President Barack Obama's view of the Muslim Brotherhood is based on
his -- and his advisors' -- apparent rationale that the Islamist group
is reformed and much more like the American and European models of
pluralistic societies.
However, experts on Islam and terrorism claim that the Muslim
Brotherhood's -- and the radical Salafists --dominance of the Egyptian
government, by virtue of its recent parliamentary election victories,
will eventually lead to the imposition of Sharia law on Islamic Arabs
and jihad against infidels.
"Nothing the Obama administration is trying to do through its
aggressive overtures, including recent high-level meetings with Muslim
Brotherhood officials, will change that fact. Jihad is embedded in its
history, as evidenced by the violent Islamic jihadist organizations such
as Hamas that it spawned. And let's not forget that it was the Muslim
Brotherhood that gave Osama bin Laden's former deputy and current leader
of al Qaeda, Ayman al-Zawahiri, his start," said attorney and World Net
Daily investigative journalist Joseph Klein.
Klein states that Jihad remains in the Muslim Brotherhood's DNA. Its
motto includes the words: "Jihad is our way. Dying in the way of Allah
is our highest hope." The Brotherhood's new offices are emblazoned with
its emblem of crossed swords.When actress and former Saturday Night Live
cast member Victoria Jackson accused the Obama administration of
allowing members of the Muslim Brotherhood access to his White House and
his administration, she was criticized for her comments.
However, in June 2011, the Law Enforcement/Public Safety Examiner
reported that the feeding frenzy over New York City's Congressman
Anthony Weiner's sex scandal was nothing compared to allegations that
his wife, Huma Abedin, has ties to the Muslim Brotherhood and it's
female off-shoot, the Muslim Sisterhood. Even more disturbing is the
fact that Mrs. Weiner works for Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and
has access to confidential, even secret, intelligence.
A counterterrorism think-tank based in the Middle East, released its
latest report on the increasingly powerful Islamic group, the
Egyptian-based Muslim Brotherhood.
In Middle Eastern and North African Arab countries, the behavior of
the Muslim Brotherhood has been influenced by the basic tension between
the movement's ultimate goal of establishing a state run according to
Islamic law (Sharia'h) and the need to exhibit a certain degree of
pragmatism and flexibility in relation to the movement's need to adapt
itself to the social and political conditions of each country, according
to a report by the Meir Amit Information Center in Israel.
The activities of the Muslim Brotherhood cannot be regarded as
uniform throughout the Arab world for it is run differently in each
country, according to local circumstances and constraints. However,
there are connections and common learning within the movement in Egypt
and other countries in the Middle East and around the globe, according
to Meir Amit.
The Muslim Brotherhood's ideology is based on the world-view of
"Islam as the solution" for every individual, social and political
problem. Instituting a comprehensive "Muslim world order" will be
possible, according to the movement and its founders, by means of a
long-term process of multiple stages.
It will, through education, begin with the new Muslim individual,
progress to his family, from his family to society at large and from
there to the new Muslim world order.
Attaining political power includes winning elections and forming a
state run according to Islamic law, the liberation of countries of Islam
from a foreign yoke, uniting them into one Islamic entity, and
spreading Islamic values around the globe on the ruins of the liberal
West.
How to implement the ideology is subject to broad interpretation, and
there are pragmatic, conservative and extremist factions within the
movement.
It is the "pragmatic" members of the Muslim Brotherhood who President
Barack Obama and his underlings choose to promote to the American
people.
The Muslim Brotherhood is the most well-organized political force in
Egypt today. It also has a broad socio-economic system (the da'wah),
built up over the years as a function of the movement's fundamental
ideology. Once Mubarak's regime was overthrown, the Muslim Brotherhood
found itself in a forward position from which to attain power than for
others who participated in the protests in Tahrir Square, as can be seen
by its success in two of the three election rounds for the People's
Assembly.
The Muslim Brotherhood was founded in Egypt by Hassan al-Banna in the
early 20th century. Over the years it grew to become the biggest and
best-established of the Muslim Brotherhood movements in the Middle East
and beyond, and one of the central movements of political Islam.
The success of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt is rooted in a
combination of ideology, politics and social work. Ideologically, it is
perceived as an authentic response to the hegemony of "Western
occupation," and attracted its following from among people who had been
disappointed by other ideologies. It also found a foothold in the
educated urban middle class using its vast socio-economic system, the
da'wah, to win the battle for hearts and minds, according to Meir Amit.
It focused on responding to the problems of the ordinary man in the
street through its broad social welfare programs, which included
education and health care, along with preaching in its network of
mosques. They often supplanted dysfunctional state institutions and
became an effective social network for the dissemination of the Muslim
Brotherhood's religious and political ideas.
The Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt is hostile to Israel because of its
fundamental ideology. The movement regards all the land of Palestine as
an Islamic endowment (waqf), rejects the State of Israel's right to
exist, promotes an uncompromising jihad against Israel, and absolutely
rejects peace treaties and normalization with Israel.
In addition, it is consistently anti-Semitic and spreads
anti-Semitism, either rooted in Islam or based on The Protocols of the
Elders of Zion. Publicly, however, it sometimes represents itself as
moderate and pragmatic because it considers its image in the
international community as important.
Special thanks to Jeffrey Hochman, a former American police sergeant
now living in Israel, for his invaluable help in acquiring intelligence
reports regarding terrorist groups.
Jim Kouri,
CPP, formerly Fifth Vice-President, is currently a Board Member of the
National Association of Chiefs of Police, an editor for
ConservativeBase.com, and he's a columnist for Examiner.com. In
addition, he's a blogger for the Cheyenne, Wyoming Fox News Radio
affiliate KGAB (www.kgab.com) and editor of Conservative Base Magazine (www.conservativebase.com). Kouri also serves as political advisor for Emmy and Golden Globe winning actor Michael Moriarty.
He's former chief at a New York City
housing project in Washington Heights nicknamed "Crack City" by
reporters covering the drug war in the 1980s. In addition, he served as
director of public safety at a New Jersey university and director of
security for several major organizations. He's also served on the
National Drug Task Force and trained police and security officers
throughout the country. Kouri writes for many police and security
magazines including Chief of Police, Police Times, The Narc Officer and
others. He's a news writer and columnist for AmericanDaily.Com,
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Kouri appears regularly as on-air commentator for over 100 TV and radio
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