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Yemen Cleric Confidante to Hasan

Marcia

Active Member
That Muslim cleric who was at the mosque about 3 miles from where I live says he was a confidante to Hasan, the Ft. Hood terrorist.
The cleric said he thought he played a role in transforming Hasan into a devout Muslim eight years ago, when Hasan listened to his lectures at the Dar al-Hijra mosque in Northern Virginia. Aulaqi said that Hasan "trusted" him and that the two developed an e-mail correspondence over the past year.

The portrait of the alleged Fort Hood shooter offered by Aulaqi provides some hints as to Hasan's mind-set and motivations in the months leading up to the Nov. 5 rampage, in which 13 were killed. Aulaqi's comments also add to questions over whether U.S. authorities, who were aware of at least some of Hasan's e-mails to Aulaqi, should have sensed a potential threat. U.S. intelligence agencies intercepted e-mails from Hasan, but the FBI concluded that they posed no serious danger and that an investigation was unnecessary, said federal law enforcement officials.

...The thick-bearded, white-robed Aulaqi, who was born in New Mexico, served as an imam at two mosques attended by three of the Sept. 11, 2001, hijackers -- Virginia's Dar al-Hijra and another in California. Aulaqi, who is in his late 30s, is also fluent in Arabic. U.S. officials have accused him of working with al-Qaeda networks in the Persian Gulf after leaving Northern Virginia....

Explaining why he wrote on his Web site that Hasan was a "hero," According to Shaea, Aulaqi said: "I blessed the act because it was against a military target. And the soldiers who were killed were not normal soldiers, but those who were trained and prepared to go to Afghanistan and Iraq."

Aulaqi's views are controversial, earning him not only designation by U.S. counterterrorism officials as a leading English-language promoter and supporter of al-Qaeda, but also criticism from other fundamentalist Islamic clerics...

.....Print, video and audio files of his words have been found on the private hard drives of terrorism suspects in Canada in 2006 and in the United States in 2007 and 2008. He also wrote congratulations to al Shabaab, an Islamic extremist group leading an insurgency in Somalia, after it apparently used the first U.S.-citizen suicide bomber last fall.

....On Dec. 23, 2008, days after he said Hasan first e-mailed him, Aulaqi also posted online words encouraging attacks on U.S. soldiers, writing: "The bullets of the fighters of Afghanistan and Iraq are a reflection of the feelings of the Muslims towards America," according to the NEFA Foundation, a private South Carolina group that monitors extremist Web sites.

....Asked whether Hasan mentioned Fort Hood as a target in his e-mails, Shaea declined to comment.
Source
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/11
/15/AR2009111503160.html?wpisrc=nlmost


It is both unbelievable and inexcusable to me that the FBI would know about this correspondence and do nothing. How can a U.S. Army officer (and psychiatrist on top of that) be able to communicate in an admiring way with someone like Aulaqi -- whom the U.S. Government knew was tied to 9-11 -- and not be investigated?
 

pinoybaptist

Active Member
Site Supporter
I agree. The FBI appears to have dropped the ball on this.

The FBI and most of the intel community just dropped a few notches off my respect totem again. If these are the kinds and caliber of intelligence agents and agencies we have, I shudder to think what else could have slipped by their runny noses ?
 

pinoybaptist

Active Member
Site Supporter
The FBI and most of the intel community just dropped a few notches off my respect totem again. If these are the kinds and caliber of intelligence agents and agencies we have, I shudder to think what else could have slipped by their runny noses ?

On the other hand, I was just reading some article about some of our Army guys who murdered four Iraqis they caught firing at them back in 2007 in some canal in Iraq and they pointed to frustrations at the long laundry list of requirements they have to meet in order to detain suspects whom they have apprehended in combat situations.
Could these intelligence folk be facing the same frustrating requirements to even launch an investigation on suspected terrorists within the Armed Services ?
 

Marcia

Active Member
The FBI and most of the intel community just dropped a few notches off my respect totem again. If these are the kinds and caliber of intelligence agents and agencies we have, I shudder to think what else could have slipped by their runny noses ?

Same here.
 
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