http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/240670/muslims_fear_backlash_from_f
ort_dix.html
Muslims Fear Backlash from Fort Dix Terror Plot
According to several news sources, the Muslim community in New Jersey is
fearing a backlash over the Fort Dix plot. Following September 11, hundreds
of Muslim men were questioned by officials in New Jersey. None were
connected with 911. 

The New Jersey AP reports that now, Muslims fear a resurgence of
anti-Islamic sentiment and incidents of bias. 

"If these people did something, then they deserve to be punished to the
fullest extent of the law," Sohail Mohammed, a lawyer who represented many
of the of detainees after the 2001 attacks told the AP. "But when the
government says 'Islamic militants,' it sends a message to the public that
Islam and militancy are synonymous. Don't equate actions with religion." 

Per the NJ AP, the Arab-American Anti-Discrimination Committee's New Jersey
chapter has been in contact with the FBI about the Muslim community's fears.
"What we're all afraid of is a new backlash," said Hesham Mahmoud, group
spokesman. The Arab-American Anti-Discrimination Committee issued the
following statement: "It seems clear that a potentially deadly attack has
been averted. We applaud the FBI for its efforts and repeat the American
Muslim community's condemnation and repudiation of all those who would plan
or carry out acts of terror while falsely claiming their actions have
religious justification." 

The six suspects in the plot are Muslim, male, and in their mid-twenties,
the same profile as those of the 911 attackers. The affidavit of Eljvir
Duka, one of the accused Muslim jihadists, points to what appears to be his
religious justification for the planned attack on Fort Dix. He is quoted in
The Christian Science Monitor as stating, "and at the end when it comes to
defending your religion, when someone is trying [to attack] your religion,
your way of life, then you go jihad." 

The tape of the New Jersey jihadists that was brought to the FBI's attention
by a Circuit City Clerk contains scenes of the tape the men firing automatic
weapons, calling for "jihad," and shouting "Allah Akbar" (God is great). 

Some experts point out the similarities between the New Jersey jihadists and
the July 2005 London train bombers along with those responsible for the
Madrid train bombings in March 2004. The terrorists responsible for these
atrocities were homegrown. 
John Zogby, president of Zogby International in Utica, N.Y., whose polling
firm has surveyed the Muslim-American community cautions that Muslim
Americans shouldn't be judged by the actions of these six Muslim men. He
told the Christian Science Monitor that the European Muslim experience is
quite different than the American Muslim. "Here they assimilate: They buy
into the American dream, and surveys suggest they succeed. They are not
locked in as a permanent underclass." 

Dave Brannan, Terrorism Studies, Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey,
California calls the plot traditional terrorism. "It's a symbolic target
coupled with the religious terrorism - the catharsis of killing many, not
just one." He notes the theological nature of the New Jersey jihadists'
plot. "This plot appears to be theologically motivated, not just generally
religious: They make repeated comments about how their brothers, their
religion is under attack." 

While Muslim in New Jersey fears a backlash over the alleged actions of six
Muslim men in their community, the Fort Dix jihad plot is not isolated. It
follows in the wake of other recent jihadist attacks by Muslim men in the
<file:///C:/Program%20Files/Common%20Files/Microsoft%20Shared/Stationery/the
me/678/united_states.html> United States in which innocent civilians were
murdered in cold blood. 

On Febuary 13th, 2007, Sulejman Talovic, an 18-year-old Bosnian Muslim
refugee who lived in Salt Lake City, Utah opened fire with his shotgun,
killing six people and critically injuring four others. 

In San Francisco, August 29th, 2006, Ohmeed Aziz Popal went on a vehicular
rampage killing one and injuring 13. He claimed that he "did it for Allah". 

The New Jersey AP reports that at a news conference after the suspects
appeared in U.S. District Court in Camden, U.S.
<file:///C:/Program%20Files/Common%20Files/Microsoft%20Shared/Stationery/the
me/334/attorney.html> Attorney Christopher Christie was careful to
differentiate between those charged in the plot, and the larger, law-abiding
Muslim community. 

"This should not be taken as a generalized indictment against the Muslim
community in New Jersey," he said. "We would not want this to tar the
reputation of the Muslim community in New Jersey and the work they do for
law enforcement every day." 

In an editorial "Wake Up Americans! We're at War!" at Philly.com today,
writer Stu Bykofsky asks a compelling question. "How do we go about rooting
out the jihadists without terrorizing peaceful Muslims?" 


 



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