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Steven Emerson,
Executive Director
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July 13, 2017
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U.S.
Sen. Richard Blumenthal's CAIR Ally Posts al-Qaida Leader's Video
by John Rossomando
IPT News
July 13, 2017
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U.S. Sen. Richard
Blumenthal with CAIR-Connecticut's Mongi Dhaouadi
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A board
member with the Council on American Islamic Relations' (CAIR)
Connecticut chapter reposted a video by a designated al-Qaida terrorist on his
Facebook page last month and says Palestinian attacks against Israel aren't
terrorist acts. Nonetheless, U.S. Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn.,
considers Mongi Dhaouadi his go-to guy on Muslim issues and has
worked with him closely for the past six years. This relationship is
particularly curious considering Blumenthal's strong statements of support
for Israel.
Dhaouadi is a man of contradictions. On one hand, he says that Islam and
terror do not mix.
"These terrorist groups don't represent our faith, do not represent
our community. And so we want to make that clear to everyone who keeps
saying that we don't hear enough from the Muslim community. We say it and
we say it over and over again," Dhaouadi said in November 2015.
On the other, Dhaouadi reposted
a pro-Qatar video on his Facebook page last month by Abdul Majeed
Al-Zindani, a specially designated terrorist and former Osama bin
Laden loyalist.
A 2004 Treasury Department statement calls Al-Zindani one
of bin Laden's "spiritual leaders." He also helped buy arms for
al-Qaida and other terrorists. Al-Zindani also appears on the United Nations list of specially
designated terrorists.
He also served on the board of Sheikh Yusuf Qaradawi's Hamas-funding
operation known as the Union of Good, the Treasury Department said in a
2008 press release labeling it a terrorist operation. Al-Zindani's al-Qaida
connection persists; the Treasury Department noted in 2013 that he provides
"religious guidance in support of [al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula]
operations."
Anwar al-Awlaki taught at Iman University in Sana'a, Yemen, an
institution founded and run by Al-Zindani Prosecutors in 2005 described Iman University as "a 'nest for
terrorism' that exports and propagates terrorism."
In the video Dhaouadi posted on Facebook, Al-Zindani thanked Qatar for supporting
Al-Jazeera and for giving refuge to people who had been kicked out of their
home countries – a likely reference to the terrorists harbored by the Gulf
emirate.
That might be appealing to Dhaouadi, who has issued extreme anti-Israel
statements.
After Saudi Arabia demanded that Qatar sever ties with Hamas last month,
Dhaouadi accused the
Saudis of "doing the bidding for the apartheid state of Israel.
Selling out the Palestinian cause in the open."
Palestinian attacks on Israelis, he has said, are not terrorist acts.
"Resisting the occupation is NOT terrorism it is a legitimate right
of defending one self from your land from real terrorists i.e. IDF,"
Dhaouadi wrote.
Blumenthal has condemned Palestinian terrorist attacks against
Israelis.
Dhaouadi's support for the Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions (BDS) movement
against Israel also stands at odds with Blumenthal's stated support for
Israel.
Blumenthal issued a Dec. 22 statement condemning a U.N. resolution calling Israel's West Bank settlements
illegal.
"Support for Israel on this issue has been and will continue to be
strongly bipartisan. Consistent with past policy, this Administration must
now veto this most recent misguided and one-sided attempt backed by the
Palestinian Authority to isolate Israel and weaken the peace process,"
Blumenthal wrote.
Blumenthal also strongly supports U.S. aid to the Israel Defense Forces (IDF),
while Dhaouadi calls the IDF a "criminal force."
"My name is Mongi Dhaouadi and I #SupportGaza
because it is time we break-open Israel's concentration camps and end the
occupation," Dhaouadi wrote in
a July 2014 Facebook post.
Dhaouadi and Blumenthal's Long Relationship
Blumenthal and Dhaouadi's public relationship dates to 2011 when the
senator spoke
at CAIR Connecticut's fundraising banquet. Dhaouadi was the chapter's
executive director.
Dhaouadi is not the only radical at CAIR Connecticut. In 2006, board
member and chapter founder Badr Malik defended riots against the Danish cartoon of Islam's
prophet Muhammad.
"It's not an overreaction in my opinion. Because it's just like
anti-Semitism is wrong, you don't put down a religion just because you are
not of that religion. It's not supposed to be happening. Making fun of
religion, making a joke of a prophet just to provoke people's emotion, it's
not right. It's basically bashing a religion," Malik said.
Fellow Connecticut board member Eman Beshtawii supports the Boycott,
Divestment, Sanctions movement and rejects Israel's right to exist as a
Jewish state.
"If you support Israel's 'right to exist as a Jewish state' in a
country whose indigenous Palestinian people today form half the population,
then you ... must come to terms with the inevitability of massacres," Beshtawii wrote in a
2014 Facebook post.
Blumenthal joined a rogue's gallery of Islamic extremists on the program
at the 2011 banquet. That included Imam Siraj Wahhaj, who testified
in defense of 1993 World Trade Center bombing mastermind Omar Abdel
Rahman, and Ahmed Bedier, a former CAIR Tampa executive who described Israel as a "terror [state]."
"I want to thank you for your friendship, for your support, for
giving me the honor of being your United States senator; I am the United
States senator for every single person in this room. I work for you," Blumenthal told
the CAIR audience.
He also attended Dhaouadi's April 2013 lecture on compassion in Islam and CAIR
Connecticut's 9th annual banquet with Dhaouadi in December
2013. The banquet speaker's list also included Wahhaj and CAIR Florida
Executive Director Hassan Shibly, a radical who defended Hizballah and opposes FBI
sting operations.
Last October, Blumenthal spoke at CAIR Connecticut's 13th annual banquet with
radical Islamist Linda Sarsour.
That month,
Blumenthal also participated in a joint press conference with Dhaouadi and announced a
plan to bring Syrian refugees into the U.S. quicker. A month later,
Blumenthal again stood with Dhaouadi and CAIR Connecticut at his state's
capitol on Nov. 21 calling for stronger hate crimes laws.
Dhaouadi, like other CAIR leaders, has a history of promoting hate
crimes that turn out to be false. He labeled the brutal 2012 murder of Iraqi Muslim refugee
Shaima Alawadi outside San Diego a hate crime.
"She was found dead two weeks ago in her home, beaten, with a note
sitting next to her that says, 'Go back home terrorist,' 'Go back home
terrorist,'" Dhaouadi
said. "I don't know about you, but I have two daughters who
wear the head scarf and they walk down the streets and they attend the
public schools in New London."
Her husband was later convicted of the crime.
Several weeks after the hate crimes press conference, Blumenthal
attended a forum on the subject at the Islamic Center of
Connecticut in Windsor with Dhaouadi. During this CAIR-sponsored event,
Blumenthal promised to "vigorously question" Attorney
General nominee Jeff Sessions.
Blumenthal held a joint press conference with Dhaouadi in February
to protest President Trump's proposed travel ban.
"We urge the president, abandon the Muslim ban. Abandon the
religious test," Blumenthal said.
Dhaouadi's recent pro-terrorist Facebook posts are only the tip of the
iceberg when it comes to his terrorist sympathies. They wouldn't be terribly
difficult for Blumenthal's staffers to discover.
Dhaouadi also works for the Center for the Study of Islam and Democracy (CSID), a
group linked to Tunisia's branch of the Muslim Brotherhood movement, the Ennahda
Party.
He supports Ennahda Party founder Rached Ghannouchi, a member
of the International Muslim Brotherhood's Guidance Bureau. Dhaouadi's
Facebook timeline includes numerous posts featuring images of Ghannouchi or news
about the cleric.
An October 2015
Facebook post shows Dhaouadi escorting Ghannouchi through the streets
of Washington, D.C. Ghannouchi spoke three days earlier at an event in New York
sponsored by CSID, founded by former Ennahda member Radwan Masmoudi. Dhaouadi also attended Ennahda's congress
in Tunisia in May 2016.
A Guantanamo Bay detainee report notes that Ennahda attempted to link up with
other radical groups including al-Qaida during Ghannouchi's exile in the
United Kingdom in the 1990s. More recently, Ghannouchi met in August 2011 with
Ansar al-Shariah founder Seif Allah Ben Hassine, better known as Abu Iyadh
– a former bin Laden ally sanctioned by the U.S. after 9/11. Abu Iyadh was responsible for al-Qaida's assassination of Northern Alliance leader Ahmed Shah
Masood two days before the 9/11 attacks.
Ghannouchi encouraged
Tunisian Muslims to wage jihad in Syria against the Assad regime in
2014; Tunisians account for the largest contingent of foreign fighters
in the country's civil war.
Additionally, Ghannouchi's name appears in the phone book of Youssef Nada, founder of the Muslim
Brotherhood controlled Al-Taqwa Bank, which U.S. Treasury officials described
as an al-Qaida and Hamas funding source.
Ghannouchi also maintains close ties with Hamas leaders such as Khaled Meshaal
and has repeatedly called for Israel's destruction. He called for the "destruction of the Jews" at a
December 1990 conference in Tehran at which he also called for jihad
against America.
Ghannouchi still supports terrorism against Israeli Jews; he gave a stirring endorsement of the Palestinian knife
jihad, calling it a "historic opportunity to support this Intifada,
support the Palestinians, and liberate Jerusalem" in a 2015 article published by Quds Press.
Pot Meet Kettle
Blumenthal castigated Attorney General Jeff Sessions for his association with Center for Security Policy founder,
president and CEO Frank Gaffney and David Horowitz Freedom Center founder
and CEO David Horowitz during Sessions' January confirmation hearing.
Blumenthal wanted Sessions to disavow having called Horowitz "a man
I admire."
Blumenthal likewise asked Sessions to disavow the support that Gaffney
and the Center for Security Policy gave him when they gave him an award in
August 2015.
"Senator Blumenthal ... has trouble distinguishing America's
defenders from her enemies," Horowitz told the Investigative Project
on Terrorism in an email.
Gaffney likewise slammed Blumenthal.
"He is so willfully blind, and so evidently under the influence of
Muslim Brotherhood operatives that he is both evidently clueless about the
threat they represent here in the United States, and he compounds it by
castigating people who understand it far better than he does," Gaffney
said.
Blumenthal's office did not respond to requests for comment.
His alliance with Dhaouadi is curious, given his grandstanding on
Gaffney and Horowitz. If it's bad for Sessions to like people with
controversial positions, why is it okay for Blumenthal?
Related Topics: Outreach,
The
Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) | John
Rossomando, Mongi
Dhaouadi, Richard
Blumenthal, Abdul
Majeed Al-Zindani, al-Qaida,
Union
of Good, Iman
University, Palestinian
terrorism, BDS,
Badr
Malik, Eman
Beshtawii, false
hate crime reports, Rached
Ghannouchi, Abu
Iyad, Outreach,
The
Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR)
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