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Ghosts of Hasan past, present and future

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After the tragedy at Fort Hood, we hear calls for action to explain how a military "Columbine" could happen. Investigating the background of the accused attacker, Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan, Monday-morning quarterbacking suggests the signs were clear - a malcontent, a loner, a man driven by religious conviction that his country was wrong to be fighting in Afghanistan and Iraq, his giving away all his personal possessions, his donning religious garb hours before the attack, etc. It was only after the fact that we wondered how such obvious signs of a man determined to do harm to others, fulfilling his destiny in doing so, were ignored.

"Hasan" is proving to be a foreboding Muslim name for Americans. In 2003, we were visited by "Hasan Past" in Kuwait. We have now been visited by "Hasan Present" at Fort Hood. And, as Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad forewarns, we are to be visited by "Hasan Future" before 2013. And, Mr. Ahmadinejad tells us, he will be the one to pave the way for Hasan Future's arrival. The Iranian president firmly believes the arrival of Hasan Future spells doom for both America and Israel.

Mr. Ahmadinejad clearly exhibits signs that he intends to wreak violence upon the world - he is only awaiting the tool that will enable him to do so. Ironically, of all the signs he exhibits, the most telling is also the most subtle.

"Hasan Past" was U.S. Army Sgt. Hasan Akbar. On March 23, 2003, as U.S. forces prepared to invade Iraq, he callously tossed a grenade into a tent where his superiors lay sleeping and then opened fire on his victims. Two officers were killed and 14 were wounded.

"Hasan Present" was U.S. Army Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan, who left 13 dead and dozens wounded in a similar jihadist attack against unsuspecting Americans.

But it is "Hasan Future" whom Mr. Ahmadinejad most eagerly awaits.

Mr. Ahmadinejad believes he has been chosen to set the stage for the return of Ibn-al-Hasan - known variously as the "Twelfth" or "Hidden" Imam or "the Mahdi." As such, Mr. Ahmadinejad and fellow Shi'ite believers of the same ilk are known as "Twelvers."

Twelvers believe Ibn-al-Hasan, born in 869, disappeared at age 5 when he was hidden by God. They further believe this Hasan to be the ultimate savior of mankind, destined to bring peace and justice to the world. But it will be a world ruled under Shariah law. Most ominous, they believe his return can only be triggered by world chaos.

Twelvers are a minority among Muslims. Sunnis, who comprise 90 percent of all Muslims, do not believe Ibn-al-Hasan to be the Mahdi. Even among many Shi'ites composing the remaining 10 percent, this is not believed. But Mr. Ahmadinejad distinguishes himself as a minority within a minority within a minority. While most Twelvers believe the world chaos necessary to trigger the Mahdi's return must be allowed to evolve naturally, he - as a member of a semisecret religious group known as "Hojatieh" - believes otherwise.

If one understands Mr. Ahmadinejad's belief that man must be a catalyst in causing the world chaos necessary to trigger the Mahdi's return, one should be very concerned about this religious zealot possessing a nuclear weapon.

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