The facts surrounding New York City’s new socialist mayor-elect should alarm every American who values Western civilization and the rule of law. Zohran Mamdani represents something far more dangerous than typical progressive politics. According to Mosab Hassan Yousef, the son of Hamas co-founder Sheikh Hassan Yousef, Mamdani functions as a Trojan horse for what Yousef identifies as the Red-Green Alliance, a coordinated effort between radical communist and Islamist forces aimed at dismantling Western capitalism and fundamentally transforming America’s largest city.
Yousef’s warnings carry weight. As “The Green Prince,” he broke with Hamas and worked covertly with Israeli intelligence, providing him unique insight into radical Islamist networks and their operational strategies. His assessment of Mamdani is not hyperbolic speculation but informed analysis based on observable evidence.
“How can somebody who is pro-disorder, pro-chaos, be trusted with ruling one of the most advanced cities in the West?” Yousef asked. The question answers itself. The answer is that he cannot be trusted, which is precisely why the alliance that financed his rise installed him in this position.
The Red-Green Alliance represents a tactical collaboration between socialist and communist forces on one side and Islamist networks on the other. These groups share a common goal: the destruction of Western liberal democracy and the undermining of the Jewish state. Mamdani embodies this alliance perfectly. He identifies as a socialist, which is simply communism rebranded for Western consumption, while simultaneously embracing Islamist ideology. Both ideologies have produced catastrophic failures wherever implemented, yet Mamdani promotes them as solutions for New York.
The evidence supporting Yousef’s assessment is substantial. Mamdani exploits identity politics with precision, deploying the Muslim victim narrative to shield himself from legitimate criticism. He promotes chaos rebranded as “Intifada,” seeking to globalize this violent uprising model. This is not rhetoric. This is his stated political framework.
Consider Mamdani’s associations. Weeks before the election, he campaigned alongside Imam Siraj Wahhaj, a radical Brooklyn cleric named by prosecutors as an unindicted co-conspirator in the 1993 World Trade Center bombing. Wahhaj has preached that homosexuality is a “disease” and once called for an “army of 10,000 men” to wage jihad through New York City. When criticized for this association, Mamdani defended Wahhaj as “one of the nation’s foremost Muslim leaders and a pillar of the Bed-Stuy community for nearly half a century.”
The same Imam Wahhaj serves as mentor to Linda Sarsour, the antisemitic activist who has long functioned as Mamdani’s political mentor. The connections form a clear pattern.
Mamdani also fabricated a personal narrative for political gain. He claimed his “hijab-wearing aunt” feared for her safety after September 11th, a story designed to generate sympathy and deflect criticism. The story was false. The woman was actually his father’s second cousin, and the incident never occurred as described. This willingness to manufacture victimhood narratives for political advantage reveals character and demonstrates the cynical manipulation at the heart of his political operation.
The Palestinian cause forms the center of Mamdani’s political identity, which he describes as “central to my identity.” This obsessive focus on a foreign conflict while seeking to govern an American city raises obvious questions about priorities and loyalties.
Yousef’s warning is clear: Mamdani will succeed in one thing, burning the castle down. The radical socialists and Islamist networks that financed his rise will now demand their return on investment. New York faces not simply bad governance but coordinated ideological subversion from within its own government.
The question is whether New Yorkers will recognize this threat before irreversible damage occurs. The facts are available. The pattern is clear. The choice remains.
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