Tuesday, 17 January 2012

ACT! for America


January 17, 2012

Obama terrorism

advisor distortions


Dear Harold,

Raymond Ibrahim recently posted an enlightening and troubling column on FrontPageMagazine about one of President Obama’s top counter-terrorism advisors (see below, highlights added).

The Muslim Brotherhood is growing in strength and power across the world, aided and abetted by the Obama administration. This is why late last year we released a first-of-its-kind resource, “Unmasking the Enemy
Among Us: Information Warfare and the Muslim Brotherhood.”

To find out more about this important and timely resource, visit our website here. More than ever, you and
those you care about need to understand this threat!



Obama Terrorism Advisor’s Book Confuses and Distorts

Posted By Raymond Ibrahim On January 9, 2012

Reading CDR Youssef Aboul-Enein’s book, Militant Islamist Ideology: Understanding the Global Threat, published
by the Naval Institute Press (2010), one can see why U.S. leadership is far from “ ;understanding the global threat”;
why the Obama administration is supportive of the Muslim Brotherhood; and why so many U.S. politicians rose up
in condemnation when one obscure pastor threatened to burn a Koran.

According to the jacket cover, Aboul-Enein is “a top adviser at the Joint Intelligence Task Force for Combating
Terrorism” and “has advised at the highest levels of the defense department and intelligence community.”

What advice does he give?

He holds that, whereas “militant Islamists” (e.g., al-Qaeda) are the enemy, “non-militant Islamists” (e.g., the
Muslim Brotherhood), are not: “It is the Militant Islamists who are our adversary. They represent an immediate
threat to the national security of the United States. They must not be confused with Islamists.”

This theme, sometimes expressed in convoluted language—at one point we are urged to appreciate the “nuanced” differences “between Militant Islamists and between Militant Islamists and Islamists”—permeates the book.

Of course, what all Islamists want is a system inherently hostile to the West, culminating in a Sharia-enforcing
Caliphate; the only difference is that the nonmilitant Islamists are prudent enough to understand that incremental infiltration and subtle subversion are more effective than outright violence. Simply put, both groups want the same
thing, and differ only in methodology.

Whereas most of the book is meant to portray nonviolent Islamists in a nonthreatening light, sometimes
Aboul-Enein contradicts himself, for instance by correctly observing that “the United States must be under no
illusions that the agenda of the Muslim Brotherhood includes limiting the rights of women” and other
anti-Western aspects.

How to explain these discrepancies? Is the Brotherhood a problem for the U.S. or not?

The book’s foreword by Admiral James Stavridis clarifies by stating that the book is a “culmination of Commander
Aboul-Enein’s essays, lectures, and myriad answers to questions.” In fact, Militant Islamist Ideology reads like a hodgepodge of ideas cobbled together, and the author’s contradictions are likely products of different approaches to different audiences over time.

His position on appeasing the Muslim world—a fixed feature of the current administration’s policies—is clear.
Aboul-Enein recommends that, if ever an American soldier desecrates a Koran, U.S. leadership must relieve the
soldier of duty, offer “unconditional apologies,” and emulate the words of Maj. Gen. Jeffrey Hammond: “I come
before you [Muslims] seeking your forgiveness, in the most humble manner I look in your eyes today, and say
please forgive
me and my soldiers,” followed by abjectly kissing a new Koran and “ceremoniously” presenting it to Muslims.

Likewise, after rightfully admonishing readers not to rely on skewed or biased accounts of Islam, he presents
Islamic apologist extraordinaire Karen Armstrong—whose whitewashed writings on Islam border on fiction—
as the best source on the life of Muhammad.

Then there are Aboul-Enein’s flat out wrong assertions and distortions, examples of which this review closes with:

  • He asserts that “militant Islamists dismiss ijmaa [consensus] and qiyas [analogical reasoning].” In fact,
  • none other than al-Qaeda constantly invokes ijmaa (for instance, the consensus that jihad becomes a
  • personal duty when infidels invade the Islamic world) and justifies suicide attacks precisely through qiyas.
  • He insists that the Arabic word for “terrorist” is nowhere in the Koran—without bothering to point out that
  • Koran 8:60 commands believers “to terrorize the enemy,” also known as non-Muslim “infidels.”
  • He writes, “when Muslims are a persecuted minority Jihad becomes a fard kifaya (an optional obligation),
  • in which the imam authorizes annual expeditions into Dar el Harb (the Abode of War), lands considered
  • not under Muslim dominance.” This is wrong on several levels: a fard kifaya is not an “optional obligation
  • —an oxymoron if ever there was one—but rather a “communal obligation”; moreover, he is describing
  • Offensive Jihad, which is designed to subjugate non-Muslims and is obligatory to wage whenever Muslims
  • are capable—not “when Muslims are a persecuted minority.”
Article printed from FrontPage Magazine: http://frontpagemag.com


-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Make sure you receive all of your messages from ACT for America. Add
actforamerica@donationnet.net to your address book as an approved email sender. If you found this message in your "Bulk" or "Spam" folder, please click the "Not Spam" button to notify your provider that these are emails you want to receive.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

ACT for America
P.O. Box 12765
Pensacola, FL 32591