Annie
Diamond Member
- Nov 22, 2003
- 50,848
- 4,828
- 1,790
http://www.investors.com/editorial/IBDArticles.asp?artsec=20&artnum=1&issue=20060608
Wow, who'd have thought?
Wow, who'd have thought?
Investor's Business Daily
Issues & Insights
Sanctuaries Of Terror
Posted 6/8/2006
War On Terror: Time and time again, the mosque connection shows up in plots against Western targets. Yet authorities remain reluctant to do much about it. Why?
In fact, almost half the suspects in the Toronto terror plot worshiped at the same mosque. But Toronto police tried to dismiss any religious motivation.
Chief Bill Blair assured Canadians that the Muslim suspects "were motivated by an ideology based on politics, hatred and terrorism, and not on faith." He added, "I am not aware of any mosques that these individuals were influenced by."
Really? No fewer than seven of the suspects prayed daily at a small Toronto-area mosque called Al-Rahman Islamic Center for Islamic Education. And the oldest suspect, 43-year-old Qayyum Abdul Jamal, often led prayers there.
Many are college-educated professionals, not career criminals. Religious, law-abiding. Under other circumstances, you might call them "church-going folk."
Only, mosques aren't churches as we know them. Yes, most are used as places of worship by devout Muslims who wish none of us harm. But mosques are also used as fundraising centers for jihad, recruiting stations for jihadists, military planning headquarters and even weapons depots.
There's no evidence yet to suggest the leaders of the Toronto mosque encouraged or even knew of their members' plans to blow up government sites. But they certainly knew that Jamal a native of al-Qaida hotbed Karachi, Pakistan had a bone to pick with the Canadian government for sending troops to Afghanistan. They let him take the mike and rant about it at Juma, or Friday prayers.
The mosque's imam, Qumal Khanson, even tried to defend the suspects' actions. "Just the possession of ammonium nitrate doesn't prove that they have done anything wrong," he said.
Sure, they amassed three tons of the stuff that Timothy McVeigh used to destroy a large building simply to fertilize their gardens.
The former imam of the Finsbury Park Mosque in London did encourage terrorism. Abu Hamza al-Masri regularly preached about the legitimacy of "martyrdom operations" against infidels. The mosque under his leadership influenced some of the London subway bombers, shoe-bomber Richard Reid and Zacarias Moussaoui.
It wasn't until several months after the tragic bombings that the London police declared the mosque "a haven for terrorists." Still, they didn't shut it down. No worries: They've been assured it's under new, "moderate" management.
America has its share of dangerous mosques, too. The 9-11 hijackers got aid and comfort from at least seven mosques in five states, coast to coast.
One wasn't far from the Pentagon. The imam of Dar al-Hijrah Islamic Center at the time a Saudi-connected specialist on martyrdom and the rewards of Paradise privately counseled the leader of the Pentagon cell.
He's since fled the country. But the mosque's prayer leader, Sheikh Mohammed al-Hanooti, is an unindicted co-conspirator in the 1993 World Trade Center bombing. And several of the mosque's directors are members of the Muslim Brotherhood, a worldwide jihad movement that gave rise to Hamas and al-Qaida.
With leaders like that, it's no surprise that Dar al-Hijrah has cultivated more terrorists than any other mosque in the country. They include:
Abdurahman Alamoudi, one of al-Qaida's top fundraisers in America; Omar Abu Ali, who cased U.S. nuke plants for al-Qaida and plotted to assassinate President Bush; Hamas political leader Mousa Abu Marzook; Abdullah bin Laden, Osama's terror-financing nephew; Ismail Elbarasse, arrested for casing the Chesapeake Bay Bridge; and Randall "Ismail" Royer, who's serving time for training to kill U.S. troops overseas.
The mosque's executive committee came out in support of several of the terrorists. Some leaders even put up their homes as bond for their release from jail.
When London police finally raided the Finsbury mosque, they recovered around 100 stolen and forged passports and driver's licenses, blank-firing handguns, chemical warfare suits, camping equipment, a stun gun and a tear gas canister. We wonder what police would find at Dar al-Hijrah. What other evil lurks there?
Unfortunately, the large mosque is in the backyard of the nation's capital and protected by rings of muscular Muslim lobby groups that intimidate politicians. The FBI can barely make a move without first consulting the groups.
Meanwhile, the Pentagon is erecting a mosque at the Marine base in Quantico, Va., and putting a Wahhabi preacher posing as a moderate in charge of it. It's the first of its kind in the 230-year history of the Corps.
The deputy secretary of defense and the Marine commandant both sang the praises of Islam at the dedication ceremony Tuesday, not realizing that the mosque can be used by the enemy to build a Fifth Column inside the Marines.
The unpleasant truth is the enemy uses mosques for terrorist activities. They are hubs connecting a terror network stretching from London to Toronto and even to Washington. There are more than 1,200 in America, and eight of 10 of them are controlled by Saudi Arabia and espouse its hateful, anti-Western Wahhabi dogma.
One may be in your neighborhood, or under construction there.