ABC Frets: Plight of Muslim Soldiers Toughest Since Japanese-Americans in WWII
ABC doubled the length of its evening newscast on Friday night and
World News used its second half hour to suggest an exculpatory reason
behind Army psychiatrist Nidal Hasan's mass killing at Fort Hood -- as
anchor Charles Gibson reasoned
“treating the mentally wounded can be stressful”
-- then to devote a story to the plight of Muslim soldiers: “It's not
easy for anyone serving in the armed forces these days, but
with America fighting Islamic enemies overseas, Muslim troops face a unique burden.” Reporter Bill Weir despaired:
The Pentagon has made a real concerted effort to create a military that is culturally sensitive and religiously tolerant, but Muslims in uniform today face a challenge not seen since Japanese-Americans fought in World War II. They
taste suspicion from some fellow soldiers who question their loyalty
and resentment from fellow Muslims opposed to both American wars.
Weir featured a Muslim soldier who lamented “our religion teaches
better,” before Weir painted Muslim soldiers as victims of intolerance,
highlighting the experience of one Muslim soldier who “began his
overseas deployment on 9/11, and
taunts followed him throughout his four-year enlistment.” Weir acknowledged that “Major Hasan's motives are still unclear,”
but he, nonetheless, recalled how “back in 2003 prosecutors alleged it
was repeated taunting and religious ideology that led Sergeant Hasan
Akbar to kill two of his commanding officers with a grenade.”
With “Stress Factor” as the on-screen heading, Gibson had set up the previous story from Martha Raddatz:
Many troops returning from Iraq and Afghanistan bare the
psychological scars of war, everything from anxiety to post-traumatic
stress. The alleged Fort Hood gunman was a psychiatrist trained to help
these soldiers. And while it's way too early to know why this rampage
occurred, we do know that treating the mentally wounded can be
stressful as well.
The MRC's Brad Wilmouth corrected the closed-captioning against the
video to provide this transcript of the Muslim soldier story aired
during the second half hour of the Friday, November 6 World News on
ABC:
CHARLES GIBSON: Muslim groups here in the United States
have moved quickly to condemn the rampage at Fort Hood after learning
the alleged gunman was a practicing Muslim, born in the U.S. to
Palestinian parents. The Council on American-Islamic Relations said no
political or religious ideology could ever justify or excuse such
wanton and indiscriminate violence. Organizations representing Muslims
in the U.S. military also are denouncing the attack. It's not easy for
anyone serving in the armed forces these days, but with America
fighting Islamic enemies overseas, Muslim troops face a unique burden.
Bill Weir joins us now. Bill?

BILL
WEIR: Charlie, the Pentagon has made a real concerted effort to create
a military that is culturally sensitive and religiously tolerant, but
Muslims in uniform today face a challenge not seen since
Japanese-Americans fought in World War II. They taste suspicion from
some fellow soldiers who question their loyalty and resentment from
fellow Muslims opposed to both American wars. At the Islamic community
center in Killeen today, Friday prayers took place under a cloud of
despair. This is where Major Nidal Hasan worshiped, alongside Fort
Hood's small Muslim community, including Sergeant Fahad Kamal, just
back from a 15-month tour of Afghanistan.
SERGEANT FAHAD KAMAL, U.S. MILITARY: I feel let down because we're
better than this. Our religion teaches better, and it just makes me
feel hurt and just, I just feel like we're much better individuals.
WEIR: Of the 1.4 million active service members around the world,
just over 3,500 call themselves Muslims -- one-quarter of one percent.
But members of their community say there are tens of thousands more who
keep their faith to themselves, bowing to Mecca five times a day in
private to avoid potential conflict with fellow troops.
SERGEANT
MCCALL ABDULLAH: My last name's Abdullah, so it's really hard to run
from it. It's right there on your BDUs, it says Abdullah.
WEIR:
Sergeant McCall Abdullah began his overseas deployment on 9/11, and
taunts followed him throughout his four-year enlistment.
ABDULLAH: You get called a camel jockey or a sand nigger or, you know, Haji or something like that.
WEIR: While Major Hasan's motives are still unclear, back in 2003,
prosecutors alleged it was repeated taunting and religious ideology
that led Sergeant Hasan Akbar to kill two of his commanding officers
with a grenade. He was sentenced to death for that crime, and he became
a symbol for those who want to believe a true Muslim could never choose
America over Allah in a war against fellow Muslims. Former Gunnery
Sergeant Jamal Gadani could not disagree more.
FORMER GUNNERY SERGEANT JAMAL GADANI, U.S. MILITARY: What some of
these individuals do, is they try to take the Koran, the Muslim Koran,
out of context and say, well, we can't kill other Muslims. Well, our
mission is not to go kill other Muslims. We're there to find the bad
guys, al-Qaeda.
ABDULLAH: We are all Americans, and we are all contributing, quite a
few of us. And it would do best to remember that before putting people
in a box.
GADANI: I feel embarrassed for the Muslim community. The feeling is
that, I want to believe that it was the individual, not the religion,
that made him do what he did.
WEIR: I asked Sergeant Abdullah how he managed to answer the call to
prayer or march while fasting during Ramadan, he said, you just have to
want it more than the rest of your guys in your platoon.
ABCNews.com
video of Weir's story.
— Brent Baker is Vice President for Research and Publications at the Media Research Center