Inteligencia y Seguridad Frente Externo En Profundidad Economia y Finanzas Transparencia
  En Parrilla Medio Ambiente Sociedad High Tech Contacto
Inteligencia y Seguridad  
 
12/11/2009 | US - Actual number of Muslims in the U.S. military believed much higher than records show

World Tribune Staff

The U.S. military plans to begin a review of the rising number of Muslims in its ranks.Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan, born in the United States and alleged to have killed 13 soldiers in the army base at Fort Hood, Texas, did not identify himself as a Muslim when he enlisted. Officials said Hasan was recruited as part of a U.S. military drive to reach out to the Muslim community.

 

Officials said the Defense Department and Joint Chiefs of Staff plan to discuss an examination of the Muslim presence in the U.S. military and the threat of Al Qaida influence. They said the Congress was pressing for such a review in wake of the Nov. 5 killing of 13 U.S. troops by a Muslim officer.

"We have to go back and look at ourselves and ask ourselves the hard questions," U.S. Army Chief of Staff Gen. George Casey said. "Are we doing the right things? We will learn from this."

Officials said the review would focus on the exact number of Muslims in the U.S. military, which has encouraged such enrollment. The Defense Department reported 3,409 Muslims on active military duty as of April 2008, but officials said the number could be at least three times higher.

"We believe there are many more Muslims who when recruited did not list their religion," an official said. "Some of these people simply wanted to avoid harassment; others might have had a sinister agenda."

Over the last decade, the military has intensified its recruitment of Arabic-, Farsi- and Pashtun-speaking soldiers for the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.

Officials said the Pentagon has been receiving reports of Muslim soldiers who expressed opposition to the U.S. military campaigns in Afghanistan and Iraq. They said the opposition was encouraged by Islamic clerics as well as Muslim officers such as Hasan, who warned Muslims against harming co-religionists.

In 2003, U.S. Army Sgt. Hasan Akbar, said to have opposed the U.S. invasion of Iraq, killed two officers and injured 14 others in a grenade attack. Akbar, a convert to Islam, was sentenced to death.

Officials said the U.S. military has sought to shield Muslims from retaliation in Afghanistan and Iraq. In many cases, they said, Muslim soldiers were ordered to use fake family names to prevent reprisals against their families abroad.

Some in Congress have called for clear guidelines on allowing soldiers to express political views in the military. They said Hasan's pro-jihad views were tolerated by officers concerned over charges of discrimination.

"I want to say very quickly we don't know enough to say now, but there are very, very strong warning signs here that Dr. Hasan had become an Islamist extremist and, therefore, that this was a terrorist act," Sen. Joseph Liberman, a Connecticut independent and chairman of the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, said.

Lieberman said his committee would investigate the Hasan shooting, particularly the motive for the attack. He said a focus would be whether the U.S. Army ignored warning signs that Hasan was heading for an attack.

Officials acknowledged that Hasan underwent an investigation in April 2009 on suspicion that he had adopted Al Qaida doctrine of holy war against the West. They said Hasan was suspected of trying to contact Al Qaida via the Internet.

"I am intending to begin a congressional investigation of my homeland security committee into what were the motives, what were the motives of Hasan in carrying out this brutal mass murder and to ask whether the army missed warning signs that should have led them to essentially discharge him," Lieberman said.

"If Hasan was showing signs, saying to people that he had become an Islamist extremist, the U.S. Army has to have zero tolerance. He should have been gone."

World Tribune (Estados Unidos)

 


Otras Notas Relacionadas... ( Records 11 to 20 of 3721 )
fecha titulo
17/03/2016 Trump, un dilema republicano
14/03/2016 La escalada 'verbal' de Donald Trump enciende la campaña
13/03/2016 Las vacaciones de Obama en Cuba
13/03/2016 El 'Salvaje Oeste' de Donald Trump
12/03/2016 La comparación de Trump con Hitler
01/03/2016 Tras el primer presidente negro, ¿uno respaldado por el Ku Klux Klan?
22/02/2016 EEUU- La derrota de Jeb y el reto de Marco
22/02/2016 Autopsia política de Jeb Bush
22/02/2016 Trump’s Foreign Soulmates
18/06/2015 Jeb Bush: ¿el candidato latino?


Otras Notas del Autor
fecha
Título
17/05/2011|
17/05/2011|
26/10/2010|
31/07/2010|
29/07/2010|
05/06/2010|
09/04/2010|
09/04/2010|
17/02/2010|
17/02/2010|
19/12/2009|
06/11/2009|
12/09/2009|
12/09/2009|
12/09/2009|
05/09/2009|
05/09/2009|
30/08/2009|
29/08/2009|
25/08/2009|
25/08/2009|
22/08/2009|
21/08/2009|
16/08/2009|
13/08/2009|
13/08/2009|
05/08/2009|
05/08/2009|
05/08/2009|
05/08/2009|
24/05/2008|
24/05/2008|
22/05/2008|
22/05/2008|
09/05/2008|
24/04/2008|
24/04/2008|
02/04/2008|
02/04/2008|
13/04/2005|
13/04/2005|
16/03/2005|
16/03/2005|
02/03/2005|
02/03/2005|
19/02/2005|
19/02/2005|
13/12/2004|
13/12/2004|

ver + notas
 
Center for the Study of the Presidency
Freedom House