WASHINGTON,
January 27 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) – Driven by the
post-September 11 investigation of Muslims living in the United States,
Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) Robert Mueller
ordered the Bureau’s 56 field offices to tally the number of mosques
in the U.S.A., causing a lot of eyebrows to be raised.
Mueller
is not satisfied with the work of his agents to date. He is frustrated
that his troops are still not aggressive enough in hunting down
“terrorists,” putting forward a controversial initiative to keep a
firm grip on Muslims there, the U.S. Newsweek magazine
reported Monday, January 27.
Mueller
has warned that if field offices don’t meet their pre-established
goals, they may be subjected to “special reviews” by inspection
teams from the bureau.
For
their part, field offices learned of the new project earlier this month
when they received a six-page questionnaire that asked about the number
of mosques in their communities.
Speaking
with one voice, Mueller and some FBI officials stressed that mosque
tallies are only one of several criteria used to assess the
“terrorist” threat in each region.
“This
is part of a larger evaluation process,” said one senior official.
“We’re trying to set performance goals and objectives for a
particular field office. We’re not targeting mosques.”
Mueller
and his fellowmen voiced deep concern about undetected “sleeper
cells” and troublesome evidence that some mosques may be serving as
cover for terrorist activity as a part of their crackdown on Middle
Eastern men in the U.S.
As
a part of its unfettered surveillance of communications, the FBI has
decided to place bugs in mosques to combat “serious crimes” and to
protect “national security,” so that they can monitor everyone and
everything.
“I
don’t believe this is the way to prevent more terrorist activity
because it breeds more hostility,” said one Arab student.
However,
Mueller’s new initiative has surprised many U.S. officials, including
some congress officials.
When
FBI executive assistant director Wilson Lowery Jr. briefed congressional
staffers on the project last week, and explained that mosque tallies
would be used to help set investigative goals, “there were a lot of
eyebrows that went up,” said one of those present.
Sounding
a discordant voice to Mueller’s initiative, some FBI officials
acknowledged that the initiative could be politically risky.
“This
is not politically correct, no question about it,” the weekly quoted
one top FBI official as saying.
The
approach raised concerns that the FBI was engaging in a new form of
religious “profiling.”
“It’s
frightening to hear that this is actual policy,” said Ibrahim Hooper,
spokesman for the Council on American Islamic Relations. “This just
shows how they are viewing every Islamic community in the country with
suspicion.”
On
May 2002, in the name of preventing terrorist attacks, Attorney General
John Ashcroft handed the FBI sweeping new powers to troll through
cyberspace and monitor people at their places of worship, political
rallies and other public venues.
FBI
Cracks Down on Iraqi Illegal Immigrants
Amid
concerns that they could be connected with extremist groups or agents of
the Iraqi regime, the FBI, in addition, has launched a search for
some 3000 illegal Iraqi immigrants who have gone missing while visiting
the United States and are among those being sought for voluntary
interviews ahead of a potential U.S.-led war on Iraq, the U.S. daily Washington
Post reported Monday, January 27.
U.S.
officials believe that Iraqi President Saddam Hussein has recruited
Iraqi students studying in the United States to gather information and
intelligence on U.S. technology.
“One
of our top priorities is to find those who are here illegally who could
be a threat,” a senior U.S. counterterrorism official told the daily.
“We
don’t really know how big the problem is or how big the threat might
be, but the possibility is real,” he added.
U.S.
law enforcement officials, for their part, said the program has three
main goals: to develop friendly intelligence sources within the Iraqi
American community; to reassure immigrants that the FBI and other
federal agencies will guard against any ethnically motivated attacks in
the event of a war; and to locate immigrants whose whereabouts are
unknown.
However,
the new U.S. move could scare away Iraqis who oppose the Iraqi regime
and are sympathetic with the U.S.
“There’s
a lot of apprehension and anxiety in the community about these visits.
If they’re trying to strengthen relations with the Iraqi community and
the opposition, I don’t think this is the way to do that,” the paper
quoted Mohammed Alomari, a spokesman for a Michigan-based Arab American
group.
The
search for the missing Iraqis has become one of the primary objectives
of a broader FBI program aimed at locating and interviewing as many as
50,000 Iraqi nationals who have entered the United States as visitors or
refugees within the last decade or so.
The
interview program was begun about two months ago after complaints from
some top lawmakers, who openly questioned the FBI's ability to guard
against espionage and terror attacks in the event of an Iraqi conflict