Aaron Bandler Profile picture
Jul 25 9 tweets 3 min read Read on X
By me in @JNS_org: 🧵

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security sent more than $25 million to extremist groups with ties to Islamist terror groups between 2013 and 2023, according to a new report from the @meforum. Image
@greggroman, executive director of the think tank, told JNS that the forum pored over publicly accessible government spending data.

“We matched these grants with extremist groups found in our research archives to identify the misuse of taxpayer dollars on a grand scale,” he said.

“Americans should know that their hard-earned money was allocated to build up security around a luxurious mosque compound in Maryland owned by Turkey’s Islamist government and that mosques in Michigan and Texas that serve as outposts for Iran’s regime were also recipients of DHS funds,” he told JNS.
Some $750,000 in federal grants went “to mosques suspected of operating on behalf of the Islamic Republic of Iran or its proxies,” according to the report. The report acknowledges that it is not known if the U.S. government ultimately paid the grants, only that it earmarked them in a specific year.
The report, which the forum published on Monday, examines three federal grant programs—the Nonprofit Security Grant Program, Countering Violent Extremism and the Disaster Relief Fund—from which the extremist groups received funding.

The Nonprofit Security Grant Program is “the greatest source of DHS funding to extremist groups,” as support for the program surged from $10 million in 2012 to $454 million in 2024, per the report.
The Islamic Center of San Diego received more than $370,000 in grants between 2015 and 2023, according to the report. Two of the Sept. 11 hijackers frequented the center and “received assistance from fellow worshippers in obtaining Social Security cards and drivers’ licenses, purchasing a car and finding local housing,” according to the report.

“The pair even accessed funds from the nephew of Sept. 11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed through a bank account belonging to an administrator at ICSD,” the report adds. (JNS sought comment from the center.)

The center’s head imam stated the day after Oct. 7 in a since-deleted social media post that “resistance is the only option for a people under occupation,” the report states.
A $150,000 Nonprofit Security Grant Program grant also went to the Turkish American Community Center in Maryland, which the report calls “a branch of the Turkish directorate of religious affairs” that “serves as Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s high court in North America.”
@greggroman The report lists one of the recipients of grant monies from the federal Countering Violent Extremism program as Leaders Advancing and Helping Communities, a Lebanese organization in Michigan, which the report says has pro-Hezbollah leaders and board members.
Disaster Relief Fund recipients include the Muslim American Society Katy Center, an organization in Texas tied to the Muslim Brotherhood, and ICNA Relief, the Islamic Circle of North America’s humanitarian wing, which has “institutional and ideological links” to the U.S.-designated terror group Jamaat-e-Islami, according to the report.
@greggroman Read the rest here: jns.org/report-more-th…

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Aaron Bandler

Aaron Bandler Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @bandlersbanter

Jul 26
By me in @JNS_org: 🧵

Stanford University suspended the student-run Kairos co-op for the upcoming academic year, after receiving reports that Jewish students were targeted, a spokeswoman for the private California school told JNS. Image
Students taking part “in an extracurricular activity were asked to leave the house and told that, among other things, the presence of ‘Zionists’ in the group was making residents of the house uncomfortable,” Dee Mostofi, assistant vice president of external communications at Stanford, told JNS.

Rabbi Jessica Kirschner, executive director of Hillel at Stanford, told JNS that “students had permission from the residents to be in the building to work on a group project,” and “some residents realized some of the visiting students were Jewish and therefore assumed to be Zionists.”

The residents “decided their presence made residents ‘unsafe’ and told the group to leave, which they eventually did,” Kirschner told JNS.
Mostofi told JNS that an investigation by Stanford’s Title VI office found that “the extracurricular project had nothing to do with the Middle East and that none of the students present had shared their political beliefs.”

“Students were targeted based on their perceived Jewish identity,” Mostofi said. “It is simply not acceptable that Jewish students would be excluded from a university space, or asked to explain their political beliefs to remain in that space.”

“No student should be subject to this kind of discrimination, whatever their identity,” she added.
Read 6 tweets
Jul 19
My latest in @JNS_org: 🧵

After Yoav Segev was attacked on Harvard University’s campus in October 2023, shortly after the Oct. 7 attacks, the university further victimized him, according to a new lawsuit which the Jewish student filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts.Image
“Harvard did everything it could to defend, protect and reward the assailants; to impede the criminal investigation; and to prevent Mr. Segev from obtaining administrative relief from the university,” per the complaint, which National Review obtained.

“After Oct. 7, 2023, antisemitism exploded on Harvard’s campus,” Mark Pinkert, partner at Holtzman Vogel, who is representing Segev, told JNS. “Amidst the chaos and protests, Yoav Segev was violently assaulted by student-employees, simply because he is Jewish.”

Segev is “pursuing justice against Harvard not only for failing to protect him and other Jewish students but for defending and rewarding antisemitism,” the attorney told JNS. “This type of treatment would be unimaginable for other minorities at Harvard, except Jews.”
The student was taking video on his phone on Harvard’s campus in 2023 during an anti-Israel “die in,” when protesters told him to leave. Segev said he had a right to be there and remained. Per the complaint, he was then surrounded by people wearing keffiyehs, who grabbed him “violently.”
Read 9 tweets
Jul 13
Thank you to the @AMarkFoundation for linking to some of my @JewishJournal articles on Wikipedia and for the award! Image
Read 8 tweets
Jul 11
My latest in @JNS_org: 🧵

A Jewish Israeli researcher faced “discrimination and insidious, malicious conduct intended to permanently tarnish his reputation and career” at Stanford University, including “tampering with his lab results and manufacturing a bogus complaint against him, merely for being Israeli,” according to a federal lawsuit filed on Thursday.Image
The suit, brought by the Louis D. Brandeis Center for Human Rights Under Law and the firm Cohen Williams, accuses the private school in Stanford, Calif., of being “complicit in permitting an environment saturated with intimidation and harassment of Jewish and Israeli students to flourish on campus.”

Shay Laps, a postdoctoral researcher, arrived at Stanford roughly six months after the Hamas-led terrorist attacks in southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, having been recommended by a Nobel laureate, according to the lawsuit. He aimed to “develop his research of synthetic and ‘smart’ insulin, which would revolutionize treatment for millions of people suffering from diabetes,” the Brandeis Center stated.

He faced extensive discrimination in the lab of Danny Chou, an associate pediatrics professor at Stanford, per the lawsuit, including tampering with his research, a fabricated sexual harassment complaint against him and being locked out of a lab.Image
“I was just shocked by the set of facts,” Rachel Lerman, vice chair and director of appeals and critical motions at the @brandeiscenter, told JNS. “We all think we’ve seen it all, but this guy, he’s really traumatized by what happened.”
Read 9 tweets
Jul 4
My latest on @Wikipedia in @JNS_org: 🧵

The widely used online encyclopedia Wikipedia deems the Anti-Defamation League and NGO Monitor to be “generally unreliable” sources to cite when discussing Israel and the Palestinians, but it maintains that Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights Monitor “can be cited as an opinion source” on Israel and the Palestinians. EuroMed has accused Israeli soldiers of harvesting Palestinian organs and their founder and chairman celebrated the Oct. 7 attacks.Image
The Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights Monitor is “an advocacy organization on a controversial topic, and should be used with attribution for factual claims,” Wikipedia states on its list of “reliable” and “perennial” sources. The group appears “to gather and responsibly report claims and information gathered directly from primary sources, and is widely used with attribution by reliable news sources,” Wikipedia states.Image
@GeraldNGOM is the president of @NGOmonitor, whose profile of Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights Monitor notes its links to Hamas. “This is outrageous, but not surprising,” he told JNS, of Wikipedia trusting the group more than his nonprofit.

“Wikipedia’s decision-making process, especially on highly disputed arenas like the Palestinian-Israeli conflict, amplifies prevailing ideological biases and agendas,” Steinberg told JNS. “Advocacy NGOs and their allies have invested years in attempts to silence NGO Monitor research. This is far from preservation of knowledge.”
Read 14 tweets
Jun 20
My first piece on @Wikipedia in @JNS_org: 🧵

‘Hypocrisy, double-standards’ in effort to axe Wikipedia page on Iranian policy to destroy Israel
“The whole thing is totally arbitrary,” an observer who documents anti-Israel hate bias on the platform told JNS.Image
Iranian regime leaders have long said “death to Israel” publicly, and Gideon Sa’ar, the Israeli foreign minister, told the United Nations Security Council this week that the Islamic Republic’s avowed goal is to “annihilate the State of Israel.” Iranian terror proxies, including Hamas, call for Israel’s destruction in their charters.

But that isn’t enough for some editors at Wikipedia, the sixth most visited site globally in May, who are attempting to delete an article titled “Destruction of Israel in Iranian policy.”

The article, which was created on June 4 and has garnered about 42,000 views in the past 30 days, states that Iran’s “foreign policy doctrine includes calling for the destruction of Israel as a Jewish state” and that “the rejection of Israel’s legitimacy has remained consistent across both hardline and moderate Iranian leaderships.”Image
Image
@MaxAbrahms, an associate professor of political science at Northeastern University who studies terrorism and the Middle East, told JNS that “Wikipedia is waging a disinformation campaign against Israel.”

If the page is deleted, or if it is merged into a larger article, “Israel will be less popular, the Islamic Republic will be more popular and readers will be stupider,” he said.
Read 11 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us!

:(