Contributors
Daniel Pipes- Contributor
Daniel
Pipes is director of the Middle
East Forum, a member of the
presidentially-appointed board of the U.S.
Institute of Peace,
and a prize-winning columnist for the New York Sun and The
Jerusalem Post. His most recent book, Miniatures:
Views of Islamic and Middle Eastern Politics (Transaction
Publishers) appeared in late 2003. His website, DanielPipes.org,
the single most accessed source of information specifically
on
the Middle East and Islam, offers an archive and a chance
to sign-up to receive his new materials as they appear. [go
to Pipes index]
A
Slick Islamist Heads to Jail
And they seemed like such moderates…
[Daniel Pipes] 8/6/04
In 2002,
the spokesman for FBI director Robert Mueller memorably
described the American Muslim Council (AMC) as the "the
most mainstream Muslim group in the United States." A
year later, the Catholic bishops called
the AMC "the premier,
mainstream Muslim group in Washington."
Its founder and long-time chief, Abdurahman Alamoudi, was a
Washington fixture. He had many meetings with
both Clintons in
the White House and once joined
George W. Bush at a prayer service
dedicated to victims of the 9/11 attacks. Alamoudi arranged a
Ramadan fast-breaking dinner for congressional leaders. He six
times lectured abroad for the State Department and founded an
organization to provide Muslim chaplains for the Department of
Defense. One of his former AMC employees, Faisal Gill, serves
as policy director at the Department of Homeland Security's intelligence
division.
In brief, as the Washington
Post describes him, Alamoudi was "a
pillar of the local Muslim community."
But the one-time high-flyer last week signed a plea
agreement with the American government admitting his multiple crimes in
return for a reduced sentence. His confession makes for startling
reading.
Alamoudi acknowledges
having obtained money from the Libyan government and other
foreign sources, "unlawfully, knowingly,
and willfully falsified, concealed and covered up by a trick,
scheme and device." He transmitted these funds to the United
States, "outside of the knowledge of the United States government
and without attracting the attention of law enforcement and regulatory
authorities."
In doing so, he engaged in illegal financial transactions and
filed false tax returns. He lied about his overseas travels,
his interest in a Swiss bank account, his affiliation with a
Specially Designated Terrorist (the Hamas leader, Mousa Abu Marzook),
and his membership in terrorist-related organizations.
Of particular note are admissions by Alamoudi that he:
Was summoned by Libyan leader Muammar al-Qaddafi to two meetings
and as a result of these Alamoudi helped
organize the assassination of Saudi crown prince Abdullah. (The plot was foiled.)
Transported money from Libya to Saudi Arabia to the United States,
where he deposited it in the American Muslim Foundation, one
of his non-profits.
Omitted on his American citizenship application his connections
to many radical organizations: the United
Association for Studies and Research, Marzook Legal Fund, Mercy International, American
Task Force for Bosnia, Fiqh Council of North America, Muslims
for a Better America, Eritrean Liberation Front/People's Liberation
Force, and Council for the National Interest Foundation.
Then there is the
fact that Alamoudi's Palm Pilot, seized at the time of his
arrest, contained contact information for seven
men designated as global terrorists by U.S. authorities. Also,
law enforcement found an unsigned Arabic-language document in
Alamoudi's office with ideas for Hamas to undertake "operations
against the Israelis to delay the peace process." And Alamoudi
has at least indirect links to Osama bin Laden through the Taibah
International Aid Association, an American non-profit where he
served along with Abdullah A. bin Laden, Osama's nephew.
For his crimes, Alamoudi's
punishment can include serving up to 23 years in prison, forfeiting
US$11⁄4 million received
from the Libyans, paying six year's worth of back taxes plus
penalties, and having his U.S. citizenship revoked. Alamoudi
could also be removed from the country and not allowed back in.
(But the agreement defers decision on Alamoudi's expulsion until
after his prison term ends, suggesting that he is singing like
a bird.)
Alamoudi is hardly the only high-profile, seemingly non-violent
leader of an Islamist organization to associate with terrorists.
At the Council on American-Islamic Relations, five staffers and
board members have been accused
or convicted of terrorism-related charges and the same has happened with leaders of the Islamic
Center of Greater Cleveland, Holy Land Foundation, Benevolence
International Foundation, and the National
Coalition to Protect Political Freedom.
The Alamoudi story
points to the urgent need that the FBI, White House, Congress,
State Department, Pentagon, and Homeland Security – as
well as other institutions, public and private, throughout the
West – not continue guilelessly to assume that smooth-talking
Islamists are free of criminal, extremist, or terrorist ties.
Or, as I put
it in late 2001: "Individual Islamists may
appear law-abiding and reasonable, but they are part of a totalitarian
movement, and as such, all must be considered potential killers." CRO
This piece
first appeared in the New York Sun
copyright
2004 Daniel Pipes
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