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Steven Emerson,
Executive Director
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March 7, 2017
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New
York Cedes Ground in the Fight Against Terrorism
by Patrick Dunleavy
IPT News
March 7, 2017
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Capitulation in a
time of conflict is demoralizing to the rank and file charged with
protecting the community they serve. This appears to be the case in the
latest legal go round between the New York Police Department (NYPD) and
Muslim activist groups.
U.S. District Judge Charles S. Haight Jr, is about to accept an agreement that will hand over
control of the NYPD's Intelligence Division investigations to a civilian
monitor appointed by Mayor Bill de Blasio. This is the same mayor who loudly cheered President Obama's last-minute
commutation of FALN terrorist Oscar Lopez Rivera, who will be freed in May.
De Blasio extolled the works of a man whose organization was
responsible for more than 100 bombings, many in New York City, including
one that killed four innocent people.
To understand the impact that this proposed settlement, between the
NYPD, and the activist organization known as the Muslim Advocates will have
on existing counter terrorism measures, we have to understand how vitally
important is the issue of protecting cities against attacks by radical
Islamist terrorists. The activist groups claim that the police department
unfairly singled out Muslim communities in the greater New York/New Jersey
area for investigation and surveillance. They also claim that gathering
specific information about the neighborhoods amounted to unprecedented
"profiling." They point to a little known NYPD unit that
collected the data and accuse it of spying.
Their argument belies the fact that collecting demographic statistics
has been used for years by the U.S. Census Bureau to map out trends and
changes in neighborhoods. Law enforcement agencies nationwide have used
this practice for decades to investigate criminal organizations such as the
Mafia, or Columbian drug cartels. The normal investigative process would
include forensic examination of the communities most likely to be
victimized by criminal organizations. The FBI did not set up surveillance
in Chinatown when taking down the Cosa Nostra. They went to Little Italy.
Radical Islamist organizations have in the past infiltrated Muslim neighborhoods
in the United States and exerted harmful influence on those communities.
For example, in 1990 a little known Islamic cleric named Omar Abdel
Rahman came to live in the greater New York area. He visited mosques in
Brooklyn, Queens, Jersey City and elsewhere, and before long forced out any
clergy who were not in line with his radical ideology.
In Brooklyn's Al Farooq mosque on Atlantic Avenue, where Mustafa Shalabi
served as a treasurer, an argument occurred over how the money should be
spent. Shalabi was found murdered in his Coney Island apartment not long
after that fight. Another of the mosque's clerics, a Sudanese imam named
Zakaria Gasmalla, was forced out and moved his entire family to the Buffalo
area to escape the pressure from Abdel Rahman and his followers. The Blind
Sheik and his followers continued to use Muslim communities to raise money
for their plots, to hide weapons, and to build the truck bomb that was placed in the garage of
the World Trade Center on Feb. 26, 1993. Six people died and more than
1,000 were injured in the resulting explosion.
The first soldiers in the jihad against America lived within the Muslim
neighborhoods in the New York/New Jersey community.
In 2000, two of the 9/11 hijackers, Nawaf al-Hazmi and Khalid
al-Mihdhar, settled into an apartment in a San Diego neighborhood near the
Masjid Ar-Ribat al-Islami mosque. There Anwar al Awlaki, a young Islamic
clergyman, welcomed them. Today we know the American-born Awlaki
as one of al-Qaida's most influential preachers and most effective
radicalizers and recruiters.
Terrorists will seek out the neighborhoods where they feel most at home,
a place where they can use the community to their advantage. Members of the
Ribat mosque provided both transportation and language education skills to
the two terrorists not knowing their true objective.
Minneapolis' Cedar Riverside neighborhood has been dubbed "Little Mogadishu" because of it large
Somali population. It is a community that has seen more than 50 of its
members go overseas to join the Islamist terrorist organization Al Shabaab. Al
Shabaab preyed on second generation immigrants who felt a disconnect
between American society and their ancestral home. To stem the tide of
continued recruitment by radical Islamist terrorists like Al Shabaab, the
FBI's Joint Terrorism Task Force successfully focused its investigation on the Muslim community in
the greater Minneapolis area.
On the other hand,
groups like the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) seek to
portray law enforcement as sinister characters sneaking through neighborhoods
in trench coats looking to do harm to the community. One chapter urged
community members to "Build a Wall of Resistance" and not
cooperate with investigators in ongoing terrorist investigations. Nothing
could be further from the truth.
Thankfully, many members of Minneapolis' Somali community rejected this approach.
To blindly think that neighborhoods are somehow immune from the
nefarious tactics used by either criminal or terrorist organization is to
cede ground to those who would do us harm. Police departments exist to
protect and serve communities and one of those tools most helpful is
knowing the makeup of each neighborhood they patrol. Turning that
responsibility over to a terrorist-friendly mayor will only handcuff police
with the ambiguity of political correctness and lead to greater harm.
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: Civil suits
| Patrick
Dunleavy, mosques
in terror plots, NYPD,
community
surveillance, Charles
S. Haight Jr., Bill
de Blasio, Oscar
Lopez Rivera, Muslim
Advocates, Omar
Abdel Rahman, World
Trade Center bombing, Mustapha
Shalabi, Al
Farooq mosque, Anwar
al-Awlaki, Al-Ribat
mosque, Civil
suits
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