Here is Part 5 of the vitally important Investigative Project series. “Quick To Defend Alleged Terrorists, CAIR Even Questioned Al Qaeda 9/11 Role,” by Steven Emerson for IPT News:
(Note: To see today’s complete dossier installment, click here: www.investigativeproject.org/documents/misc/116.pdf)
CAIR’s soft spot for terrorists extends well beyond the Hamas connections documented in yesterday’s installment in this comprehensive series on the group. Today we focus on its portrayal of virtually any law enforcement action against radical elements as an assault on all American Muslims.
· Days after the 9/11 attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, CAIR-New York Executive Director Ghazi Khankan used an online chat with the Washington Post to launch a weeks-long campaign casting them as part of a conspiracy to discredit Muslims. Citing spurious evidence, he claimed that “many of the names of the terrorists are people impersonating innocent Muslims and Arabs.”
CAIR pushed Khankan’s misidentification theory in an October 2001 statement, speculating that three of the 19 suspected “˜hijackers’ were still alive in the Middle East and asking, “Who is impersonating these three Muslim Arabs? Why are Muslim Arabs been (sic) implicated in this terrorism? And, who could “˜benefit’ from this horrific tragedy?”
· CAIR spokesman Ibrahim Hooper similarly hesitated to blame Al Qaeda. “We condemn the attacks on the buildings,'” he told Salon.com, adding, “If Osama bin Laden was behind it, we condemn him by name.” Asked why he qualified the response, Salon.com reported, “Hooper said he resented the question.”
· As late as June 2005, CAIR-Canada Advisory Board Member Jamal Badawi questioned responsibility for 9/11. Calling the attacks “un-Islamic” and declaring, “I strongly condemn” them, he told the Saudi Gazette it had not yet been confirmed who was actually behind the actions. And at an August 2005 “Know Your Rights” workshop sponsored by CAIR-San Diego, invited speaker Randall Hamud responded to an audience member’s comment that there was “still no evidence that Muslims carried out 9/11” by saying, “Maybe a hundred years from now we’ll find that out.”
Meanwhile, CAIR pursued its consistent opposition to U.S. government prosecution of alleged terrorist financiers and supporters. Thus, for example:
· When the founder and the imam of the Masjid As-Salam mosque in Albany, N.Y. were indicted in 2004 on charges of taking part in what they thought was a plot to buy shoulder-fired missiles and to assassinate a Pakistani diplomat, CAIR warned that such sting operations could be used to “smear Muslims and to demonize Islam.” Both men were convicted and sentenced to 15 years in prison for their role in the plot.
· Three members of a jihad network in Northern Virginia charged in September 2003 with conspiracy to wage war against the United States and conspiracy to provide material support to Al Qaeda were convicted the following March and sentenced, respectively, to life in prison, 85 years and 97 months. CAIR called the sentences “draconian” and cited a “near universal perception in the Islamic community” that the men never would have been charged had they not been Muslims.
Read it all.