Absurdity Reigns: Of Want Ads and Counter-Radicalization Patrick Dunleavy

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The theater of the absurd seems to have found a place to perform in the current atmosphere created by the threat of Islamic terrorism in both Europe and the United States.

Belgium, which has seen its deeply-rooted radical Islamic nature exposed by the attacks in Paris and Brussels, thinks it has the answer to the phenomenon of Islamic radicalization. The Muslim Executive of Belgium placed an ad seeking counselors to deradicalize inmates. The advertisement lists the following qualifications, looking for candidates with “sufficient religious knowledge” and a “resistance to stress.”

In essence, Belgium outsourced hiring for this experimental state-run deradicalization program to the country’s religious leaders.

It’s a bad idea that cannot work, and is especially untenable if Americans tried to follow suit.

Can you imagine if, after any terrorist attack or plot in the United States, instead of responding with force against the terrorist organizations that perpetrated those heinous acts, we simply placed an advertisement in the help wanted section of a newspaper announcing the job opening for someone who could “cure the problem”?

We’d call it what it is, naive foolishness.

Yet 15 years after 9/11, we find that some have actually taken that approach to the threat of Islamic radicalization and the acts of terrorism it produces.

In European city after city – Brussels, Copenhagen, Paris, Toulouse – we have seen innocent civilians – men, women, and children – maimed or killed by people who were radicalized. Now we know that many of the terrorists were radicalized while serving time in prison for petty offenses. It was in the cauldron of the penitentiary that they were exposed to radical Islamic terrorists as well as to literature and clergy that facilitated their transition from crook to jihadist.

The United States is not immune to this disease. In Chattanooga, Garland, Texas, New York City, Philadelphia, San Bernardino and elsewhere individuals who had become radicalized committed attacks and murder in the name of  Allah.

Authorities know that the journey to Islamic radicalization may take many paths including social media, videos, literature, or a charismatic facilitator. But the end result is always the same. It produces people who are willing to kill anyone, including themselves, while thinking they are pleasing God. False promises of virgins and paradise spur them on.

Those who are captured or arrested are confined. They are removed from society, however no effective program has been found to undo the radicalization process to which they succumbed.

What is the solution?

A program that seeks to hire more “religious counselors” certainly would not be a realistic solution in the United States. We have yet to find an adequate way to vet Islamic clergy applying for positions in the U.S. Bureau of Prisons even though the Inspector General for the Department of Justice in 2004 stated it was necessary to thwart prison radicalization. Recently, it was discovered that a radical imam, Fouad El Bayly, was working as a chaplain at Maryland’s Cumberland Federal Correctional Institution. In 2007, El Bayly publicly called Somali-born activist Ayaan Hirsi Ali an apostate who deserved death.

His appointment exposed the crack in the wall that allows religious workers who hold radical Islamic views into correctional facilities.

Another questionable program designed to counter the Islamic radicalization problem has been initiated in the United States.

Minneapolis has seen a fair share of Islamic radicalization among its Somali youth. Numerous Somali American young men have left the U.S. to join Al Shabaab and the Islamic State after being exposed to radical Islamic teachings through social media and videos.

In an effort to deal with the problem of the radicalization of as many as 10 people recently arrested for attempting to provide material support to a terrorist organization, Minnesota U.S. District Judge Michael Davis has devised a deradicalization program that includes hiring researcher Daniel Koehler, who has dealt with the neo-Nazi movement in Germany, to provide counseling and training for both inmates and staff.

The program has already met with criticism from both law enforcement and civil rights activists. Law enforcement officials point to the first inmate, Abdullahi Yusuf, as a sign of the program’s potential danger.

Yusuf was arrested in 2014 when he attempted to board a flight to Turkey to join ISIS and fight in Syria. While awaiting trial, he was admitted to the program for deradicalization counseling and was allowed to stay in a halfway house instead of in jail. Less than four months later he was removed from the program after he was found with a box cutter.

The 9/11 attacks proved how devastating the tool can be in the hands of a terrorist.

Further resistance to the judge’s deradicalization program came from the defense attorney appointed to represent Adan Abdihamid Farah. Farah was arrested last year when he attempted to travel to Syria and fight alongside other Islamic State jihadists. “If the deradicalization is for him (Farah) to moderate his religious beliefs, I can’t do that,” defense attorney Kenneth Udoibok told the Wall Street Journal.

Law enforcement officials are concerned that any government program designed to modify an individual’s religious belief system, no matter how well intentioned, would run afoul of the First Amendment protection of religious freedom. It could open up prison officials to litigation filed under the Religious Freedom Restoration Act.

Absent modifying someone’s radical Islamic beliefs, the program is left with offering job training, educational programs, psychological therapy, or family counseling. All of these options have been in the correctional environment for decades. Even with those programs, the recidivism rate exceeds 65 percent.

There has to be a new approach to countering radicalization – on this point the experts agree. It is the methodology that generates concern. Law enforcement and counterterrorism agencies are responsible for protecting us, not coddling criminals.

We cannot wait for the right radicalization rehab program to come along.

One of the more successful counter terrorism programs has come under attack is the use of undercover agents to infiltrate terrorist conspiracies. Groups like the ACLU and the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) have criticized it as “entrapment.” This position is simply wrong.

At some point it becomes necessary for authorities to intervene before the planned

attacks are carried out. Providing an opportunity for someone predisposed to commit a crime is not entrapment.

While social programs may be designed to compete for the same young, impressionable minds and counter the allure that experienced Islamic extremist groups utilized in recruitment, we must insist that authorities not back away from their primary responsibility in the fight against terrorism. It is a war, and it will not be over until groups like ISIS and al-Qaida are taken out.

Simply placing an ad in the newspaper will not make them go away.

Patrick Dunleavy is the former Deputy Inspector General for New York State Department of Corrections. He is the author of “The Fertile Soil of Jihad: Terrorism’s Prison Connection,” details of which can be found at his website, and he can be contacted at: mail@ptdassociates.com. Mr Dunleavy is currently a consultant for the International Association of Chiefs of Police. He  teaches a class on terrorism for the United States Military Special Operations School, “Dynamics of International Terrorism”  and has testified as an expert witness before the House Committee on Homeland Security regarding the threat of Islamic Radicalization in the U.S. Prison System.

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