Good training but not enough!

 

B

 

http://muslimmatters.org/2011/03/04/how-we-train-our-cops-to-fear-islam/

 


How We Train Our Cops to Fear Islam


Posted by Amad <http://muslimmatters.org/author/amad/>  . March 4th, 2011 .
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Next time, a cop sees you and wants to check out how high your pants are
(above the ankles or not), you can safely bet that he has been "trained" by
an Islamophobia-"trainer". This stuff is really scary and provides more
background on how Islamophobia is spreading so rapidly. 

How We Train Our Cops to Fear Islam
<http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/features/2011/1103.stalcup-craze.html> 

There aren't nearly enough counterterrorism experts to instruct all of
America's police. So we got these guys instead.

By Meg Stalcup and Joshua Craze
<http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/features/2011/1103.stalcup-craze.html#Byli
ne> 

On a bright January morning in 2010, at Broward College in Davie, Florida,
about sixty police officers and other frontline law enforcement officials
gathered in a lecture hall for a course on combating terrorism in the
Sunshine State. Some in plain clothes, others in uniform, they drifted in
clutching Styrofoam cups of coffee, greeting acquaintances from previous
statewide training sessions. The instructor, Sam Kharoba, an olive-skinned
man wearing rimless glasses and an ill-fitting white dress shirt, stood
apart at the front of the hall reviewing PowerPoint slides on his laptop.

As he got under way, Kharoba described how, over the next three days, he
would teach his audience the fundamentals of Islam. "We constantly hear
statements," Kharoba began, "that Islam is a religion of peace, and we
constantly hear of jihadists who are trying to kill as many non-Muslims as
they can." Kharoba's course would establish for his students that one of
these narratives speaks to a deep truth about Islam, and the other is a
calculated lie.

"How many terror attacks have there been since 9/11? Muslim terror attacks,"
Kharoba asked the room. Silence. "Let's start the bidding."

"Over a hundred," someone volunteered.

"I got a hundred," Kharoba called back. Another audience member, louder now,
suggested three hundred.

"Three hundred!" Kharoba declared.

"Over a thousand," offered another voice in the audience.

Kharoba stopped the bidding. "Over thirteen thousand," he said. "Over
thirteen thousand attacks." He paused to let the statistic sink in.

Kharoba belongs to a growing profession, one that is ballooning on the
spigot of federal and state dollars set aside for counterterrorism efforts
since the attacks of September 11, 2001. He is a counterterrorism instructor
to America's beat cops, one of several hundred working the law enforcement
training circuit. Some are employed by large security contractors; others,
like Kharoba, are independent operators.

Kharoba was born in Jordan, and he likes to intimate that members of his
family are important tribal leaders. This lends a veneer of insider
credibility to classroom remarks that might otherwise seem like off-color
jokes. He showed the class some photographs taken in the Gaza Strip. "This
is the Arab version of a line," Kharoba told the students, gesturing to a
photo of Palestinians rushing toward a passport agency. Then he showed a
YouTube video of two uniformed men beating a nameless prisoner. "This is
what Miranda rights are in the Arab world," he said.

Fortunately for an adept American police officer, Kharoba said, jihadists
telegraph their extremist intentions in altogether predictable ways. One
only has to learn the signs. Take Mahmoud-Kharoba's preferred name for a
generic Muslim. Kharoba can tell whether Mahmoud is a Wahhabi (a member of a
fundamentalist Islamic sect from Saudi Arabia) just by going through
Mahmoud's trash. There will be no pre-approved credit card offers, because
interest is forbidden in Islam. There will be no brown wax fried-chicken
bags, because fried chicken isn't halal. For Kharoba, extremist Muslims are
as easy to spot as American gang members.

"When you see a bunch of guys in red, what do you know?" Kharoba asked.

"They are Bloods," responded the audience, many of whom deal with gangs
regularly.

"When you have a Muslim that wears a headband, regardless of color or
insignia, basically what that is telling you is 'I am willing to be a
martyr.'" There were other signs, too. "From the perspective of operational
security, there are two things I am always looking out for: a shaved body
and moving lips," he explained. "Some of the Pakistani hijackers shaved
their whole bodies in a ritual of cleanliness. If their lips are moving,
these guys are praying. As they are walking through an airport, every second
they're going to be praying."

America today is too politically correct to acknowledge the reality of
Islamic fanaticism, Kharoba said. "Would Islam be tolerated if everyone knew
its true message?" he asked the class. "From a Muslim perspective, do you
want non-Muslims to know the truth about Islam?"

"No!" came the audience reply.

"So what do Muslims do?" Kharoba demanded.

"Lie!"

Kharoba strode forward to the front of the room, his voice slower now, more
measured. "Islam is a highly violent radical religion that mandates that all
of the earth must be Muslim."

The class broke for lunch.

That afternoon, Kharoba offered more tips on how to detect violent Muslims.
"You remember the Alligator Alley incident?" he asked.

He was referring to the events of September 13, 2002, when three Middle
Eastern men at a Shoney's restaurant in Calhoun, Georgia-one Jordanian, one
Pakistani, and one Egyptian-were overheard talking about "bringing it down"
to Miami. A nearby diner, one Eunice Stone, became alarmed and contacted the
Georgia highway patrol. In what became a terrorist scare with national
coverage, the police pulled the three men over on Alligator Alley, the long
section of Interstate 75 that cuts west across Florida. For thirteen hours,
the police combed the vehicle for explosives.

Kharoba projected a picture of Ayman Gheith, one of the arrested men, onto
the screen. "The first thing is facial hair," Kharoba said. "Do you see how
the moustache is trimmed, and the beard is in a cone shape? It is very
common to have this beard, and the moustache will always be the same, just
like Muhammad."

There is only one problem with the Alligator Alley case-a problem Kharoba
never mentioned to the class. The incident was a false alarm. The
"terrorists" turned out to be medical students on their way to a conference
in Miami. They were innocent. After thirteen hours of interrogation, the
police released them. Kharoba, however, taught the class that Ayman Gheith
was a "textbook case" of Islamic fanaticism.

While his views are entirely his own, the fact that Kharoba is teaching this
course at all reflects a sweeping shift in America's official thinking about
law enforcement and intelligence gathering. In recent years, the United
States has become more and more committed to the idea of bringing local
police forces into the business of sniffing out terrorists. In 2002, the
National Joint Terrorism Task Force was set up to coordinate existing
collaborative efforts among federal, state, and local law enforcement. And
since 2006, the Department of Justice has been developing a program called
the Nationwide Suspicious Activity Reporting Initiative, through which local
cops are meant to act as intelligence gatherers on the ground, feeding
reports of suspicious activity to a network of data "fusion centers" spread
out across the country. The system is scheduled to be up and running in all
seventy-two of the nation's fusion centers by the end of this year. But in
order for the cops to play a role in counterterrorism, the thinking goes,
they need to be trained. And that's where Kharoba and his
ilk-counterterrorism trainers for hire-come in.

The very idea of integrating local police into the nation's counterterror
intelligence efforts is a subject of debate among security experts. People
at the highest level of law enforcement and intelligence-to say nothing of
civil liberties groups-have concerns about the strategy. While the premise
is perhaps intuitively appealing-particularly in a place like Florida, where
several of the 9/11 hijackers took flying lessons-one danger is that the
system will be flooded with bad leads. An increase in incidents like the
mistaken arrests on Alligator Alley would only degrade police work, obscure
real threats, and spoil relations between America's cops and America's
Muslims-who have thus far volunteered some of the most fruitful leads in
preventing domestic terror attacks.

It might be theoretically possible to ward off such an outcome if police
could be provided with impeccable training. But one of the central problems
is that the demand for training far exceeds the supply of qualified
instructors. Even the CIA and FBI have had trouble finding people with the
key skills to fill their ranks. For state and local law enforcement
departments, the scarcity is even more acute. Into the void, self-styled
experts have rushed in.

While expertise in counterterrorism training may be in short supply, money
for it is not. Each year the federal government directs billions of dollars
(no one knows exactly how much) in terrorism-related training grants to
state and local governments. These funds cascade down into myriad training
programs like the one at Broward College, where instructors like Kharoba ply
their trade with only minimal supervision.

 



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