http://jewishworldreview.com/0411/emerson040711.php3

 

April 7, 2011 / 3 Nissan, 5771 

Mueller Talks FBI Budget Challenges, Reaffirms CAIR Ban 

By Steven Emerson 

 

Senators question counter-terrorism techniques, limitations 

 

The FBI should shut down web sites carrying al-Qaida propaganda on
American-based servers, including its English-language magazine, if it has
the ability and legal authority to do so, a ranking member of Congress said
Wednesday.

U.S. Rep. Frank Wolf, <http://wolf.house.gov/>  R-Va., repeatedly asked FBI
Director Robert Mueller to pursue the issue during a hearing on the FBI's
2012 budget request. Wolf chairs the House Appropriations Subcommittee on
Commerce, Justice, Science, and Related Agencies.

The capability exists, Mueller said, but there are questions about the First
Amendment and the likelihood that the radical content would simply migrate
to other websites. Mueller acknowledged that young Americans are being
radicalized by jihadist content on the Internet, especially the sermons and
writings of American-born al-Qaida cleric Anwar al-Awlaki.

In addition to ideological radicalization, many of those sites including
training and specific instructions. Web sites bring the "sermons of Alwaki
into the bedroom of teenagers anywhere in the United States," he said. The
FBI is working to determine who is visiting such sites, Mueller said.

"We are trying to develop sources to identify people who are being
radicalized and are seeking weapons or explosives in order to carry out
their intentions," he said.

While Mueller was on Capitol Hill to discuss the 2012 budget, he stressed
the challenges the FBI faces if a budget compromise is not reached this year
and the government is forced to shut down. It's a point he made last week
<http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/fbi-director-robert-mueller-agency-hampered-
threat-government/story?id=13260408>  before a Senate panel, when he said
the FBI would face $200 million in cuts and would be forced to leave
hundreds of vacant positions unfilled.

Money from important, but lower-ranked priorities would be diverted to
ensure the Bureau's top priorities of counter-terrorism, counter
intelligence and cybercrimes do not suffer. "Investigations will continue
unhindered," while new initiatives and some training would take a hit,
Mueller said. 

 

The United States faces "an unprecedented range of threats," he said,
mentioning the attempted air cargo bombings last October to thwarted plots
to detonate bombs at a Portland Christmas tree lighting ceremony and along
Washington, D.C., subway lines.

Much of that threat comes from individual radicalization fueled by the
Internet. Al-Qaida affiliates in Yemen and Somalia aggressively target
Westerners for recruitment. Among the examples is Inspire magazine,
published by al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula. Each issue includes
suggestions for "open source jihad" and step-by-step instructions for
attacks.

"I know you can't take every site down," Wolf told Mueller. "But that
magazine is out there and it ought to be taken down."

He also urged Mueller to continue the FBI's policy of not working with the
Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), even though it is the nation's
most visible Muslim advocacy group. The FBI's cut off came in 2008, based on
evidence tying the group's founders to a Hamas-support network in America.

Mueller did not say much in response. "We have no formal relationship with
CAIR," he said when asked if the policy continues. He has made similar
statements
<http://www.newson6.com/story/14328429/cair-says-fbi-cutting-ties-hurts-effo
rts-in-local-communities?redirected=true>  before other congressional
committees this year and cited concerns with the group's national
leadership.http://www.investigativeproject.org/pics/482_large.jpg

He said he was aware of a poster published by CAIR's San Francisco chapter
which urged people to "Build a Wall of Resistance" by not talking to the
FBI.

That poster, Wolf said, "is a telling example of how CAIR has sought to
prevent individuals from cooperating with law enforcement, or at the very
least to present themselves as the only legitimate channel for doing so."

Wolf then read from a letter sent by Executive Director Nihad Awad to Libyan
dictator Muammar Gaddafi seeking money for a CAIR project. Last month, the
Investigative Project on Terrorism reported on a face-to-face appeal Awad
made to Gaddafi when the Libyan leader visited the United Nations in 2009.
In the letter, Awad thanked Gaddafi for his generous support, Wolf said.

He asked Mueller whether the FBI knew if CAIR received any money from
Gaddafi. Mueller said he would find out.

On other issues, Mueller said the FBI had developed intelligence showing
terrorists in places like Pakistan and Yemen discussing getting people into
the United States through the Mexican border. He declined to address any
specific instances in the open hearing, but stressed that both the northern
and southern borders are targeted by terrorists seeking entry into the
country.

When it comes to questioning terrorist suspects, Mueller was open to
legislation allowing a temporary exception to the Miranda rule so agents
could inquire about plots or other conspirators. The FBI already has used
"clean teams," agents who may question a suspect on such matters strictly
for intelligence reasons. After they are done, criminal investigators may
take their places and question the suspect further after reading him his
rights.

"To the extent we can have flexibility in such situations, I am in favor of
flexibility," Mueller said in response to a question from Rep. Adam Schiff,
D-Calif. Sometimes, he cautioned, that exchange of agents might be
counterproductive in that it makes it more difficult for agents to build a
rapport with a suspect and persuade him to answer more questions.

Mueller also addressed questions based on media reports that FBI agents are
questioning Libyan nationals in the United States. In some cases, it is to
determine who might pose a threat of pursuing a terrorist act in retaliation
for U.S. airstrikes against Gaddafi's regime. In others, it is an attempt to
learn about the rebels fighting the regime and determine whether they have
terrorist ties.

 



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