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If
the Taliban catches an American spy, they slit the informer's throat.
If we catch a pro-Taliban spy, he gets a slap on the wrist after
getting a letter from a Muslim pressure group urging leniency. Who says
we're winning this war?
Last month, Taliban fighters claimed to
have killed a "female U.S. spy" for helping American forces in
Afghanistan. Once all the evidence against the alleged spy was
gathered, they slit her throat with a knife.
Compare that with
the kid glove treatment of Sgt. Muhammad Weiss Rasool, a Muslim cop in
the nation's capital who tipped off the target of an FBI terrorism
investigation into a pro-Taliban mosque.
Despite his arrest,
confession and recent conviction in federal court, Rasool, an Afghan
immigrant, will do no jail time and will continue to collect a paycheck
from taxpayers pending the results of an internal-affairs probe by the
Fairfax County Police Department outside Washington.
Rasool took
an oath to protect this country several years ago when he joined the
FCPD, which is the largest force in Virginia and a key partner with the
FBI in investigating major terror cases in the Washington area,
including the 9/11 attack on the Pentagon.
But Rasool put his
religion ahead of his adopted country when he alerted a fellow member
of his mosque that he was under federal surveillance. At his Muslim
brother's request, he searched a police database and confirmed that FBI
agents were tailing him.
When agents went to arrest the target
early one morning, they found him and his family already dressed and
destroying evidence. They knew they had a mole and worked back through
the system to find Rasool.
That's when agents discovered the
police sergeant had breached their database at least 15 times to look
up names of other contacts, including relatives, to see if they showed
up on the terrorist watch list. (As part of post-9/11 data-sharing,
local police now have access to classified federal case files on
terrorists maintained within the NCIC, or National Crime Information
Center system.)
Rasool's actions "damaged the integrity of the
NCIC system and jeopardized at least one federal investigation," U.S.
prosecutors said in court papers filed last month. "The defendant's
actions could have placed federal agents in danger."
Rasool, 31,
at first claimed he didn't know the terrorist target. He confessed only
after hearing a recording of his message for the suspect, who was a
cleric in his local Taliban-sympathizing mosque. Rasool finally pleaded
guilty to illegally searching a federal database.
Despite his
subsequent conviction, however, Fairfax County has left him on the
force, pending the outcome of an internal investigation. The leniency
afforded Rasool is unprecedented, given how he copped to the crime -
and not just any crime, but one that betrayed his fellow officers and
country.
It also contrasts starkly with the recent handling of
other Arab and Muslim government employees caught breaching classified
databases.
The city of Rochester, N.Y., for example, summarily
fired a Muslim 911 operator, Nadire Zenelaj, well before she was
formally charged last month with illegally searching the names of
hundreds of friends in the terrorist watch list. And as part of a
federal plea deal, Lebanese national Nada Prouty resigned from the U.S.
government after confessing she accessed a restricted FBI database to
see if relatives were being investigated for terrorist activities.
Unlike
these alleged spies, however, Rasool has a powerful patron in
Washington -- the Council on American-Islamic Relations, which lobbied
on his behalf during his prosecution.
"I have always found Sgt. Rasool eager to promote a substantive
relationship between the Fairfax County Police Department and the local
Muslim community," wrote CAIR Governmental Affairs Coordinator Corey
Saylor in a letter to the federal judge, who ended up denying
prosecutors the jail time they requested for Rasool. (He got off
lightly with a fine and two years probation.)
Indeed, Rasool
acted as CAIR's representative on the police force, and even worked
with the group to kill a successful counterterror-training program
within the department.
Rasool and other Muslim officers tied to
CAIR claimed the course taught by the respected Higgins Center for
Counter Terrorism Research portrayed Islam in a bad light. CAIR phoned
Fairfax County Police Chief David Rohrer to complain, and the chief
canceled the training in 2006.
That same year, Rohrer spoke at
CAIR's annual fundraising dinner in Washington, crediting the group
with "helping police departments to better understand the Muslim
community."
But the chief was being used -- by the Islamist
enemy. It turns out his aggrieved sergeant at the time was under
federal investigation for aiding and abetting terrorists. And so was
CAIR -- the group from whom Rohrer was accepting phone calls and on
whom he was conferring legitimacy. In fact, U.S. prosecutors at the
time were adding CAIR to a list of co-conspirators in a terror scheme
to funnel more than $12 million to Hamas suicide bombers and their
families.
Yet CAIR and Rasool teamed up to persuade the
politically correct Rohrer to nix the anti-terror training, which
included counterintelligence measures to help police guard against the
very infiltration from terror supporters and facilitators that has
taken place on Rohrer's watch.
Sadly, the chief appears more concerned about protecting the force from charges of "Islamophobia" than Islamist penetration.
Rasool,
still on paid leave, says he hopes to be permanently reinstated. If so,
it would mark a humiliating defeat in our battle against the growing
Islamist 5th column in America. Rasool has a dangerous religious
conflict, and should never wear the uniform again.
Paul Sperry is a Hoover Institution media fellow and author of Infiltration: How Muslim Spies and Subversives Have Penetrated Washington. He can be conacted at
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Source: FrontPageMagazine.com
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