Saturday, November 21, 2009

[Levin should recluse himself for pro-Israel Jewish bias] Levin: May be more troubling e-mails from Hasan

Associated Press
Writers Pamela Hess And Anne Gearan

WASHINGTON – There may be additional e-mails that could have tipped off law enforcement or military officials to the Fort Hood shooter before he went on his deadly rampage, the chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee said Friday.

The U.S. government intercepted at least 18 e-mails between Hasan and Anwar al-Awlaki, a radical American-born cleric. They were passed along to two Joint Terrorism Task Force cells led by the FBI, but a senior defense official said no one at the Defense Department knew about the messages until after the shootings. The official spoke on condition of anonymity in order to discuss intelligence procedures.

Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., said after a briefing from Pentagon and Army officials that his committee will investigate how those and other e-mails involving the alleged shooter, Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan, were handled and why the U.S. military was not made aware of them before the Nov. 5 shooting.

Levin said his committee is focused on determining whether the Defense Department's representative on the terrorism task force acted appropriately and effectively.

Levin also said he considers Hasan's shooting spree, which killed 13 and wounded more than 30, an act of terrorism.

"There are some who are reluctant to call it terrorism but there is significant evidence that is. I'm not at all uneasy saying it sure looks like that," he said.

He said his committee will also look into whether military members have the ability to report suspicious behavior evinced by colleagues.

FBI and military officials have provided differing versions of why Hasan's critical e-mails to al-Awlaki and others did not reach Army investigators before the shooting.

FBI officials have said a military investigator on the task force saw the e-mails and looked up Hasan's record, but finding nothing particularly worrisome, the investigator neither sought nor got permission to pass the e-mails on to other military officials.

But the senior defense official has countered that the rules of the task force prevented that military representative from passing the records on without approval from other members of the task force.

Sen. Joe Lieberman, chairman of the Senate Homeland Security Committee, said it appears there was enough information available to law enforcement, the military and intelligence agencies to raise alarm bells about Hasan but no one connected the dots.

"Had it been gathered on one desk, someone might have said 'Nidal Malik Hasan is dangerous,'" Lieberman, a Connecticut independent, told reporters after the briefing.

The Pentagon may reconsider rules governing participation in extremist organizations that some lawmakers say appear outdated and too narrow in light of the shooting rampage at the Army base in Texas.

Lieberman said Congress may recommend such a review, and a Pentagon spokesman said Friday that the rules could be among the policies scrutinized by a wide-ranging inquiry aimed at preventing another similar attack.

The Pentagon wrote regulations on "dissident and protest activities" in response to soldier participation in skinhead and other racially motivated hate groups. The current rules were written in 1996 and last updated in 2003.

The rules prohibit membership or participation in "organizations that espouse supremacist causes," seek to discriminate based on race, religion or other factors or advocate force or violence. Commanders can investigate and can discipline or fire people who "actively participate in such groups."

The rules also cover the distribution and possession of "printed materials," and gatherings held outside military posts.

The language appears to loosely cover some of the activity law enforcement sources have ascribed to Hasan.

But it is geared toward racially motivated groups and toward preventing public espousal of hateful ideology, such as attendance at a rally or the recruitment of new members. The language also applies most directly to materials and communication in the pre-Internet age.

Defense Secretary Robert Gates announced the 45-day probe on Thursday, the same day that retired Army Gen. John Keane told Congress that the existing rules will probably need revision to cover activity of "Islamic extremists."

Any revision would have to be done carefully to avoid First Amendment violations on the free exercise of speech and religion.

Keane was formerly the No. 2 Army official.

The Pentagon inquiry will get under way in earnest next week.

A senior military official said the inquiry's top leaders will meet with Gates on Monday and are likely to visit Fort Hood on Tuesday. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because plans are not final.


Associated Press writers Devlin Barrett and Eileen Sullivan contributed to this report.

Senator Carl Levin, another Jewish American in our government with pro-Israel sentiments, heads the Senate Committee on Armed Services. How will Americans ever be able to tell if he is voicing America's concerns or Israeli and Zionist Jewish concerns? As this news article shows, he is already throwing his weight into making sure the Ft. Hood gunman Nidal Hasan is tied to Muslim terrorist organizations in order to sway any court-martial or jury trial. Why do we let our 2% religious minority group have so much political and economic power over U.S. foreign policy? Are we fools? Didn't anyone take political science professors John Mearsheimer and Stephen Walt's book warning about undue Israeli influence over U.S. foreign policy seriously? We are paying again in loss of respect by the Muslim world, you know, the billion plus Muslims who were waiting with hope for Obama to do something different than his predecessors who were acting like puppets of Israel. It doesn't help our image to these people in the Middle East to see still another prominent Jewish-American who already controls important U.S. policy through his committee position trying to drive another nail into the coffin of U.S./Muslim cooperation.

3 comments:

Rose said...

Stephen. Hasan murdered people.

One of the people he murdered was a mother and grandmother whose job was to help people with post traumatic stress.

He was an asshole. Anyone who was assigned to him for care asked to be reassigned.

This is not the kind of guy you want to be defending.

Steve Lewis said...

This isn't about Hasan, anon. It's about the right to a fair trial, something guaranteed every U.S. citizen regardless of race, color, or creed or guilt or innocence.

Read your Constitution with its Bill of Rights. We violate a person's right to a fair trial and we are no better than any banana republic or good ol' boy kangaroo court out to hang a black guy innocent or not.

Steve Lewis said...

oops, anon is you, Rose..and again you haven't thought it through and are simply siding with Islamophobic prejudice instead of justice for all.

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