@mountaineer
You don't understand the concept of creating "plausible deniability" when going deep undercover to infiltrate the enemy?
Everyone arguably needs to learn two terms:
1) taqiyya - the practice by Muslims of willfully and deliberately lying to conceal their beliefs, intentions and purposes from nonbelievers. This strategery (sic) is at the foundation of the religious authority by which salafist and twelver jihadist sleeper cells infiltrate/attack non-Muslim or non-jihadist (shiekist) Muslim populations and governments.
2) Dhimmitude - The willful, intentional subordination / subjugation of non-Muslims or non-Jihadist Muslims to sharia and/or to domination by Islam through deception, misinformation, subversion, infiltration, oppression and coercion.
Both of those terms were banned from use in government by the Eightball Obama administration - most likely because they accurately describe the combined efforts of so many radical, militant fundamentalist Islamist terrorist networks and their adjunct affiliated supporters and operatives around the world. The ban of those terms was part-in-parcel of the greater efforts of the Democrats to promulgate the general attitude both in government and in the U.S. population that there is no significant connection between international fundamentalist Islamist terrorist networks and the teachings of the Q'ran. There is.
Leftists are forever engaging in the fiction that if one stops talking about something or refuses to acknowledge its existence, this somehow makes the thing cease to exist or have potency. The notion that the belief or non-belief in something directly effects it (such as that having a belief that one can fly by flapping one's hands influences one's ability to fly) is known by psychologists as "magical thinking".
That sort of thing can be seen abundantly in cases where people have taken hallucinogenic drugs like LSD and lept to their deaths off tall buildings because they thought that if they believed strongly enough, they would fly.