by Laura Sullivan
THE BALTIMORE SUN - WASHINGTON -- November 30, 2002 - Federal
law enforcement officials are concerned that al-Qaida is targeting
what authorities fear is an increasingly fertile breeding ground
for Islamic extremism: U.S. prisons.
Over the past year, officials have suspected that al-Qaida and
other extremists have been reaching out to U.S. prisoners through
reading material and personal contacts to try to form a base
from which to gather information, funding and recruits.
Although al-Qaida's efforts seem only loosely organized, one
former top FBI official said prisoners are one of the three groups
that most trouble the bureau as it monitors terrorists' efforts
to recruit followers and inflame anti-American fervor.
The two other groups are those who have trained at al-Qaida camps
in Afghanistan and those who have joined radical mosques here
and abroad.
Prisons are "a captive audience of people already willing
to use violence," the official said. "It's fertile
ground."
There is no evidence that al-Qaida has yet succeeded in recruiting
many prisoners in the United States or overseas. But authorities
point to the case of Jose Padilla, a former Chicago gang member
who is accused of plotting to set off a radioactive "dirty"
bomb in the United States. Padilla had converted to Islam while
in a Florida jail.
In addition, Richard Reid, who pleaded guilty to trying to blow
up a jetliner with a bomb in his shoe, converted to an extreme
form of Islam while in prison in London.
Officials say that while the cases of Padilla and Reid are rare,
they can't afford to ignore the extremism that seems to be brewing
in the prison system.
Charles Mandigo, special agent in charge of the FBI's Seattle
field office and an authority on terrorists, said al-Qaida is
not likely trying to assemble the next band of hijackers or suicide
bombers out of groups of incarcerated U.S. convicts.
What's more probable, he said, is that terrorists are looking
to establish a support structure in the United States. Such connections
could help al-Qaida gather details about targets and build a
network of contacts. Terrorists, Mandigo said, regard U.S. prisons
as an ideal place to ffor radical propaganda to flourish.
Mahdi Bray, who runs the National Islamic Prison Foundation,
a Washington-based outreach group, said the foundation receives
thousands of books and pamphlets from Arabic nations to distribute
to prisoners. Each year, it sends more than 20,000 Qurans and
other books to those incarcerated.
But, he says, the group has also received extremist literature,
sometimes from Pakistan and Saudi Arabia, filled with anti-American
vitriol. "When we looked at some of them, we said, 'Hell
no,' " Bray said. "I just won't distribute those."
For the FBI, the need to combat this kind of extremist influence
strains resources. The work involves hunting not would-be terrorists,
but rather their sympathizers, who might not be intending to
carry out terrorist acts.
"It eats up a lot of our time," Mandigo said, adding,
though, "Even if they never do anything, we can't afford
to ignore them. "
Yet there is risk, too, in ignoring any al-Qaida support network
in the United States. It takes just one disgruntled sympathizer
to carry out a terrorist act. Newly recruited radicals, officials
say, could become frustrated with playing a minor role or with
al-Qaida's pattern of waiting years before attacking.
Muslim clerics who work with U.S. prisoners say Islam has enjoyed
a resurgence in recent years, giving many convicts a moral purpose
and teaching them to pursue discipline and self-sacrifice.
At least 10 percent of prisoners, say they are followers of Islam,
according to state and federal prison statistics.
But some Muslims acknowledge worries about potentially ominous
signs of Islamic extremism: senior clerics, or imams, who have
traveled to Arabic countries for "training" and radical
literature that has flowed into prison cells.
"I call it the unholy alliance," said Faheem Shuaibe,
imam at a mosque in Oakland, Calif., who has spent much time
working in California prisons.
Shuaibe says he believes al-Qaida and other extremists have been
targeting black prisoners, who they hope will turn against the
country. Most Muslims in U.S. prisons are black.
The prison environment in recent years has also created obstacles
for investigators as the number of groups with extremist or separatist
ideas has risen.
Most black prisoners, which Bray's foundation is closest to,
are not the ready recruits al-Qaida thinks they are, Bray said.
"They thought, 'African-Americans are the most mistreated
-- recruit them.' But it didn't work. Ultimately, people see
through it.
"You can't understand American culture from a cave in Afghanistan,"
he said, "and you certainly can't understand African-American
culture."
http://www.sltrib.com/2002/nov/11302002/nation_w/7130.htm |