairly limited reach to make a stand for Tariq Ramadan.
Al-Arian, who was deported
to Turkey in 2015 pursuant to terms in his 2006 guilty plea connected to his Palestinian Islamic
Jihad support, doesn't generally push conspiracy theories, but when it
comes to Jews and Israel, he and Barrett share many ideas.
As the videos in each of the following links show, Al-Arian invoked a
Quranic passage calling Jews "monkeys and pigs," screamed "death to Israel," during rallies. He sat passively
as he was introduced as the head of "the active arm of the
Islamic Jihad Movement in Palestine. He also celebrated a double-suicide bombing by the Palestinian
Islamic Jihad by writing to a Kuwaiti legislator, soliciting "true
support for the jihad effort in Palestine so that operations such as these
can continue, so that people do not lose faith in Islam ..."
Ramadan stood by Al-Arian during his prosecution. Now Al-Arian
seems to be returning the favor.
Ramadan, an Oxford University professor and the grandson of Muslim
Brotherhood founder Hassan al-Banna, is accused of raping two women in France. One, Henda
Ayari, claims Ramadan "choked me so hard that I thought I was going to
die" while raping her in his hotel room in 2012. A second accuser,
identified as "Christelle," told Vanity Fair's French edition that Ramadan
beat and raped her in 2009 in a Lyon hotel.
French law allows him to be held in custody while an investigation
determines whether he should stand trial.
It's a witch hunt, Barrett said, and Al-Arian agreed. Tariq Ramadan is
an effective voice for Islam in Europe, so he had to be destroyed.
"He presents Islam as a rational way of life, even in a liberal
world," Al-Arian said. "And he was able to stand his ground, as I
said, in many debates when faced with assaults on the whole notion of
religion. And many powerful political figures don't like what he has to
offer, don't like his message. And they have been trying to assassinate
him, character assassination, throughout his career, throughout his life.
And what we see now is a very dirty game of trying to assassinate his
character and try to basically kill him, figuratively speaking, by bringing
these vile charges."
Al-Arian and Barrett made a passing reference to the Harvey Weinstein
sexual harassment and assault scandal, and the growing #MeToo"
movement it sparked. But Al-Arian attacked the alleged victims' credibility
anyway in language that could have come from Weinstein's mouth.
"You know this whole thing; it just doesn't make any sense,"
he said. "People, you know, claiming rape. They start reporting it,
two three, and possibly they're threatening more. Ten years after the fact,
12 years after the fact, five years after the fact. Some of them claiming
that this was going on for years. How does that make any sense whatsoever?
He's a public figure for God's sake. And then what is the evidence?
Absolutely nothing except what people claim might have happened! You have
absolutely no, you know, any evidence that we know of. And why would people
not talk before? Why would people subject themselves to years of abuse? It
doesn't make any sense."
Both victims are Muslim women. And, in the United States, a third Muslim
woman reportedly has gone to the FBI with similar
allegations. More victims could come forward, said attorney Rabia Chaudry.
"This is not a vast international conspiracy. This is also not how
people are wrongfully convicted," she wrote in a Feb. 15 Facebook post. "Wrongfully convicted
people are not accused of multiple similar crimes in different countries.
In fact they usually have completely clean records other than one
accusation that ends up being false."
Try telling that to Barrett and Al-Arian, who are likely to dismiss
Chaudry as a tool of the Zionist conspiracy.
"It's a political case disguised as a criminal one against one of
the most and foremost moderate voices of Islam in Europe," Al-Arian
insisted. "And he's been targeted, you know, Dr. Ramadan has been
targeted for many years by, as you say, Islamophobes, those who really hate
what he stands for, because he does not fit the – this caricature of being
an extremist, angry man against the West and all that."
He probably could have found more reputable outlets to make this
argument. It says a lot that he chose Barrett's conspiracy carnival
instead.
Related Topics: Media, Sami
Al-Arian, conspiracy
theories, "false
flag" claims, anti-Semitism,
Tariq
Ramadan, sexual
assault, Kevin
Barrett, 9/11
attacks, Charlie
Hebdo, San
Bernardino attack, Media,
Sami
Al-Arian
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