It took last-minute arm-twisting by congressional offices and the Department of Homeland Security Wednesday to unravel State Department red tape that nearly prevented a top former Islamic radical from testifying to a Senate committee on the threat his former comrades present to the West.
Maajid Nawaz, 30, a former key member of Hizb ut-Tahrir, a secretive Islamicist group that works to foment military coups d'etats in countries friendly to the West, is scheduled to testify on Islamicist terrorism Thursday at a hearing of the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs.
A British citizen of Pakistani heritage, Nawaz was finally granted a "significant benefit parole" into the U.S. by Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE. The procedure is used to allow individuals with "significant criminal histories," such as mafia figures, into the U.S. to testify against their former organizations.
Nawaz, who gets "credible death threats from al-Qaeda types on a weekly basis," according to a person working on getting him into the U.S., was imprisoned and tortured for more than four years in Egypt because of his involvement with Hizb ut-Tahrir.
ICE deployed agents in three cars to escort him from Dulles Airport to his Washington hotel and an afternoon briefing at the Center for National Policy, a think tank headed by former Indiana congressman Tim Roemer, a member of the 9/11 Commission.
The security agents also took a room opposite his at the hotel.
ICE spokeswoman Kelly A. Nantel declined to comment, citing privacy issues.

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