| Editorial
"Foiled
Bomb Plot Reveals 'Home-Grown' Reach of Extremists"
By Dr. Zuhdi Jasser
Dr. Zuhdi Jasser, President
and founder of the American Islamic Forum for Democracy (AIFD), today warned
that the foiled bomb plot in New York City is a "clear and calculated warning
that well-coordinated extremists are on the move within the U.S."
Four individuals were arrested Thursday in New York City on charges that
they planned to detonate explosives at a Jewish synagogue and community
center and shoot down U.S. military aircraft with surface-to-air missiles.
"The arrest of four individuals;
three of whom appear to be U.S. citizens; confirms that homegrown Islamist-inspired
terrorism is a clear and present danger," said Dr. Jasser. "Today's
arrests should be a wake-up call to America and especially to American
Muslims that we are long overdue in countering the well-coordinated and
well-funded Islamist programs which exist within the United States."
The 2007 NYPD Radicalization
Report is accurate; radicalization in U.S. prisons is an immediate threat.
This recent terrorist attempt on Jewish synagogues shows the NYPD Report
was right. The Council for American Islamic Relations (CAIR) opposed
that report because as usual they were in denial about the radicalization
in U.S. prisons," said Dr. Jasser. "It's now acknowledged that at
least some of the alleged bombers were radicalized in U.S. prisons. Many
Islamist imams are aggressively recruiting inmates in our prisons with
ideologies that fuel 'home-grown' terror."
"It's significant that this
terrorist plot was targeted against synagogues, underscoring the dangerous
hatred promoted by radical imams in American prisons," said Dr. Jasser.
"The solution begins with
government rejection of Islamist apologist groups like CAIR, who are not
representatives of the Muslims in America. The FBI has recently
rejected them and we support that decision. We must engage the majority
non-Islamist American Muslim community to reject political Islam and its
fuel for radicalized Islam," said Dr. Jasser.
Dr. Jasser, a devout Muslim
and son of Muslim-Syrian immigrants, is a former U.S. Navy Lieutenant Commander,
physician and past president of the Arizona Medical Association.
Jasser is widely known as a moderate, anti-Islamist Muslim leader featured
in the PBS film, Islam v Islamists produced by ABG Films, Inc. in 2007
and narrator of the recently released The Third Jihad produced by Clarion
Fund, Inc. which focuses on the threat of radical Islam to America. Jasser
appears regularly in print and on national TV and radio programs.
TO SCHEDULE AN INTERVIEW,
PLEASE CONTACT SUSAN ASSADI
(800) 922-8792, cell (480)
510-4881, susan@assadi.com
About American Islamic Forum
for Democracy (AIFD)
AIFD is a think tank and
activist Muslim organization which provides a platform for a movement to
separate spiritual Islam from the political.
AIFD openly engages and challenges
all American Muslims to proactively be in the forefront of the domestic
and foreign struggle against the primary driving force of militant Islamism
and its terrorist offshoots-the ideology of political Islam. Militant Islamists
are fueled ideologically by a radicalization of the faith of Islam. This
radicalization is fueled by both militant components and a more central
political desire (Islamism) to establish Islamic states. Islamists view
secular pluralistic societies like America as an anathema to Islam.
AIFD rather seeks to build
coalitions of Muslims, which not only reject the means of terror as an
anathema to Islam but more globally reject the ends of the Islamic state
which Islamists seek.
AIFD believes that the only
way to genuinely wage the contest of ideas and counter the root cause of
terrorism is for Muslims to be given ample opportunity for debate between
one another-- especially within the mosques. AIFD believes that the outcome
of these debates between political Islam and non-political Islam will ultimately
be one of the primary reasons globally for the decrease in the threat of
homegrown terrorism. For more information see www.aifdemocracy.org.
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