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gmsisko1
01-19-2007, 07:12 PM
Hezbollah Inside America: FOX News Tells All in Documentary

Thursday , January 18, 2007

By David Asman




Does any terrorist organization pose a greater threat to Americans than Al Qaeda?

The shocking answer to that question unfolds this Saturday, January 20th, at 8 p.m. EST, as FOX News Channel presents a breakthrough documentary, “Smokescreen: Hezbollah Inside America.”

While Americans are still largely focused on Al Qaeda and Usama bin Laden — who’s presumably rotting away in some cave — the terrorist group Hezbollah has been setting up shop right here in America’s heartland. And most Americans don’t know a thing about it. But we should know more about Hezbollah — a lot more.

As tensions with Iran are increasing, it’s important to keep in mind that Hezbollah is largely funded by Iran and has operated as its tool in terror operations around the world. As former Director of National Intelligence John Negroponte recently reminded us: “Hezbollah’s self-confidence and hostility toward the U.S. as a supporter of Israel could cause the group to increase its contingency planning against U.S. interests.”

But Hezbollah has been focused on U.S. interests for quite some time. In fact, Hezbollah operatives have been quietly setting up operations in the U.S. for years.

One of those operations is the subject of “Smokescreen: Hezbollah Inside America,” an exhaustive FOX News report about a Hezbollah cell that was operating for several years in Charlotte, North Carolina. FOX followed the many tentacles of this cell, which extended far beyond Charlotte — to Michigan, to the West Coast, to Canada and to Beirut, Lebanon, where most of the members were from. FOX News spent months tracking this story to all these places and more.

At least one member of the Hezbollah cell first came to the U.S. on forged visa picked up in Venezuela. Others overstayed their tourist or student visas. Once here, they began making millions through a combination of tobacco smuggling, credit card schemes, and arranging phony “green-card” marriages. They even succeeded at obtaining a $1.7 million loan from the Small Business Administration.

Even though the team succeeded in gaming our system and making millions of dollars in criminal enterprises, the FBI was on to them almost from the start.

But this was before 9/11 (and before the Patriot Act) when the FBI was prevented from combining its terrorist surveillance with criminal investigations. A “Chinese Wall” separated criminal investigations from terrorist investigations, so ATF that had launched its own probe into the case, knew nothing of the gang’s terrorist connections.

This is just one of the many hurdles the FBI, ATF, state and local law enforcement needed to overcome in bringing this cell down. We highlight their heroic efforts and the flaws in our own system that allowed this terror network to flourish.

Initially, the hardest part of the job for FBI terror investigators was convincing their cohorts that Hezbollah was a genuine threat to Americans. There was much skepticism, despite the fact that before 9/11, no terrorist group had killed more Americans in the Mideast than Hezbollah. And Hezbollah extended their killing spree to this hemisphere, with a 1994 bombing that killed dozens of women and children at a Jewish center in Argentina. But the FBI, as much of the nation, was still in its pre-9/11 mindset, refusing to devote the resources or concern that we should have been devoting to the terrorist threat.

The exceptions to that rule are the heroes of this story: An FBI agent who refused to allow the taunts and skepticism of his colleagues to dissuade him from tracking the connections that linked a group of Lebanese illegals operating in Charlotte to terror cells in Canada and Beirut. An alert sheriff’s deputy, working part time at a tobacco wholesaler in Charlotte, who spent his own time tracking down a suspicious group of Arabic-speaking customers who were trading wads of cash for tons of cheap tobacco. A young prosecutor willing to bet his reputation on a case that had to leapfrog over terrorist laws that were either antiquated or hadn’t even been written yet.

While arrests were made in this case a year before 9/11, the case was tried just after 9/11, and that brought with it a whole new set of questions that we examine.

Were members of the terror cell too readily convicted by a jury that was still caught up in a post-9/11 panic? Certainly that’s the contention of Stanley Cohen, the lawyer for the cell’s ringleader, Mohammad Hammoud.

FOX News wanted to find out more about the case. So we got Cohen to take us to Beirut to talk to members of the cell indicted in the case. Only by seeing the volatile environment in which the cell members were raised did we get an appreciation of what motivated them. But we also witnessed why the United States needs to stay vigilant in its efforts to stop those who want to do us harm.

We went to Beirut, and our timing was auspicious. Our visit coincided with an explosive power struggle in Lebanon between Hezbollah and its opponents in government. While we were filming in Hezbollah's stronghold in Southern Beirut, a FOX producer rushed to the scene to tell us that cabinet minister Pierre Gemayal had just been shot and killed in an ambush not far from where we were filming. The decision was made to get out quickly.

The night before the assassination, Cohen appeared shaken after a conversation with Sheik Abbas Harake, a man we were supposed to interview the next day.

According to the U.S. government, Harake was a military commander in Beirut and received money from Mohammad Hammoud, Cohen's client. Harake was the alleged conduit connecting the Charlotte cell to the military wing of Hezbollah. Cohen argued that Harake was just a used car salesman, who ran a humanitarian aid group for Hezbollah. But the night before the assassination, it appeared Harake knew that something was up. He called Cohen to say he couldn't make the interview the next day. "Things are about to get ugly," a nervous Cohen told me after speaking with the sheik.

What makes "Smokescreen: Hezbollah Inside America" particularly relevant today is not merely how it connects with the growing conflicts in the Mideast and our growing conflicts with Iran, but the fact that the case in Charlotte is about to be reopened. In February, the leader of the Charlotte cell, who was sentenced to 155 years in jail, is up for re-sentencing. This story will undoubtedly shed more light on the case and help decide whether this man will ever see the light of day outside of a U.S. prison.

A gripping story that's must see television, "Smokescreen: Hezbollah Inside America" airs on Saturday night at 8 p.m. EST. Don't miss it.

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,244002,00.html

Freethinker
01-19-2007, 09:33 PM
Yaaaaaaaaaaawn.

All that flummery, and they couldn't name one instance of a terrorist act carried out inside the U.S. by the cell that operated *for years* in North Carolina......?? :rolleyes:

How many years do you reckon they'll need to be here planning before they can blow up a phone booth or a mailbox, or do something equally nefarious.......???

""FOX News wanted to find out more about the case. So we got Cohen to take us to Beirut to talk to members of the cell indicted in the case. Only by seeing the volatile environment in which the cell members were raised did we get an appreciation of what motivated them.""

Yeeeeees!....please uncover the dastardly plans of these bloodthirsty fiends!!........I for one am just breathless with anticipation to find out what sort of 'volatile environment' could possibly motivate these e-ville terrorist masterminds to "trade wads of cash for tons of cheap tobacco" and to run credit card schemes and to arrange green card marriages.

RUN FOR YOUR LIVES! HEZBOLLAH TERRORISTS IN NORTH CAROLINA ARE ARRANGING PHONY GREEN-CARD MARRIAGES IN THE USA!!!

:hahanot:

Brooks
01-19-2007, 09:46 PM
Free in August 2001: Yaaaaaaawn

I don't quite understand your problem with this. Is it that you don't believe it's possible for groups to operate here without us knowing?

gmsisko1
01-19-2007, 10:42 PM
His problem is the fact that Fox News is the source. In his mind, if it's from Fox news, it just is not true. If it is from CNN, or one of those way off the wall liberal web sites, it's true true true.

Free in August 2001: Yaaaaaaawn

I don't quite understand your problem with this. Is it that you don't believe it's possible for groups to operate here without us knowing?

DarkFantasy96
01-19-2007, 10:59 PM
CNN and Fox are almost identical, as far as I'm concerned. Bias toward scandals, violence, and scare tactics.

Evakian
01-20-2007, 02:48 AM
All that flummery, and they couldn't name one instance of a terrorist act carried out inside the U.S. by the cell that operated *for years* in North Carolina......?? :rolleyes:

How many years do you reckon they'll need to be here planning before they can blow up a phone booth or a mailbox, or do something equally nefarious.......???
Hezbollah killed 200 of our troops in Lebanon. While that was a while ago, that doesn't exactly make them trustworthy.

Does a terrorist group with a history of violence have to commit a terrorist act on our territory before we take action?

Freethinker
01-20-2007, 09:37 AM
Free in August 2001: Yaaaaaaawn

I don't quite understand your problem with this. Is it that you don't believe it's possible for groups to operate here without us knowing?

Yes...it is entirely possible for groups to operate here.

But these people are being posed as a *terrorist* group.

Contrary to what the imbecile gmsisko says, I believe what Fox is saying about them......it's just that no instance is named in the article where they have carried out any terrorist attack in this country, even though they've been here for years.

My problem is that there are certain people who like to keep the populace in intense fear of an imminent terrorist attack.....and in the case of this group, that fearmongering seems entirely overblown.

The first line of the article states-- ""Does any terrorist organization pose a greater threat to Americans than Al Qaeda?""

Yet for all their frantic fulminating, they are unable to name a single terrorist attack carried out on US soil by the group based in N Carolina......?!?!?!?!?

It's called fearmongering.

Does a terrorist group with a history of violence have to commit a terrorist act on our territory before we take action?

Naw. Fuck it. Let's just throw the Constitution out the window, forget the principles of jurisprudence that this country was founded upon, and arrest these guys for thinking about committing a terrorist act on our soil.

:rolleyes:

Evakian
01-20-2007, 09:56 AM
Naw. Fuck it. Let's just throw the Constitution out the window, forget the principles of jurisprudence that this country was founded upon, and arrest these guys for thinking about committing a terrorist act on our soil.
See the sig line of Brooks.

Freethinker
01-20-2007, 10:05 AM
See the sig line of Brooks.

Ok, insincere worm -- I'll bite.

If arresting them before they *commt a terrorrist act on our territory* was some sort of gross exaggeration (per Brooks' tagline), then just what kind of *action* did you have in mind with the following comment---

""Does a terrorist group with a history of violence have to commit a terrorist act on our territory before we take action?""

Evakian
01-20-2007, 10:13 AM
Ok, insincere worm -- I'll bite.

If arresting them before they *commt a terrorrist act on our territory* was some sort of gross exaggeration (per Brooks' tagline), then just what kind of *action* did you have in mind with the following comment---

""Does a terrorist group with a history of violence have to commit a terrorist act on our territory before we take action?""
You're making assumptions about my ideas. You know what that does? Makes an ass out of you...and mptions. I did not call for their arrest.

Freethinker
01-20-2007, 10:14 AM
I did not call for their arrest.

In that case I repeat --

...just what kind of *action* did you have in mind with the following comment---

""Does a terrorist group with a history of violence have to commit a terrorist act on our territory before we take action?""

Evakian
01-20-2007, 10:17 AM
In that case I repeat --

...just what kind of *action* did you have in mind with the following comment---

""Does a terrorist group with a history of violence have to commit a terrorist act on our territory before we take action?""
I didn't offer any suggestions in that comment. I did not call for Hezbollah's arrest, nor did I even call for action to be taken against them. I asked you a question.

If you want me to answer your question, answer mine.

Freethinker
01-20-2007, 10:19 AM
If you want me to answer your question, answer mine.

Ok.

Yes is the answer to your question.

Evakian
01-20-2007, 10:27 AM
Ok.

Yes is the answer to your question.
It's good that you value the lives of innocents.

'Investigation' is the answer to your question.