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Connect the Dots
What do the following recent news items have in common?
These three developments actually have several things in common: First, they each shed light on the magnitude of the threats we are facing in what truly is a War for the Free World. Sen. Warner's trial balloon is a reminder of the greatest danger we face in waging that war – the prospect of being defeated politically on the home front. Adm. McConnell's revelations make clear that our enemies overseas are not waiting for such a defeat, and the humiliating withdrawal from Iraq it will precipitate, to try to attack us here at home. And the hash-up by the Department of Justice calls attention to the fact that, even if no more foreign-based terrorists get into our country, we already have in our midst organizations that are sympathetic with, if not actually serving the interests of, our Islamofascist foes. Second, each of these news items tends, if anything, to understate the problem. Senator Warner's is not only the latest of Congressional demands to begin the surrender of Iraq to those who wish us ill there. It is also perhaps the most modest. The more irresponsible seek the immediate removal of all U.S. forces – a logistical impossibility and strategic disaster. Others envision changing the mission at once, quickly removing some of our troops and putting the rest on remote bases, effectively ceding much of Iraq to the terrorists and their enablers. For his part, Adm. McConnell's admission raises the obvious question: If we caught more than a dozen Iraqi terrorists slipping into the United States during each of the past two years, how many were not intercepted? Typically, the ratio is something like for every one nabbed, ten get through. Indeed, WorldNetDaily reports that "the U.S. Customs and Border Protection intercepted 60 Iraqis crossing the nation's southwestern border in 2006 who were seeking asylum in the U.S., while that number so far in 2007 is 178." What is interesting about that is the fact that the El Paso Times was told by a U.S. intelligence analyst, "There's been evidence that human smugglers, or coyotes, are telling Iraqis to ask for amnesty if they are caught." How many desiring to do us harm are among those seeking amnesty (caught and uncaught) – and whose wish might be realized if extraordinarily ill-advised legislation like H.R. 2265 recently introduced in Congress is adopted? (For a troubling analysis of this bill, see http://www.vigilantfreedom.org/910blog/2007/08/06/faq-on-hr-2265/.) The problem with the Islamic Society of North America is also but the tip of the iceberg. There are dozens of groups like it in this country. Most have been established by, received funding from or are otherwise lashed up with Saudi Arabia. They typically serve as vehicles for promoting the intolerant Wahhabi strain of Islam, inculcating a sense of separateness and grievance among American Muslims and advancing the insidious, even seditious, agenda of the Muslim Brotherhood. The three headlines are also, regrettably, indicative of one other thing: a certain cluelessness on the part of the U.S. government. Congressional figures, intelligence officials and bureaucrats in various departments throughout the government are neither fulfilling their sworn obligations to defend the Constitution of the United States nor serving the American people well by their failures to recognize – let alone deal effectively with – the great and growing dangers we face, abroad and at home. It is past time for an honest rendering of the facts suggested by "connecting these dots": America will not be made more secure by surrendering in Iraq. The porousness of our borders is an open invitation to terrorists and our continuing failure to secure them will, in due course, make possible not just "mass casualties," but possibly national calamity. And Islamist organizations may declare themselves to be the self-appointed leaders of the Muslim-American community, but no good can come from our government associating with or otherwise legitimating them. |
About Frank Gaffney
Frank J. Gaffney, Jr. is President of the Center for Security Policy and lead-author of War Footing: Ten Steps America Must Take to Prevail in the War for the Free World. Mr. Gaffney formerly acted as the Assistant Secretary of Defense for International Security Policy during the Reagan Administration, following four years of service as the Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Nuclear Forces and Arms Control Policy. Previously, he was a professional staff member on the Senate Armed Services Committee under the chairmanship of the late Senator John Tower, and a national security legislative aide to the late Senator
Henry M. Jackson.
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