Islamist 'Trojan horse' in Pentagon, say experts 
FBI: Top defense advisers linked 
to radical Muslim Brotherhood 

  _____  

Posted: February 1, 2008
6:05 p.m. Eastern
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=59995



C 2008 WorldNetDaily.com 



Federal authorities say a high-level Muslim Pentagon aide, who led a
campaign to silence a Pentagon intelligence analyst for taking a hard line
against Islam, is running an "influence operation" on behalf of U.S. Muslim
groups fronting for the radical Muslim Brotherhood. 



  <http://www.worldnetdaily.com/images2/heshamislam%20(2).jpg> 
Hesham H. Islam (left), Muslim aide to the deputy secretary of defense, with
Muslim  <http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=59995#>
military chaplain Abuhena M. Saifulislam (right)        

Hesham H. Islam, a special assistant to deputy Defense secretary Gordon
England, recently criticized Maj. Stephen Coughlin, one of the military's
leading authorities on Islamic war doctrine, for making the connection
between the religion of Islam and terrorism. 


After Islam lodged complaints, Coughlin's contract with the chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff at the Pentagon was not renewed. 


Islam also was upset with briefings Coughlin recently prepared for the U.S.
military warning that major U.S. Muslim groups were fronting for the Muslim
Brotherhood, a worldwide jihadist movement based in Egypt. 


Islam, who was born and raised in Egypt, is heavily involved with one of the
groups - the Islamic Society of North America, which U.S. prosecutors last
year named as a member of the U.S. branch of the Muslim Brotherhood and an
unindicted co-conspirator in a major terror-funding case. 


Islam has persuaded his boss, England, to conduct various outreach with
ISNA, including hosting the group's leaders in the Pentagon and speaking at
its annual convention. 


Speaking during ISNA's 2006 opening ceremonies, England proclaimed, "There
is no contradiction between the peaceful religion of Islam and America's
values and principles." 


Coughlin reached the opposite conclusion in a 329-page
<http://www.strategycenter.net/docLib/20080107_Coughlin_ExtremistJihad.pdf>
report submitted to the National Defense Intelligence College, in which he
warns that Islamic law sanctions violence. That finding, among others, has
put him at odds with Islam, whom England describes as "my personal close
confidante." 


"I take his advice," England said, "and I listen to him all the time." 


WND has learned that Islam is closely associated with a Muslim military
chaplain trained at a radical Islamic school that federal agents raided
after 9/11 in connection with terror-financing. 


As  <http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=51534> WND
reported, the chaplain, Abuhena M. Saifulislam, studied Islam at the
Graduate School of Islamic and Social Sciences in Virginia. 


Recently declassified
<http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=59995#> FBI
documents reveal its sister organization, an Islamist think tank known as
the International Institute of Islamic Thought <http://www.iiit.org/> , or
IIIT, is involved in a Muslim Brotherhood conspiracy to wage a cultural and
political jihad to eventually take over America from within - most notably,
through infiltration of government agencies. 


Islam works closely with Saifulislam (Arabic for "sword of Islam") on
Pentagon outreach projects involving Middle Eastern
<http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=59995#> embassies
and the so-called Wahhabi lobby in Washington. 


"He's a Muslim brother," an FBI official said of Islam. "He's a bad actor.
He's well-positioned to be where he is, and that doesn't do us any good." 


He also said Saifulislam is "definitely Muslim Brotherhood," while noting
that Islam "is a lot smoother than Saifulislam," who as a chaplain at Gitmo
lobbied for special meals and other privileges for al-Qaida detainees. 


The official hastened to add that, at this point, belonging to the Muslim
Brotherhood is not criminal, and neither Defense Department employee is the
subject of a formal
<http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=59995#>
counterterrorism or counterespionage investigation. Both men have refused
interviews, and the Pentagon had no comment. 


However, the FBI official warned that the Muslim aides are part of a
conspiracy by Muslim Brotherhood fronts to run "influence operations"
against the U.S. government. 


"Their M.O. is to make nice for the very purpose of penetrating us," he
said, "and we just roll over for them, at least at the top levels." 


He says England, who also
<http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=53371> recently
dedicated an Islamic prayer center at Quantico on the advice of Saifulislam,
is blind to the threat. 


"England doesn't know it's an influence operation that's been laid at his
door," he said. "His lack of awareness is irresponsible." 


A senior U.S. official who has met with England says he was not even aware
that a convicted terrorist and al-Qaida fund-raiser created the Pentagon's
Muslim chaplains corps. 


Adurahman Alamoudi, a Muslim Brotherhood leader and founder of the American
Muslim Council, placed Muslim chaplains throughout the military. He is now
in jail on charges of terrorism. However, most of the chaplains he trained
and sponsored are still in their current positions. 


"The Islamic chaplains who serve were trained by a known terrorist," said
terrorism expert Steve Emerson. 


Emerson says Islam, like Alamoudi, has invited "subversive" elements into
U.S. military headquarters. 


"Hesham Islam is an Islamist with a pro-Muslim Brotherhood bent who has
brought in groups to the Pentagon who have been unindicted co-conspirators,"
he said. 


Emerson said a "Trojan horse" of subversives and potential spies have
penetrated deep inside the Pentagon, and they are now bearing fruit with the
ouster of Coughlin. Sources say Islam has high security clearance. 


A former Pentagon colleague of Coughlin described Islam as a "gatekeeper,"
who at a minimum, is blocking candid discussion of the religious nature of
the threat posed by Muslim terrorists. Such action, William Gawthrop says,
thwarts the U.S. war effort, because it denies military brass and
rank-and-file the information they need to effectively fight the Islamist
enemy. 


"We still do not have an in-depth understanding of the war-fighting doctrine
laid down by (the Muslim prophet) Muhammad, how it might be applied today by
an increasing number of Islamic groups, or how it might be countered,"
Gawthrop told WND. 


He says Coughlin was trying to bridge that gap before being pushed out. 


Supporters of the respected contractor say Islam had a direct hand in his
firing. They say that on Jan. 3 Coughlin was told his contract, which ends
in March, would not be renewed because his message had become too
"politically hot." 


They say that in a meeting late last year between Coughlin and a member of
England's staff, which Islam unexpectedly attended, Islam asked Coughlin to
"soften his message" regarding Islamic war doctrine. Coughlin refused. 


Islam was heard referring to Coughlin as a "Christian zealot with a poison
pen." The conflict resulted in his contract being terminated. 


A well-placed Pentagon insider described it differently, however. Islam and
Coughlin were present at the briefing, but there was no direct confrontation
between the two. It was not until Hesham returned to England's office suite
that he remarked that Coughlin had a "poison pen." 


"He clearly doesn't like him," the source told WND. 


Also, Coughlin was let go in part because his contract was up, and at
$440,000, it was too steep to justify renewing, the insider says. And though
he had written a 329-page thesis on the subject, he was not effective at
briefing the J-2 intelligence staff of the Joint Chiefs. 


"He's brilliant, and he knows his stuff, but he couldn't teach it," the
source said. "It went over everybody's head." 


Still, England has not properly vetted his long-time aide, Islam. "Gordon is
so trusting of this guy because he's worked for him for so long," the same
official said. "But he's got questionable contacts, and he (England) needs
to have his antennae up." 


  _____  

Islam probed 
http://www.washingtontimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080201/NATION04/
12563013/1008
<http://www.washingtontimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080201/NATION04
/12563013/1008&template=printart> &template=printart
February 1, 2008 
By Bill Gertz - Islam probed 

The Pentagon is looking into conflicting statements about the background of
Hesham Islam, a special assistant to Deputy Defense Secretary Gordon England
who was the focus of a dispute with a Joint Staff counterterrorism analyst. 

Mr. Islam faced tough questions about his background posed by veteran
journalist Claudia Rosett, a former Wall Street Journal reporter who covered
the United Nations oil-for-food scandal with Iraq. Last week, Miss Rosett
took the Pentagon to task by uncovering serious discrepancies about the
Egyptian-born Islam that no one at the Pentagon seems willing to answer. 

Writing in National Review Online, Miss Rosett revealed that certain claims
about Mr. Islam's background don't fit. 

Shortly after she wrote about the discrepancies contained in a
Pentagon-written article on Mr. Islam's background, the Pentagon removed the
biography from its Web site, DefenseLink.mil. 

Pentagon spokesman Geoff Morrell said "that piece was taken down in an
attempt to reduce the rhetoric and the emotion surrounding this issue while
we try to determine the facts." 

The Pentagon does not comment on such personnel matters, he noted. "That
said, we are looking into the matter and trying to reconcile conflicting
statements." 

Mr. Morrell called later to clarify that the conflicting statements being
probed relate to whether or not Mr. Islam used the term "Christian zealot
with a pen" in describing Mr. Coughlin, and not about discrepancies in Mr.
Islam's background. 

Mr. Islam has come under fire from supporters of Stephen Coughlin, the Joint
Staff analyst on counterterrorism whose contract was not renewed. The action
followed a meeting between Mr. Coughlin and Mr. Islam several weeks ago when
the two clashed over Mr. Coughlin's views on the Islamic law roots of
terrorism. 

After refusing comment to Inside the Ring, Kevin Wensing, a spokesman for
Mr. Islam, now says that reports in this space that Mr. Islam called Mr.
Coughlin a "Christian zealot with a pen" did not take place during the
meeting. 

Queries to other Pentagon officials familiar with the issue said the phrase
was used by Mr. Islam after the meeting, not during it. 

No action was taken against Mr. Islam, a Muslim adviser and confidant of Mr.
England, for the anti-Christian comments. 

Mr. Islam could not be reached for comment. 

Miss Rosett tried - and failed - to get straight answers from Mr. Wensing
about why Mr. Islam claimed that when he was 7 his family was bombed by
Israeli jets at his home in Cairo, when there is no evidence the Israelis
bombed the Egyptian capital during the 1967 war. 

Also, Mr. Wensing could not explain why Mr. Islam said in his biography that
he was on a freighter sunk by an Iranian torpedo in the Persian Gulf when
there is no record of the ship being sunk. 

According to his 1992 master's thesis at the Naval Postgraduate School, Mr.
Islam is highly critical of Israel and the influence of American Jews on
U.S. politics, noting that U.S. ties to Israel have harmed relations to
other states in the Middle East. 

One Pentagon official suggested that any security concerns about Mr. Islam
are misguided, noting that someone in his position would have to face a
background check. 


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