Last night Kimberly Morin and I recorded a segment for this week’s podcast. The discussion centered on the Sununu family purchase of Waterville Valley Ski Resort in New Hampshire and the claim that the investors were local when at least one of them was not.
As Kimberly explains here, over a million dollars originated from a group called Safa Trust.
Safa Trust is a registered non-profit/charity that serves as a collection of Middle Eastern Shell companies to launder money for international terrorism.
One shell under the Safa Trust umbrella which Kimberly mentions was the SAAR Foundation.
The U.S. branch of SAAR was dissolved in December 2000 after raising $1.7 billion in the United States. SAAR was part of the SAFA Trust Group, a group of shell companies headquartered at 555 Grove Street in Herndon, Virginia, where the FBI and the U.S. Customs agency believe SAAR was set up to raise funds and launder money for international terrorist groups like al Qaeda, Hamas,Hezbollah, and Palestinian Islamic Jihad.
In March 2002 the FBI and U.S. Customs raided SAAR’s Virginia offices and seized records of the SAFA Group (SAAR included). The information obtained in this raid revealed a pattern of multi-layered transactions by the SAFA Group that were designed to confuse law-enforcement authorities and keep them off the money trail. Of $54 million dollars raised by the SAAR Foundation ostensibly for “charity,” $26 million went to the Isle of Man in the Irish Sea, a notorious location for drug runners and money laundering. Only $20 million made its way to SAFA Group charities. According to David Kane, the federal agent who led the raid, SAAR/SAFA’s intent was “to route money through hidden paths to terrorists, and to defraud the Untied States by impeding, importing, obstructing, and defeating the lawful functions of the IRS.”
Abdurahman Alamoudi, who has been linked to terrorism funding by federal authorities, led several organizations in the SAAR/SAFA Trust Group. The SAAR Foundation was also implicated in funding Sami Al-Arian, who was the U.S. leader of Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ), for which he raised money while working as a professor at the University of South Florida.
Along with the International Institute of Islamic Thought, SAAR in the 1990s was a leading financial supporter of the Islamic Committee for Palestine and the World & Islam Studies Enterprise.
Another is the International Institute of Islamic Thought (IIIT), along with the Sununu’s ties to that organization. John H. Sununu has long time friends there. Friends who, after the first $750,000.00 was donated for the purchase of Waterville Valley Ski Resort, invited Gov. John Sununu to be the keynote speaker at an IIIT event the following year.
Gubernatorial Candidate and Waterville Grand-poobah Chris Sununu may or may not know why he should be concerned about that association, but we should be. While the lying about local investors is a problem, the IIIT connections are troubling. Voters and Republicans need to ask themselves why the Sununu’s have not distanced themselves from a group of organizations with these sort of goals and this list of associates?
From Discover the Networks, on IIIT.
A partner organization to the Graduate School of Islamic and Social Sciences, the International Institute of Islamic Thought (IIIT) defines itself as “a private, non-profit, academic and cultural institution, concerned with general issues of Islamic thought.” Giving “special emphasis to the development of Islamic scholarship in contemporary social sciences,” it works “from an Islamic perspective to promote and support research projects, organize intellectual and cultural meetings and publish scholarly works” that will help “the Ummah [Muslim nation] to deal effectively with present challenges.” Established in 1981, IIIT is headquartered in Herndon, Virginia (near Washington, DC), and has set up branch offices in a number of capital cities worldwide.
IIIT was co-founded by Anwar Ibrahim, who strives to present himself to the West as a moderate, but who in fact is an Islamist who promotes global Islamic rule based on Shari’a Law.
The Institute seeks to achieve its objectives by: “directing research and studies to develop Islamic thought and the Islamization of knowledge”; “holding specialized scholarly, intellectual and cultural conferences, seminars and study circles”; supporting researchers and scholars in universities and research centers, and publishing selected scholarly, cultural and intellectual works, in English, Arabic and several other languages”; and signing agreements of cooperation with various universities, research centers and academic institutions throughout the world to carry out activities of mutual interest.”
IIIT was named in a May 1991 Muslim Brotherhood document — titled “An Explanatory Memorandum on the General Strategic Goal for the Group in North America” — as one of the Brotherhood’s 29 likeminded “organizations of our friends” that shared the common goal of destroying America and turning it into a Muslim nation. These “friends” were identified by the Brotherhood as groups that could help teach Muslims “that their work in America is a kind of grand Jihad in eliminating and destroying the Western civilization from within and ‘sabotaging’ its miserable house by their hands … so that … God’s religion [Islam] is made victorious over all other religions.”
Also named in the Muslim Brotherhood document were:
- American Trust Publications
- Association of Muslim Social Scientists (of North America)
- Audio-Visual Center
- Baitul Mal Inc.
- Foundation for International Development
- International Institute of Islamic Thought
- Islamic Association for Palestine
- Islamic Book Service
- Islamic Centers Division
- Islamic Circle of North America
- Islamic Education Department
- Islamic Housing Cooperative
- Islamic Information Center (of America)
- Islamic Medical Association (of North America)
- Islamic Society of North America (ISNA)
- Islamic Teaching Center
- ISNA Fiqh Committee (now known as the Fiqh Council of North America)
- ISNA Political Awareness Committee
- Malaysian Islamic Study Group
- Mercy International Association
- Muslim Arab Youth Association
- Muslim Businessmen Association
- Muslim Communities Association
- Muslim Students Association of the U.S. and Canada
- Muslim Youth of North America
- North American Islamic Trust
- Occupied Land Fund (later known as the Holy Land Foundation for Relief and Development)
- United Association for Studies and Research
In the early 1990s, IIIT invented and promoted the term “Islamophobia,” a term which implies that any societal fear associated with Islam is necessarily irrational, even if that fear stems from the fact that Islam’s prophet and its modern-day imams call on believers to kill infidels, or from the fact that the 9/11 attacks were carried out to implement those calls. Moreover, the term suggests that any negative societal reaction to such exhortations to violence reflects a bigotry that itself should be feared.
Former IIIT member Abdur-Rahman Muhammad — who was with that organization when the word was formally created, and who has since rejected IIIT’s ideology and terminated his membership in disgust — now reveals the original intent behind the concept of Islamophobia: “This loathsome term is nothing more than a thought-terminating cliche conceived in the bowels of Muslim think tanks for the purpose of beating down critics.” In short, in its very origins, “Islamophobia” was a term designed as a weapon to advance a totalitarian cause by stigmatizing critics and silencing them. This plan was an outgrowth of the Muslim Brotherhood’s deceptive “General Strategic Goal for North America.”
Although the term was coined in the early 1990s, “Islamophobia” did not become the focus of an active Brotherhood campaign until after 9/11.
Along with the SAAR Foundation, IIIT in the 1990s was a leading financial supporter of the Islamic Committee for Palestine and the World & Islam Studies Enterprise.
Controlled by the extremist, Saudi-based Wahhabi movement, IIIT maintains that reports about mosques distributing hate-filled literature are untrue, and claims that the concept of jihad in no way condones or connotes violence. As an IIIT public-relations flyer puts it: “Jihad does not mean ‘holy war.’ Literally, jihad in Arabic means to strive, struggle and exert effort. It is a central and broad Islamic concept that includes struggle against evil inclinations within oneself, struggle to improve the quality of life in society, struggle in the battlefield for self-defense or fighting against tyranny or oppression.” The back of the flyer contains a list of recommended websites and books on Islam. Among the authors of these books are such apologists for extremism as John Esposito, Karen Armstrong, Hassan Hathout, and Bill Baker.
IIIT has numerous documented links to terrorism. According to court documents, in the early 1990s the organization donated at least $50,000 to a think tank run by Sami al-Arian, the World Islam Study Enterprise, which served as a front group for Palestinian Islamic Jihad. IIIT is also named as a defendant in two class-action lawsuits brought by victims of the 9/11 attacks. One alleges that the Institute received the bulk of its operating expenses from the SAAR network, whose component groups are accused in another class-action suit of being “fronts for the sponsor of al Qaeda and international terror.” The same suit lists IIIT and nearly all of its officers as supporters of the SAAR network.
Moreover, IIIT’s 2003 tax-exempt IRS filing lists a $720 donation to the al-Haramain Islamic Foundation of Ashland, Oregon, which in 2004 was designated by the U.S. government as a terrorist-funding entity guilty of tax fraud, money laundering, supporting Chechen mujahideen affiliated with al Qaeda, and maintaining “direct links between [its] U.S. branch and Usama bin Laden.”
In 2003, IIIT co-founder Anwar Ibrahim and his family were the beneficiaries of an apparent tax fraud perpetrated by IIIT. According to its own tax filings for that year, IIIT made $92,200 in contributions to Ibrahim’s daughter, Nurul Izzah. Where it listed the donations to Izzah on the tax forms, IIIT violated U.S. law by indicating “none” under the heading “Donee’s Relationship.” The group would have lost its tax-exempt status had it been known that it was sending money to the family member of a director. Ibrahim never disavowed this act when given the chance and even stated explicitly that these contributions were made for the education of his six children.
The IIIT was demonstrated by the Justice Department to be an “unindicted co-conspirator” in a 2007 court case probing the Holy Land Foundation’s funding of the terror group Hamas.
IIIT is a prominent endorser of the book Reliance of the Traveller: A Classic Manual of Islamic Sacred Law, an authoritative compendium of sharia written by an eminent 14th-century Islamic jurist. By IIIT’s reckoning, the English translation by Umdat al-Salik is “a valuable and important work” that is highly successful in “its aim to imbue the consciousness of the non-Arabic-speaking Muslim with a sound understanding of Sacred Law.” According to Andrew McCarthy, Reliance “denies freedom of conscience, explaining that apostasy from Islam is a death-penalty offense”; contends that “a Muslim apostatizes not only by clearly renouncing Islam but by doing so implicitly — such as by deviating from the ‘consensus of Muslims,’ or making statements that could be taken as insolence toward Allah or the prophet Mohammed”; “approves a legal caste system in which the rights and privileges of Muslims and men are superior to those of non-Muslims and women”; “penalizes extramarital fornication by stoning or scourging”; endorses the death penalty for homosexuals and for people who make interest-bearing loans; venerates jihad; and exhorts Muslims “to strive to establish an Islamic government, ruled by a caliph.”
Safa Trust/IIIT didn’t just throw a dart at a map in their Hendron, VA offices and decide to give $1.2 million dollars to help Chris Sununu buy a ski resort in New Hampshire. And IIIT has been around so long that even a former Chief of Staff of a US President, a seasoned political class DC insider (who can turn the money on and off) like Gov. John Sununu, should have heard about them and their ties to terrorism.
Don’t cash that check, son!
Seems more likely that the donation was solicited yes? So, can they play stupid and get themselves a pass?
Kimberly informed me during our interview that rather than make an apology for misrepresenting the sources of funding for Waterville–which is still a hot mess in need of qualified leadership–or answering questions about the association, the Sununu campaign has decided to play the race card. I guess we’re all a bunch of racists for wondering how over a million dollars from a fund based in Virgina with ties to all the major Muslim terror groups is ‘local money.’
Racist! I know Islam is a religion, not a race, so they get an A+ for stupid. But what does it tell us aside from that?
In the original Willie Wonka (Gene Wilder, Peace be upon you) when the gum-chewing addict Violet turned violet, she went from pasty-faced brat to a very blueberry in moments. RINO’s do something similar as they become more like Democrats. It can be observed in the way they treat Republicans who are not on that progressive journey.
Racist!
Whatever becomes of the non-local donor lie or the ties to radical Islamist funders of global terror conundrum, Sununu, when put under pressure, took a giant step to the left.
I hope Republican Primary voters noticed.