Muslim leader had troubling talks with suspect
By ANGELA K. BROWN
Associated Press Writer
FORT HOOD, Texas (AP) - An Army psychiatrist who authorities say
went on a shooting rampage at Fort Hood was so conflicted over what
to tell fellow soldiers about fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan that
a local Islamic leader said Saturday he was deeply troubled by it.
Osman Danquah, co-founder of the Islamic Community of Greater
Killeen, said he was disturbed by Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan's
persistent questioning and recommended the mosque reject Hasan's
request to become a lay Muslim leader at the sprawling Army post.
Danquah said Hasan never expressed anger toward the Army or
indicated any plans for violence, but during the second of two
conversations they had over the summer, Hasan seemed almost
incoherent, he said.
``But what if a person gets in and feels that it's just not
right?'' Danquah recalled Hasan asking him.
``I told him, `There's something wrong with you,''' Danquah told
The Associated Press during an interview at Fort Hood on Saturday.
``I didn't get the feeling he was talking for himself, but
something just didn't seem right.''
Authorities accuse Hasan of firing more than 100 rounds Thursday
in a soldier processing center at Fort Hood, killing 13 and
wounding 29 others in the worst mass shooting on a military
facility in the U.S. At the start of the attack, Hasan reportedly
jumped up on a desk and shouted ``Allahu akbar!'' - Arabic for
``God is great!'' Hasan, 39, was seriously wounded by police and is
being treated in a military hospital.
The military has said Hasan was scheduled to deploy to
Afghanistan, but family members suggested he was trying avoid
serving overseas.
Hasan's relatives who live in the Palestinian territories have
said they had heard from family members that Hasan felt mistreated
in the Army as a Muslim.
``He told (them) that as a Muslim committed to his prayers he
was discriminated against and not treated as is fitting for an
officer and American,'' said Mohammed Malik Hasan, 24, a cousin,
told the AP from his home on the outskirts of Ramallah, a
Palestinian city in the West Bank. ``He hired a lawyer to get him a
discharge.''
The Army major also had previously questioned the U.S. war on
terror.
A former classmate has said Hasan was a ``vociferous opponent of
the war'' and ``viewed the war against terror'' as a ``war against
Islam.'' Dr. Val Finnell, who attended a master's in public health
program in 2007-2008 at Uniformed Services University with Hasan,
said he told classmates he was ``a Muslim first and an American
second.''
``In retrospect, I'm not surprised he did it,'' Finnell said.
``I had real questions about what his priorities were, what his
beliefs were.''
Danquah said his conversations with Hasan occurred following two
religious services sometime before Ramadan, the Islamic holy month
that started in late August. He said the soldier, who transferred
to Fort Hood from Walter Reed Army Medical Center in July,
regularly attended services at the Killeen, Texas, mosque in his
uniform.
During his talks with Hasan, Danquah said he told him that
Muslims were fighting each other in Afghanistan, Pakistan and the
Palestinian territories and that American soldiers with objections
to serving overseas had recourse to voice such concerns.
``As a Muslim, you come into a community and the way you
integrate normally - I didn't see that kind of integration,'' he
said. It was not immediately clear if Danquah had informed the Army
about his concerns.
Most of the wounded from Thursday's attack remained
hospitalized, many in intensive care. Former President George W.
Bush and his wife, Laura, visited wounded soldiers Friday night at
the post hospital. A Bush spokesman said the couple spoke with
family members of the wounded and personally thanked hospital staff
members and Fort Hood leaders.
Texas Gov. Rick Perry said Saturday after visiting with the
wounded that he was humbled by the conversations he had with
soldiers. He said at a news conference that he told the wounded
soldiers that the entire state is behind them, and that ``there's
24 million Texans praying for them and wishing them well.''
Hasan was transferred Friday to Brooke Army Medical Center in
San Antonio, about 150 miles southwest of Fort Hood. Army officials
late Friday gave no indication of his condition except to say he
was ``not able to converse.''
Associated Press Writers Dalia Nammari in Ramallah, West Bank,
and Jessica Gresko in Washington, D.C., contributed to this report.
11/07/09 14:10
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