- Covert Islamist who has infiltrated the conservative movement
- Worked to eliminate the Justice Department’s use of so-called
“secret evidence” in deportation cases involving Arab immigrants suspected of
terrorism
- Believes that Muslim Americans "are
often faced with discrimination, harassment and outright hatred"
See also: Grover Norquist Muslim Brotherhood
Born
in Boulder, Colorado and raised in California, Suhail Khan
is a Muslim American whose father
was the late Mahboob Khan—an early founder of the Muslim
Students Association (MSA),
a founding member of the Islamic
Society of North America
(ISNA), a founding member of the Muslim
Community Association (MCA), and the founder of American Muslims for Global Peace and Justice. Suhail Khan has vowed to carry
on his “dear father’s shining legacy.” Suhail's mother,
Malika Khan, was a founding member of the MCA and is currently a board member of
the Council
on American-Islamic Relations'
(CAIR) California chapter.
Suhail
Khan earned a B.A. in political science from UC Berkeley in 1991 and
a J.D. from the University of Iowa in 1995.
As
a Capitol Hill staffer in the mid-1990s, Khan convinced
then-House Speaker Newt Gingrich to reserve a room in the Capitol for
Muslims to pray. Subsequently, numerous extremists—including the cleric Anwar Awlaki, now a known affiliate of
al-Qaeda—led prayers and spoke there.
In 1999 Khan spoke at
an ISNA event where he praised
the “mujihadeen” who had martyred themselves “for the cause of
Islam”; he praised “the early Muslims [who] loved death more than
the oppressors loved life”; he lamented that Muslim Americans "are under attack" and "are
often faced with discrimination, harassment and outright hatred"; and he urged his co-religionists to be "prepared to give our lives for the
cause of Islam." Khan also
expressed
hostility toward federal law-enforcement and sympathy for
terrorist suspects.
At that time, Khan was working for Tom Campbell, a Republican
congressman from a heavily Muslim district in Northern
California, to eliminate the Justice Department’s use of so-called
“secret evidence” in deportation cases involving Arab immigrants suspected of
terrorism. Khan worked
that legislation specifically for Sami
Al-Arian,
whose brother-in-law,
Mazen al-Najjar, was facing terrorism-related deportation
proceedings where federal immigration officials were using classified
intelligence which the suspect was not permitted to see. Khan tried
to rescue Najjar by helping to draft the legislation—the “Secret Evidence Repeal Act of 2001”—which, had it been passed, would
have banned the use of secret evidence.
Khan also defended
Al-Arian against conservative allegations that he himself was a Palestinian
Islamic Jihad (PIJ) leader. Under the very law that Khan was trying
to abolish, Al-Arian would ultimately be arrested, convicted, and sentenced
to federal prison for his PIJ affiliations.
After
George W. Bush's presidential election victory in 2000, Khan became
a staff
member in
the White House Office of Public Liaison (OPL), where he was given
responsibility
for selecting which Muslims would be allowed access to the President
and his team.
In this role, Khan
helped
facilitate a White House meeting with Sami al-Arian, even though
the latter was already under FBI investigation.
After the San
Francisco Chronicle
published a 2001 report
tying Osama bin Laden's chief lieutenant, Ayman al-Zawahiri, to the Santa Clara mosque where Khan's
late father had been board chairman, Suhail Khan was removed from the OPL and was given a political
appointment in the Department of Transportation. He spent the
rest of the Bush administration there, ultimately serving as the
Assistant
to the Secretary for Policy. In that capacity, Khan had access
to classified information on such matters as port, rail, waterway and
highway security, as well as the movement of nuclear weapons and
other hazardous materials.
At
an American Muslim Council convention in June 2001, Khan
received
an award from Abdurahman Alamoudi, who in 2004
would be sentenced to 23 years in prison as one of al-Qaeda’s top
fundraisers in America.
According
to a December 2003 press release issued by the Islamic Society of North America, Khan served
on one of that organization's committees. Over the years, he has repeatedly been a featured
speaker at events hosted by ISNA, MSA, CAIR, the Muslim
Public Affairs Council,
and the Islamic Institute established by Grover Norquist.
Since
departing the Bush administration, Khan has tapped into the
Muslim Brotherhood’s highly successful “interfaith
dialogue” strategem for co-opting and influencing the clerical
leaders of other faiths. Toward that end, he has developed an affiliation
with the increasingly Saudi-funded Institute for Global Engagement,
on whose board serves John Esposito. Esposito is the founding
director of the Muslim Brotherhood dawa
(proselytizing)
operation known as the Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal Center for
Muslim-Christian Understanding. Khan
boasts that this tie-in has afforded him an opportunity
to cultivate relations with prominent Christian clerics and some wealthy conservative
philanthropists.
Presenting
himself as a pro-American, “life-long
Reagan conservative,” Khan
in 2007 was elected to the board
of directors of the
American
Conservative Union (ACU),
the organization which hosts the annual Conservative
Political Action Conference
in Washington, DC.
His candidacy for that post was strongly
supported by Grover Norquist, who was already an ACU board
member.
Also thanks
largely to Norquist’s sponsorship, Khan has been able to infiltrate
other conservative circles as well. In addition to attending, for
years, Norquist’s influential Wednesday Group Meetings, Khan has cultivated a reputation as a “conservative leader” by dint of his
chairmanship
of “the Conservative Inclusion Coalition,” which meets at the
office of Norquist's “Americans for Tax Reform.” Khan also has convened periodic meetings
with young congressional staff members, some of whom work for
legislators in positions of leadership.
After the election of President Barack Obama, Khan teamed up with Imam Mohamed Magid, Obama’s Muslim outreach partner, to do interfaith outreach with evangelical Christian leaders in the South.
In
2010, Khan supported
Imam Faisal
Abdul Rauf's
effort to build a mosque near Ground Zero in Manhattan. Khan
characterized
Rauf as a moderate Muslim whose intentions vis à vis the mosque were
benevolent.
According
to the Contra
Costa Times
and other local press in California, Khan’s family mosque hosted
several Taliban supporters while raising money for Hamas through its U.S. charitable front, the now-defunct
Holy Land Foundation (HLF). The mosque is held in trust by the North American Islamic
Trust.
By early 2011, Khan had become a spokesman
for the Congressional Muslim Staff Association, where he worked with a
Muslim convert named Jihad Saleh Williams. Khan also briefed
Republican leadership staff on various issues and sought to
establish a relationship with some of incoming House Speaker John Boehner’s
people. Moreover, Khan gained
the trust of key staffers running the Republican Study Committee,
the caucus for conservatives in the House of Representatives.
This profile is adapted from the following articles: “Khan Job,” by Frank J. Gaffney, Jr. (February 20, 2007); "Who Is Suhail Khan?" by Paul Sperry
(January 11, 2011); "Memorandum for Members of the Board of Directors of the American Conservative Union," by Frank J. Gaffney, Jr. (January 14, 2011); and "Odd Connections of Some GOP Backers of Ground Zero Mosque," by J. Michael Waller (August 23, 2010).
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