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Muslim Moles

Von: leonard78sp@primus.ca (leonard78sp@primus.ca) [Profil]
Datum: 11.07.2008 05:10
Message-ID: <C49C477F.10E7C%leonard78sp@primus.ca>
Newsgroup: misc.education alt.education alt.politics.usa.congress alt.politics.republicans alt.politics.democrats.d alt.security.terrorismtalk.politics.misc
Muslim Moles

Thursday, July 10, 2008 4:20 PM PT

Homeland Security:
In a sign background checks are far too lax,
an alarming number of Arabs and Muslims
have landed sensitive government jobs only
to be caught later spying for the enemy.

Guarding against penetration by terrorist
agents and sympathizers should be a top
concern of public agencies, but it's not.

Guarding against charges of job
discrimination is.

Multiculturalism and political correctness
have made it easier for the terrorists to use
Arabs and Muslims to infiltrate the
government and steal security secrets.

In the latest example, a former city 911
operator faces multiple felony counts for
allegedly searching the names of friends
and relatives on the FBI's terrorist watch list.

Nadire P. Zenelaj, an ethnic Albanian, says
she's being singled out because she is
Muslim. "I feel they targeted me because of
my religion," she said.

No, she was investigated for looking up
classified information on her confederates.
At least one of the 227 names she checked
was on the terrorist watch list, according to
Rochester, N.Y., police.

A D.C.-area cop recently was convicted of
doing the same thing.

Federal prosecutors say Fairfax County
Police Sgt. Weiss Rasool, an Afghan
immigrant, tipped off a fellow mosque
member that he was under FBI
investigation. When agents went to arrest
the terrorist 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.

Thanks to post-9/11 data-sharing, local
police like Rasool ‹ as well as first
responders like Zenelaj ‹ now have access
to classified FBI files on terror suspects
maintained with the NCIC, or National
Crime Information Center system.
Prosecutors said Rasool's actions "damaged
the integrity of the NCIC system and
jeopardized at least one federal investigation."

That's not all. In May, the Energy
Department had to revoke the security
clearance of an Egyptian-born nuclear
physicist because of "conflicting allegiances."

The FBI questioned Moniem El-Ganayni,
also a Muslim prison chaplain, for allegedly
inciting inmates to carry out jihad against the
U.S., charges he denies.

Still, such questioning should've taken place
before El-Ganayni got acccess to nuclear
secrets. It's likely his extracurricular
activities would have been enough of a red
flag to bar his employment.

Same goes for an EPA toxicologist who
turned out to be an al-Qa'ida fundraiser.
Waheeda Tehseen would never have been
hired at all if the feds hadn't cut corners on
her background check. Not only did
Tehseen's husband work for Pakistani
intelligence, but she lied about her U.S.
citizenship on her government application.
EPA missed it.

Then there's the case of Hezbollah spy
Nadia Prouty. The Lebanese immigrant also
lied about her citizenship and was hired any
way by both the FBI and CIA.

The good news is, these moles were caught.
But they should have been screened out
before they could ever get in and do damage.

© Copyright 2008 Investor's Business Daily.


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