When Jihad Came to America -Andrew C. McCarthy
On May 1990, the U.S. embassy in Cairo alerted its counterpart in Khartoum that Egypt's "leading radical," Omar Abdel Rahman, was on his way to Sudan and warned that his ultimate plan might be to seek exile in the U.S.
And yet when, immediately upon arriving in Sudan, Abdel Rahman made application at the American embassy for a visa to the U.S., the document was issued to him within a week. Visa in hand, Abdel Rahman relocated to the U.S.
He was the motivating force behind the first effort to bring down the World Trade Center buildings in a bombing that killed six adults and wounded hundreds more in February 1993. I led the team of prosecutors who in 1995 successfully convicted him and nine others.
On May 1990, the U.S. embassy in Cairo alerted its counterpart in Khartoum that Egypt's "leading radical," Omar Abdel Rahman, was on his way to Sudan and warned that his ultimate plan might be to seek exile in the U.S.
And yet when, immediately upon arriving in Sudan, Abdel Rahman made application at the American embassy for a visa to the U.S., the document was issued to him within a week. Visa in hand, Abdel Rahman relocated to the U.S.
He was the motivating force behind the first effort to bring down the World Trade Center buildings in a bombing that killed six adults and wounded hundreds more in February 1993. I led the team of prosecutors who in 1995 successfully convicted him and nine others.
But this was not the first terrorist act on American soil for which he bore responsibility. It was preceded, only months after his arrival, by the assassination of the radical Jewish activist Meir Kahane. Had American authorities connected this murder to what they already knew about Abdel Rahman's burgeoning activities in America, and worked to mine the reams of evidence left by Kahane's assassin in his car and home, they would have gathered the information necessary to break up a terrorist ring in its relative infancy and thereby prevent the 1993 bombing - and, perhaps, much else that was to follow.
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