John Fund updates us on Sayed Rahmatullah Hashemi, former Taliban spokesman now Yale undergrad, in the Opinion Journal:
Something is very wrong at our elite universities. Last month Larry Summers resigned as president of Harvard; today Libyan dictator Moammar Gadhafi will speak by video to a conference at Columbia University that his regime is cosponsoring. (Columbia won’t answer questions about how much funding it got from Libya or what implied strings were attached.) Then there’s Yale, which for three weeks has refused to make any comment or defense beyond a vague 144-word statement about its decision to admit Sayed Rahmatullah Hashemi–a former ambassador-at-large of the murderous Afghan Taliban–as a special student.
The three backers of the foundation that, along with Yale, is subsidizing Mr. Hashemi’s tuition have told the Yale Daily News that they are withdrawing their support. But the university remains mute and paralyzed. “The intelligentsia haven’t told Yalies what to think yet, because even they haven’t made up their minds,” says Yale professor David Gelernter. He clearly has: He calls the Taliban “an evil and macabre terrorist group. . . . The fact that Hashemi didn’t do actual killing does not absolve him. Goebbels didn’t shoot anyone either.”…
Given his record as a Taliban apologist, Mr. Hashemi has told friends he is stunned Yale didn’t look more closely into his curriculum vitae. “I could have ended up in Guantanamo Bay,” he told the New York Times. So how did he end up in the Ivy League? Questions start at the State Department’s door. Sen. John Cornyn of Texas, chairman of the Judiciary Committee’s border security panel, has asked the State Department and Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff to explain exactly how Mr. Hashemi got an F-1 student visa. Yale’s decision tree is clearer. Richard Shaw, Yale’s dean of undergraduate admissions until he took the same post at Stanford last year, told the New York Times that Yale had another foreigner of Mr. Hashemi’s caliber apply but “we lost him to Harvard” and “I didn’t want that to happen again.” Mr. Shaw won’t return phone calls now, but emails he’s exchanged with others offer insights into his thinking…
Read it all.