Updated: Monday, 09 Nov 2009, 6:31 AM EST
Published : Sunday, 08 Nov 2009, 9:37 PM EST
FORT HOOD, Texas (AP) - A key U.S. senator said Sunday he would begin an investigation
into whether the Army missed signs that the man accused of opening
fire at Fort Hood had embraced an increasingly extremist view of
Islamic ideology.
Sen. Joe Lieberman's call for an investigation came a day
after classmates who participated in a 2007-2008 master's program
at a military college said they complained to superiors about Maj.
Nidal Malik Hasan and what they considered to be his anti-American
views, which included his giving a presentation that justified
suicide bombing and telling classmates that Islamic law trumped the
U.S. Constitution.
"If Hasan was showing signs, saying to people that he had
become an Islamist extremist, the U.S. Army has to have zero
tolerance," Lieberman, an independent from Connecticut, said on
"Fox News Sunday." "He should have been gone."
Lieberman, chairman of the Senate Homeland Security and
Governmental Affairs Committee, wants Congress to determine whether
the shootings constitute a terrorist attack.
Army Chief of Staff George Casey also warned Sunday against
reaching conclusions about the suspected shooter's motives until
investigators have fully explored the attack. "I think the
speculation (on Hasan's Islamic roots) could potentially heighten
backlash against some of our Muslim soldiers," he said on ABC's
"This Week."
Dr. Val Finnell told The Associated Press on Saturday that he
and other classmates participating in a 2007-2008 master's program
with Hasan at the Uniformed Services University complained about
his comments, including that the war on terror was "a war against
Islam."
Another classmate told the AP on Sunday that he complained to
five officers and two civilian faculty members at the university.
He wrote in a command climate survey sent to Pentagon officials
that fear in the military of being seen as politically incorrect
prevented an "intellectually honest discussion of Islamic ideology"
in the ranks. The classmate requested anonymity because the
investigation is ongoing.
Meanwhile, the FBI will probably look into whether Hasan
attended the same Virginia mosque as two Sept. 11 hijackers in 2001
at a time when a radical imam preached there, said a law
enforcement official who spoke on condition of anonymity because
the investigation is ongoing.
Imam Johari Abdul-Malik, outreach director at the Dar al
Hijrah Islamic Center, confirmed Sunday Hasan's family participated
in services at the mosque in Falls Church, Va. Abdul-Malik said the
Hasans were not leaders at the mosque and their attendance was
utterly normal, and he did not know whether Hasan himself ever
attended services there.
In 2001, Anwar Aulaqi was an imam, or spiritual leader, at
the mosque. Aulaqi told the FBI in 2001 that before he moved to
Virginia in early 2001, he met with 9/11 hijacker Nawaf al-Hazmi
several times in San Diego. Al-Hazmi was at the time living with
Khalid al-Mihdhar, another hijacker. Al-Hazmi and another hijacker,
Hani Hanjour, attended the Dar al Hijrah mosque in early April
2001.
The mosque is one of the largest on the East Coast, and
thousands of worshippers attend prayers and services there every
week. Abdul-Malik said it's a mistake for people to conflate
regular attendance at a mosque with extremism.
Many Muslims pray at the mosque multiple times a day, he
said. "It's part of family life. It's like going out for ice cream
after dinner."
Faizul Khan, former imam of the Muslim Community Center in
nearby Silver Spring, Md., where Hasan also worshipped, said he was
not aware that Hasan had attended services at Dar al Hijrah but
said it would not be unusual for Hasan to attend more than one
mosque concurrently. Khan said he did not recall Hasan mentioning
having been taught or preached to by Aulaqi.
Hasan's family has described the Army psychiatrist him as a
"peaceful, loving and compassionate person." His brother, Eyad
Hasan, of Sterling, Va., said in a statement Saturday that Hasan
has "never committed an act of violence and was always known to be
a good, law-abiding citizen."
Authorities continue to refer to Hasan, 39, as the only
suspect in the shootings that killed 13 and wounded 29, but they
won't say when charges would be filed and have said they have not
determined a motive. Hasan, who was shot by civilian police to end
the rampage, was in critical but stable condition at an Army
hospital in San Antonio.
He was breathing on his own after being taken off a
ventilator on Saturday, but officials won't say whether Hasan can
communicate. Sixteen victims remained hospitalized with gunshot
wounds, and seven were in intensive care.
Hasan likely would face military justice rather than federal
criminal charges if investigators determine the violence was the
work of just one person.
There is no time limit on charging Hasan, but once he is in
pre-trial confinement, the military has 120 days to start his
trial, said John P. Galligan, an attorney who has represented Fort
Hood soldiers but is not involved in the Hasan case. However,
defense attorneys often file motions that stop the 120-day clock.
Authorities have said Hasan is "in custody" in the hospital, but
it's unclear if that is considered pre-trial confinement.
At the post's main church Sunday, Col. Frank Jackson, the
garrison chaplain, asked mourners to pray for Hasan and his family
"as they find themselves in a position that no person ever desires
to be -- to try and explain the unexplainable."
"Lord, all those around us search for motive, search for
meaning, search for something, someone to blame. That is so
frustrating," Jackson told a group of about 120 people gathered at
the 1st Cavalry Memorial Chapel. "Today, we pause to hear from you.
So Lord, as we pray together, we focus on things we know."
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