MISSILE DEFENSE: Jim Woolsey, FDD Board of Advisors member and former CIA director for President Clinton, and Rebeccah Heinrichs, FDD Adjunct Fellow and former manager of the bipartisan House Missile Defense Caucus, argue that the United States needs a comprehensive missile defense system more than ever. Writing in the Wall Street Journal, they observe:
When a country is the most active state sponsor of terrorism, and its leaders routinely endorse slogans like "Death to Israel" and "Death to America," we should take it seriously when they pursue the capabilities to make their dreams a reality.
A December 2009 missile launch proved Iran has already obtained the ability to reach Israel. Given President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's and other Iranian leaders' millenarian fanaticism, it would be most imprudent to rely on nuclear deterrence alone to protect us. If Tehran were to achieve a nuclear missile capability, it could hold American cities hostage -- unless, that is, the U.S. builds a robust and comprehensive ballistic missile defense. ...
If Iran were to launch a nuclear-armed missile from a ship near one of our coasts -- say a primitive SCUD from a fishing boat -- we would have very little warning and no protection. ...
Further, if the Iranians were to detonate even a primitive nuclear warhead over the United States, it could send out an electromagnetic pulse (EMP) destroying the electric grid and electrical systems across a wide swath of U.S. territory. Iranian military writings show the mullahs recognize the potential of this kind of attack. Depending on where it occurred and how large the warhead was, an EMP attack could cause large-scale fatalities and unimaginable economic devastation. Defending against this kind of threat requires defensive systems that can intercept an attacking ballistic missile while it is still ascending. ...
Given the growing Iranian threat, the Obama administration should re-evaluate its missile-defense strategy.
More here.
IRAN: In a cover story for The Weekly Standard, FDD Senior Fellow Reuel Marc Gerecht takes a hard look at the possibility that sanctions against Iran will not be seriously implemented -- or will be seriously implemented and still fail -- and that Israeli leaders will then have to decide whether to use military force to prevent Tehran from acquiring nuclear weapons. Among the many thought-provoking points he makes:
An Israeli strike now -- after the rise of the Green Movement and the crackdown on it -- is more likely to shake the regime than would have a massive American attack in 2002, when Tehran’s clandestine nuclear program was first revealed. And if anything can jolt the pro-democracy movement forward, contrary to the now passionately accepted conventional wisdom, an Israeli strike against the nuclear sites is it. …
If Khamenei can suppress the Green Movement and develop a bomb, he might choose to move beyond suicide bombers and Hezbollah and Hamas rocketry in his assaults on Israel and “global Jewry.” Who would stop him? …
In Iran among the hard core, an Islamist-Marxist-Nazi brew sustains the most vicious anti-Semitic -- not just anti-Zionist -- regime ever in the Muslim Middle East. (Saudi Arabia is a close but less threatening second.) In the Islamic Republic, state-sponsored anti-Semitism, for both popular and highbrow audiences, has become ubiquitous. …
[F]or those, like the Iranian hard core, who believe this is a match-up between God and the Devil, a peace process can ameliorate nothing. …
Imagine what Khamenei and the Revolutionary Guard Corps will think of the Americans, and especially the Israelis, if, after announcing repeatedly that an Iranian nuclear weapon is “unacceptable,” they permit it. …. Terrorism is never static. …
While there is no guarantee that an Israeli raid would cause sufficient shock to produce a fatal backlash against Khamenei and the senior leadership of the Guards, there is a chance it would, and nothing else on the horizon offers Israel better odds. …
More here.
And in The New Republic, Reuel writes:
Throughout the greater Middle East, frank discussions about Islam are easier to have than they are in Washington, D.C.-- especially among government officials. Ask someone in the Obama administration about jihad and, unless the official knows the conversation is off the record -- and sometimes even if it is off the record -- that official likely will become a bit panicked, nonplussed, and try to change the subject.
… Whether the invidious subject is slavery, female genital mutilation, Sharia’s draconian corporal punishments (hudud laws), women’s rights, corruption, jihadism, “oriental despotism,” or representative government, intra-Muslim ethical deliberations on most of these subjects have been provoked by Westerners and Westernized Muslims taking issue with prevailing practices. …
More here.
Evidence has surfaced that the flawed 2007 National Intelligence Estimate on Iran, which asserted that Tehran had halted its nuclear weapons program, resulted from political cookery.
More here.
More here.
FROM BERLIN TO JERUSALEM: In my Scripps Howard News Service column this week, I look at the common ground between National Socialism and the doctrines of militant Islam and Arab nationalism.
In the 1930s, the mufti of Jerusalem was Haj Amin el-Husseini. He, too, despised Jews -- there was not yet a state of Israel to despise. After participating in a pro-Nazi coup in Iraq in 1941, Husseini moved to Berlin. There he became Hitler’s ally, the “most important public face and voice of Nazi Germany’s Arabic-language propaganda,” in the words of historian Jeffrey Herf. …
And here we are, more than a half century later, with the current mufti of Jerusalem fabricating crimes against Muslims for which Jews deserve to be put to death. Meanwhile, Hamas leaders openly declare their intention to annihilate Israel and exterminate Jews -- claiming they, too, are acting in self-defense, and calling themselves a “resistance” movement. …
[S]ocial critic Paul Berman …recently observed that a taboo has developed: Most intellectuals determinedly ignore the fact that “Nazi inspirations have visibly taken root among present-day Islamists, notably in regard to the demonic nature of Jewish conspiracies and the virtues of genocide.”
More here.
IS AL-QAEDA RACIST? FDD’s Daveed Gartenstein-Ross writes that a focus on its willingness to kill Africans
ignores the fact that the terrorist group has shown a real lack of regard for the value of life of virtually every ethnic group and nationality on the planet. …
It is doubly absurd to argue that al Shabaab is racist, since it is a Somali-led organization. Though it is true that virtually all of Shabaab's brutality has been inflicted upon Africans, this is a matter of geography: when an insurgency is based in Africa, it is a certainty that the vast majority of its victims will be Africans.
Many strong lines of criticism can, of course, be directed at al Qaeda. I need not elaborate on the fact that the organization is brutal, reprehensible, imperialistic, and totalitarian. But the notion that its attacks are uniquely anti-African is spurious, and one hopes the administration will soon abandon this disingenuous claim. …
[T]he administration's "al Qaeda is racist" comments seem uniquely American in outlook. That is, one unstated assumption underlying these remarks is that being racists might be worse than being mass murderers.
More here.
Daveed also writes that Shabaab’s ideology
was expressed in such documents as Abu Mansoor al-Amriki’s January 2008 “A Message to the Mujaahideen in Particular and Muslims in General.” In it, Amriki proclaimed that Shabaab’s manhaj, or religious methodology, was the “same manhaj repeatedly heard from the mouth of the mujaahid shaykh Usaamah Bin Laden … the doctor Ayman ath-Thawaahiri [bin Laden’s deputy] … and the hero, Abu Mus’ab az-Zarqaawi [the late head of al-Qaeda in Iraq].”
Shabaab leaders have also been explicit in their desire to ally militarily with Al Qaeda. This was expressed, for example, in the August 2008 video “March Forth” released by Al Shabaab’s late military strategist Saleh Ali Saleh Nabhan, and more recently in a February 2010 statement in which Al Shabaab said that it had agreed “to connect the horn of Africa jihad to the one led by al-Qaeda and its leader Sheikh Osama Bin Laden.”
More here.
TERRORIST MEDIA: Rep. Peter Hoekstra believes that we underestimate
radical jihadist propaganda at our peril. Inspire [al-Qaeda’s new online magazine] is not designed for mainstream Muslim audiences who will reject its radical content. The target audience is marginal Muslims not integrated in mainstream society, as well as the disaffected young men in English-speaking countries such as the U.S. and the U.K. …
Inspire is the latest indication not just that radical Islam is still at war with the U.S., but that it's opening up a new front to recruit fringe individuals in our country and radicalize them.
More here.
GAZA AND THE WEST BANK: FDD’s Jonathan Schanzer and Asaf Romirowsky argue that, at this point, neither Hamas nor Fatah is attempting to sustain democratic institutions of government. They ask:
GAZA AND THE WEST BANK: FDD’s Jonathan Schanzer and Asaf Romirowsky argue that, at this point, neither Hamas nor Fatah is attempting to sustain democratic institutions of government. They ask:
How can the U.S., in good faith, sponsor a state that would not be a functioning democracy? If the Obama administration wants to continue to hold out hope for Palestinian statehood, it must find a way to revive the flat-lining Palestinian political system. The odds of success grow increasingly dim.
More here.
ISRAEL: Energy researcher Gal Luft notes:
The discovery of a gigantic natural gas reservoir less than 100 miles off Israel’s coast seems like great news for the diplomatically and militarily embattled country. The gas finding will strengthen Israel’s energy security, enable it to become an important gas exporter and contribute wealth to its economy.
It could also be the pretext for the next Middle East war.
More here.
PAKISTAN-AFGHANISTAN RELATIONS: FDD Senior Fellow Bill Roggio on NPR here.
GROUND ZERO: Stephen Schwartz writes that the
Ground Zero Islamic facility rests on a support network linked to the anti-Jewish Mahathir and the Perdana-supported Gaza raiders, some notable servants of the Iranian clerical dictatorship, and an Egyptian property developer associated with the pro-Hamas chief of the Arab League. …
Feisal Abdul Rauf¹s wife, Daisy Khan, executive director of ASMA [the American Society for Muslim Advancement] … is the niece of Dr. Farooq Khan, formerly a leader of the Westbury Mosque on Long Island, which is a center for Islamic radicals and links on its website to the paramilitary Islamic Circle of North America (ICNA), the front on American soil for the Pakistani jihadist Jamaat e-Islami.
Lazio and King are right, and Cuomo and Bloomberg are wrong. Aside from the matter of sensitivity to the families of the 9/11 victims and other Manhattanites who live near Ground Zero, if the friends and fans of Feisal Abdul Rauf believe his mosque plan is entirely above board, they should be the first to encourage full public disclosure of its backing and finances.
More here.
Also, links to CAIR and the Muslim Brotherhood? More here.
LAWFARE: FDD Senior Fellow Tom Joscelyn here on why the British are going to pay off jihadis -- and their lawyers.
CROSSING THE BORDER: It’s not just Mexicans. Watch this.
NOT ON THE AGENDA OF THE UN HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION:
If an Iranian prosecutor has his way, a 43-year-old mother of two will soon be taken from her cell in Tabriz prison, wrapped in a white shroud, buried up to her chest in a dirt pit, and stoned to death. In accordance with Iran's penal code, the rocks pelted at her head will be big enough to inflict pain, but not large enough to kill her immediately. It will take time -- maybe half an hour -- for her to die.
More here.
QUEERS AGAINST ISRAEL: James Kirchick writes that the Madrid gay parade banned participants from Israel, despite the fact that
Israel is the only Middle Eastern country that even has gay pride parades, never mind respects the dignity of homosexuals. Saudi Arabia beheads gays. Syria arrests them in sting operations. Iran hangs them from cranes in public squares. (Speaking at Columbia University in 2007, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad claimed that there are no homosexuals in his country, an absurd assertion nonetheless portentous for its murderous aspirations). As for Gaza, one of Hamas's leaders has referred to gays as "a minority of perverts and the mentally and morally sick."
Like so many other democratic values, when it comes to gay rights Israel is an oasis in a sea of state-sanctioned repression … Many Palestinian gays seek asylum in Israel. …
The decision by Spain's leading gay group is part of an international trend that has seen far left elements hijack what ought to be a non-partisan movement to promote individual liberty. Earlier this year, for instance, organizers in Toronto allowed an organization called "Queers Against Israeli Apartheid" to march in its parade. When I suggested to a Spanish friend that I might bring a small Israeli flag to the parade route, he wrote back, "Are you out of your mind? It's dangerous." …
More here.
RIP, NATO: A Turkish diplomat closely allied with Turkey’s pro-Hamas, pro-Iranian president, Abdullah Gul, has been appointed NATO’s new deputy for planning.
Michael Rubin has more here.
ON ISLAMISM: Author David Pryce-Jones provides this definition:
“Islamism” is the term that describes the growing global movement of Muslims for whom the supremacy of their faith justifies every kind of deception and violence.
Islamism as we experience it today began in Egypt between the world wars, with the movement known as the Muslim Brotherhood. Over the years, the Brothers have been phenomenally successful, establishing themselves in one form or another in at least 60 countries. In 1991, the Brotherhood’s top leader in America wrote a memorandum for the Brothers to make them understand their present purposes … They were engaged, he explained, on “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 believers so that it is eliminated and God’s religion is made victorious over all other religions.”
More here.
HOMEGROWN: Erick Stakelbeck on Hizb ut-Tahrir America here.
--Cliff May
IN THEIR OWN WORDS
"The goal of Islamism is to establish a global caliphate in which all people either convert to Islam or accept the authority of the Islamic state (and, as the Koran puts it in Sura 9:29, 'pay the jizya with willing submission and feel themselves subdued')."
(07/14/2010) Andy McCarthy, Co-Chair of FDD's Center for Law and Counterterrorism
(07/14/2010) Andy McCarthy, Co-Chair of FDD's Center for Law and Counterterrorism
"You are not supposed to observe that Islamism is a modern, instead of an ancient, political tendency, which arose in a spirit of fraternal harmony with the fascists of Europe in the 1930s and '40s. You are not supposed to point out that Nazi inspirations have visibly taken root among present-day Islamists, notably in regard to the demonic nature of Jewish conspiracies and the virtues of genocide."
(07/12/2010) Scholar Paul Berman
(07/12/2010) Scholar Paul Berman
"[Uganda] is a major infidel country supporting the so-called government of Somalia. We know Uganda is against Islam and so we are very happy at what has happened in Kampala. That is the best news we ever heard."
(07/12/2010) Sheikh Yusuf Isse, an al-Shabaab commander in Somalia's capital Mogadishu
IN THE MEDIA
(07/12/2010) Sheikh Yusuf Isse, an al-Shabaab commander in Somalia's capital Mogadishu
Should Israel Bomb Iran?
07/19/2010, Reuel Marc Gerecht, The Weekly Standard
There is only one thing that terrifies Washington's foreign policy establishment more than the prospect of an American airstrike against Iran's nuclear-weapons facilities: an Israeli airstrike. Left, right, and center, "sensible" people view the idea with alarm. Such an attack would, they say, do great damage to the United States in Iraq and Afghanistan, where Tehran would counterattack, punishing "the Great Satan" (America) for the sins of "the Little Satan" (Israel).
07/19/2010, Reuel Marc Gerecht, The Weekly Standard
There is only one thing that terrifies Washington's foreign policy establishment more than the prospect of an American airstrike against Iran's nuclear-weapons facilities: an Israeli airstrike. Left, right, and center, "sensible" people view the idea with alarm. Such an attack would, they say, do great damage to the United States in Iraq and Afghanistan, where Tehran would counterattack, punishing "the Great Satan" (America) for the sins of "the Little Satan" (Israel).
Kick North Korea Out Of The U.N.
07/16/2010, Claudia Rosett, Forbes.com
"Amputations without anesthesia" is the headline some news outlets have culled this week from a new Amnesty International report on "The Crumbling State of Health Care in North Korea." That title is a generous description of a North Korean system in which -- apart from perks for Kim Jong Il and his cronies -- whatever is now crumbling has been from the get-go consigned by state policy to the stone age.
07/16/2010, Claudia Rosett, Forbes.com
"Amputations without anesthesia" is the headline some news outlets have culled this week from a new Amnesty International report on "The Crumbling State of Health Care in North Korea." That title is a generous description of a North Korean system in which -- apart from perks for Kim Jong Il and his cronies -- whatever is now crumbling has been from the get-go consigned by state policy to the stone age.
The End of Palestinian Democracy?
07/15/2010, Jonathan Schanzer, Asaf Romirowsky, The Weekly Standard
Saturday, July 17, was the day Palestinians were slated to hold a municipal election in the West Bank. But the elections were scrapped. Initially, only groups like Hamas rejected the vote. Then, last month, the Palestinian Authority (PA) opted to postpone the elections entirely. The legislative process came to a screeching halt.
07/15/2010, Jonathan Schanzer, Asaf Romirowsky, The Weekly Standard
Saturday, July 17, was the day Palestinians were slated to hold a municipal election in the West Bank. But the elections were scrapped. Initially, only groups like Hamas rejected the vote. Then, last month, the Palestinian Authority (PA) opted to postpone the elections entirely. The legislative process came to a screeching halt.
From Berlin to Jerusalem
07/15/2010, Clifford D. May, Scripps Howard News Service
Sheikh Muhammad Hussein, the Mufti of Jerusalem, last month called on Palestinians to defend the Al-Aqsa Mosque which, he said, was "threatened by the plans of the enemies of God," by which he meant Israelis.
07/15/2010, Clifford D. May, Scripps Howard News Service
Sheikh Muhammad Hussein, the Mufti of Jerusalem, last month called on Palestinians to defend the Al-Aqsa Mosque which, he said, was "threatened by the plans of the enemies of God," by which he meant Israelis.
UN Goldstone Commission Member Equates Israel with Terrorists
07/15/2010, Benjamin Weinthal, The Weekly Standard
The anti-Israel, UN sponsored Goldstone Report enters its second phase of its assault on Israel, aiming at stripping that nation of its right to self-defense and legitimacy. The head of the commission, the German jurist Christian Tomuschat, has a personal background that offers a window into the UN's position toward Israel.
07/15/2010, Benjamin Weinthal, The Weekly Standard
The anti-Israel, UN sponsored Goldstone Report enters its second phase of its assault on Israel, aiming at stripping that nation of its right to self-defense and legitimacy. The head of the commission, the German jurist Christian Tomuschat, has a personal background that offers a window into the UN's position toward Israel.
Al Shabaab's Grim Milestone In Uganda
07/14/2010, Daveed Gartenstein-Ross, FoxNews.com
Bad as the twin blasts that rocked the Ugandan capital of Kampala on Sunday were -- and with a death toll of at least 74, they represent a considerable tragedy -- the overall carnage could have been worse. Indeed, authorities seem to have disrupted two planned follow-up attacks.
07/14/2010, Daveed Gartenstein-Ross, FoxNews.com
Bad as the twin blasts that rocked the Ugandan capital of Kampala on Sunday were -- and with a death toll of at least 74, they represent a considerable tragedy -- the overall carnage could have been worse. Indeed, authorities seem to have disrupted two planned follow-up attacks.
Is al Qaeda Racist?
07/14/2010, Daveed Gartenstein-Ross, The Long War Journal: Threat Matrix
Those familiar with the inner workings of jihadi circles will know that racism is in fact prevalent within al Qaeda's ranks. But that makes the administration's new line of rhetorical attack against the terrorist group -- that it shows a disregard for African life -- no less absurd.
07/14/2010, Daveed Gartenstein-Ross, The Long War Journal: Threat Matrix
Those familiar with the inner workings of jihadi circles will know that racism is in fact prevalent within al Qaeda's ranks. But that makes the administration's new line of rhetorical attack against the terrorist group -- that it shows a disregard for African life -- no less absurd.
Countering The Threat From Terrorist Media
07/14/2010, Mark Dubowitz, inFocus
The Long War against radical Islam is a war of ideas as much as a war of arms. Yet, for much of the past decade, the incitement and violent propaganda emanating from satellite television stations, radio outlets, and Internet platforms operated by violent Islamist extremists has too often gone unnoticed and unanswered.
07/14/2010, Mark Dubowitz, inFocus
The Long War against radical Islam is a war of ideas as much as a war of arms. Yet, for much of the past decade, the incitement and violent propaganda emanating from satellite television stations, radio outlets, and Internet platforms operated by violent Islamist extremists has too often gone unnoticed and unanswered.
Islam: Unmentionable in D.C.
07/14/2010, Reuel Marc Gerecht, The New Republic: Entanglements
The recent suicide bombing against Pashtun tribal elders in Mohmand, a region not far from Peshawar, the capital city of Pakistan’s North-West Frontier Province, made my mind return to conversations I’d had in Peshawar in 2000. Westerners could then roam the non-restricted areas of the province without much fear.
07/14/2010, Reuel Marc Gerecht, The New Republic: Entanglements
The recent suicide bombing against Pashtun tribal elders in Mohmand, a region not far from Peshawar, the capital city of Pakistan’s North-West Frontier Province, made my mind return to conversations I’d had in Peshawar in 2000. Westerners could then roam the non-restricted areas of the province without much fear.
Iran and the Missile Defense Imperative
07/14/2010, R. James Woolsey, Rebeccah Heinrichs, The Wall Street Journal
In a June 27 interview on ABC's "This Week," CIA Director Leon Panetta warned that it could be a mere two years before Iran is able to threaten other states with nuclear warheads mounted on ballistic missiles. When discussing the new U.S. sanctions against Iran recently signed into law by President Barack Obama, Mr. Panetta said, "Will it deter them from their ambitions with regards to nuclear capability? Probably not."
07/14/2010, R. James Woolsey, Rebeccah Heinrichs, The Wall Street Journal
In a June 27 interview on ABC's "This Week," CIA Director Leon Panetta warned that it could be a mere two years before Iran is able to threaten other states with nuclear warheads mounted on ballistic missiles. When discussing the new U.S. sanctions against Iran recently signed into law by President Barack Obama, Mr. Panetta said, "Will it deter them from their ambitions with regards to nuclear capability? Probably not."
The Islamic Revolution Is Still Alive
07/13/2010, Tony Badran, NOW Lebanon
The recent tension in South Lebanon, choreographed by Hezbollah against UNIFIL under the guise of spontaneous protests by villagers, has been used by the party to reassert its equation of "the Resistance, the people, and the army"- the three mutually-reinforcing pillars which, Hezbollah maintains, are alone responsible for safeguarding the country's security.
07/13/2010, Tony Badran, NOW Lebanon
The recent tension in South Lebanon, choreographed by Hezbollah against UNIFIL under the guise of spontaneous protests by villagers, has been used by the party to reassert its equation of "the Resistance, the people, and the army"- the three mutually-reinforcing pillars which, Hezbollah maintains, are alone responsible for safeguarding the country's security.
Germany Bans IHH for Hamas Links
07/13/2010, Benjamin Weinthal, The Jerusalem Post
BERLIN – Germany has banned the Frankfurt-based Foundation for Human Rights and Freedoms and Humanitarian Relief (IHH) because it “fights against Israel’s right to exist.” “Organizations that operate from German soil, directly or indirectly, with the aim of fighting Israel’s right to exist, have forfeited their right to freedom of association,” Germany’s Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere said on Monday.
07/13/2010, Benjamin Weinthal, The Jerusalem Post
BERLIN – Germany has banned the Frankfurt-based Foundation for Human Rights and Freedoms and Humanitarian Relief (IHH) because it “fights against Israel’s right to exist.” “Organizations that operate from German soil, directly or indirectly, with the aim of fighting Israel’s right to exist, have forfeited their right to freedom of association,” Germany’s Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere said on Monday.
Disconnecting the Dots
07/13/2010, Thomas Joscelyn, The Weekly Standard
On Tuesday, the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals issued a stinging rebuke to a district court that granted a Guantanamo detainee's habeas petition last year. The detainee in question is Mohammed al-Adahi, a Yemeni who District Judge Gladys Kessler ordered freed in August 2009.
07/13/2010, Thomas Joscelyn, The Weekly Standard
On Tuesday, the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals issued a stinging rebuke to a district court that granted a Guantanamo detainee's habeas petition last year. The detainee in question is Mohammed al-Adahi, a Yemeni who District Judge Gladys Kessler ordered freed in August 2009.