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The Terror Apologist in the Edwards Campby Steven Emerson
He's an underdog candidate for President who needs all the help he can get against bigger-named, better-financed rivals. For former U.S. Sen. John Edwards (D-North Carolina), that has meant embracing the leader of a the American Muslim Council (AMC), an organization with a history of defending Palestinian terrorists and whose founder is in prison after pleading guilty to violating anti-terror legislation. M. Ali Khan, a Chicago investment banker, has been the AMC's national director since 2003. Khan has helped organize at least two fundraisers for Edwards and, in a series of internet postings, described how he has reached the inner sanctum of the former senator's campaign advisors. He spent most of December in Iowa, where Edwards finished second in the Jan. 3 caucus. "There are about 10 Edwards insiders that have been invited to help John in Des Moines," Khan wrote in a December 2 post. "Most Insiders are from Chapel Hill, but we have Portland, Seattle, LA. New York and myself from Chicago." Khan is listed by the Edwards campaign as a fundraising solicitor and he helped host at least two campaign fundraisers, one June 13 and one September 4. He has been with AMC at least since 1998. The organization was founded in 1990 by Abdurahman Alamoudi. Alamoudi was arrested in September 2003 and subsequently indicted in the Eastern District of Virginia for illegal transactions with Libya. He is now serving a 23-year prison sentence. Government officials also say Alamoudi served as a financial courier for Al Qaeda. After Alamoudi's September 2003 arrest, Khan adopted the pose of Captain Renault in "Casablanca," "I'm shocked, shocked to find that gambling is going on in here!" The Washington Post reported:
As an investment banker, Ali Khan might reasonably be expected to have been more diligent in carrying out his fiduciary responsibilities of the treasurer of a large organization, and to have inquired more closely into the sources of AMC's funding. Khan and his organization have made some disturbing statements, including some which can only be viewed as de facto support for terrorists. For example, on October 4, 2004 in the run-up to the 2004 presidential election, AMC issued a bizarre opinion piece entitled "Osama bin Laden." The op-ed only fails to condemn Bin Laden for his many crimes, but raises the possibility that the arch-terrorist is some kind of romantic revolutionary dedicated to the cause of "liberation" like Fidel Castro. Bin Laden, the article notes, is but one man living in a cave. Yet his death or capture could change the election's outcome:
What's most astonishing is that the article remains on the AMC website today, more than three years later. The same website has defended people accused of supporting terrorism. For example in March 2006 an article about Sami Al-Arian was posted under the headline "Commentary: America's Conscience on Trial." Al-Arian had been jailed for three years by that time and was facing a retrial on charges he conspired to fund the terrorist group Palestinian Islamic Jihad. The writer asserted that Al-Arian:
By this time Al-Arian acknowledged, through his attorney, that he was a member if the Palestinian Islamic Jihad. Evidence from his first trial, which ended with eight acquittals and a hung jury on nine counts, further showed Al-Arian on the Jihad's governing board. In April 2006, Al-Arian pled guilty to providing illegal goods and services to a terrorist organization and agreed to be deported upon his release. "I'm Happy for Sami and his Family who has suffered tremendously over the years," Khan wrote in an internet post. "Sami was a personal jihad that we at AMC have been fighting for many years." But then Khan offered some insight into what his political action is all about:
In an article on the AMC website last May, Khan described his first meeting with the candidate at a fundraiser last May:
Two of those chances to get to know Edwards better came in fundraisers Khan hosted on June 13 and September 4. But what Khan considers a human rights issue and what he considers terrorism is open to question. Al-Arian, an acknowledged member of a designated terrorist group, is worthy of "a personal jihad." When Israeli forces attacked Hizballah targets in Lebanon, he accused Israel of a "campaign of "terror" in Southern Lebanon, and "state terrorism." In May 2004, Khan wrote, "Despite this country's claim to be a defender of human rights and freedom, President Bush and his administration have turned a blind eye on the terror being set loose by the Israeli government on Palestinians." Another bizarre article posted to the AMC website at the time of the controversy over the Danish cartoons, called for a kind of global censorship to criminalize such publications everywhere:
Khan has pushed the idea of the victimization of American Muslims after 9/11. For example, at a May 2002 forum at Purdue University, Khan waved a speeding ticket claiming he had received it as a result of profiling. "I'm making an issue out of this. My sense of freedom has been lost since 9/11" He did not clarify how police radar was able to determine his religious affiliation. Khan never mentioned the ticket again, and presumably never contested it on the grounds of "profiling." After a third place finish in New Hampshire, Edwards vowed to stay in the race through the Democratic National Convention. That gives him, and the voters, plenty of time to learn more about his inner circle.
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