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Steven Emerson,
Executive Director
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November 16, 2018
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CAIR
Continues Building Its "Wall of Resistance" Against Law
Enforcement
by Patrick Dunleavy
IPT News
November 16, 2018
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Several years ago
the Investigative Project on Terrorism exposed the Council on American-Islamic Relations
(CAIR)'s deep-seated hostility toward law enforcement agencies. This
hostility was vividly displayed in a poster produced by CAIR's California
chapter that depicted a law enforcement officer, complete with dark trench
coat and hat, lurking in a neighborhood as doors slammed in the officer's
face. The poster exhorted followers to refuse to talk with the FBI and to
"Build a Wall of Resistance."
CAIR's anger grew out of the FBI's blacklisting the organization from outreach programs
after an investigation into CAIR's involvement in financing Hamas, a State
Department designated foreign terrorist organization.
CAIR spokesman Ibrahim Hooper claimed the poster was being misinterpreted and blamed that on "Muslim bashers," and an
"Islamophobic hate machine." The local CAIR chapter eventually
removed the poster from its website at the request of the national
headquarters.
Outwardly, CAIR claims to want to work with law enforcement agencies to
"protect our nation," but recent actions by its San Francisco
chapter reveal that the policy to "Build a Wall of Resistance"
continues to be its driving force.
Case in point, the Alameda County Sheriff's Department was awarded a
grant from the Department of Homeland Security's Countering Violent
Extremism program. The grant is to fund a program that would address the
issue of inmate radicalization and also assist with the successful re-entry
of released prisoners to the community.
In the initial application for the grant, the sheriff's department
partnered with the Ta'leef Collective, a Muslim non-profit located in
Freemont, Calif.
Sheriff's department staff met with Ta'leef founder Usama Canon, a
former California Department of Corrections chaplain, and Micah Anderson,
director of Ta'leef's wellness program, to formalize the grant application.
Sheriff Gregory Ahern described Ta'leef as an organization that had
"extensive experience in providing mental health and spiritual
wellness services to justice-involved individuals."
One of the goals of the program was to "assist those individuals
most susceptible to violent extremism." In other words, they wanted to
help inmates avoid radicalizing influences from extremist groups seeking
new members.
Acknowledging the threat of prison radicalization would seem to be a no-brainer
given the studies that have been done on the issue both here and abroad. This was also the initial finding of the FBI's
Correctional Intelligence Initiative program begun in 2003 which found the U.S. prison system "represents a sizable
pool of individuals vulnerable to radicalization."
The most recent study by George Washington University's
Program on Extremism found prison radicalization, "to be a major
factor in how the threat of terrorism will unfold over the next
decade."
In an earlier study, GWU found that prison radicalization
was "evolving" and that "a broader approach is needed"
which would include community and religious leaders.
Given the reality of the dual problem of radicalization & recidivism,
who would object to a program that seeks a collaborative work between law
enforcement and community organizations? Enter Zahra Billoo, executive
director of the Council of American Islamic Relations, San Francisco Bay
Area chapter. Billoo was on the job when her chapter published that
"Wall of Resistance" image on social media.
She believes that the program unfairly targets Muslims and that law
enforcement only uses the CVE programs to spy on the Muslim community.
Billoo also believes that all DHS CVE funding is
"tainted" because it comes from the Trump administration, even
though the Obama administration started the program.
It would appear that CAIR is attempting to hide behind its political
opposition to Trump even though the group was previously opposed to
cooperating with law enforcement in general. Given statements like this from
one of CAIR's outspoken leaders we should not be surprised for the renewed
call for resistance against any law enforcement agency that seeks to
develop a viable program that deals with violent extremism and prison
radicalization.
Pressure from CAIR caused Ta'leef leader Usama Canon to withdraw from the
program with the Alameda County Sheriff's Department. Sheriff Ahern
replaced Ta'Leef with Oakland's Mind Body Awareness (MBA) Project. It
should be noted that MBA director Micah Anderson still runs Ta'leef's
wellness program.
This is not the only incident where CAIR sought to derail a partnership
between law enforcement and community leaders in effectively dealing with
radicalization.
In June, CAIR filed a lawsuit against the city of Los Angeles for
accepting a CVE grant of $425,000 to combat radicalization.
Two months later, under pressure from CAIR and other Muslim activist
groups, L.A. Mayor Eric Garcetti announced that he would not accept the DHS grant money.
CAIR may have taken a derogatory poster down from its website, but it
continues to vilify any law enforcement agency that seeks DHS funding to
combat radicalizing influences in its community.
CAIR's continued obstinacy only harms the Muslim community. It erodes
the community's trust in law enforcement, a necessary component in
combating crime and violent extremism.
The wall of resistance has become an impediment to combating violent
extremism and radicalization. It needs to come down.
IPT Senior Fellow Patrick Dunleavy is the former Deputy Inspector
General for New York State Department of Corrections and author of The Fertile Soil of Jihad. He currently
teaches a class on terrorism for the United States Military Special
Operations School.
Related Topics: Patrick
Dunleavy, CAIR,
"wall
of resistance, "
Zahra Billoo, countering
violent extremism, FBI,
Ta'leef
Collective, Usama
Canon, Alameda
County Sheriff, Gregory
Ahern, prison
radicalization, George
Washington University Program on Extremism, Eric
Garcetti
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