Excerpt:
An Army lieutenant colonel who was on the fast track until Muslim groups complained about a course he taught on radical Islam has a legal foundation in his foxhole.
Attorneys for Lt. Col Matthew Dooley, a West Point graduate and highly-decorated combat veteran, was an instructor at the Joint Forces Staff College at the National Defense University, where by most accounts he won praise from students and faculty alike. But when Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Martin Dempsey excoriated Dooley during a Pentagon press conference in May, characterizing his course, "Perspectives on Islam and Islamic Radicalism" as objectionable, unprofessional, and "against our values," Dooley's once-bright career effectively hit a dead end, say his backers.
"This was a very heavy-handed approach from the very top," said Richard Thompson, chief counselor and president of the Thomas More Law Center, a national nonprofit public interest law firm handling Dooley's case. "He had a brilliant career ahead of him," Thompson said. "Now, he has been flagged."