http://www.investigativeproject.org/3576/mainstream-islamist-group-attacks-law-enforcement

Few organizations in the United States have been as consistent in attacking law enforcement as the Muslim Public Affairs Council and its president, Salam al-Marayati.
Marayati, who attended last year's White
House Iftar Dinner during Ramadan, has suggested that Muslim Americans
are at war with both al-Qaeda and the FBI. "We in the Muslim American
community have been battling the corrupt and bankrupt ideas of cults
such as Al Qaeda," he wrote in October in the Los Angeles Times." Now it seems we also have to battle pseudo-experts in the FBI and the Department of Justice."
Marayati was incensed over reports that the
FBI and one U.S. Attorney's office had used training materials
"revealing a deep anti-Muslim sentiment within the U.S. government." One
example was a 2010 presentation by an analyst working for a U.S.
Attorney in Pennsylvania which warned of a civilizational jihad that is "waged today in the U.S. by 'civilians, juries, lawyers, media, and charities'" who "threaten our values."
Marayati warned that if U.S. law
enforcement continues to use such "incorrect and divisive" literature,
the "partnership" between Muslim Americans and law enforcement "will
slowly disintegrate."
"Such baseless and inflammatory claims
shall best be left to those few who share Al Qaeda's agenda," Marayati
wrote. "In other words, the rhetoric of Al Qaeda and those law
enforcement trainers are opposite sides of the same coin of hate."
But the concept of civilization-jihad is
not something conjured up by a consultant as a pretext to oppress
Muslims. During the 2008 Hamas-financing prosecution of five former
officials of the Holy Land Foundation for Relief and Development (HLF),
FBI Agent Lara Burns testified about a 1991 internal memorandum
outlining the agenda of the Muslim Brotherhood-connected "Palestine
Committee" which was created to advance the Hamas agenda in the United States.
"The process of settlement is a 'Civilization-Jihadist Process' with all the word means," the memo read.
"The Ikhwan must understand that their work in America is a kind of
grand Jihad in eliminating and destroying the Western civilization from
within and 'sabotaging' its miserable house by their hands and the hands
of the believers so that it is eliminated and God's religion is made
victorious over all other religions."
The five HLF officials were convicted on all charges by a federal jury in Dallas and sentenced to long prison terms.
Despite its long record
of attacking law enforcement efforts to protect the American people
from jihadist violence, MPAC has gained influence within the Obama
administration. The group's Washington office director, Haris Tarin, has
frequently attended White House events, including its Iftar Dinner last Ramadan and President Obama's 9/11 Memorial at the Kennedy Center. In July, Obama personally telephoned Tarin to commend him for MPAC's work.
And in recent months, MPAC, working in
tandem with other Islamist organizations, has repeatedly pushed in order
to bend U.S. government policies to its will.
In February, MPAC joined the Islamic Society of North America
(ISNA) and other groups in meeting with FBI Director Robert Mueller to
discuss purportedly anti-Muslim materials in Bureau training manuals.
MPAC's website linked to an article
which said the FBI had destroyed hundreds of terrorism documents in an
effort to root out "Islamophobia." The purged materials included
articles and PowerPoint presentations defining jihad as "holy war" and
describing the Brotherhood's efforts to achieve world domination.
In April, MPAC and Muslim Advocates
sprung into action after White House counterterrorism advisor John
Brennan expressed "his full confidence that the NYPD is doing things
consistent with the law, and it's something that again has been
responsible for keeping this city safe over the past decade."
MPAC responded to Brennan's statement with a call for "immediate public clarification" along with a threat. Much as Marayati did in the Los Angeles Times
op-ed cited above, Tarin suggested Muslims would cease cooperating with
law enforcement if surveillance policies were not changed to MPAC's
satisfaction.
"There are plenty of robust partnership
models that both communities and the government have invested in and
those partnerships will be jeopardized if NYPD's current tactics are not
halted, and its programs are not adjusted to more successful
initiatives," Tarin warned.
Four days after MPAC laid down the law, the Obama administration caved and issued a clarification
of Brennan's comments. The counterterrorism chief had "never approved
of described press accounts of alleged NYPD surveillance," a White House
official said.
In earlier comments praising the police
department, Brennan "wasn't referring to the NYPD surveillance" that had
come under attack from Islamist groups like MPAC and Muslim Advocates,
the official added. "Rather, he was stating that everyone in the
counterterrorism and law enforcement community must make sure we are
doing things consistent with the law."
Non-Islamist Muslims like Zuhdi Jasser, founder and president of the American Islamic Forum for Democracy are a top target of MPAC attacks.
A first-generation American Muslim whose
parents fled Syria's Ba'athist dictatorship in the 1960s, Jasser served
11 years as a U.S. Navy medical officer. He believes that the jihadist
terror threat cannot be addressed without addressing the role of
"political Islam" as practiced by groups like the Council on
American-Islamic Relations (CAIR).
Jasser has called on Muslims to oppose people like Muslim Brotherhood-linked cleric Yusuf al-Qaradawi, who has said it is permissible to kill apostates, and Jamal Badawi
of the Islamic Society of North America (ISNA), who has said apostates
should be "punished." According to Jasser, the jihadists won't be
defeated until Muslims start to realize that they are on a "slippery
slope" toward radicalism.
This kind of talk has earned Jasser the enmity
of groups like MPAC, which sent out a March "action alert" urging
supporters to protest his appointment to the U.S. Commission for
International Religious Freedom (USCIRF), calling it "an affront to all
Muslims." The group directed its Twitter followers to a petition
circulated by Islamist groups, copying its claim that "Zuhdi Jasser does
not belong on the USCIRF."
While it treats fellow Muslim Americans
like Jasser with contempt and works to marginalize them, MPAC is
frequently deferential to rogue states and terrorists.
Last month, it reposted an article
suggesting that convicted terrorist Tarek Mehanna was only exercising
his freedom of speech when he translated and posted al-Qaida recruitment
videos, and that Muslims have the right to kill American forces in
Afghanistan and Iraq. The article, published in Britain's Guardian newspaper, was linked from MPAC's Twitter feed and Facebook page.
The writer, Marine veteran Ross Caputi,
argues that Mehanna, "is being punished for his ideas, and the case
against him stinks of a lynch-mob mentality." Describing Mehanna, now
serving a 17-year prison term, as a "victim" of a " hysterical
witch-hunt for 'radical' Muslims," Caputi agrees with the convicted
terrorist "that much of what the US military has done in Iraq and
Afghanistan can be characterized as terrorism, and I support Afghans and
Iraqis who fight back against us."
In February, MPAC reposted on its Twitter
and Facebook pages an article in which Iran's repressive regime gloated
over the fact that an Iranian film won an Oscar, defeating an Israeli
film in the same category.
In a Feb. 29 appearance on Russia Today's Cross Talk
program, al-Marayati depicted Iran (which is flouting international law
with its illicit nuclear-weapons program) as the victim in the current
diplomatic crisis.
"With other countries, we utilize the IAEA
(International Atomic Energy Agency), we use multilateral instruments to
deal with the nuclear problem," al-Marayati said. "In this case with
Iran, there is no dialogue, there is (sic) no negotiations , it is all
confrontational policies that is part of a war-mongering mentality here
in the U.S. and they're just waiting for the tripwire and then the
machinery of war will begin."
Al-Marayati also suggested that the United States was in trouble for doing "dirty work" for Israel.
"The other point here, which is very
important historically, the United States has done a lot of dirty work
that has served the interests of Israel," he said. "It destroyed Iraq.
It supported the destruction and crippling of Egypt. It has crippled the
Gulf. And now, it is looking to Iran as the next target for crippling
and destroying. I think this is madness. Who is driving our foreign
policy? President Obama or Prime Minister Netanyahu?"
MPAC officials have also appeared on Press TV,
the Iranian regime's English-language propaganda outlet, at least six
times since November 2010, always criticizing U.S. government policies
or complaining about the plight of Muslims in the U.S.
MPAC has a history of excusing terrorist
attacks against Americans and questioning U.S. government actions
against terrorists and their financiers.
In a 1999 paper,
it called Hizballah's bombing of U.S. Marine barracks in Beirut in
1983, in which more than 280 American servicemen were killed as they
slept, "a military operation, producing no civilian casualties – exactly
the kind of attack that Americans might have lauded had it been
directed against Washington's enemies." Other MPAC policy papers have criticized the presence of Hizballah, Hamas, and Palestinian Islamic Jihad on the U.S. list of terror groups.
MPAC questioned Washington's targeting of
U.S.-born cleric Anwar al-Awlaki, an al-Qaida ideologue and facilitator
of attacks against America. After Awlaki was killed in a Sept. 30 drone
strike, MPAC rejected his message of violence while questioning his killing "without a trial and due process."
In 2001, MPAC blasted the Treasury
Department for designating the HLF for its Hamas fundraising activities.
It accused Washington of "taking food out of the mouths of Palestinian
orphans" and "succumbing to politically-motivated smear campaigns by
those who would perpetuate Israel's brutal occupation."
At a MPAC's December 2010 annual
conference, senior MPAC official Maher Hathout portrayed critics of
radical Islam as "Muslim bashers." Ignoring a slew of homegrown terror
plots targeting the United States that year, Hathout tried to whitewash
the connection between jihad and violence – even though terrorists
themselves invoke Islam to justify their violent jihad.
"I am so protective of the word and concept
of jihad," Hathout said. "We define what jihad is, not anyone else, and
jihad has nothing to do with what they are talking about."
He made this comment shortly after Awlaki took to the pages of al-Qaida's Inspire magazine to argue that Western Muslims must wage violent jihad in order to topple non-believers.
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