http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/publications/id.9470/pub_detail.asp

 

May 10, 2011


Something Rotten in Denmark (and Here)


 <http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/authors/id.113/author_detail.asp>
Frank Gaffney, Jr.

http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/imgLib/20110509_DenmarkHedegaard.jpg

 

Surprisingly, on net, last week was not a good one for the Free World.
Despite the signal accomplishment of liquidating Osama bin Laden, Western
civilization suffered serious reverses on several fronts.

 

What these reverses all have in common is a deference to the doctrine our
enemies' call "shariah," in a manner they perceive to be acts of
"submission." Such behavior is exceedingly dangerous, as it invites our foes
to redouble their efforts to make us, in the words of the Koran, "feel
subdued."

 

For instance, consider the aftermath of SEAL Team 6's extraordinary
take-down of bin Laden.  What ensued was nothing less than a debacle as
President Obama's political appointees kept changing their accounts of what
had happened.  As one wag put it, "Osama bin Laden died and we got 72
versions."  

 

The subtext was of an administration effort desperately trying not to give
offense to our adversaries.  Yet, they and our friends could only have felt
reaffirmed in their already dim view of what passes for American leadership
under Mr. Obama.

 

Then, there was the unctuous effort to dispose of bin Laden's body in strict
"conformance to Islamic practice."  The fastidious cleansing and wrapping of
the body, the 40-minute ceremony and the burial at sea conjure up images of
an America treating one of its most psychopathic enemies as a legitimate,
even revered figure. Islam scholar
<http://www.andrewbostom.org/blog/2011/05/07/did-naval-burial-ceremony-for-b
in-laden-curse-jews-and-christians-and-confer-pardon-and-paradise-on-the-mus
lim-mass-murderer/> Andrew Bostom raises the question whether such rites
actually included shariah-conforming denunciations of Christians and Jews? 

 

Either way, this exercise was a pathetic act of appeasement.

 

Next, the President announced that he had decided not to release the dead
jihadist's photo. 

 

As with the handling of bin Laden's burial, the justification given was
concern that the picture's dissemination would only inspire more violence
against us and our forces overseas.  The truth of the matter is that the
more we signal our fear of the violence of shariah-adherent Muslims, the
more certain it is to be visited upon us. 

 

Meanwhile, on Tuesday an appeals court in Denmark convicted one of Western
civilization's most courageous defenders - Lars Hedegaard, president of the
International Free Press Society.  His crime?  He gave offense to Muslims.
Yes, that's right, a Danish judicial panel effectively enforced shariah
blasphemy law.  In the process, the court violated one of the most cardinal
pillars of freedom: the right to free speech.  

 

If allowed to stand, the ruling in the Hedegaard case will be used to
abridge fundamental civil rights throughout Europe, and possibly far beyond.
Yet, there has been remarkably little outcry about the defendant's plight -
most especially from journalists who have as much to lose as anybody.  

 

In this instance, as in the foregoing ones, the West is acting out of fear,
lest our conduct become grounds for fresh violence.  This is an enduring
legacy of, among other things, the manufactured outrage and mayhem over the
Danish cartoons a few years back.  It gives ominous new meaning to the
expression "Something is rotten in Denmark."

 

Unfortunately, our own judicial processes seem increasingly susceptible to
Islamist intimidation, as well.  Recently, counter-terrorism expert
<http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&source=web&cd=4&ved=0CCwQFjAD&url=http://paj
amasmedia.com/blog/did-obama-and-holder-scuttle-terror-finance-prosecutions/
&rct=j&q=patrick%20poole%20doj&ei=uQ3ITbKhEMjx0gGQh_2TCA&usg=AFQjCNH1k6NAUeb
VSH8P9CdSpuL2Enew7g&cad=rja> Patrick Poole published at Pajamas Media
excerpts from an interview with an anonymous source high in the Obama
Justice Department.  These included an allegation that political appointees
in that department had "quashed" a request by prosecutors to pursue
individuals and organizations listed as unindicted co-conspirators in the
nation's largest terrorism financing trial: United States v. the Holy Land
Foundation.

 

According to Poole's insider, the problem was that the administration stood
to be embarrassed if this prosecution went forward.  After all, the
defendants associated with Muslim Brotherhood fronts like the Council on
American Islamic Relations (CAIR) would assuredly have tried to use their
close ties with government officials and agencies to avoid the convictions
and punishments meted out to the first five Holy Land conspirators.  

 

The plot thickened last week.  Shortly before Attorney General Eric Holder
was scheduled to testify on Capitol Hill, the prosecutor in the Holy Land
case, U.S. Attorney Jim Jacks, told the Dallas Morning News that there was
no political interference from "the Attorney General or the White House"
leading to a decision not to prosecute CAIR.  This directly contradicts not
only Patrick Poole's source but also House Homeland Security Committee
Chairman Peter King (R-NY), who insisted that both prosecutors and FBI
agents involved in the case had told him they had "vehement objections" to
the "declination to prosecute" memo that came out of Washington.

 

Congressman Louie Gohmert (R-TX), himself a former judge and chief justice
in the Texas court system, pointedly challenged the Attorney General during
the latter's appearance before the House Judiciary Committee on Tuesday.
Rep. Gohmert noted that it is a matter of record that Mr. Jacks had filed
compelling briefs at both the federal district and appellate levels - and
was upheld by both courts - in his position that there were sufficient
grounds to treat CAIR and others as co-conspirators with the Muslim
Brotherhood and Hamas.  The AG claimed unconvincingly to be unfamiliar with
the particulars.

 

We need to stand up against shariah, not submit to it - at home or abroad.
We must demonstrate that we are, to use bin Laden's term, the "stronger
horse," by touting our victories and power, and not convey the opposite
impression by obscuring or apologizing for them.  And we must see the
paperwork that precipitated the declination to prosecute CAIR and its Muslim
Brotherhood friends - and then get on with putting them out of business.

 

 <http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/> FamilySecurityMatters.org
Contributor
<http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/authors/id.113/author_detail.asp>
Frank J. Gaffney, Jr. is President of the Center for Security Policy, a
columnist for the Washington Times and host of the syndicated program,
Secure Freedom Radio, heard in Washington on weeknights at 9:00 p.m. on WRC
1260 AM.

 



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