Stephen C. Coughlin is an American lawyer and former Joint Chiefs of Staff intelligence analyst who was a contract employee providing advice and analysis at the Pentagon, until he was let go in 2008 under controversial circumstances, reportedly owing to his views on the nature of Islam and the Muslim Brotherhood.[1][2][3][4]
According to reporter Bill Gertz, Coughlin "led the way in uncovering the truth about the U.S. government's failures to tackle the Islamic threat."[1] Coughlin completed his master's thesis in 2007 at the National Defense Intelligence College, which focused on the Islamic doctrine of jihad as formed by Islamic law, and directly conflicted with the positions of Gordon England's central Muslim outreach Pentagon aide Hesham Islam and others in the U.S. government.[1][2][8] In connection with the trial against the Islamic charity Holy Land Foundation for Relief and Development, which had been designated a terrorist organization for providing millions in funds to Hamas, Coughlin wrote a memorandum that explicitly criticized several groups that the U.S. Justice Department had been involved with as part of their Muslim outreach program, identifying them as front groups of the Muslim Brotherhood that were part of a subversion plan against the United States.[1][9] Coughlin was eventually notified after a meeting at the Pentagon's upper floor which included Islam, who according to Gertz controversially called Coughlin a "Christian zealot", that his contract would not be renewed after March 2008.[1][8] Pentagon officials however denied that there was any confrontation at the meeting.[8]
One official claimed the decision was due to "budget cuts", but this was not believed by others, including generals and admirals who according to Gertz quietly rallied to support Coughlin.[10] Other officials reportedly said Coughlin had become "too hot" or controversial within the Pentagon,[11] or that "there was no need to exercise the option to extend or renew [his] contract."[8] The decision to not renew his contract proved controversial, and Lt. Col. Joseph C. Myers, Army Advisor to the Air Command and Staff College denounced it as "an act of intellectual cowardice,"[2] and stated that the Joint Staff was "losing its only Islamic law scholar if the firing stands."[10] Moreover, Coughlin was praised by retired Air Force Lt. Gen. Thomas McInerney as "the most knowledgeable person in the U.S. government on Islamic law," while Marine Corps Lt. Gen. Samuel Helland said that Coughlin "hit the mark in explaining how jihadists use the Koran to justify their actions."[10]
Catastrophic Failure: Blindfolding America in the Face of Jihad. Center for Security Policy Press. 2015. ISBN978-1511617505.
"Bridge-Building" to Nowhere: The Catholic Church's Case Study in Interfaith Delusion. Center for Security Policy Press. 2015. ISBN978-1519377838.
Re-Remembering the Mis-Remembered Left: The Left's Strategy and Tactics To Transform America. Co-authored with Higgins, Richard. Unconstrained Analytics. 2019. ISBN978-1733473101.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
^Stout, Mark E. (2012). "The Evolution of Intelligence Assessments of al-Qaeda to 2011". In Fenner, Lorry M.; Goldings, Jessica L. (eds.). 9/11, Ten Years Later: Insights on Al-Qaeda's Past & Future Through Captured Records: Conference Proceedings. National Defense University. p. 28.