"How did the enemy get into our camp?"
That's what Bart Womack, a command sergeant major of the elite 101st
Airborne Division, asked himself as a grenade rolled past him after
The attacker worked methodically, destroying an electricity generator, throwing grenades into Womack's tent and the two other command tents, then shooting tents. One soldier died and 15 sustained injuries.
The enemy in this case appears to be not what one might expect - an Iraqi soldier or a Kuwaiti Islamist. The only suspect in custody is Hasan Karim Akbar, 31, a sergeant in the 101st Airborne Division.
If Akbar were responsible for the rampage, what might be his motivation? First reports suggest that, as a devout African-American convert to Islam, he identifies with the Iraqi enemy against his fellow soldiers.
The Los Angeles Times quotes him stating, after he was apprehended, "You guys are coming into our countries, and you're going to rape our women and kill our children."
NBC found that he "was opposed to the killing of Muslims and opposed to
the war in
There is evidence to suggest that Akbar expected
to get in trouble even before he arrived in
This incident raises two issues.
First, the
* "A prescription drug for or consistent with depression" to explain why El Sayyid A. Nosair in 1990 shot Rabbi Meir Kahane.
* "Road rage" to explain why Rashid Baz in 1994 shot a Hassidic boy on the
* "Many, many enemies in his mind" to explain
why Ali Hasan Abu Kamal in
1997 shot a tourist on the
* "A work dispute" as why Hesham Mohamed Ali Hadayet in 2002 shot two people at the El Al counter of Los Angeles International Airport.
Akbar in 2003? U.S. Army spokespersons talk variously about an "attitude problem," a desire for "retribution" and "resentment."
The chief chaplain at Akbar's
No one yet knows Akbar's motives, but ignoring that it fits into a sustained pattern of political violence by American Muslims amounts to willful self-deception. When will officialdom acknowledge what is staring it in the face?
Its avoidance of reality has real consequences, increasing the dangers Americans face. "This country's officials are in a state of denial and confusion that is almost as frightening as the terrorism they are supposed to be fighting," observes Dennis Prager, only slightly exaggerating.
Second, the Akbar incident points to the suspect
allegiance of some Muslims in government. The case of Gamal
Abdel-Hafiz recently surfaced: an FBI agent whose
colleagues say he twice refused to record conversations with suspected
financiers of militant Islamic terrorism ("A Muslim does not record
another Muslim"). [The Seattle Times reports three witnesses
recalling that John Allen Muhammad, the man accused of the Washington,
D.C.-area sniper murders last fall, had thrown a grenade into a tent during the
1991 war against
All of which reinforces what I wrote in January: "There is no escaping the unfortunate fact that Muslim government employees in law enforcement, the military and the diplomatic corps need to be watched for connections to terrorism, as do Muslim chaplains in prisons and the armed forces. Muslim visitors and immigrants must undergo additional background checks. Mosques require a scrutiny beyond that applied to churches and temples."
As Sgt. Womack noted, the enemy has already managed to "get into our camp." Do we have the will to stop him before he strikes again?
If evidence points to a terrorist motive, the F.B.I. would most likely open
a full investigation, officials said. But "at this point," a law
enforcement official in
-- The New York Times,
U.S. Air Force Capt. Mark Wisher, the Northern Kentuckian injured during a
grenade attack carried out by a member of his own unit in
-- The
-- The