Frank Gaffney
This article contains too many or overly lengthy quotations. (February 2011) |
Frank J. Gaffney, Jr. (born April 5, 1953 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania) is the founder and president of the American Center for Security Policy, columnist at the Washington Times, blogger at Big Peace and radio host on Secure Freedom Radio.
Education and career
A 1975 graduate of the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service of Georgetown University.[citation needed], Gaffney holds a graduate degree from the Johns Hopkins University's Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies.[1]
Gaffney began his public service career in the 1970s, working as an aide in the office of Democratic Senator Henry M. Jackson, under Richard Perle. From August 1983 until November 1987, Gaffney held the position of Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Nuclear Forces and Arms Control Policy in the Reagan Administration, again serving under Perle. In April 1987, Gaffney was nominated to the position of US Assistant Secretary of Defense for International Security Policy. He served as the acting Assistant Secretary for seven months,[2] though his confirmation was ultimately blocked by the United States Senate.
In 1988, Gaffney established the Center for Security Policy (CSP), a conservative national security and defense policy organization. The CSP is subsidized by donors supportive of conservative causes, including the Sarah Mellon Scaife Foundation, the Shelby Cullom Davis Foundation and the William H. Donner Foundation.[3]
Gaffney appeared on FahrenHYPE 9/11, the conservative documentary that was intended as a rebuttal to Michael Moore's liberal film Fahrenheit 9/11. He is also a regular guest on MSNBC's "Hardball with Chris Matthews" show.
Gaffney was an executive producer for the documentary Islam vs. Islamists: Voices from the Muslim Center. The documentary was created to air as part of the America at a Crossroads series on PBS, but it has not been shown.[4]
Gaffney is the lead author of War Footing (Naval Institute Press, 2005), a collection of essays that "offer ten specific steps that Americans, as individuals and as communities, can take to ensure their way of life and safety and the future well-being of their children and grandchildren."[5]
He is a founding member of the Set America Free Coalition, dedicated to reducing dependence on foreign oil, as well as of the current iteration of the Committee on the Present Danger.[6]
Angolan presidential election, 1992
In November 1992, Gaffney's Center for Security Policy organization released a report detailing voter fraud in Angola's presidential election. Election officials stopped registering voters 40 days before the election. Polling stations had identical voting results. The MPLA retained a monopoly on television election-coverage. CSP also found widespread vote buying by the MPLA, the discarding of as many as 25% of casted ballots, and electricity blackouts during voter counting. United Nations special envoy Margaret Anstee said she "had never witnessed a more unfair election, even in Latin America."[7]
Project for a New American Century
Along with a number of figures who later assumed leading positions in the George W. Bush administration, Gaffney was one of 25 signatories[8] of the June 3, 1997 "Statement of Principles" from the Project for the New American Century,[9] an educational and political advocacy organization whose stated goal was "to promote American global leadership."[10]
Gaffney–Norquist dispute
In 2002, Gaffney publicly accused Grover Norquist, an anti-tax activist and prominent Republican strategist, for alleged ties to radical Islamist groups attempting to influence the Bush Administration. Gaffney said a press release by the American Muslim Council credited Ali Tulbah, a Bush-White House aide, for getting them access to the administration. Norquist banned Gaffney from the weekly "Wednesday Meeting" of the Leave Us Alone Coalition that Norquist hosted. Norquist later wrote an open letter, accusing Gaffney of "racial prejudice, religious bigotry [and] ethnic hatred," calling Gaffney a "sick, little bigot.... His whole life screams of bigotry, and what he said is just part of a pattern.... Frank Gaffney and Osama bin Laden share the same view on the relationship between the United States and Islam. I agree with the president in rejecting Osama bin Laden's and Frank Gaffney's worldview." In 2011, Gaffney accused Norquist of "helping the Muslim Brotherhood spread its influence in the nation's capital."[11] David Keene, President of the American Conservative Union, later commented on the Gaffney-Norquist dispute, saying, "I, for one, don't see it. If you read the transcript [of the panel], you can see if Frank was right or wrong, but there was nothing racist or bigoted about it." Norquist's comments so angered Keene that he stopped talking to Norquist.[12]
In a front-page story in The Wall Street Journal, Karl Rove dismissed Gaffney's assertions regarding Bush, stating "there's no there there."[13] In an article appearing in the January 2007 edition of Vanity Fair about neoconservatives who pushed for the 2003 invasion of Iraq, Gaffney said of Bush, "He doesn't in fact seem to be a man of principle who's steadfastly pursuing what he thinks is the right course. He talks about it, but the policy doesn't track with the rhetoric, and that's what creates the incoherence that causes us problems around the world and at home."[14]
U.S. troop deaths in Iraq
On MSNBC's Hardball with Chris Matthews, Gaffney, commenting on the 2003 invasion of Iraq, said, "My position is [that] it is regrettable that any Americans died. It is regrettable that they had to die, but I believe they did have to die. The threat we did know about was the chemical capability that Saddam Hussein had used against his own people. The potential for biological agents were real there was evidence that there was an ongoing nuclear program... The danger was inaction could have resulted in the death[s] of a great many more Americans than 4,000 and that's the reason I'm still delighted that we did what we did."[15]
Al Jazeera
In 2003, Gaffney called on the United States military to "take out" the Al Jazeera news network for inciting violence against the Western world by showcasing Osama bin Laden and Saddam Hussein's "calls-to-arms."[16]
Criticism of Barack Obama
In October 2008, Gaffney questioned whether then Senator Barack Obama of Illinois is a "natural born citizen of the United States" and his legal eligibility to be the President of the United States.[17]
In a February 2009 Washington Times column, Gaffney accused President Obama of "embracing the agenda of the Muslim Brotherhood," a political organization banned in several countries in the Middle East.[18]
In April 2009, Gaffney appeared on television and accused President Obama of using coded language to indicate that America would submit to Sharia law.[19]
In a June 9, 2009, Washington Times article Gaffney wrote: "With Mr. Obama's unbelievably ballyhooed address in Cairo Thursday to what he calls 'the Muslim world' ... there is mounting evidence that the president not only identifies with Muslims, but actually may still be one himself."[20]
Gaffney continued this theme in on February 24, 2010, in his column on Andrew Breitbart's BigGovernment blog, when Gaffney attacked the administration's plans to modernize and update the missile defense program as "US submission to Islam" from "an Alinsky acolyte", citing as "evidence" the redesigned logo of the Missile Defense Agency.[21]
- "Team Obama’s anti-anti-missile initiatives are not simply acts of unilateral disarmament of the sort to be expected from an Alinsky acolyte. They seem to fit an increasingly obvious and worrying pattern of official U.S. submission to Islam and the theo-political-legal program the latter’s authorities call Shariah.
- "What could be code-breaking evidence of the latter explanation is to be found in the newly-disclosed redesign of the Missile Defense Agency logo.... As Logan helpfully shows, the new MDA shield appears ominously to reflect a morphing of the Islamic crescent and star with the Obama campaign logo."
However, Al Kamen reports that the new Missile Defense Agency logo is over three years old and was actually developed during the George Bush administration.[22]
Gaffney has accused Obama of attempting to buy a larger more capable aircraft for the KC-X contract, under the pretext that it costs less than the aircraft made by Gaffney's client.[23]
Saddam Hussein, the 1993 World Trade Center bombing, and the Oklahoma City Bombing
On March 12, 2009, Gaffney appeared on MSNBC's Hardball with Chris Matthews and accused Iraqi President Saddam Hussein of being involved in the 1993 World Trade Center bombing and the Oklahoma City bombing, "There is also circumstantial evidence, not proven by any means, but nonetheless some pretty compelling circumstantial evidence of Saddam Hussein's Iraq being involved with the people who perpetrated both the 1993 attack on the World Trade Center and even the Oklahoma City bombing."[24]
Recent activities
In 2010, Gaffney, along with co-authors such as former deputy undersecretary of defense for intelligence Lt. Gen. William G. Boykin and former CIA Director R. James Woolsey, Jr., released a book entitled "Shariah: The Threat to America," published by the Center for Security Policy.[25] The book "describes what its authors call a 'stealth jihad' that must be thwarted before it's too late," and argues that "most mosques in the United States already have been radicalized, that most Muslim social organizations are fronts for violent jihadists, and that Muslims who practice Sharia law seek to impose it in this country."[25] According to the Washington Post, "Government terrorism experts call the views expressed in the center's book inaccurate and counterproductive."[25] In other articles, Gaffney claims that stealth jihad to advance Sharia constitute sedition.[26]
In early 2011, Gaffney charged that the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) had "come under the influence of the Muslim Brotherhood, which is working to bring America under Saudi-style Shariah law."[11] Gaffney told the conservative website WorldNetDaily that "Islamism has infiltrated the American Conservative Union, the host of CPAC, in the person of Washington attorney and political activist Suhail Khan and a group called Muslims for America. Gaffney also accuses another ACU board member, leading conservative political organizer Grover Norquist, of helping the Muslim Brotherhood spread its influence in the nation's capital."[11] Gaffney has also accused 2012 Republican presidential candidate Herman Cain of collaborating with the Brotherhood, though Cain was actually meeting with the imam of a moderate Muslim mosque, and that General David Petraeus is submissive to Sharia. [27]
In Murfreesboro, Tennessee Gaffney testified to support a lawsuit against a planned mosque. The lawsuit alleged that the county zoning board didn't give proper notice of a hearing, however during eight days of hearing the judge allowed mosque opponents to introduce unverified claims or inflammatory statements, to include arguing Islam is not a religion and asking a county commissioner if he supported keeping a whip over his bed to beat his wife with. Although Gaffney was currently not a member of any police or intelligence agency, and admitting under oath he is not an expert in Shariah law or Islam, he testified Islam is a threat to the United States and by extension the mosque was a threat.[28][29][30][31]
External links
- Center for Security Policy: Frank Gaffney
References
- ^ Ruppert, Michael C. (2004). Crossing the Rubicon. p. 531.
- ^ Frank Gaffney Biography Center for Security Policy
- ^ "Recipient Grants: Center for Security Policy, Inc". MediaTransparency.org. Retrieved 2007-07-12.
- ^ Frank Gaffney; Filmmaker, "Islam vs Islamists" C-SPAN
- ^ War Footing: 10 Steps America Must Take to Prevail in the War for the Free World The Heritage Foundation
- ^ Who We Are Set America Free
- ^ James P. Lucier (2002-04-29). "Chevron oil and the Savimbi problem". Unknown via CBS. Retrieved 2009-06-26.
- ^ Loo, Dennis. Impeach the President, the case against Bush and Cheney. p. 259.
{{cite book}}
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suggested) (help) - ^ "Statement of Principles". Project for the New American Century. 1997-06-03. Retrieved 2007-07-12.
- ^ "About PNAC". Project for the New American Century. Retrieved 2007-07-12.
- ^ a b c Sullivan, Andrew (2011-01-05) The CPAC War: Getting Weirder, The Atlantic
- ^ "Fight on the Right". National Review Online. March 19, 2003. Retrieved 2007-07-12.
- ^ Hamburger, Tom (June 11, 2003). "In Difficult Times, Muslims Count On Unlikely Advocate". The Wall Street Journal.
{{cite news}}
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suggested) (help) - ^ Rose, David (January 2007). "Neo Culpa". Vanity Fair.
- ^ ThinkProgress Hardball with Chris Matthews via YouTube
- ^ Gaffney, Frank (2003-09-29). "Take Out Al Jazeera". Fox News. Retrieved 2009-06-26.
- ^ http://washingtontimes.com/news/2008/oct/14/the-jihadist-vote/
- ^ GAFFNEY: Embracing of Shariah? The Washington Times
- ^ Frank 'I'm A Member Of Dick Cheney's Fan Club' Gaffney: Obama's 'Respect' For Muslims Is Code For Submission ThinkProgress
- ^ America's first Muslim president? The Washington Times
- ^ Can This Possibly Be True? New Obama Missile Defense Logo Includes A Crescent
- ^ Kamen, Al. "Is the Missile Defense Agency's logo Obama-meets-Islam?". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2010-05-02.
- ^ Gaffney, Frank J. Jr. "GAFFNEY: Scandalous air tanker decision." The Washington Times, 21 February 2011.
- ^ It never ends Washington Monthly
- ^ a b c Priest, Dana and Arkin, William (December 2010) Monitoring America, Washington Post
- ^ Christian Century, Oct. 2010
- ^ "Frank Gaffney's Latest Conspiracy: Herman Cain Actually Met With A 'Prominent Muslim Brotherhood' Group".
- ^ "Hearing over Tennessee mosque puts Islam on trial". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2010-11-12. [dead link]
- ^ "Murfreesboro mosque can move ahead, judge rules". The Tennessean. Retrieved 2010-11-22.
- ^ "Murfreesboro mosque's approval questioned by attorney". The Tennessean. Retrieved 2010-11-22.
- ^ "Murfreesboro mosque trial keeps focus on Islam". The Tennessean. Retrieved 2010-11-22.
- 1953 births
- American columnists
- American foreign policy writers
- American political writers
- Conspiracy theorists
- Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service alumni
- Islam in the United States
- Islam-related controversies
- Johns Hopkins University alumni
- Living people
- National Review people
- Reagan Administration personnel
- The Washington Times people
- United States Department of Defense officials