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*[http://members.forbes.com/forbes/2007/0507/184a.html "Web of Terror"], ''[[Forbes]]'', with Josh Devon, May 7, 2007
*[http://members.forbes.com/forbes/2007/0507/184a.html "Web of Terror"], ''[[Forbes]]'', with Josh Devon, May 7, 2007
*[http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2007/06/22/franchising_al_qaeda/ "Franchising Al Qaeda"], ''The Boston Globe'', with Josh Devon, June 22, 2007
*[http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2007/06/22/franchising_al_qaeda/ "Franchising Al Qaeda"], ''The Boston Globe'', with Josh Devon, June 22, 2007

===Testimony===
*[http://armedservices.house.gov/pdfs/TUTC021407/Katz_Testimony021407.pdf "The Online Jihadist Threat"], Testimony Before the [[House Armed Services Committee]]; Terrorism, and Unconventional Threats and Capabilities Subcommittee, [[U.S. House of Representatives]], with Josh Devon, February 14, 2007


==External links==
==External links==

Revision as of 23:53, 1 February 2010

Rita Katz
Born1963 (age 60–61)
Alma materTel Aviv University
OccupationTerrorism analyst
Years active1997-present
EmployerSITE Institute
Notable workTerrorist Hunter: The Extraordinary Story of a Woman Who Went Undercover to Infiltrate the Radical Islamic Groups Operating in America[1]
TitleExecutive Director
ChildrenFour
Websitesiteintelgroup.com

Rita Katz (born 1963, in Basra, Iraq) is a terrorism analyst and the co-founder of the Search for International Terrorist Entities Institute (SITE Institute), a private intelligence firm based in Washington, DC.

The Institute tracks global terrorist networks, and intercepts and distributes secret messages, videos, and advance warnings of suicide bombings from the terrorist group's communications networks.[2][3]

Early life

Katz, a fluent Arabic speaker, was born in Basra in Southern Iraq in 1963 to a well-to-do Iraqi Jewish family.[4][1] After the Six Day War and shortly after Saddam Hussein's Ba'ath Party seized power in Iraq in 1968, her father was arrested on charges of spying for Israel.[4] The family's property was confiscated by the state, and the rest of the family put under house arrest in a stone hut.[4][1] The following year, after having been tortured, Katz's father was convicted and executed in a public hanging in the central square of Baghdad to the roaring applause of more than half a million Iraqis; the government offered free transportation to people from the provinces, and belly dancers performed for the crowd.[4][1][5] Katz's mother managed to escape on foot with her three small children to Iran, and from there made their way to Israel.[6]

The family settled in a seaside town called Bat Yam.[4] While in Israel, Katz served in the Israeli Defense Forces and studied politics, history, and Middle Eastern studies at Tel Aviv University.[4] She later married a medical student and in 1997 came to the United States with her husband, who received a National Institutes of Health fellowship, and their three children.[4]

Career

Katz believes that most Muslims living in America are moderate. But that a small group of people, funded by some Saudi Arabians and others, are trying to radicalize them.

In approximately 1997 she began working for a Middle Eastern research institute.[1] As a result of her research, she realized that the Holy Land Foundation was a front group for Hamas.[1]

Wanting to examine it more closely, she went to a fundraiser of theirs dressed as a Muslim woman.[1] Soon thereafter, disguised as a Muslim woman, wearing a burqa, and and wearing recording equipment, she began attending conferences and fundraisers, visiting mosques, and participating in pro-Palestinian rallies in the U.S. as an undercover investigator in order to expose links of American Islamic groups to foreign terrorist groups.[1][7]

Katz's SITE Institute, co-founded with Josh Devon in July 2002, was funded by various federal agencies and private groups. It analyzes "corporate records, tax forms, credit reports, video tapes, internet news group postings and owned websites, among other resources, for indicators of illicit activity".[8] It provided information on radical Muslim groups operating in the United States, and led to closures of organizations, deportations, and ongoing investigations.[9] Katz spends hours every day monitoring password-protected online chat rooms in which Islamic terrorists discuss politics, exchange tips, and announce their plans and accomplishments.[4] She and her researchers research online sources for intelligence, which her staff translates and sends out by e-mail to about 100 subscribers.[4] Among her subscribers are people in government, in corporate security, and in the media.[4] She has also worked with prosecutors on more than a dozen terrorism investigations, and many American officers in Iraq rely on her e-mails to, for example, brief troops on the designs for explosives that are passed around terrorist Web sites.[4]

With the SITE Institute, which she co-founded to monitor Islamic extremist websites and to expose terrorist front groups, she worked with federal investigators in terrorism cases.[4][10] She was cited in Richard Clarke's book, "Against All Enemies," as having helped to provide information to the government on the Al Qaeda network.[11][12] Clarke wrote that she and Steven Emerson, for whom she formerly worked, regularly provided the White House with a stream of information about possible Al Qaeda activity inside the U.S. that was apparently largely unknown to the FBI before the 9/11 attacks.[13] They gave Clarke and his staff the names of Islamic radical Web sites, the identities of possible terrorist front groups, and the phone numbers and addresses of possible terror suspects--data Clarke was unable to get from elsewhere in the government.[14] She also served as a consultant in a $1 trillion wrongful-death suit seeking to hold Saudi government and business interests accountable for the 9/11 attacks.

In May 2003, Katz related her story on the CBS newsmagazine, "60 Minutes," but in disguise, discussing her work helping the U.S. in a number of terrorism-related investigations by sneaking undercover into mosques linked to radicals.[1] She also wrote a book entitled Terrorist Hunter: The Extraordinary Story of a Woman Who Went Undercover to Infiltrate the Radical Islamic Groups Operating in America under the name "Anonymous", to protect herself and her family from retaliation from groups that she said were linked to Al Qaeda, Hamas, Islamic Jihad, and Hezbollah.[1] In the book she tries to reveal what she sees as the gravity and extent of the presence of Islamic fundamentalism in America, and that government agencies still do not all work together as one to fight terrorism, but instead hide information from each other, try to take over investigations, and even deliberately slow down terrorism investigations.[1]

In January 2007, Al-Jazeerah reported that The National Association of Muslim American Women filed a formal complaint with the U.S. Department of Justice Civil Rights Division, Criminal Section, and also with the Executive Office for the United States Attorneys at the U.S. Department of Justice, alleging that as a result of misleading and false information provided to U.S. law enforcement agencies, the media, and various governmental bodies, various Jewish organizations and individuals including Katz had sought to create an environment in the U.S. that is hostile towards U.S. Muslims, resulting in the deprivation and violation of Muslim civil liberties and civil rights.[15]

In October 2007, it was revealed that Katz had discovered, and issued to the Bush administration, a copy of an Osama bin Laden video which had yet to be released by al-Qaeda. Katz issued the video via a private link to a SITE web page to White House counsel Fred F. Fielding and Joel Bagnal, deputy assistant to the President for Homeland Security. Within 20 minutes, computers registered to various parts of the Executive Branch began downloading the video, and within hours a transcript referencing SITE had appeared on Fox News. Katz had requested the web page remain confidential, and has reported that dissemination of this information tipped off her Al-Qaeda supporters who had since eliminated the ability of SITE to gather such information.[16]

"Rita really knows what she's talking about--who's responsible for attacks, what's a legitimate terrorist organization, and what's not", said Robert Worth, a New York Times reporter.[4] Her company's work was cited in the Times and the Washington Post about twice a month as of 2006.[4]

Controversy

In July 2003 two of the groups she discussed in her book and on television (the Heritage Education Trust and the Safa Trust) sued her and revealed her name and identity. The number of lawsuits she was named in rose to three, all in connection with her work helping the government investigate Islamic charities in northern Virginia. In two of the suits, targets of the investigation said they were defamed in the 60 Minutes" television broadcast. Katz said she has been the victim of a smear campaign, and attempts to intimidate her, adding:

"As they were never able to challenge the accuracy of my research, and as they were upset by the ramifications of it in terms of arrests, indictments, and raids, a few Muslim activist organizations have on occasion tried to portray me as a Muslim-basher. I have no quarrel with Islam or Muslims, and I only target terrorists and their supporters."[17]

In one case, in 2005 federal Judge Leonie Brinkema dismissed Katz from the lawsuit by a leader of the International Institute of Islamic Thought, Iqbal Unus, and Katz's dismissal was upheld on appeal unanimously by a three-judge panel of the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in 2009.[18][19]

Critics of Katz say she is giving terrorists a larger platform than they would otherwise have, and is too eager to find plots where they don't exist.[4] Some people also do not think a private group with limited resources can do as good a job as government agencies can.[4] Katz maintains the professionals missed many signals about al-Qaeda before 9/11, and she is simply filling a gap.[4][20] A 2004 audit showed that the FBI alone had thousands of hours of untranslated intercepts.[4]

Works

Book

Select articles

Testimony

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Lopez, Kathryn Jean (June 26, 2003). "Q-A: The Terrorist Hunter Speaks; An amazing story of an Iraqi Jew at the heart of dismantling terrorism". National Review. Retrieved February 1, 2010.
  2. ^ "Keeping an Eye on Al Qaeda". Newsweek. Sept. 11, 2007. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  3. ^ Joby Warrick (Sept. 12, 2007). "Bin Laden, Brought to You by ..." The Washington Post. pp. A01. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r "Private Jihad". The New Yorker. May 29, 2006. Retrieved February 1, 2010.
  5. ^ Glick, Caroline B., "A personal jihad", Jerusalem Post, July 25, 2003, accessed January 31, 2010
  6. ^ Wallace-Wells, Benjamin (May 29, 2006). "Private Jihad: How Rita Katz got into the spying business". The New Yorker. Retrieved 2007-10-09. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  7. ^ Malone, Julia, "Group hunting terrorists online / A nonprofit outfit screens thousands of jihadist Web sites," Richmond Times, April 9, 2006, accessed February 1, 2010
  8. ^ Watt, Holly, and Winnett, Robert, "Spies trawl Friends Reunited for terror whispers," The Sunday Times, August 6, 2006, accessed February 1, 2010
  9. ^ Leibel, Aaron, "Author Infiltrates Islamic Terror Cells", Jewish Journal, August 28, 2003, accessed January 31, 2010
  10. ^ Cha, Ariana Eunjung, "From a Virtual Shadow, Messages of Terror," The Washington Post, October 2, 2004, accessed January 31, 2010
  11. ^ "Consultant gives limited testimony; Katz's court role in Al-Hussayen case mundane", Spokesman-Review, May 16, 2004, accessed January 31, 2010
  12. ^ Schmitt, Richard B., "Demand Broadens the Field of Terror Experts; Young, Internet-savvy consultants are making careers in an area once reserved for bookish academics. Critics worry they're just cashing in", Los Angeles Times, April 17, 2004, accessed January 31, 2010
  13. ^ Sealey, Geraldine, "Thursday's must-reads", Salon, April 1, 2004, accessed January 31, 2010
  14. ^ Michael Isikoff and Mark Hosenball, "Terror Watch: How Clarke 'Outsourced' Terror Intel; The Former Counterterrorism Chief Tapped A Private Researcher To Develop Intelligence On Al Qaeda. The Disclosure Sheds New Light On White House Frustrations With the FBI", Newsweek, March 31, 2004, accessed January 31, 2010
  15. ^ "National Association of Muslim American Women files for Department of Justice investigation of Jewish Lobby," Al-Jazeerah, January 19, 2007, accessed February 1, 2010
  16. ^ "Leak Severed a Link to Al-Qaeda's Secrets". The Washington Post. Oct. 9, 2007. Retrieved 2007-10-09. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  17. ^ Schmitt, Richard B., "Antiterror expertise goes high-tech; Many consultants young, Web-savvy", Los Angeles Times, April 25, 2004, accessed January 31, 2010
  18. ^ Gerstein, Josh, "Judge Dismisses Suit Questioning Federal Tactics," The New York Sun, November 8, 2007, accessed February 1, 2010
  19. ^ O'Dell, Larry, "Appeals court says raid on Muslims' Va. home OK", The Guardian, May 7, 2009, accessed February 1, 2010
  20. ^ Robert F. Worth, "Mideast Analysis, Fast and Furious," The New York Times, June 18, 2006, accessed February 1, 2010