In my piece yesterday, I noted that the ACLU released a video earlier this month that features former Gitmo detainee Moazzam Begg. Begg made news earlier this year when he became the front man for a video game in which players could pretend to be Gitmo detainees capable of shooting their way out of the detention facility. The game’s producers canceled it as public pressure to nix it mounted. But that hasn’t stopped Begg. In fact, Begg has compiled an extensive and troubling resume since being released from Gitmo. (This is in addition to the disturbing jihadist dossier he compiled prior to ever being detained.) One of Begg’s more troubling associates is Anwar al Awlaki – the al Qaeda cleric who became a confidant for the Fort Hood Shooter. The relationship between Begg, Cage Prisoners (Begg’s organization), and Awlaki has been detailed by Alexander Meleagrou-Hitchens of The Centre for Social Cohesion, which has released a dossier on Awlaki’s supporters in the UK. On the relationship between Cage Prisoners (CP) and Awlaki, Mr. Meleagrou-Hitchens writes (footnotes omitted):
In December 2007, Begg interviewed Awlaki for CP’s website and Awlaki praised CP for its support. (A transcript of the interview is available online here and you can also find audio of the interview, with pictures of Begg and Awlaki, on You Tube.) Meleagrou-Hitchens rightly observes that the interview is “extensive and friendly” and notes:
In September of 2008, just a few months before Awlaki was contacted by Major Nidal Malik Hasan, CP hosted a fundraising event called “Another Ramadan 2008” during which Awlaki delivered a “live lecture” via his cell phone. CP called it a “big draw” for its attendees. Then, in August 2009 (just weeks after Awlaki blessed attacks on non-Muslim soldiers on his web site), CP organized a conference called “Beyond Guantanamo” that was scheduled to feature a video of Awlaki. Local authorities forced CP to withdraw Awlaki’s lecture. CP did so, but issued a statement saying:
Meleagrou-Hitchens notes that while CP claimed it was “unaware of Awlaki’s extremist background,” the CP “reproduced an article [on the CP’s web site] from the New York Times which identifies his sermons as an inspiration for violent jihad” one month earlier. Finally, on October 2, 2009, the CP web site reproduced a defense of Awlaki that was written by one of CP’s members. The author objected to the councils’ decision to prevent Awlaki from lecturing the “Beyond Guantanamo” conference and called him an “inspirational imam.” Among the men that Awlaki has “inspired” is Major Nidal Malik Hasan, who killed 13 Americans just one month after the CP once again praised the radical al Qaeda cleric. Despite all of this, and much more, the ACLU has embraced Moazzam Begg, who is one of the most effective propagandists the jihadists have in the West. Begg and his organization, Cage Prisoners, have consistently backed Anwar al Awlaki – the cleric who was a “spiritual advisor” for at least two of the 9/11 hijackers, inspired a terrorist plot in Toronto as well as the 2007 Fort Dix plot, and became an admitted confidant for the Fort Hood Shooter. It is therefore shameful that the ACLU, in turn, embraces and promotes Moazzam Begg.