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[Infiltration: How Muslim Spies and Subversives Have Penetrated
Washington, Paul Sperry, Nelson Current, 2005, 360 pages, $24.99
U.S.]
Paul
Sperry’s shoe-leather investigative journalism is showcased to its
fullest in Infiltration: How Muslim Spies and Subversives Have
Penetrated Washington, in which he sets out to prove that, for the
past thirty years, the burgeoning Muslim community’s representatives in
the United States
have been working clandestinely to
undermine America’s constitutional government and the Judeo-Christian
ethics on which it was built. ... Their goal, quite simply, is to
replace the U.S. Constitution with the Qur’an, the Muslim sacred book,
and turn America into an Islamic state.
Given the gravity of the claim,
the prospective reader may rightly ask: Is this book just another
conspiracy theory, akin to those who bang on about “Illuminati Jews From
the Center of the Earth” and their manipulation of world affairs? Or has
Sperry met his evidentiary obligations?
You bet he has. In fact, the mass
of evidence Sperry provides is staggering. His findings are based on
interviews with some two dozen law enforcement and intelligence
officials from the FBI, the Departments of Homeland Security and
Defense, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Customs and Border
Protection, as well as local law enforcement—including the Fairfax
County Police Department in Virginia, the heart of the Wahhabi corridor
in America. Some of these sources are cited in the book, while others
have requested anonymity for fear of reprisals from headquarters for
speaking out on classified cases.
In addition to these sources,
Sperry cites more than fifty sensitive internal government documents,
some classified, and many posted on the book’s companion Web site (sperryfiles.com).
If the strength of ideas rests on their relationship to reality, then
Sperry has struck a chord with the men in the trenches. Both the NYPD
and the DOD have ordered copies of Infiltration for training
field investigators charged with protecting U.S. military installations
across the country. And after reading Infiltration, one senior
member of the federal National Counterterrorism Center in McLean, Va.,
who had investigated many of the key Saudi-connected cases along the
Wahhabi corridor in the Washington suburbs, said: “Sperry has catalogued
the last three years of our lives.”
Sperry’s most controversial claim
is that the radical Islamist assault on the West is based not on some
perverse interpretation of Islam, but is rooted in Islam itself. I
happen to agree with him, while realizing that this point is subject to
considerable debate. However, Sperry’s unmasking of radical Islamist
subversion in America does not hinge on whether the militants constitute
Islam’s fringe or its mainstream: either way, the threat they pose is
ominous enough.
The book begins by exposing the
countless U.S. Muslim leaders who masquerade as moderates, forswear
terrorism, but then do what the Qur’an commands: “instill terror in the
hearts of unbelievers” (Surah 8:12). Embraced by American Presidents,
the likes of Sami Al-Arian, Abdurahman M. Alamoudi, and Muzammil H.
Siddiqi—to name but a few—represent the crème de la crème of
“moderate” Islam in America. Sperry traces the career trajectories of
these (and other) faux moderates as they’ve gone from “the White House
to the Big House”: the first was tried for heading the U.S branch of
Islamic Jihad; the second “pleaded guilty of plotting terrorist acts
with Libya”; the third, president of the Fiqh Council of North America
and the flower of the flock, has confined himself mercifully to merely
cussing the U.S.
Consider the “moderate” Council
on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR)—the media-savvy mouthpiece for
militant Islam in America. One CAIR leader, Omar M. Ahmad, is quoted as
saying that “Islam isn’t in America to be equal to any other faith, but
to become dominant. The Koran...should be the highest authority in
America, and Islam the only accepted religion on earth.” Says Ibrahim
Hooper, another low-key chap from CAIR: “I want to see the U.S become an
Islamic nation.” This “mainstream” Islamic group has seen three of its
top leaders—Ghassan Elashi, Bassem K. Khafagi, and Randall Todd “Ismail”
Royer—convicted on terrorism-related charges.
Even more dispiriting, we learn
that there is nothing extraordinary about the characters whose
unpleasant acquaintance we make. When addressing gullible Americans and
their votes-vying leaders, too many of America’s Imams are “the picture
of piety,” observes Sperry. They talk a good game about Islam’s devotion
to peace and co-existence and they’ve offered (sham) sympathies for
9/11. However, while whispering sweet nothings in naïve American ears,
in private and from their pulpits, revered religious pillars of the
Muslim community have been caught advocating violence, advising their
followers to work to impose the strict Islamic code of shari’a in the
U.S., and swearing allegiances to al-Qaeda’s capo di tutti capi.
Take Imams Siraj Wahhaj and
Muzammil H. Siddiqi as examples. In 1992, a year after Wahhaj gave the
invocation to Congress, no less, he “suggested to a Muslim audience in
New Jersey that Muslims had the numbers to take control of the United
States in a political coup.” For his part, Siddiqi was given the “solemn
honor of representing the Muslim faith during the prayer service for
[9/11] victims at the national Cathedral in Washington.” This,
apparently, did nothing to detract from his desire to consolidate a
caliphate. In a 2003 fatwa, he reminded the faithful that “Allah’s rules
have to be established in all lands, and all our efforts lead to that
direction.”
According to Sperry, such
duplicity is in keeping with Taqiyya—the seldom-discussed Islamic
practice of lying to non-Muslims in order to win political battles and
protect Islam.
Thanks to multiculturalist
efforts to appease the Islamist lobby, it has infiltrated deep into
American society. A Muslim chaplain corps has been created in the U.S.
military and a Saudi-based front for al-Qaeda employed to minister to
the approximately twenty thousand Muslim soldiers. The same religious
recruiters are active in penitentiaries, where there are two hundred
thousand Muslim inmates. In fact, the prison system is now the top
recruiting grounds for al-Qaeda in the U.S.
Then there are radical Islam’s
apologists in academia. Leading the pack is Professor John Esposito,
director of the Center for Muslim-Christian Understanding at Georgetown
University, who “argues American heritage can be more accurately defined
as ‘Judeo-Christian-Islamic.’” Esposito’s well-funded, academically
credentialed “interfaith phoniness,” as Sperry puts it, has gone a long
way toward mainstreaming Islam. By sheer fluke, of course, Esposito also
“lionizes Palestinian terrorists as leaders of a political movement and
the late PLO chief Yasir [sic] Arafat as a statesman. And he urges
Washington to distance itself from Israel.” Sperry traced Esposito’s
backers through IRS tax records, and—wouldn’t you have guessed it?
Esposito is in the pay of a wealthy Palestinian who hates Israel.
Objectivists, who don’t have a
dog in the interfaith rivalry, will suppress a yawn as our deeply
religious author attempts to show that Muslims do not worship the same
God as Christians and Jews do—they do not believe Jesus is the son of
God. We realize Sperry doesn’t write to please Objectivists. Still, had
he placed a greater emphasis on philosophical rather than theological
one-upmanship, he might have juxtaposed the significant ethical and
philosophical differences between the Judeo-Christian and the Islamic
traditions. For example: universal concepts of justice vs. ruthless
particularism; the sanctity and rights of all human beings vs. dominance
for some and dhimmitude for others, etc.
Courtesy of an administration
that has anesthetized Americans to the essential Islam (and thus
continued its predecessor’s multicultural mission), Muslims with ominous
beliefs and agendas have managed to infiltrate every security agency,
from the FBI to the Pentagon. Sperry warns that the FBI, freighted by
anti-discrimination laws and pathological political correctness, now
harbors Muslim translators with ties to “various foreign military and
intelligence agencies in Syria, Egypt, Pakistan, and Turkey.” (Could
this help explain why urgent intercepts are often left untranslated or
are mistranslated?) Easily the most scandalous anecdote in the book is
that of FBI agent Sibel Edmonds walking into the Washington field office
after 9/11, to find the Middle Eastern linguists making merry—passing
around date-stuffed cookies to celebrate the occasion on which America
got its just deserts. Were they fired? Stripped of their top-secret
security clearances? Au contraire! More of their ilk were hired.
Meanwhile, Arabic-speaking Sephardic Jews have been rejected for the
job. There were “loyalty concerns,” or so the bureau said.
Subversive Muslims and Arabs have
also received top-secret clearances at the Homeland Security Department
and even the White House, where, according to Sperry, they’ve
“successfully run influence operations against our political system with
the help of both Democrats and Republicans, not least in order to badger
corporate boards into Islamizing the work place.”
So to the big question: What role
does Islam itself play in this subversive effort? Sperry has read the
CAIR-approved translation of the Qur’an, as well as the hadiths (“sacred
supplements to the Quran”), and concludes—as have scholars such as
Robert Spencer (author of The Politically Incorrect Guide to
Islam (and the Crusades)) and Serge Trifkovic (of The Sword of
the Prophet fame)—that “sadly, much of western terrorism is simply
Islam in practice, the text of the Qur’an in action.” Judging by the
Qur’an, Islam is “an inherently violent and intolerant faith,” around
which a politically correct mythology has been molded. Osama has
heeded, not hijacked, Islam.
In the event that doubts linger,
Infiltration’s “Top Ten Myths Of Islam” blows an even bigger hole
in the heart of the Religion-of-Peace fable. Terrorism is an excrescence
of Islam, Sperry argues, because while the murder of “innocents” might
be prohibited, “orthodox Muslims do not consider Jews and Christians
[much less Israeli civilians] necessarily innocent.” In other words,
“What the public recognizes as murder, these Muslims recognize as
justice.” The Qur’an, after all, doesn’t teach tolerance toward other
faiths, but inveighs against the Jewish “apes and swine” and the
Christian blasphemers. Sperry backs his debunking by quoting copiously
from the Qur’an. Here a word about Qur’anic literalism might have been
instructive. Unlike the Jewish and Christian holy texts, which have been
reinterpreted by the sages over the centuries, Islam has changed little
in 1,400 years—its decrees are not debatable and are taken very
literally.
Well, then, what of moderate Muslim leaders and interpreters?
Hasn’t Sperry given short shrift to the many who promote a more benign
version of Islam? The Muslim community, he observes, is divided into
Shiites, Sunnis, and more moderate Sufis. The reformers and the
moderates come from the ranks of the Shiite and Sufi, but are
not considered part of the established Muslim leadership in America, and
have only minor voices in the national debate. Why? Mainly because the
vast majority of mosques in America practice Sunnism, Islam’s main sect,
and as many as eight out of ten are under Saudi Wahhabi control.
The extent to which the
community’s Wahhabi-dominated organizations coordinate their schemes is
revealed in a chapter entitled “The Muslim Mafia.” Practically all
Muslim groups in America are united under the umbrella of the American
Muslim Political Coordinated Council, whose goal, in Sperry’s words, is
“rolling back U.S. support for Israel and weakening U.S. anti-terrorism
laws.” A CIA internal report that Sperry references reveals that “at
least one-third of the fifty Islamic nongovernmental organizations in
existence ‘support terrorist groups or employ individuals who are
suspected of having terrorist connections.’” Further FBI investigations
have unveiled organizations with “interlocking boards of directors,” and
an elaborate maze of shell companies and fronts—religious charities and
think tanks included—set up to launder terrorist-bound funds. The Holy
Land Foundation, a façade for Hamas (recently catapulted into government
power by the Palestinians) has since become a synonym for terrorism.
Many of these groups’ leaders are under indictment, having pled guilty
to ties to terrorists. Again, Sperry emphasizes that these leaders and
their syndicates are not fringe elements, skulking on the outskirts of
the American Islamic community, but are among “the best the Muslim
community has to offer.”
So what is to be done? The book’s Afterword offers pragmatic
recommendations that Sperry—a bare-knuckled but beguiling
writer—prefaces with a call for us to better understand the nature of
the threat:
America is a beautiful, fun, and vibrant place. Its people are friendly
and hospitable. Why didn’t any of the hijackers have second thoughts?
Why didn’t they say, ‘You know, this place isn’t so bad after all. Osama
can go pound sand up his nightgown; we’re gonna chill here for a while’?
The short answer is a toxic yet
intoxicating trinity: Allah, the Qur’an, and The Pearly Gates that
beckon. Yet Washington refuses to grapple with the enemy’s inspirations
and motives. Our ostensible protectors have not even read, let along
understood, the founding document that fuels jihad. Coming to terms with
the true Islam and with what drives its foot soldiers is imperative,
insists Sperry.
Other more concrete
recommendations include investing in mastering Arabic and cracking down
on terrorism-supporting charities. The least promising of Sperry’s
recommendations is the enforcement of the oath of allegiance. Given what
our author has told us about deception vis-à-vis Taqiyya, it’s naïve to
hope that prohibiting dual citizenship and enforcing an oath will
dissolve the pledge of allegiance to Islam and the greater Ummah.
Then there’s the issue of
“profiling.” Next time you shake in your socks on an American airplane
as Middle Eastern men on a suspected dry run strut up and down the isles
unhindered, duck into toilets with cell phones and cameras, flout flight
rules, and intimidate terrified travelers with menacing gestures, thank
the Muslim lobby groups for the experience. (This incident actually
occurred last year on a Northwest Airlines flight.) However, you owe
deeper gratitude to our elected representatives for legally prohibiting
commonsense profiling and other “minimally observant” screening
safeguards. After all, Muslim identity groups are not paid to protect
Americans; the government is. Yet it appears stone deaf to our fate,
while all ears to the bellyaching of resentful Muslim advocacy groups.
Sperry, our epistolary Jack Bauer, exposes many former and present
government officials, such as the FBI’s Robert Mueller, the CIA’s George
Tenet, and Transportation’s Norman Mineta—all of whom opted for
multicultural outreach and sensitivity training to the detriment of
counterterrorism and counterintelligence. Considering the severity of
their transgressions—and the stakes—the words “gullible” and
“politically correct” do not begin to describe their dereliction.
In the final analysis, Sperry’s
book constitutes a withering indictment of an administration that has
not only failed in its constitutional duty to uproot America’s enemies
on the home front, but has done its best to accommodate and appease
them.
©2006 By Ilana Mercer
Reviewed in The New
Individualist
Winter 2006
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