Pentagon Aide's Invitations Contradicted U.S. Policy


by Steven Emerson
IPT News
February 4, 2008

http://www.investigativeproject.org/article/596

At the urging of a subordinate, Deputy Secretary of Defense Gordon England
scheduled at least two meetings with foreign emissaries in direct
contradiction of U.S. policy at the time. The meetings date back to 2005.
They involved a Lebanese ambassador considered a proxy for the Syrian
government and a leading member of Syria's Muslim Brotherhood.

U.S. policy at the time was not to engage in talks with either man, because
they represent groups with whom the United States was not to communicate.
The meetings were organized by England's special assistant for international
affairs, Hesham Islam.

An invitation to Muslim Brotherhood official Husam al-Dairi was canceled in
late 2005 after a senior State Department official heard about it and
insisted it not take place. That official, J. Scott Carpenter, told IPT News
he was shocked that such an invitation was issued, let alone that it was
done without anyone consulting the State Department.

Carpenter was Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Near East Affairs at
the time and knew the meeting went against U.S. policy toward the Muslim
Brotherhood.

"I said, 'what are you talking about?'" he remembered in an interview last
week. "It was a bad idea."

Without due deliberation, it is easy to send the wrong message "broad and
near," Carpenter said. "If something like that were to come up and be
blindsided . it's not just a procedural foul up. It could unwittingly create
bigger problems for the United States government."

"When you have somebody who has a controversial background," Carpenter
added, "you don't want to give the impression that the United States
government is standing behind them."

Two discussions should have taken place, he said. One would debate whether
the meeting should take place at all. If it was agreed it should, the next
question should determine the level of government appropriate to meet
someone from the Brotherhood. Deputy Defense Secretary is far too high,
Carpenter said.

After Carpenter relayed his concerns to England's office, a staff member
called back. She told him it would be "a huge hassle to postpone it" and if
that happened, England's office would make it clear this was the result of
the State Department "putting its foot down and [saying] the meeting should
not take place."

Carpenter said that was fine by him. The episode, including the
serendipitous way he learned about it, made him wonder whether other
meetings like that took place without State Department consultation, he
said.

"When the United States is meeting with dissidents, it is important to know
who those dissidents are and what message we send by meeting with them. It
is incredibly important that the wrong signal not be sent," Carpenter said.

That may have happened earlier in 2005, when England met with Farid Abboud,
a Lebanese ambassador to Washington. Viewed as a proxy for the Syrian
government, Abboud was frozen out by U.S. government officials working to
isolate Syria, especially as tensions rose following the February 2005
assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri. The attack is
widely suspected of having been orchestrated by Syria.

David Schenker, a former adviser in the Secretary of Defense's office on
Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, and Palestinian affairs, described Abboud's
influence in Washington in an
<http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/013/365tfvmq.
asp> article column published last March in the Weekly Standard. Schenker
described Abboud as "unabashedly pro-Syria, pro-Hezbollah" and explained his
diplomatic isolation resulted from that perception.

"Essentially, Abboud has spent the last six years of the Bush administration
largely isolated, having little or no contact with executive branch
personnel. Since 2003 Abboud has met with only one senior administration
official--then Deputy Secretary of Defense-designate Gordan England--but the
meeting happened only because of negligence on the part of one of England's
junior staffers. As a matter of policy, the administration has treated
Abboud as a Syrian official and has studiously avoided contact."

Schenker declined to discuss the controversy in England's office or Hesham
Islam. But he confirmed that Islam is the "junior staffer" referenced in his
article.

U.S. Rep. Pete Hoekstra, who chairs the House Select Committee on
Intelligence, said news of the invitations was a cause for concern.

"You have to wonder, what do you have, freelancers out there?" Hoekstra
asked. "Clearly it's sending a conflicting message to some of these groups.
When you have a lack of clarity it always creates problems."

Islam has become embroiled in a power struggle of sorts within England's
office. Late last month, Army Reserve Major Stephen Coughlin, who also
reports to England, was told his contract would not be renewed. Allies
consider Coughlin the Pentagon's lone specialist on Islamic law, especially
as militants use it to justify terrorism. That was the subject of Coughlin's
thesis for the Joint Military Intelligence College completed last year,
titled "To
<http://strategycenter.net/docLib/20080107_Coughlin_ExtremistJihad.pdf> Our
Great Detriment: Ignoring What Extremists Say About Jihad."

In addition, Coughlin issued a memo in September analyzing evidence in the
Texas-based trial of the Holy Land Foundation for Relief and Development
(HLF). The foundation and five of its officials were charged with illegally
funneling money to Hamas.

Evidence released at the HLF trial implicated, among other Islamist groups,
the Islamic Society of North America (ISNA) as part of a Muslim Brotherhood
network in the U.S. Coughlin concluded that the Department of Defense should
cease its outreach programs with ISNA. Yet England has met repeatedly with
ISNA officials, including an April 2007 luncheon at the Pentagon.

The Washington Times reported Coughlin's ouster was rooted in a disagreement
with Mr. Islam over the tone of Coughlin's writings. In one meeting, the
Times reported, Islam referred to Coughlin as "a Christian zealot with a
pen." Pentagon officials maintain Coughlin's contract was not renewed due to
basic budgetary concerns.

Whatever the cause, Coughlin's pending departure from the Pentagon has
generated concern on Capitol Hill. U.S. Rep. Sue Myrick, R-NC, indicated she
may
<http://www.cnsnews.com/ViewNation.asp?Page=/Nation/archive/200801/NAT200801
16a.html> try to organize an inquiry by the bipartisan House Anti-Terrorism
Caucus.

The Pentagon appears reluctant to address questions about Coughlin or Mr.
Islam.

On Jan. 25, Claudia Rosett challenged
<http://article.nationalreview.com/?q=NTQ1ZjE0MWZlYWI2ODVjYzU3MjcyZjBkMzcxNz
BjNTQ=> a series of key components in Islam's biography.

An October profile published on a web site called Defense Link was removed
from the Department of Defense website by the next business day. Rosett
reported that no
<http://pajamasmedia.com/xpress/claudiarosett/2008/01/28/and_now_hesham_isla
ms_amazing.php> one responded to her requests for an explanation. The
profile can still be seen here
<http://www.investigativeproject.org/documents/misc/95.htm> .

The DOD public affairs office did not respond to numerous telephone messages
and e-mails seeking information about the article's removal, the two
invitations from England's office or more information about Hesham Islam.
The Washington Times quoted
<http://www.washingtontimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080201/NATION04
/12563013/1002/NATION> a top Pentagon spokesman Friday saying the profile
was "taken down in an attempt to reduce the rhetoric and the emotion
surrounding this issue while we try to determine the facts."

Geoff Morell went on to say that the facts he referred to related to whether
Islam called Coughlin "a Christian zealot with a pen" and not about the
questions regarding Islam's life story.

Reportedly, Deputy Secretary England has a great deal of confidence in Mr.
Islam, especially when it comes to Islamic issues. "He's my interlocutor,"
England said in the Islam profile recently removed from the DOD website. "He
represents me to the international community. He assists me in my own
outreach efforts, and he's extraordinarily good at it." Mr. England added
that he is hardly ever in disagreement with Mr. Islam's advice. "After all,"
he said, "if you have a good doctor, you listen to your doctor, right?"

While the U.S. government continues to debate the merits of talking with the
Muslim Brotherhood, England's "doctor" has prescribed a steady diet of
Brotherhood-connected outreach. The Brotherhood's ideology is what gives
government officials pause. Founded in Egypt in 1928, the Muslim Brotherhood
is a global Islamist movement with a stated long-range objective of a global
Islamic state with Shariah law "the basis controlling the affairs of state
and society." As stated by Hasan al-Banna, the Brotherhood's founder, "It is
the nature of Islam to dominate, not to be dominated, to impose its law on
all nations and to extend its power to the entire planet." That helps
explain the Muslim Brotherhood's motto: "God is our objective, the Quran is
our Constitution, the Prophet is our leader, jihad is our way, and death for
the sake of God is the highest of our aspirations."

It has provided the ideological underpinnings for almost all modern Sunni
Islamic terrorist groups. Hamas, Palestinian Islamic Jihad and Al Qaeda may
all be independent terrorist groups, but in 2003
<http://www.investigativeproject.org/documents/testimony/77.pdf> testimony
before the Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee, former
counter terror adviser to the National Security Council Richard Clarke
points out: "The common link here is the extremist Muslim Brotherhood - all
of these organizations are descendants of the membership and ideology of the
Muslim Brothers." The Hamas Charter <http://www.mideastweb.org/hamas.htm>
states that the terrorist organization "is one of the wings of Moslem
Brotherhood in Palestine. Moslem Brotherhood Movement is a universal
organization which constitutes the largest Islamic movement in modern
times."

In his thesis, Coughlin argues Muslim Brotherhood ideology is not far
removed from bin Laden's. And he casts doubt on the Brotherhood's claim that
it parted ways with its violent rhetoric. As an example, Brotherhood
spiritual leader Yusuf al-Qaradawi in 2004 labeled all Americans in Iraq as
combatants acceptable for targeting. "The abduction and killing of Americans
in Iraq is an obligation so as to cause them to leave Iraq immediately."
Coughlin writes:

Of note, although attempting to reposition as moderates, the Muslim
Brotherhood has yet to reject any portion of its historic mission as stated
above. As the citation string of Muslim Brotherhood leaders indicates,
"extremists" have a coherent message that is consistent and specifically
defined in Islamic terms that include jihad. As both al-Qaeda and Muslim
Brotherhood examples indicate, choosing not to look to Islam for answers
becomes the decision not to understand the threat.

As for the American branch of the Brotherhood, ISNA was founded in 1981 by
Muslim Brotherhood members in North America. It is the first organization
listed among "A list of our organizations and the organizations of our
friends" in a secret Muslim Brotherhood internal strategy memo dates May 22,
1991. The memo was entered into evidence last summer during the HLF trial.

That memo <http://www.investigativeproject.org/documents/case_docs/445.pdf>
also laid out the Brotherhood's (Ikhwan in Arabic) long-range strategy in
the U.S.

The process of settlement is a "Civilization-Jihadist Process" with all the
word means. The Ikhwan must understand that their work in America is 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
the believers so that it is eliminated and God's religion is made victorious
over all other religions. Without this level of understanding, we are not up
to this challenge and have not prepared ourselves for Jihad yet. It is a
Muslim's destiny to perform Jihad and work wherever he is and wherever he
lands until the final hour comes, and there is no escape from that destiny
except for those who chose to slack. But, would the slackers and the
Mujahedeen be equal.

ISNA was named as an unindicted co-conspirator in the HLF trial, which ended
in a mistrial in October. Prosecutors are preparing to retry the case.

In addition to the invitations to Abboud and al-Dairi, Mr. Islam arranged
for Deputy Secretary England to be a featured speaker at ISNA's 43rd Annual
Convention in September 2006. England reciprocated by hosting an ISNA
delegation at the Pentagon on April 25, 2007. According to ISNA's
publication, Islamic Horizons, Hesham Islam also attended the meeting, along
with Abuhena Saifulislam, the U.S. Navy chaplain trained by ISNA's Graduate
School of Islamic and Social Sciences (GSISS).

ISNA also has a long history of sympathy and sometimes open support for
terrorist organizations and their objectives. That including speaking out
against the detention of Hamas deputy political director Mousa Abu Marzook.
US authorities arrested Marzook in 1995 after Israel requested his
extradition to face murder charges. Hamas already had been designated a
terrorist group by the US government. The November/December 1995 issue of
ISNA's Islamic Horizons magazine described Marzook as "[a] member of the
political wing of Hamas, disliked by the Zionist entity for its Islamic
orientation."

Marzook wound up deported to Jordan in 1997. He later thanked ISNA, writing
that the group supported him through his "ordeal." Marzook wrote that ISNA's
efforts had "consoled" him.

In his Sept. 7, 2007 memorandum on the HLF evidence, Coughlin urged caution
in conducting outreach ventures "in the face of credible information that
seeming Islamic humanitarian or professional non-governmental organizations
may be part of the global jihad with potential for being part of the
terrorist or insurgent support system."

The memo concludes intelligently and prophetically:

The [Brotherhood] Memorandum identifies ISNA as an element of the Muslim
Brotherhood that the Justice Department already designated as an unindicted
coconspirator that Congress has given formal notice that it has knowledge.
Outreach as an end in itself can cause those responsible for its success to
so narrowly focus on the outreach relationship that they miss the
surrounding events and lose perspective. This could undermine unity of
effort in Homeland Security, lead to potential for embarrassment for the USG
and legitimize threat organizations by providing them domestic sanctuary. In
light of unfolding events, disregarding a Congressional request to suspend
attendance at the ISNA conference may result in some uncommonly
uncomfortable public testimony. (italics added)

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