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McDonough said agencies throughout the Obama administration would continue working to understand the process of radicalization. He also promised further outreach to Islamic communities in the United States, as well as efforts to dispel "misperceptions about our fellow Americans who are Muslim." Some 300 protesters gathered in New York's Times Square on Sunday to speak out against the planned congressional hearing, criticizing it as xenophobic and saying that singling out Muslims, rather than extremists, is unfair. In all its efforts, the Obama administration faces the same challenge as the Bush administration of whether to identify religion as part of the motive for attacks on the U.S., said Stewart Baker, a former senior Homeland Security official. "If you don't, then it's a very abstract discussion of why terrorism is bad," Baker said. "If you do, you raise the profile of religion in ways that makes Americans uncomfortable. That concern hasn't gone away in the new administration
-- if anything, it's stronger." King's critics, including the first Muslim elected to Congress, Minnesota Democrat Keith Ellison, say it is wrong to single out a religion. "We're concerned about the breadth of this," Ellison said on CNN Sunday. "To say we're going to investigate ... a religious minority, and a particular one, I think is the wrong course of action to take." But King isn't the first lawmaker to convene a congressional panel on the topic. Radicalized Muslims have been the centerpiece of most of the congressional hearings on violent extremism held since the Sept. 11, 2001 terror attacks. Some lawmakers have avoided using specific terms about Islam in the title of the hearings. But after a few sentences into the committee chairs' opening statements, it's clear that the focus is on people who have been influenced by radical Islam.
[Associated
Press;
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