Islamofascists

CAIR leader knows “violent jihadist”

A leader at the Columbus, Ohio, chapter of CAIR, the Council on American-Islamic Relations, admits knowing an accused terrorist and “his group will work” to ensure Christopher Paul’s “constitutional rights are granted.” Paul was arrested in Columbus this week for planning to conduct attacks with explosives here in America and elsewhere. He has known ties to Nuradin Abdi who is awaiting trial for plotting to blow up a Columbus shopping mall. One of Abdi’s former roommates was Iyman Faris, an Ohio truck driver, who is currently serving 20 years for plotting to sabotage the Brooklyn Bridge. Sources state that both Paul and Faris were trained in terrorist camps in Afghanistan, met with Osama bin Laden, and received instructions from senior al Qaeda planners, to include Khalid Sheik Mohammed. Abdi allegedly trained in violent jihad in Ethiopia.

Ohio men with alleged ties to terrorism

Friday, the Associated Press reported:

Federal authorities say an Ohio man was so dedicated to committing violent jihad that he angrily told a fellow al-Qaida member that the terrorist group should never consider scaling back military operations. Christopher Paul is depicted by investigators as a man who made that statement during a stay at an exclusive guest house for al-Qaida members in Pakistan in the early 1990s. He then spent years providing money and training to others who would join him in plotting to bomb European tourist resorts and U.S. military bases overseas, the U.S. government said Thursday.

In a letter to his future wife, Paul even reflected on his desire to one day raise “little mujahideen,” or holy warriors, according to a federal grand jury indictment. The investigation into Paul spanned four years, three continents and at least eight countries, FBI agent Tim Murphy said.

Paul, 43, a U.S. citizen and Columbus resident, was arrested Wednesday outside his apartment. He is charged with providing material support to terrorists, conspiracy to provide support to terrorists and conspiracy to use a weapon of mass destruction. The weapon of mass destruction charge carries the most serious penalty, up to life in prison.

Ahmad Al-Akhras, vice chair of the Columbus chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations, said he knows Paul and the charges are out of character.“From the things I know, he is a loving husband and he has a wife and parents in town,” Al-Akhras said. “They are a good family together.” Al-Akhras said his group will work to make sure Paul’s constitutional rights are granted.

It sounds like CAIR plans on providing Christopher Paul with a lawyer, some positive PR, or both. One wonders who is paying Nuradin Abdi’s legal fees:

June 15, 2004 — “The American heartland was targeted for death and destruction by an al-Qaida cell,” Ashcroft said at a news conference announcing the four-count indictment against the man, Nuradin Abdi, 32, a cellular telephone business owner in Columbus who is originally from Somalia. The indictment, which was handed up by a criminal grand jury in Columbus on Thursday and was unsealed Monday, charges that Abdi conspired with admitted al-Qaida member Iyman Faris and others to detonate a bomb at a shopping mall in the Columbus area after he obtained military-style training in Ethiopia.

Abdi, who has been in custody since November on immigration-related violations, also was charged with fraud and misuse of documents by claiming that he had been granted valid asylum status in the United States. In fact, prosecutors say, he obtained that refugee document under false pretenses. There also were one count each of conspiracy to provide material support to terrorists and conspiracy to provide material support to a designated foreign terrorist organization, in this case al-Qaida.

A government motion seeking to keep Abdi in detention says he returned to the United States from Africa in March 2000 and was met at the airport in Columbus by Faris. Those two and other unidentified co-conspirators were involved in the alleged shopping mall plot, prosecutors say.

One of the immigration charges contends that Abdi concealed his true destination when he applied for a U.S. travel document on April 27, 1999. He said he was going to Germany and Saudi Arabia to visit Mecca and relatives. In fact, “as the defendant well knew, he planned to travel to Ogaden, Ethiopia, for the purpose of obtaining military-style training in preparation for violent Jihad,” the indictment says. The training allegedly included use of guns, bombs and guerrilla warfare.

The man who planned to bring down the Brooklyn Bridge also lived in Columbus:

June 19, 2003 — An Ohio trucker has admitted to helping plan al Qaeda attacks in the United States after meeting terror chief Osama bin Laden at an Afghanistan terror training camp. Iyman Faris, 34, checked out the chances of destroying a New York bridge and tried to buy equipment for proposed al Qaeda attacks while appearing to be a law-abiding trucker, according to documents unsealed Thursday in the U.S. District Court in Alexandria, Virginia.

Faris pleaded guilty May 1 to providing material support to al Qaeda and to conspiring to do so, according to the documents. The charges together carry as much as 20 years in prison and up to $500,000 in fines. Sources told CNN that al Qaeda leader Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, who is in U.S. custody, told his interrogators the target was the 116-year-old Brooklyn Bridge.

Faris’ first links to al Qaeda came in late 2000 when he traveled with a longtime friend, who was an operative for the terror group, from Pakistan to Afghanistan, according to the court documents. During a series of visits to Afghanistan and Pakistan, Faris was introduced to bin Laden and at least one senior operational leader, who gave Faris his orders for when he returned to the United States. The operational leader, identified in court documents as “C-2” and said to be bin Laden’s “number three man,” told Faris in 2002 al Qaeda was again planning simultaneous attacks on New York and Washington.

In his first visit to an al Qaeda camp one of bin Laden’s men asked him about ultralight planes and said al Qaeda was seeking to buy an “escape airplane,” the documents said. About two months later, Faris went to an Internet cafe in Karachi where he looked up information on ultralights and provided it to an al Qaeda representative. In Pakistan, Faris helped procure 2,000 sleeping bags for use by al Qaeda and delivered cash and cell phones to an al Qaeda operative. In late December 2001, he bought several airline tickets to Yemen for use by al Qaeda operatives, the documents said. A few months later — and less than a year after the September 11 attacks — he was introduced to C2 and told of the new planned attacks on New York and Washington.

The leadership at CAIR — in the interest of national security and better American-Islamic relations — could promote “If you see something, say something” within the Muslim community. Instead, they always seem to be announcing they will spend money on legal fees for accused terrorists and those who only act like them aboard planes.

Oh Canada, who stands on guard for thee?

Corporal Matthew Dicks, a Canadian soldier who was injured in the same attack that killed his comrades salutes during ramp ceremonies for Master Cpl. Allan Stewart, from Petawawa, and Trooper Patrick James Pentland, from Petawawa, at the base in Kandahar, Afghanistan on Fri. April 13, 2007. The two soldiers were killed in a roadside bomb attack two days ago. (Ryan Remiorz/CP)

While Canadian troops are fighting and dying in Afghanistan, a Canadian judge sent a suspected terrorist home to be closely watched by his wife and six children. Meanwhile, a Green Party candidate, Kevin Potvin, “explains” that he was being “symbolic” when in 2002 he wrote:

“When I saw the first tower cascade down into that enormous plume of dust and paper, there was a little voice inside me that said, “Yeah!” When the second tower came down the same way, that little voice said, “Beautiful!”

The column goes on to say “I know lots of people were killed. But then again, I see lots of people getting killed whenever I turn the TV news on, and, frankly, it doesn’t really get me any more.” Mr. Potvin said yesterday he didn’t mean he was dismissing the deaths. “If you read the story that I wrote, you’ll notice that I’m talking about it on a symbolic level,” he said.

I’m sure glad Mr. Potvin cleared up his lack of human compassion for us.

Elsewhere, there are Canadians trying to accomplish something a little more tangible:

KANDAHAR, Afghanistan — Canadians and their allies are hunting for a group of Taliban bombers who have infiltrated the farmland west of Kandahar from neighbouring Helmand province, military officials confirmed yesterday. But the insurgents’ strike with an improvised explosive device in Zhari district this week, which killed two Canadians, does not mean the Taliban’s spring offensive has arrived, said Lieutenant-Colonel Rob Walker, the battle group commander. Nor does the bombing mean that the security situation in Zhari has deteriorated, he added. “We were just in the process of starting operations to target that particular cell when we had this most recent IED strike,” Lt.-Col. Walker said.

Six weeks ago, patrolling that area was difficult, Major Graham [commander of the reconnaissance unit struck by the most recent bombing] said. “We were getting attacked, we were getting mined, we were getting IEDed. None of the locals wanted anything to do with us, because they were under the belief that we would quickly leave the area and the Taliban would remain.” However, the young officer said he believes their persistence has seen the local residents warming to the Canadians.

“Local people tell us where IEDs are laid in the road, locals come to my shuras [meetings] and talk about security issues in the area and they now work with the Afghan police, which they didn’t want to do previously,” he said.

Major Graham arrived in Afghanistan two months ago and has spent many of his days since sitting down with tribal elders and other local residents. These conversations have left him optimistic, he said.

“We’re going to win this.”

Meanwhile, at the Canadian military base in Kandahar yesterday, the journey home for Master Corporal Allan Stewart and Trooper Patrick Pentland began with hundreds of salutes from their comrades. One in particular served as a poignant reminder of both the bond soldiers share and the perils of war: the one that came from a hospital stretcher.

Corporal Matthew Dicks, his eye blackened and an oxygen mask over his face, braved the diesel and dust of Kandahar Airfield to bid farewell to the men with whom he was sharing a cramped Coyote armoured vehicle when it was flipped over Wednesday by a roadside bomb.

As pallbearers slowly carried the two flag-draped coffins toward a waiting military aircraft, The Canadian Press reported, the bedridden man from Conception Bay, Nfld., pressed his hand to his temple, his index finger equipped with a pulse oximeter, an IV tube running the length of his bandaged right arm.

Despite the courage and sacrifice of Canada’s heroes, those in authority at home cannot seem to figure out how to send a still breathing suspected terrorist back to his home country:

An Egyptian terrorism suspect has been released from years of jail, but the Federal Court judge yesterday expressed strong security concerns and a lack of confidence in the man’s main bail surety, his wife. Mahmoud Jaballah was released from a detention centre in Kingston and will be placed under an extreme form of house arrest. He is the second terrorism suspect freed in two days, after the release of Mohamed Zeki Mahjoub on Thursday.

After being detained for nearly six years, Mr. Jaballah was escorted by officials back to his Toronto home, where he will live with his wife and six children, several of whom are now responsible for watching his every move. “He’s out,” the suspect’s lawyer, Barbara Jackman, said last night. “I’m just pleased he’s out. It’s been so hard on them as people, as individuals.”

Egyptian terrorism suspect Mahmoud Jaballah was released from a detention centre in Kingston and will be placed under an extreme form of house arrest. He is the second terrorism suspect freed in two days, after the release of Mohamed Zeki Mahjoub on Thursday. Since 1999, the Canadian government has been trying to use the federal security-certificate process to deport the terrorism suspect and, after losing its initial case, had Mr. Jaballah rearrested in 2001. He had been jailed ever since as courts, citing concerns about torture in his native Egypt, rejected efforts to deport him.

The release quickly followed a 62-page bail decision by Madame Justice Carolyn Layden-Stevenson. The judge writes that security-certificate cases rely on “reasonable suspicion,” not criminal standards of proof. “There are reasonable grounds to believe that Mr. Jaballah was a senior member of [Egyptian al-Jihad] who acted as a communicator among terrorist cells of the AJ and al-Qaeda” during the time of the deadly 1998 al-Qaeda bombings in Africa.

If elected to Parliament, Green Party member Kevin Potvin should propose legislation that overrules Canada’s judges and sends Mahmoud Jaballah home to Eqypt where he belongs. Yet Mr. Potvin does not let people dying at home or abroad at the hands of terrorists bother him anymore so…