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The Third Jihad: Radical Islam's Vision for America is a documentary film released in 2008 (with significant attention in 2010) that explores the alleged threat of radical Islam to American society, including claims of Muslim Brotherhood infiltration, through cultural and political subversion. Directed by Wayne Kopping and Erik Werth, and produced by Werth and Raphael Shore (a Canadian-Israeli filmmaker), the film features narration by Muslim American physician Zuhdi Jasser and includes interviews with experts warning about the infiltration of Islamist ideologies into Western institutions. It argues that a 'third jihad'—following the overt jihad of 9/11 and the war on terror—is underway through stealthy means. Financed by the Clarion Project (formerly the Clarion Fund, an organization labeled by the Southern Poverty Law Center as an anti-Muslim hate group), the film gained controversy after being screened for over 1,400 New York City police recruits in 2010, leading to criticism from groups like CAIR and eventual distancing by the NYPD. Widely distributed online and through conservative media, the documentary has been accused of promoting Islamophobic narratives, fear-mongering, misinformation, and selective portrayal of Islamic teachings, while influencing public discourse on national security and religious extremism. Raphael Shore, known for similar documentaries like Obsession: Radical Islam's War Against the West, played a key role in its production.