President Obama says don’t worry, the Orlando
terrorist was just another “lone actor” operating in isolation,
unconnected to any larger group of supporters. In fact, these so-called
“lone wolves” are running in packs, and suggesting otherwise gives the
public a false sense of security.
By: Paul Sperry

President Obama says don’t worry, the Orlando terrorist was
just another “lone actor” operating in isolation, unconnected to any
larger group of supporters. In fact, these so-called “lone wolves” are
running in packs, and suggesting otherwise gives the public a false
sense of security.
Yet Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson echoed Obama, saying Omar
Mateen was “self-radicalized” without any religious, ideological or
operational support from friends, family or others in the Muslim
community.
“What we do know at this point is it appears this was a case of
self-radicalization,” Johnson said. “He does not appear to have been
part of any group.”
A more accurate picture is that Mateen, an Afghan-American, was part
of a disturbingly large Muslim family of sympathizers, supporters and
even co-conspirators.
A more accurate picture is that Mateen, an Afghan-American, was part
of a disturbingly large Muslim family of sympathizers, supporters and
even co-conspirators.
For starters, his wife could face criminal charges in the attack on
the gay Orlando nightclub, the deadliest act of terrorism in the US
since 9/11. Noor Zahi Salman, who wed Mateen in 2011, reportedly told
the FBI she knew about her husband’s planned attack and even drove him
to the site of the massacre as part of a scouting operation. She also is
said to have helped him case the Disney Springs shopping complex.
What’s more, Salman allegedly was with Mateen when he bought ammo and a
holster used in the attack.
Prosecutors have convened a grand jury to present evidence against
Salman, a Palestinian immigrant, who ultimately could be indicted as an
accessory to the murders of 49 people and the attempted murders of 53
others. Possible other charges include failing to report a terrorist
attack and lying to federal agents.
It appears the seeds of Mateen’s hatred were planted at home.
His Afghan immigrant father, who founded a nonprofit group to support
the Taliban, preached gays should be punished. In a video Seddique Mir
Mateen posted on the Web, he expresses gratitude toward the Afghan
Taliban, who stone homosexuals to death, calling them “our warrior
brothers.”
Other statements make it clear the elder Mateen could have passed anti-gay views onto his son.
“God will punish those involved in homosexuality,” the elder Mateen
said in the wake of his son’s rampage. He seemed to rationalize the
targeting of gays by pointing out that his son was offended by two gay
men kissing in front of his 3-year-old son during a recent family trip
to Miami.
Other Mateen videos are full of anti-US rhetoric regarding America’s
military role in Afghanistan. That influence may have showed up in his
29-year-old son’s statement to a 911 operator during the mass shooting.
“He said the reason he was doing this was he wanted America to stop
bombing his country,” said a survivor who overheard the conversation.
His father’s anti-American views may have seeped into the terrorist’s
psyche at an earlier age. High-school classmates recall a 14-year-old
Mateen jumping up and down and cheering the attacks on 9/11. “That’s
what America deserves,” he reportedly exclaimed, while praising Osama
bin Laden.
Mateen likely absorbed more anti-gay and anti-US messaging at the
small Fort Pierce, Fla., mosque his father helped run. Authorities say
the radical Islamic center has been a “breeding ground” for terrorists,
including the first American suicide bomber in Syria, alongside whom
Omar Mateen prayed. Mateen worshipped there for more than a dozen years,
praying up to four times a week. State incorporation records show the
senior Mateen served as the mosque’s vice president and sat on its board
for several years.
Seddique Mateen insists he did not know his son was radicalized and
was angered by his actions. “If I did know, 1 percent, that he was
committing such a crime myself, I would have arrested him myself,” he
claimed. Also serving on the board of his pro-Taliban nonprofit, The
Durand Jirga Inc., are two daughters and an Afghan-born son-in-law,
who’s also active in politics in Afghanistan.
Just weeks before the attack, property records I’ve obtained show
Omar Mateen transferred his interest in a Fort Pierce condo over to one
of the sisters and and the Afghan brother-in-law, a possible indication
the family could have had some knowledge of his martyrdom plans.
Authorities say the fatally wounded Mateen clearly was prepared to die
in a gun battle.
The mysterious brother-in-law — Mustafa Abasin, aka Mustafa Aurakzai,
who shows an intense hatred for Donald Trump on social media — has been
questioned by federal investigators, along with other family members.
I’m also told FBI agents have expanded the investigation overseas to
family connections in Afghanistan. On Friday, both Mateen’s widow and
father were placed on the federal no-fly list.
December 2015: San Bernardino terrorist Syed Farook’s
father shared his hatred for Jews and even knew his son followed ISIS,
while his mother lived with him and his accomplice wife in their bomb
factory they called home, and was an active member of an extremist
Pakistani front group. Investigators found targets and GoPro camera
packaging in mom Rafia Farook’s car. Both parents were placed on a
federal terrorist watchlist. Meanwhile, his sister took target practice
with him. Most recently, the FBI arrested Farook’s brother,
sister-in-law and another relative on terrorism and immigration fraud
charges.
July 2015: The Chattanooga, Tenn., military base
shooter, Mohammad Youssef Abdulazeez, was influenced by his devout
Muslim father who appeared at one point on a federal terrorist watch
list and is said to also have been radicalized by a pro-jihad Muslim
Brotherhood uncle in Jordan who was under terrorism investigation. In
addition, Abdulazeez attended a local mosque founded and controlled by
the radical Brotherhood, according to property records I’ve obtained.
April 2013: The Boston Marathon bombers, Dzhokhar
and Tamerlan Tsarnaev, were radicalized by their devout, America-hating
Chechen mother, who forced them to go to an extremist mosque and study
hardcore Islamic texts.
“I told Tamerlan that we are Muslims, and we are not practicing our
religion, and how can we call ourselves Muslims,” Mrs. Tsarnaev said.
“And that’s how Tamerlan started reading about Islam, and he started
praying, and he got more and more and more into his religion.”
The change was dramatic in both boys, who stopped partying and
started hating — Jews, Christians, America. Suddenly they were growing
out Islamic beards and saying they were “willing to die for Islam.”
As you can see, the bad apple doesn’t fall far from the terror tree.
Tamerlan Tsarnaev appeared to have a sympathetic wife, moreover. He
stored pressure cookers and bomb parts at the home where he lived with
his Muslim convert spouse, who investigators suspect helped purchase the
equipment from Macy’s. On the day of the bombings Katherine Tsarnaev
expressed no sympathy for the victims, texting a friend that “a lot more
people are killed every day in Syria and other places . . . Innocent
people,” according to court testimony.
In a WhatsApp message, Dzhokhar and Tamerlan’s mother also said
America “is the real terrorist” and will burn “in the flames of an
eternal and terrifying fire.”
Obama’s “rogue” homegrown Muslim terrorist is a myth. In virtually every
case, the terrorist suspect’s radicalization spokes off into family,
local mosques and the larger Muslim community. Family and friends knew
they were radicalized. And in some cases, they even helped them pull off
their evil plots. The shock and denials from relatives and clergy are
for the most part for public consumption.
In fact, suspects in all but a handful of the roughly 90 ISIS terror
cases prosecuted in America since 2014 were part of a group of up to 10
co-conspirators who met in person to discuss their plans or who made
contact via text messaging or e-mail, Reuters found in a recent review
of Justice Department case files. Only 11 percent of cases involved a
terrorist acting entirely alone. “Wolf dens, not lone wolves, [are] the
norm in US Islamic State plots,” the wire service concluded, further
casting doubt on the official White House line.
“The relationships between accused co-conspirators range from casual
acquaintances to lifelong friends, from married couples to cousins and
from roommates to college buddies,” said the report, which did not
examine connections in the Orlando attack. In virtually every case, the
co-conspirators attended the same mosques. In fact, mosques are the
connective tissue in all these attacks and plots.
The president is desperately trying to disconnect these dots, but the
hard truth is there’s a much broader network of support for these
so-called “lone wolf” terrorists within their Muslim families and the
larger Muslim community than the public is being told.
“If there’s anyone out there who thinks we’re confused about who our
enemies are,” Obama lectured Americans last week in a post-Orlando
speech, “that would come as a surprise to the thousands of terrorists
who we’ve taken off the battlefield.”
What he still doesn’t get is, “the enemies” aren’t just terrorists
overseas but terrorists at home — along with their friends and relatives
— and “the battlefield” is in our own communities. Until we grasp that
shocking reality, we won’t be able to stop this cancer from spreading
deeper into our own back yards.
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