“The Trojan Horse”: UAE Journalist Stuns U.S. News Anchor With Viral Warning of Islamist “Infiltration” into American Institutions

The glitzy, high-tech backdrop of a major Manhattan news studio briefly felt like a courtroom this week when Amjad Taha, a renowned geopolitical expert from the United Arab Emirates, delivered a staggering indictment of how radical ideologies are being “incubated” within the United States.

.

.

.

The interview, which has since sent shockwaves across social media, featured Taha—a self-described “advocate of peace” and a practicing Muslim—warning that the American commitment to absolute freedom of speech is being weaponized by “former terrorists” who have reinvented themselves as “activists” on U.S. soil.

The “Activist” Facade

The tension began when the host asked Taha to explain the difference between the Islam practiced in the progressive UAE and the radicalized version often seen on Western television. Taha’s response was immediate and visceral.

“When you say ‘on our TVs,’ you mean the West,” Taha said. “And what we see in the West shocks us. You see radical Islamists and members of the Muslim Brotherhood—individuals who were involved in heinous acts in their own countries—living in the West today as teachers, lecturers, and doctors.”

Taha argued that these individuals often arrive in the U.S. under refugee status, escaping justice in the Middle East, only to use their newfound platform to radicalize the next generation. “As they get citizenship, they start recruiting Western citizens to become hostages of the same Islamist propaganda their parents fled from,” he warned.

From Harvard to the “Lone Wolf”

Taha pointed to the recent wave of unrest on American university campuses as the primary evidence of this “civilizational breaking point.” He described prestigious institutions like Harvard and Columbia as becoming “war zones” where Jewish students are persecuted and teachers are attacked for differing perspectives.

“Right now, when I think of Harvard, I don’t think of education. I think of riots,” Taha stated. “I see people with masks covering their faces with the flags of terrorist groups like Hamas and Hezbollah. You are allowing your civilization to break under your own observation.”

The UAE expert noted a disturbing statistical trend: in many Western nations, more citizens have traveled to join the ranks of the Islamic State (ISIS) than have joined their own national armed forces. He attributed this to “jihadist schools” operating on weekends and a lack of oversight regarding who is allowed to preach in local mosques.

The UAE vs. The West: A Question of “Political Correctness”

Perhaps the most provocative moment of the interview came when Taha challenged the American government’s refusal to ban organizations that have already been outlawed in the heart of the Islamic world.

“You cannot be more Muslim than me. You will not be more Arab than I,” Taha said, addressing the camera directly. “So why is it that I have banned the Muslim Brotherhood in the UAE and they have been banned in Mecca, yet they are allowed to operate freely in London, Paris, and Washington, D.C.?”

He specifically cited organizations like “Islamic Relief,” claiming they function as “charity fronts” that funnel money from Western donors into the pockets of terrorist organizations in the Middle East. Taha’s frustration centered on what he called Western “ignorance”—the failure to distinguish between a spiritual religion and a political, “evil” ideology.

The “Second Generation” Crisis

The debate took a darker turn when the discussion shifted to radicalization among second- and third-generation migrants. Data shows that these individuals—often American or European citizens—are significantly more likely to radicalize than their parents who immigrated directly from the Middle East.

“Why is a third-generation Muslim in Dubai open-minded and conservative but peaceful, while a third-generation Muslim in France or the U.K. is more likely to join ISIS?” Taha asked. His answer: a lack of integration and an educational system that avoids “offending” certain groups due to political correctness.

The host, visibly shaken by Taha’s bluntness, noted that the primary hurdle in the U.S. is the fear of being labeled “Islamophobic.” Taha dismissed this concern as a strategic tool used by Islamists to shield themselves from legitimate scrutiny.

A Call for Deportation and Reform

Taha’s prescription for the United States was as controversial as his diagnosis. He called for the immediate deportation of those who use the “space of freedom” to glorify terrorism or promote anti-Semitism.

“Do not let them harm your children. Do not let them harm your community,” Taha urged. “This is your country. This is your civilization. You must put rules and regulations in place. If a scholar does not support coexistence, peace, and tolerance, they should not be teaching your children.”

As the segment wrapped up, the analyst “The Traveling Clatt” noted that the core of the problem is “political correctness.” He argued that by trying to appear inclusive, Western societies have inadvertently “embraced” the very ideologies seeking to dismantle them.

As the lights dimmed in the studio, the message remained clear: the warning is no longer coming from “Western hawks,” but from the heart of the Arab world itself. The question for American policymakers is whether they are prepared to listen to a Muslim expert who says the “Trojan Horse” has already entered the gates.