According to its website, the Syrian Emergency Task Force (SETF) has a both a Board of Trustees and Board of Directors “consisting of Syrian American professionals from across the United States.” Of seven board members named, four are known to have a history of close ties to the US Muslim Brotherhood:

1. Jihad Qaddour

Another Syrian-Ameriecan organization website presents the following biographical information for Dr. Jihad Qaddour:

Dr. Jihad Qaddour received his Ph.D. degree in Electrical Engineering in 1990 from Wichita State University and is currently an associate tenured professor at Illinois State University (ISU). Before Joining ISU, he held various positions in management, research, analysis and design, planning and strategic planning, and was a tenured associate professor at Mesa State College. He is the founder of Advanced Global Technology and Wind and Sunergy consulting companies and has more than 18 years of experience in renewable energy and telecommunications. Additionally, Dr. Qaddour served as Treasurer of the Muslim American Society (MAS) for 12 years and is a founding member of the Islamic Society of Wichita in Kansas.

In addition to his role as an officer of the Muslim American Society, the part of the US Muslim Brotherhood closest to the Egyptian organization, an individual with the last name Qaddour was listed on a spreadsheet from an internal U. Brotherhood document dated 12/18/88 that lists fifteen last names of the US Brotherhood Shura Council.

2. Hashem Mubarak

The above website also presents the following biographical information for Hashem Mubarak:

Dr. Mubarak was born in Damascus, Syria in 1955. He graduated with his MD from the University of Damascus in 1978. He moved to the U.S. in 1979 and completed 3 years of Internal Medicine training in Trenton, NJ. He then completed his Cardiology Fellowship at Rutgers University (now called Robertwood Johnson). He currently resides in Panama City, FL with his wife and youngest of six children….Hashem Mubarak has been practicing Cardiology in Panama City, FL since 1986. He has served as the president of the Bay County Islamic Society (BCIS) and is on the board of Life Management Center.

According to confidential information supplied to the GMBDW, the Bay City Islamic Center was part of the US Muslim Brotherhood network established in Panama City by the late and former head of the US Muslim Brotherhood Ahmed Elkadi.

3. Yahya M. Basha

The American-Arab Chamber of Commerce is posting the following bio on Dr. Yahya M. Basha (edited for brevity):

Born in Hama, Syria to a family of eleven children, Dr. Yahya M. Basha was educated in Christian Orthodox and Muslim schools and graduated from the University of Damascus, Syria, where he earned his Doctorate of Medicine. Dr. Basha came to the United States in 1972 as an intern at Mt. Carmel Mercy Hospital and completed his residency at William Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak, Michigan. In 1980, he began his own radiology practice ….In 2006 he was appointed a “Civilian Ambassador” by the U.S. State Department, traveling to the Netherlands, Germany and Denmark, as part of Undersecretary of State for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs Karen Hughes’ efforts to improve and clarify the U.S. image abroad. He is on the Advisory Board of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), and is a National Advisory Board Member of the Arab American National Museum (AANM), on the Board of Governors of the Arab American Institute (AAI) in Washington, and on the Board of the National American Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC). Dr. Basha is also a Foundation Board Member of the Muslim Public Affairs Council (MPAC) in California, Board Member of the World Elijah Interfaith Academy, based in Jerusalem, on the Board of the Syrian American Congress (SAC) in Chicago, and a member of BRIDGES, a formalized working body created to bridge the gap between Arab-Americans and law enforcement. His former accolades include: Chairman of the American Muslim Council in Washington (AMC) • Advisor to the American Muslim Taskforce (AMT) • Chair of American Muslim Political Coordinating Council (AMPCC) • Board Member of the Center for the Study of Islam and Democracy (CSID) • …Married and living with his wife and seven children in West Bloomfield, Michigan, n.

MPAC, AMC, AMT, AMPCC, and CSID are all part of the US Muslim Brotherhood.

4. Bassam Estwani

A US government website provides the following information on Bassam Estwani:

He is the chairman of the board of the Dar Al-Hijrah Islamic Center, which is one of the Nation’s most active and influential mosques, located in the 11th Congressional District, which I represent. He has participated in many international conferences that focus on Islam and religious values in America. He has been instrumental in bringing members of different faith communities together to promote social justice.He has a law degree from the University of Damascus. He studied Islamic law in Damascus and at the University of Cairo. In Kuwait, Mr. Estwani participated in the publication of the Encyclopedia of Islamic Jurisprudence. In Lebanon, he established an Islamic publishing house that produced more than 200 titles in a number of different languages.

Dar Al-Hijrah is a Northern Virginia mosque closely tied to the US Muslim Brotherhood.

It should also be noted that Jihad Qaddour and Hashem Mubarak are also both members of the board of Syria Relief and Development, another US NGO said to be providing humanitarian aid to Syria.