Showing posts with label Fort Hood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fort Hood. Show all posts

Saturday, May 26, 2012

It's Always About Islam. Always.

For those in America who still wish to deny the link between terrorism and Islam, well....either get the hell out of this country or see a shrink.  For those in the Obama administration who refuse to even use the term "Islamic terror" then kindly resign from your post and let us put someone in that will protect this country.

The case of Army Pvt. Naser Jason Abdo shows us once again that Islam is mightier, to some, than devotion to country, loyalty to family, and caring for your fellow human beings.  We see from the trial of Abdo how consuming the brainwashing of Islam truly is...as this Army private forsake all things holy to a member of the U.S. military and devoted his last mission to allah and the pedophile rock sitter.

The story comes from The Investigative Project on Terrorism.




"The Reason is Religion, Mom"


Army Pvt. Naser Jason Abdo faced his mother during a visit in a Texas jail last July.

Abdo had been arrested for plotting an attack on a restaurant in Killeen popular with soldiers from nearby Fort Hood. He would set off a bomb inside the restaurant, then shoot and kill as many survivors as possible as they scrambled out to safety.

His mother asked the obvious question. Why?

Jurors convicted Abdo's Thursday of attempting to use a weapon of mass destruction and attempted murder after hearing and seeing the answer on video.

"The reason is religion, Mom."

He had to act in response to American military actions in Afghanistan and Iraq. As a Muslim, he considered those affected by such actions to be family. "When bad things are happening," he said, "you have to do something about it."

His mother couldn't comprehend her son's logic, to which he explained, "it may seem crazy from the outside, but it's not."

Abdo's reasoning echoes the justification offered by a series of attempted homegrown jihadists. If America is killing Muslims, the logic goes, Muslims must do whatever they can to stop it.

Abdo chose Fort Hood as a target because that's where Army psychologist Nidal Malik Hasan opened fire a year earlier, killing 13 people. Hasan reportedly shouted "Allahu Akhbar" as he opened fire, and had built a disturbing record of justifying suicide bombings and endorsing other radical ideas during his time in the service.

Hasan had been in direct contact with American-born al-Qaida cleric Anwar al-Awlaki before the attack. Abdo carried copies of al-Qaida's English-language magazine, Inspire, which included articles from Awlaki invoking theology in urging Muslims in America to wage attacks at home.

"We as Muslims should seek the wealth of the disbelievers as a form of jihad in the path of Allah," Awlaki wrote in one issue. "That would necessitate that we spend the money on the cause of jihad and not on ourselves."

Despite the self-professed motives, Islamist advocates argue that radical religious interpretations should not be discussed in assessing terrorist plots by Muslims. The Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) even conspired with a political scientist in 2010 to gin up sales of the professor's book, which claimed that religious extremism was a minimal factor in suicide bombings.

The group tries to pressure people out of discussing Islamic radicalism in general.

In the wake of Hasan's Fort Hood shooting spree, CAIR national spokesman Ibrahim Hooper told a radio interviewer that Hasan's religious beliefs shouldn't be considered as a factor. "He could have just snapped from some kind of stress. The thing is when these things happen and the guy's name is John Smith nobody says well what about his religious beliefs? But when it is a Muslim sounding name that automatically comes into it."

A week after the massacre, when Hasan's beliefs and contacts with Awlaki were well established, CAIR issued a press release arguing that those who did discuss religion were exploiting the tragedy to "promote hatred and intolerance."

And military leaders have shied away from the issue, omitting any reference to it in a report on Hasan's Fort Hood attack. That drew a strong rebuke last year in a report by the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs.

"We are concerned that [Defense Department's] failure to address violent Islamist extremism by its name signals to the bureaucracy as a whole that the subject is taboo," the report said, "and raises the potential that DoD's actions to confront radicalization to violent Islamist extremism will be inefficient and ineffective."

It is just as odd to see the Obama administration take pains to avoid even uttering the phrase "radical Islam," opting instead for a generic "violent extremism."

Examples of homegrown terror conspirators invoking Islam as a justification include:

· Daniel Patrick Boyd, who was recorded scouting the U.S. Marine Corps Base at Quantico, Va., after failing in several attempts to wage jihad abroad. "The American troops even occupy the place of our two holy sites, Mecca and Medina," he said in a recording by an informant. "This isn't some fantasy, this is a reality. They are there and they are helping the Jews be in our third holy site, Aqsa. That would be our deen [religion]. This was forbidden by the Prophet on his death bed, he forbid that they can be in Mecca and Medina and there they are."

· Faisal Shahzad, whose car bomb parked near Times Square failed to detonate in May 2010. "This time it's the war against people who believe in the book of Allah and follow the commandments, so this is a war against Allah," Shahzad said at his sentencing. "So let's see how you can defeat your Creator, which you can never do. Therefore, the defeat of U.S. is imminent and will happen in the near future, inshallah [God willing], which will only give rise to much awaited Muslim caliphate, which is the only true world order."

· Farooque Ahmed, who scouted subway stations along the Washington, D.C. Metro line in hopes of aiding a bombing plot. "There's an incessant message that is delivered by radical followers of Islam," Ahmed's lawyer said at sentencing, "that one cannot be true to the faith unless they take action, including violent action, most especially violent action … that is a message that can unfortunately take root in individuals who feel like if they don't do something, that they literally will not find salvation under their faith."

· Jesse Morton, a founder of the radical website Revolution Muslim, pleaded guilty to charges stemming from threats made against the producers of the animated comedy "South Park," after the show featured a character supposed to be the prophet Muhammad fully shrouded in a bear suit. In a speech posted online, "Morton asserted that Islam's position is that those that insult the Prophet may be killed under Shariah law just as if they were fighting with a weapon," a statement of facts that accompanied his guilty plea said. "Morton exhorted his listeners to fight the 'disbelievers near you.'"

Add Abdo to the list. He had all the components to make a bomb in his hotel room when police arrested him. He had divine inspiration.

None of that would have happened had he not felt a religious duty to kill his fellow soldiers. The sooner the government is willing to acknowledge this ideology, the sooner concrete steps can be taken to produce an effective program to neutralize the radical message.

Sunday, December 27, 2009

Did The Mentor Of The Fort Hood Assassin Get Vaporized In Yemeni Airstrike?


You know how you read something and you instantly hope that it is true? Well, this report at The Investigative Project on Terrorism is one of those occasions. I'm sure you all remember the American-born islamic cleric who apparently served as the inspiration and mentor to the Fort Hood assassin, Nidal Malik Hasan. Well, that cleric, Anwar Al-Awlaki, is suspected to be one of the dead in the recent air strike that hit Yemen and killed nearly 30 al Qaeda and related targets.

Let's all keep our fingers crossed that this IS confirmed and the world is rid of one more islamic terrorist and we as Americans can rejoice that one of our own, one of our very own disgraces is busy walking the halls of Hell finding out it was all a lie.


Awlaki Reportedly Dies in Yemen Air Strike

An American-born cleric considered an inspiration to Fort Hood shooter Nidal Malik Hasan may be among 30 militants killed Thursday in an air strike by Yemeni forces.
Officials believe that Anwar Al-Awlaki is among the dead in what news reports indicate was a strike targeting a meeting of Al Qaeda leaders in Yemen.
Also believed to be among the casualties are two leaders of Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula. None of the identities has been confirmed.
Awlaki was the subject of repeated investigations when he lived in America and preached at the Dar al-Hijrah mosque in Falls Church, Va. He is believed to have known two of the 9/11 hijackers. Since leaving the U.S. around 2002, Awlaki's preaching turned even more radical. He argued that the U.S. was leading "a war against Islam," a message that seemed to resonate with Hasan, an Army psychologist.
Hasan reportedly communicated with Awlaki in at least 18 emails last year. Awlaki claimed one email came in a year ago "asking for an edict regarding the [possibility] of a Muslim soldier [killing] colleagues who serve with him in the American army." The Middle East Media Research Institute (MEMRI) has a must-read translation of an interview with Awlaki about his communication with Hasan.
Hasan's shooting rampage Nov. 5 left 13 people dead and 30 more wounded at Fort Hood. Hasan is reportedly paralyzed after being shot himself, faces a military trial for the killings.

Friday, November 20, 2009

The Warning Signs Were Out There.

By Findalis of Monkey in the Middle


As far back as 2007 officials at Walter Reed knew that there were problems with Nidal Hasan, yet they did nothing. They chose to ignore the signs for whatever reason they had.
Two years ago, a top psychiatrist at Walter Reed Army Medical Center was so concerned about what he saw as Nidal Hasan's incompetence and reckless behavior that he put those concerns in writing. NPR has obtained a copy of the memo, the first evaluation that has surfaced from Hasan's file.

Officials at Walter Reed sent that memo to Fort Hood this year when Hasan was transferred there.

Nevertheless, commanders still assigned Hasan — accused of killing 13 people in a mass shooting at Fort Hood on Nov. 5 — to work with some of the Army's most troubled and vulnerable soldiers.

Read the full story here.
I wonder if Hasan was a Christian or Jewish would he have gotten the same easy pass that he did.

Just read the memo and wonder what the US Army considers to be good psychiatric care?

The Memo:
National Capital Consortium
Psychiatry Residency Program
Borden Pavilion, Walter Reed Army Medical Center
Bldg.6, Rm. 2059, 6900 Georgia Ave, NW
Washington DC, 20307-5001
XXXXXXX

Consortium Participating Instructions: Uniformed Services University of Health Sciences, Walter Reed Army Medical Center, National Naval Medical Center, Malcolm Grow USAF Medical Center

May 17, 2007

Memorandum for: Credentials Committee

Subject: CPT Nidal Hasan

1. I am the program director for NCC Psychiatry Residency Training Program. I took over as PD in MAR 2007 and was Assistant PD from July 2006. I have been a faculty member of the residency since July 2004.

2. This memo is based on my personal knowledge of and the documented incidences in CPT Hasan’s Resident Training File.

3. The Faculty has serious concerns about CPT Hasan’s professionalism and work ethic. Clinically he is competent to deliver safe patient care. But he demonstrates a pattern of poor judgment and a lack of professionalism. In his PGY-2 year, he was counseled for inappropriately discussing religious topics with his assigned patients. He also required a period of in-program remediation when he was discovered to have not documented appropriately an ER encounter with a homicidal patient who subsequently eloped from the ER. He did successfully remediate this problem. At the end of his PGY-2 year, he was placed on administrative probation by the NCC GMEC for failure to take and pass USMLE Step 3 and to obtain an unrestricted state medical license by the end of his PGY-2 year; as a result he was not promoted to PGY-3 on time. He did eventually complete step 3 and get a license and was promoted to PGY-3. He was counseled for having a poor record of attendance at didactics and lower than expected PRITE scores. One year he failed to show for his PRITE examination at all. During his PGY-3 year, he was counseled for being consistently late to NNMC morning report. During his PGY-4 year, he was discovered to have only seen 30 outpatients in 38 week of outpatient continuity clinic. He was required to make this missed clinic time up using his elective. He failed his HGT/WGT screening and was found to be out of standards with body fat % and was counseled on that.
Lastly, he missed a night of call for MGMC ER and then did not respond to numerous pages by my office the next day.

4. Take together; these issues demonstrate a lack of professionalism and work ethics. He is able to self-correct with supervision. However, at this point he should not need so much supervision. In spite of all of this, I am not able to say he is not competent to graduate nor do I think a period of academic probation now at the end of his training will be beneficial. He would be able to contain his behavior enough to complete any period of probation successfully. My purpose in writing this letter is to give the credentials committee the benefit of full disclosure and the opportunity to modify CPT Hasan’s plan of supervision following initial privileging.

5. I did discuss this memo with CPT Hasan and informed him I would be adding it to his initial credentialing paperwork.

6. POC is the undersigned and may be reached at 202-XXX-XXXX or email at XXX/

Sincerely,

Scott Moran, MAJ, MC
Program Director
NCC Psychiatry Residency Training
A memo like that by a civilian hospital would destroy anyone's career, regardless of race or religion. But not in the military. What the US Army only wants is diversity for the sake of diversity. Not competency. Thus Hasan's passing grade and promotion.

In the old US Army, Hasan not only would have been investigate for his anti-American, treasonous (it is treason to side with the enemy during war-time) views, but would have failed in his quest to become a psychiatrist, been given a discharge (or asked to resign) and forced to pay the taxpayers back for his medical school.

No one would have died at Ft. Hood, and Hasan could have emigrated to one of the 57 Islamic countries that could have used his talents.

Oh for the good old days!