Monthly Archives: March 2008

Lessons for American Muslims from the Conviction of Abujihaad

American Islamic Forum for Democracy (AIFD) founder Dr. M. Zuhdi Jasser writes:

Wednesday’s conviction of Hassan Abujihaad should serve as a warning sign to the lethality and danger to our security from political Islam (Islamism). Islamism is an ideological clear and present danger to our security. Until we figure this out and finally begin the debate within the Muslim community about how to separate religion and politics within the Islamic consciousness, there will be many more traitorous Abujihaads produced out of the political grievance mills which many American mosques and American Islamist organizations have become.

A federal jury in Connecticut convicted Hassan Abujihaad, 32, formerly known as Paul Hall, of providing classified information to a London-based publication called Azzam Publications while knowing that it would be used in a conspiracy to kill U.S. citizens. Abujihaad, arrested in Phoenix, Arizona, on March 7, 2007, is due to be sentenced on May 23 and faces a maximum term of 25 years in prison, said Thomas Carson, a spokesman for the U.S. Attorney’s office in New Haven, Connecticut.

Sean Holstege, Arizona Republic reports today about the Navy sailor’s quiet life and how it took a sinister turn. The Muslim American Society’s Arizona Chapter and Freedom Foundation (MAS-AZ) director, Deedra Abboud, dismisses Mr. Abujihaad as part of the “victim mentality” combined with a “little delusion.” I would imagine she harbors under the delusion that the MAS, CAIR (Council for American Islamic Relations) and other American Islamist organizations have nothing to do with that victimization mantra which she clearly acknowledges here as problematic — and yet remains the overwhelming central focus of the work of domestic Islamists like herself.

Secret FBI wiretaps recorded Abu-Jihaad talking of attacking a military recruiting base in Phoenix and a naval station in San Diego with a younger man, Derrick Shareef. In some of the transcripts, the two are recorded discussing the purchase of two automatic assault rifles for $1,300. They talk about calling their group the American Islamic Movement or the American Muslim Movement Organization.

Abu-Jihaad befriended Shareef, a drifter, at the Phoenix mosque, before inviting him to share his apartment. Abu-Jihaad taught Shareef radical Islamic ideology and trained him in weapons, court records show. They watched jihadist propaganda films of battle-scarred places such as Chechnya, which showed actual execution footage of Russian soldiers. Abu-Jihaad bought the materials from London-based Azzam Publications.

It was Azzam’s Web site — believed by prosecutors to be a conduit of money and equipment to al-Qaida fighters, including ones who massacred students at a Russian school — that landed Abu-Jihaad in trouble. Authorities raided the London apartment of the Webmaster and found a floppy disk with an e-mail from Abu-Jihaad. The Phoenix man had sent it while aboard the destroyer USS Benfold while in the Persian Gulf in 2001. It showed the movements of the battle group through the precarious Straits of Hormuz and discussed its vulnerabilities.

I believe the American people deserve an apology from Ms. Abboud (or from her previous employer, CAIR-Arizona) for defending a now-convicted traitor…

READ THE REST at Family Security Matters.

The New York Times thinly reported (via the AP) on this case. Go figure.

Haditha Marines update: LCpl Tatum trial now leads

Nathaniel R. Helms of the War Chronicle provided an update yesterday on the prosecution of four Marines still charged in the Haditha “massacre.” In part, Helms wrote:

The long anticipated court-martial of Staff Sergeant Frank Wuterich is now on hold, clearing the way for the first trial of a Marine rifleman facing charges for unlawfully killing Iraqi civilians after being ambushed in Haditha, Iraq. Lance Corporal Stephen Tatum is now scheduled to stand before a general court-martial on March 28, marking the beginning of the end of the 29-month ordeal for four Marines still waiting to come home from the war. “We have been told that SSgt Wuterich’s trial has been stayed for appellate review of a pretrial ruling. I have not seen a court order. However, we will insist on going forward with a pretrial hearing on 27 March, and select the members on 28 March.,” defense attorney Jack B. Zimmermann said on Thursday.

The unexpected appeal by the government was good news for Tatum, 27, an Oklahoma son who served two combat tours in Iraq with Kilo Co., 1st Battalion, 3rd Marines. The long ordeal has taken its toll on him and his family. It is never far from their minds that he faces two counts of involuntary manslaughter that carries a maximum 10-year sentence for each count, a charge of aggravated assault, carrying an eight year penalty, and reckless endangerment, with a one-year maximum sentence.

The 29-month ordeal has devastated the fortunes of Tatum’s family, including another son who served in the Army in Iraq. His parents have had to re-mortgage their home, disposes of all their assets, and appeal to the public for help with defending their son. It was a harsh burden for the proud family to bear. So far Tatum’s defense has cost more than $500,000 and incalculable heartbreak in his family.

A public fund drive led by the news magazine NewsMax, and other volunteer organizations, has helped pay for the expert witnesses, travel, and tremendous legal expenses, but any more delays threatens the slender war chest already accumulated to pay for his defense.

“We do not intend to let the government get away. We are going after them on 28 March,” Zimmermann said.

READ THE REST