| Fenton - More than two years ago, a well-known Muslim
leader who has offices in Fenton warned U.S. officials of a possible
strike against the country by Osama bin Laden forces, but little came of
it. The hijacked airliners that slammed into the World Trade Center
and the Pentagon last week were not what Shaykh Muhammad Hisham Kabbani
had expected, but he said his warning still should have been heeded.
Kabbani, who maintains a low profile in his office in a Fenton
shopping district, is chairman of the Islamic Supreme Council of
America, a nonprofit, nongovernmental religious organization promoting
Islam as a religion of moderation, tolerance, peace and justice.
He advised the Clinton administration, the U.S. Department of State
and other policy-forming entities on political, religious and cultural
issues. He also attended Friday's national day of mourning service in
the National Cathedral in Washington, D.C., at the invitation of
President Bush.
Kabbani said he is irritated that, in some quarters, Muslims in
general are being blamed for last week's attacks because Muslims
themselves were among the victims.
"I have every reason to believe they (the attackers) are trying to
hide behind the name of Islam," Kabbani said.
In fact, he said many Muslims worked in the center and even had a
room to use as a mosque for Friday afternoon religious services.
He urged the Muslim community to stand up against the terrorists and
to pass on to U.S. authorities any information they may have that will
lead to the arrest of the attackers' accomplices.
He said Muslims must speak up loudly to decry the attacks. If they
had spoken up before, they probably "could have saved many lives, and we
wouldn't be in this danger," Kabbani said.
It was at an open forum at the U.S. Department of State on Jan. 7,
1999, that he spoke out against extremists and warned that bin Laden was
trying to form a coalition of groups to fight the West.
He said the United States should be concerned that extremists "were
able to buy more than 20 nuclear warheads from some of the mafia in the
ex-Soviet Union" for $30 million and two tons of opium.
Kabbani also said the extremists hired a number of unemployed
scientists from the former Soviet Union to try to build an atomic
reactor to break the nuclear warheads into smaller parts that could be
shipped around the world in suitcases or even handbags.
He also told the State Department forum that a number of nonprofit
organizations in the United States have collected "humanitarian" funds
to send to extremists outside the country. He said he didn't know where
the money was going, but it likely was sent to parties in the Middle
East and the Far East, including Afghanistan and the Caucasus.
He also said the United States must be alert to possible biological
attacks.
He repeated his concerns Monday in an interview at his office after
discussing them on the NBC "Today" show. Other media have also asked to
talk with him, but he said little attention was given to his original
warning.
Kabbani applauded Bush's handling of the crisis thus far.
"Bush is standing up in this crisis and, by doing so, shows he's a
great president," Kabbani said. "I hope he will find the right people
who did that (the attacks) and punish them."
He said he expects to attend briefings with U.S. Congress members in
the next few days.
The soft-spoken Kabbani, 56, was born in Lebanon and has been a U.S.
citizen since 1990.
George Jaksa covers religion. He can be reached at (810) 766-6332 or
gjaksa@flintjournal.com. |