Author Topic: Mahmud Abouhalima Day  (Read 313 times)

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Mahmud Abouhalima Day
« on: February 27, 2021, 03:54:43 pm »
   Mahmud Abouhalima Day
By Mark Krikorian

February 26, 2021 6:30 AM
 

Friday is the 28th anniversary of the first World Trade Center attack, which killed six people and came close to knocking down the Twin Towers seven and a half years before another group of Islamist terrorists succeeded. The experience of one of its masterminds should give pause to lawmakers considering the U.S. Citizenship Act, a.k.a. the Biden-Menendez amnesty bill.

Mahmud “The Red” Abouhalima was an Egyptian radical Islamist who flew to the U.S. in the fall of 1985 on a tourist visa. He had no intention of leaving and became an illegal alien the next year when he overstayed his allotted time. Working as a cab driver in New York, he applied for the 1986 amnesty — as a farmworker. And he was approved, as were thousands of others, in what the New York Times called “one of the most extensive immigration frauds ever perpetrated against the United States Government.”

Only with the legal status accorded him by the amnesty was he able to travel to and from Afghanistan for terrorist training, which he used not only for the WTC attack but apparently also in the planning for the follow-up plot (which was happily foiled) to bomb New York City landmarks.

https://www.nationalreview.com/corner/mahmud-abouhalima-day/