Tuesday, November 23, 2010

For A Group Responsible For More American Deaths Than Any Other Group Besides Al Queda, Hizballah Enjoys Surprisingly Open Support In The U.S.

From Jihad Watch:

"For a group responsible for more American deaths than any terrorist group other than al-Qaida,...Hizballah enjoys surprisingly open support within...the United States"


A jihad terror group finds support in the U.S. from an official of Hamas-linked CAIR and others.



"Hizballah's Brash U.S. Supporters," from IPT News, November 18:



(Part two of three) Green and yellow flags bearing an emblem of a hand grasping an assault rifle waved at a September rally in Washington. The flags of Hizballah, the Iranian-backed foreign terrorist organization, flying in the nation's capital, are a sign of defiance.

For a group responsible for more American deaths than any terrorist group other than al-Qaida, whose leaders continue to view America as the enemy, Hizballah enjoys surprisingly open support within pockets inside the United States.



From rallies like September's Al Quds Day protest featuring Hizballah flags and images of its leaders, to speeches endorsing its activity by national Islamist leaders, to a radical student movement that gives voice to its dogma, the Lebanese-based terrorist group that is considered an Iranian proxy is cast as a legitimate political player and heroic resistance movement.



In fact, the rally's purpose - honoring Al Quds Day - continues a legacy established 30 years ago by the late Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khomeini, a continuing source of inspiration to Hizballah.



Al Quds is an Arabic reference to Jerusalem and protests oppose Israel's control of the city. In addition to support for Hizballah, Al Quds rallies routinely feature incendiary rhetoric and call for Israel's destruction. The most recent event in Washington's Dupont Circle included a claim that the 9/11 attacks were a Zionist plot "in order to justify to occupy the land of the Muslims such as Afghanistan, such as Iraq, such as Pakistan, now moving on to the rest of the areas."



The Hizballah flag and images of the group's leaders, like Hasan Nasrallah, are ubiquitous at anti-Israel rallies throughout the country. A 2006 protest outside the Los Angeles Israeli consulate featured chants of "Long Live Hizballah." A 2000 rally in Lafayette Park featured the nation's most prominent Muslim political activist at the time garnering enthusiastic cheers when he asked the crowd if they supported the organization.



Ideological support for Hizballah in the United States, however, is not limited to flag waving and chanting.



U.S. government officials have accused one U.S. Muslim student group of providing intelligence to Hizballah's biggest financial and political supporter, Iran.



In 1987, a group of Persian speaking Muslims publicly pledged allegiance to the Iranian government and handed out literature written by the then- Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khomeini during a conference in Dallas.



The group, the Muslim Students Association, Persian Speaking Group (MSA-PSG), is also known by its Farsi name, Anjoman Islamie.



Federal officials have repeatedly linked the group to Hizballah and the Iranian government. A 1994 FBI report on Hizballah activities in the U.S. obtained via the Freedom of Information Act said "Hizballah also is known to be in contact with the Anjoman Islamic [sic], an Iranian student group active in the United States."



In 1998 testimony before a U.S. Senate subcommittee, then-Chief of the International Terrorism Section of the FBI Dale Watson said that members of the Anjoman Islamie are heavily relied upon by the Iranian government "for low-level intelligence and technical expertise." Watson added that, "the Anjoman Islamie also provides a significant resource base which allows the government of Iran to maintain the capability to mount operations against the United States." [...]



Other supporters argue that Hizballah is a legitimate political party in Lebanon. Despite its ugly side, they say, Hizballah is a multi-faceted organization that also provides social services. "You may think of Hizballah as a terrorist organization, and certainly they have engaged in terrorist acts, but they are also the most dynamic political and social organization in Lebanon," writer and Muslim scholar Reza Aslan explained in a 2009 speech.



Likewise, CAIR-Michigan Executive Director Dawud Walid emphasized earlier this year to an audience at Washentenaw County Community College in Ann Arbor, that there are "different wings" of Hizballah. "They run schools, hospitals, humanitarian aid, and they have a military wing," he said. "But the whole organization has been lumped as a terrorism organization."



The U.S. Supreme Court specifically rejected the legitimacy of this argument in its opinion which recently upheld a federal statute which prohibits material support of any part of a designated terror organization:



"'[F]oreign organizations that engage in terrorist activity are so tainted by their criminal conduct that any contribution to such an organization facilitates that conduct.' ... 'Material support meant to 'promot[e] peaceable, lawful conduct,' ... can further terrorism by foreign groups in multiple ways.... Such support frees up other resources within the organization that may be put to violent ends. It also importantly helps lend legitimacy to foreign terrorist groups--legitimacy that makes it easier for those groups to persist, to recruit members, and to raise funds--all of which facilitate more terrorist attacks. 'Terrorist organizations do not maintain organizational 'firewalls' that would prevent or deter . . . sharing and commingling of support and benefits.' ... '[I]nvestigators have revealed how terrorist groups systematically conceal their activities behind charitable, social, and political fronts.' ... 'Indeed, some designated foreign terrorist organizations use social and political components to recruit personnel to carry out terrorist operations, and to provide support to criminal terrorists and their families in aid of such operations.'"

Holder et al. v. Humanitarian Law Project at al, 561 U.S. , ___, 130 S. Ct. 2705, 2725 (2010), (citations omitted).





There is much, much more. Read it all.

Posted by Robert on November 22, 2010 3:08 PM
 
 
And this, related, also from Jihad Watch:
 
"Moderate" Reza Aslan praises jihad terror group Hizballah, appears for Muslim Brotherhood group MSA


Aslan: Did he ever meet a jihad terror group he didn't like?

AslanOct262010.jpg

Reza Aslan is a prime contemporary example of a deceptive Islamic supremacist who is widely taken as a "moderate," and is thus a good illustration of how the ignorant and unwitting -- especially Leftist NPR multiculturalist types -- can be taken in by such people.



The adolescent literary poseur Aslan is racing around the country promoting his new literary anthology and trying to claim a spurious victim status for Muslims by whining about "Islamophobia," but his moderate mask just keeps on slipping: it is already known that he is a Board member of the National Iranian American Council, a group that genuine Iranian pro-democracy forces regard as an apologetic vehicle for the Islamic Republic of Iran. He has also called on the U.S. Government to negotiate not only with Ahmadinejad but with Hamas -- that is, with some of the most barbaric and genocidally-inclined adherents of Sharia.



And now there is more. The Investigative Project's recent survey of apologists for the jihad terror group Hizballah in the U.S. contains this:



Other supporters argue that Hizballah is a legitimate political party in Lebanon. Despite its ugly side, they say, Hizballah is a multi-faceted organization that also provides social services. "You may think of Hizballah as a terrorist organization, and certainly they have engaged in terrorist acts, but they are also the most dynamic political and social organization in Lebanon," writer and Muslim scholar Reza Aslan explained in a 2009 speech.

Well, sure, Reza, and Hitler built the autobahn.



Nor is that all. Aslan's "Islamophobia" Muslims-Are-Victims-Ignore-That-Jihad-Terror Tour last week had him appearing at Columbia University, at an event jointly sponsored by the Muslim Students Association and Hillel. From the MSA website:



Park 51 Reevaluated: Reza Aslan on Islamophobia and Anti-Semitism

Submitted by luqman on Mon, 11/08/2010 - 5:34am



Join the MSA & Hillel for a discussion on Park 51, Islamophobia, and Anti-Semitism with the CNN featured acclaimed author and professor Reza Aslan. Professor Aslan will also present and sign his latest book, Tablet & Pen: Literary Landscapes from the Modern Middle East, on neglected Middle Eastern literature in the English-speaking world. The discussion will be moderated by Professor Gil Anidjar of Columbia's Religion and Middle Eastern, South Asian, and African Studies departments.





The MSA and Hillel, eh? The Muslim Students Association was established by members of the Muslim Brotherhood. In "An Explanatory Memorandum on the General Strategic Goal for the Brotherhood in North America," by Mohamed Akram, May 19, 1991, the MSA is listed as one of the Brotherhood's allied organizations. And the memorandum explains that the Brotherhood's agenda in the U.S. is subversive: the Muslim Brothers "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."



So now we have this vaunted moderate excusing Hizballah, calling for negotiations with Hamas, appearing for the MSA, and serving on the Board of a group that runs interference for the Iranian mullahs.



Has the "moderate Muslim" Reza Aslan ever met a jihad terrorist or Islamic supremacist he didn't like?

Posted by Robert on November 22, 2010 4:08 PM

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