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Steven Emerson,
Executive Director
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August 21, 2018
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Brave
voice warned us of Islamic extremism
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Steve Emerson might have had himself a lucrative career in law, or
business, or investment banking, like so many of his fellow Ivy League
graduates. He might have lived a comfortable life, constructed around convention
and financial security.
He didn't go in that direction. He left Brown University in the late
1970s and headed for Washington, D.C., armed with edgy skepticism of
authority and a desire to make a difference. He has made a big one.
After a stint on Capitol Hill and a few award-winning years in
investigative journalism, Emerson wrote a groundbreaking expose of Saudi
Arabia's vast leverage over corporate America, Washington public relations
outfits and the nation's educational institutions, titled "The
American House of Saud: The Secret Petrodollar Connection." The book
launched Emerson's three decades as one of America's foremost experts on
radical Islam, terrorism and shadowy Middle East funding of extremism here
and abroad, during which he has written and spoken widely and, more
importantly, done the courageous, laborious, frustrating work of calling
bad, often dangerous, actors to account.
Twenty-three years ago, Emerson founded the Investigative Project on
Terrorism, which investigates the funding and operations of extremist
networks. It has been a reliable source for law enforcement agencies,
congressional committees and others. His work has been appreciated not one
bit by extremism's indulgers; Emerson has almost always been right, and
when on occasion he hasn't been, his enemies, well-funded with big
megaphones, have tried to take him down. Their failure to do so is
testament to Emerson's inexhaustible energy, monumental resilience and
unwillingness to be intimidated.
Emerson has been relentless about warning of radical Islam's designs on
the West, and about the urgency of confronting those designs rather than
looking the other way, or pretending they aren't real. He was famously
prescient in predicting 9/11 years before it occurred, earning derision
from the predictable quarters. In his 1993 PBS documentary "Terrorists
Among Us: Jihad in America," he decried the popular pretense that that
year's World Trade Center bombing was somehow a onetime deal. As far as the
media was concerned, he said, "all this was (was) a spectacular news
event that is over. Is it indeed over? The answer is: apparently not. A
network of Muslim extremists is committed to jihad against America."
In February 1998, he told the Senate Judiciary Committee, "The
foreign terrorist threat in the United States is one of the most important
issues we face. We now face the distinct possibility of mass civilian
murder the likes of which have not been seen since World War II." Four
months before 9/11 he wrote: "Al Qaeda is ... planning new attacks on
the US ... Al Qaeda and other terrorist groups ... have silently declared
war on the US; in turn, we must fight them as we would in a war."
Though Emerson himself would never endorse the comparison, he has been
something of a modern-day Paul Revere, warning the West that radical Islam
was not only coming, but already here. Unlike Revere, however, Emerson has
sometimes found himself vilified by those he was attempting to warn. The
vilification has typically originated with a kind of Islamism lobby, funded
by Middle Eastern entities and their allies, who have had a pronounced
self-interest in shutting off any spotlight on the spread of extremist
ideology and the tactics of those responsible for it. Whether it has been
death threats or lawsuits leveled against him, or defamation of him,
Emerson has declined to be cowed.
"It is from numberless acts of courage and belief," said
Robert Kennedy, one of Emerson's heroes, in a speech delivered at the
University of Cape Town in 1966, "that human history is shaped."
In ways he could not have imagined when he left graduate school for the
nation's capital some 40 years ago, Steve Emerson's acts of courage and
belief have had a very big impact indeed, one which should fill him with
satisfaction and pride.
Jeff Robbins is a Boston attorney and former U.S. delegate to the United
Nations Human Rights Commission.
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