http://counterterrorismblog.org/2008/07/steven_emersons_statement_for.php
 

Steven Emerson's Statement For Senate Committee Hearing on Extremism


By Andrew Cochran


Steven Emerson prepared the following written statement for the record for
today's Senate committee hearing on violent extremism, which features Maajid
<http://counterterrorismblog.org/2008/07/former_hizbuttahrir_leader_to.php>
Nawaz, former senior Hizbut official (see this
<http://blogs.cqpolitics.com/spytalk/2008/07/red-tape-nearly-stops-testimon.
html> article about the measures taken to bring him into the country this
week).

Steven Emerson 

Executive Director

Investigative Project on Terrorism

www.investigativeproject.org




Report on the Roots of Violent Islamist Extremism and Efforts to Counter It:
The Muslim Brotherhood

Introduction: 

Since the attacks of September 11, 2001, the security apparatuses of United
States have dedicated themselves to combating Islamist terrorism and
countering its roots. These efforts have been met with varying levels of
success. Operationally, the U.S. has been largely successful - thwarting
terrorist attacks against the homeland and hardening American targets
abroad. However, the primary driver of the violence - ideology - has not
been successfully countered or even sufficiently understood. The roots of
this ideology are diverse and diffuse, but the primary root of Sunni
Islamist violence in the modern era is the Muslim Brotherhood. 

The Muslim Brotherhood (al-Ikhwan al-Muslimun)[1] was founded as an Islamic
revivalist movement in the Egyptian town of Isma'iliyaa in March 1928 by
school teacher Hassan al-Banna (1906-1949).[2] The vast majority of Sunni
terrorist groups - including al Qaeda, Egyptian Islamic Jihad, Hamas, and
the Palestinian Islamic Jihad - are derived from the Muslim Brotherhood.

The Brotherhood's goal has been to promote the implementation of Shari'ah
(Islamic law derived from the Quran and the Sunnah).[3] Early in its
history, the Brotherhood focused on education and charity. It soon became
heavily involved in politics and remains a major player on the Egyptian
political scene, despite the fact that it is an illegal organization. The
movement has grown exponentially, from only 800 members in 1936, to over 2
million in 1948, to its current position as a pervasive international Sunni
Islamist movement, with covert and overt branches in over 70 countries. 

"I did not want to enter into competition with the other orders," al-Banna
once said. "And I did not want it to be confined to one group of Muslims or
one aspect of Islamic reform; rather I sought that it be a general message
based on learning, education, and jihad."[4] According to al-Banna, "It is
the nature of Islam to dominate, not to be dominated, to impose its law on
all nations and to extend its power to the entire planet."[5] That helps
explain the Muslim Brotherhood's motto: "Allah ghayatuna Al-rasul za'imuna.
Al-Qur-'an dusturuna. Al-jihad sabiluna. Al-mawt fi sabil Allah asma
amanina. Allah akbar, Allah akbar." ("God is our goal, the Quran is our
Constitution, the Prophet is our leader, struggle [jihad] is our way, and
death in the service of God is the loftiest of our wishes. God is great. God
is great.")[6] 

The Brotherhood has reached global status, wielding power and influence in
almost every state with a Muslim population. Additionally, the Brotherhood
maintains political parties in many Middle-Eastern and African countries,
including Jordan, Bahrain, Tunisia, Algeria, Jordan, Iraq, Syria, Sudan,
Somalia, Yemen, and even Israel. The Syrian Muslim Brotherhood attempted to
overthrow the Syrian government in the 1980s, but the revolt was crushed.
Aside from the Muslim Brotherhood in Israel proper, the terrorist
organization Hamas was founded as the Palestinian chapter of the Muslim
Brotherhood. In fact, Article II of the Hamas charter states:

The Islamic Resistance Movement is one of the wings of Moslem Brotherhood in
Palestine. Moslem Brotherhood Movement is a universal organization which
constitutes the largest Islamic movement in modern times. It is
characterized by its deep understanding, accurate comprehension and its
complete embrace of all Islamic concepts of all aspects of life, culture,
creed, politics, economics, education, society, justice and judgment, the
spreading of Islam, education, art, information, science of the occult and
conversion to Islam.[7]

Since its founding, the Muslim Brotherhood has openly sought to reassert
Islam through the establishment of Sunni Islamic governments that will rule
according to the strict and specific tenets of Shari'ah. To the Brotherhood,
this is the correct primary endeavor of human civilization, with the
ultimate goal being the unification of these regimes under the banner of the
Caliphate - or universal Islamic state.

According to al-Banna, the Caliphate must govern all lands that were at one
time under the control of Muslims. He stated:

We want the Islamic flag to be hoisted once again on high, fluttering in the
wind, in all those lands that have had the good fortune to harbor Islam for
a certain period of time and where the muzzein's call sounded in the takbirs
and the tahlis. Then fate decreed that the light of Islam be extinguished in
these lands that returned to unbelief. Thus Andalusia, Sicily, the Balkans,
the Italian coast, as well as the islands of the Mediterranean, are all of
them Muslim Mediterranean colonies and they must return to the Islamic fold.
The Mediterranean Sea and the Red Sea must once again become Muslim seas, as
they once were.[8]

Once that is accomplished, the Caliphate is to be expanded to cover the
entire globe, erasing national boundaries under the flag of Islam. This
concept was elucidated by the Brotherhood luminary, Sayyid Qutb, who wrote
in his seminal work, Milestones (1964), that Muslims are not merely obliged
to wage jihad in defense of Islamic lands, but must wage offensive jihad in
order to liberate the world from the servitude of man-made law and
governance.[9]

Organizational Structure:
The Muslim Brotherhood used activism, mass communication, and sophisticated
governance to build a large support base within the lower class and
professional elements of Egyptian society. By using existing support
networks built around mosques, welfare associations, and neighborhood
groups, the Brotherhood was able to educate and indoctrinate people in an
Islamic setting. The organization is headed by a Supreme Guide or Secretary
General and is assisted by a General Executive Bureau (Maktab al-Irshad),
and a constituent assembly known as the Shura Council. There have been six
Secretaries General of the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood,[10] which is widely
seen as the leading branch of the worldwide organization. 

Ideology: 
The Muslim Brotherhood seeks to restore the historical Caliphate and then
expand its authority over the entire world, dismantling all non-Islamic
governments. The Brotherhood aims to accomplish this through a combination
of warfare - both violent and political. 

The Muslim Brotherhood has provided the ideological model for almost all
modern Sunni Islamic terrorist groups. When discussing Hamas, Al Qaeda, and
Palestinian Islamic Jihad, Richard Clarke - the chief counterterrorism
adviser on the U.S. National Security Council under Presidents Clinton and
Bush - told a Senate committee in 2003 that "The common link here is the
extremist Muslim Brotherhood - all of these organizations are descendants of
the membership and ideology of the Muslim Brothers."[11]

The leadership of Al Qaeda, from Osama bin Laden to his deputy Ayman
al-Zawahiri and 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed all were influenced
by Muslim Brotherhood ideology.[12] In fact, al-Zawahiri was a member of the
Muslim Brotherhood as a young man, but he broke with them when his terrorist
career began. He later wrote a book called The Bitter Harvest in which he
condemned the Brotherhood for neglecting jihad in favor of participating in
elections.[13] 

The Brotherhood's ideology was formulated by its two main luminaries: its
founder, Hassan al-Banna - who was assassinated by agents of the Egyptian
government in 1949 - and Sayyid Qutb, hanged in 1966. 

Al-Banna once described the Brotherhood as, "a Salafiyya message, a Sunni
way, a Sufi truth, a political organization, an athletic group, a
cultural-educational union, an economic company, and a social idea."[14]
While studying in Cairo, al-Banna had become immersed in the writings of
Rashid Rida (1865-1935), Muhammad Abduh (1849-1905) and Jamal al-Din
al-Afghani (1839-1897), who formed the backbone of the Salafiyya
Movement.[15] Al-Banna agreed with their ideas that Islam provided the
solution to the afflictions plaguing Muslim society. Specifically, in
accordance with Salafism, he called for a return to what he perceived to be
true Islam. 

Salafism is an austere form of Islam within the Sunni sect that attempts to
return to what its adherents believe to be unadulterated Islam as practiced
by Muhammad and his companions. In order to achieve this, Salafists strip
out what they see as bida, or innovations, from the practice of Islam as it
has developed over the centuries. According to Salafists, only pure Islam
can solve the political, economic, social, domestic, and external issues of
the Muslim nation (ummah). As such, Muslim societies should be governed
according to Shari'ah.

While al-Banna drew almost exclusively on early Islamic doctrine in his
works, it is also important to understand the strong anti-colonialism
sentiments driving his ideology. Al-Banna was writing and working at a time
when European powers had colonized the Middle East.

Jihad, death, and martyrdom have been lauded throughout the history of the
Brotherhood, not only as a means to achieve the above goals, but as an end
unto itself. In his seminal work, The Society of Muslim Brothers, Robert P.
Mitchell the late University of Michigan Professor of Near Eastern History,
quotes and paraphrases al-Banna:

The certainty that jihad had this physical connotation is evidenced by the
relationship always implied between it and the possibility, even the
necessity, of death and martyrdom. Death, as an important end of jihad, was
extolled by Banna in a phrase which came to be a famous part of his legacy:
"the art of death" (fann al-mawt). "Death is art" (al-mawt-fann). The Qur'an
has commanded people to love death more than life. Unless "the philosophy of
the Qur'an on death" replaces "the love of life" which has consumed Muslims,
then they will reach naught. Victory can only come with the mastery of "the
art of death." In another place, Banna reminds his followers of a Prophetic
observation: "He who dies and has not fought [ghaza; literally: raided] and
was not resolved to fight, has died a jahiliyya [ignorance of divine
guidance] death." The movement cannot succeed, Banna insists, without this
dedicated and unqualified kind of jihad.[16]

Jihad is a central tenet in the Muslim Brotherhood ideology. In a booklet
entitled, "Jihad" and in other works, al-Banna clearly defines jihad as
violent warfare against non-Muslims to establish Islam as dominant across
the entire world. He wrote:

Jihad is an obligation from Allah on every Muslim and cannot be ignored nor
evaded. Allah has ascribed great importance to jihad and has made the reward
of the martyrs and fighters in His way a splendid one. Only those who have
acted similarly and who have modeled themselves upon the martyrs in their
performance of jihad can join them in this reward.[17]

To support his assertions about jihad, al-Banna quotes extensively from the
Quran, the Hadith, and great Islamic scholars. These quotes either define
jihad as fighting and/or emphasize the obligatory nature of jihad. On the
specific subject of "fighting with People of the Book [Jews and
Christians],"[18] al-Banna quotes Quran 9:29 - the infamous sword verse:

Fight against those who believe not in Allah nor in his Last Day, nor forbid
that which has been forbidden by Allah and His Messenger and those who
acknowledge not the Religion of Truth (i.e. Islam), from among the People of
the Book, until they pay the jizya [poll tax] with willing submission, and
feel themselves subdued.

Al-Banna quotes a Hanafi scholar:

Jihad linguistically means to exert one's utmost effort in word and action;
in the Sharee'ah it is the fighting of the unbelievers, and involves all
possible efforts that are necessary to dismantle the power of the enemies of
Islam including beating them, plundering their wealth, destroying their
places of worship and smashing their idols.[19]

Al-Banna continues:

Islam allows jihad and permits war until the following Qur'anic verse is
fulfilled:

"We will show them Our signs in the universe, and in their own selves, until
it becomes manifest to them that this (the Qur'an) is the truth" (Surat
al-Fussilat (41), ayah 53)[20]

In conclusion, al-Banna writes:

My brothers! The ummah [Islamic community] that knows how to die a noble and
honourable death is granted an exalted life in this world and eternal
felicity in the next. Degradation and dishonour are the results of the love
of this world and the fear of death. Therefore prepare for jihad and be the
lovers of death.[21]

To ensure that the Shari'ah would be the "the basis controlling the affairs
of state and society,"[22] al-Banna laid out a seven-step hierarchy of goals
to be implemented by the Brotherhood for the Islamization of society. The
first step is to educate and "form" the Muslim person. From there the Muslim
person would spread Islam and help "form" a Muslim family. Muslim families
would group together to form a Muslim society that would establish a Muslim
government. The government would then transform the state into an Islamic
one governed by Shari'ah, as voted by the Muslim society. This Islamic state
would then work to free "occupied" Muslim lands and unify them together
under one banner, from which Islam could be spread all over the world. 

As Mitchell explains, quoting original Brotherhood sources, these goals
would be carried out in three stages. Starting with "the first stage through
which all movements must pass, the stage of 'propaganda, communication, and
information.'"[23] In this stage, the Brotherhood would recruit and
indoctrinate core activists. The next stage consists of "formation,
selection, and preparation."[24] In this stage, the Brothers would endear
themselves to the population by creating charities, clinics, schools, and
other services. More importantly, they would prepare for the third and final
stage: the stage of "execution."[25] Of this stage, al-Banna stated:

At the time that there will be ready, Oh ye Muslim Brothers, three hundred
battalions, each one equipped spiritually with faith and belief,
intellectually with science and learning, and physically with training and
athletics, at that time you can demand of me to plunge with you through the
turbulent oceans and to rend the skies with you and to conquer with you
every obstinate tyrant. God willing, I will do it.[26]

Qutb and Jahiliyya
In addition to al-Banna's founding philosophy, the works of Sayyid Qutb
(1909-1966) also had a major impact on the ideology of the Muslim
Brotherhood. Beyond that, Qutb's books sent shockwaves throughout the entire
Islamic world. His most influential works were Fi zilal al-Qur'an ("In the
Shade of the Quran")[27] and Ma'alim fi al-Tariq ("Milestones"). Milestones
has come to be Qutb's most popular work and has influenced Islamic
extremists such as Ayman al-Zawahiri,[28] Dr. Abdullah Azzam, [29] and Osama
bin Laden.[30] 

Written while Qutb was in prison in Egypt,[31] Milestones' central thesis
was that the world had degraded into a state of ignorance (as existed before
the Prophethood of Mohammad) or jahiliyya.[32] He proposed that the
overthrow of apostate rulers and the establishment of Islamic societies
worldwide though offensive jihad is the only way to solve this state of
affairs. In addition to Hassan al-Banna's ideas, Qutb was heavily influenced
by the writings of Indian Islamist Sayyid Mawlana Abul Ala Maududi
(1903-1979)[33] and the medieval scholar Taqi ad-Din Ahmad Ibn Taymiyyah
(1263-1328). However, Qutb expanded on their ideas of jahiliyyah and jihad. 

As the 9/11 Commission Report found, Qutb came to the U.S. to study in the
late 1940s:

Qutb returned with an enormous loathing of Western society and history. He
dismissed Western achievements as entirely material, arguing that Western
society possesses "nothing that will satisfy its own conscience and justify
its existence." Three basic themes emerge from Qutb's writings. First, he
claimed that the world was beset with barbarism, licentiousness, and
unbelief (a condition he called jahiliyya, the religious term for the period
of ignorance prior to the revelations given to the Prophet Mohammed). Qutb
argued that humans can choose only between Islam and jahiliyya. Second, he
warned that more people, including Muslims, were attracted to jahiliyya and
its material comforts than to his view of Islam; jahiliyya could therefore
triumph over Islam. Third, no middle ground exists in what Qutb conceived as
a struggle between God and Satan. All Muslims-as he defined them-therefore
must take up arms in this fight. Any Muslim who rejects his ideas is just
one more nonbeliever worthy of destruction.[34]

While both Maududi and Ibn Taymiyyah used jahiliyya to describe some
contemporaries, Qutb described the whole of the Muslim community to be in
jahiliyya, as "the Muslim community has long ago vanished from
existence."[35] Since Arab secular leaders did not follow the Shari'ah, they
were considered to be in apostasy for violating God's sovereignty
(al-hakimiyya) on earth. In fact, "any place where the Shari'ah is not
enforced and where Islam is not dominant becomes the Abode of War
(Dar-ul-Harb)."[36] Jahiliyyah now included all states, whether ruled by
Muslims or not. 

To achieve his vision, Qutb advocated for the creation of a vanguard
(tali'a), whose members would model themselves after the Prophet Muhammad's
companions. This vanguard would then fight jahiliyya and its influences
through

methods of preaching (daw'a) and persuasion for reforming ideas and beliefs;
and it uses physical power and Jihad for abolishing the organizations and
authorities of the jahili system which prevents people from reforming their
ideas and beliefs but forces them to obey their erroneous ways and make them
serve human lords instead of the Almighty Lord.[37] 

According to his vision, the vanguard would not "compromise with the
practices of jahili society, nor can we be loyal to it," Qutb wrote. "Jahili
society, because of its jahili characteristics (described as evil and
corrupt), is not worthy to be compromised with."[38]

Qutb's jihad against Dar al-Harb (Abode of War),[39] was not only to protect
the Dar al-Islam (Abode of Islam) but also to enhance it and spread it
"throughout the earth to the whole of mankind."[40] Adherence to Shari'ah
would free mankind from the jahiliyyah influences. This war would not be
temporary, "but an eternal state, as truth and falsehood cannot co-exist on
this earth."[41] 

The Brotherhood Today: 
While many Muslim Brotherhood branches around the world claim to have
embraced democracy, the philosophies developed by Hassan al-Banna and Sayyid
Qutb still carry great influence within the organization. The Brotherhood
continues to be driven by al-Banna's belief that Islam is destined to
eventually dominate the world. The Brotherhood's declared principles remain
steadfast even today. According to their website, the Brotherhood seeks,
"the introduction of the Islamic Shari'ah as the basis controlling the
affairs of state and society" and "unification among the Islamic countries
and states.liberating them from foreign imperialism."[42] This includes
"spreading Islamic concepts that reject submission to humiliation, and
incite to fighting it" while "reviving the will of liberation and
independence in the people, and sowing the spirit of resistance."[43] 

Some have contended that there is a "moderate" wing to the Muslim
Brotherhood that can and should serve as a bridge between the Islamic world
and the West,[44] but this claim has been much disputed in academia and the
media. Proponents of this theory claim that beginning with Hassan al-Hudaybi
- al-Banna's immediate successor as Supreme Guide - the Brotherhood took a
moderate turn. 

Detractors[45] note the proponents' lack of background in the subject
matter. They also cite the Brotherhood's persistent support of violence,
under the rubric of resistance against occupation, and the greater
popularity of decidedly immoderate figures like Sayyid Qutb over al-Hudaybi
in the modern Brotherhood (Qutb's books can be found in a variety of
languages all around the world. The same cannot be said for al-Hudaybi's).
One scholar has questioned whether al-Hudaybi even penned the moderate
volume, Preachers, Not Judges, that has been credited to him, raising the
possibility that the Egyptian intelligence service played a role in its
production.[46]

In the fall of 2007, the Brotherhood issued its first official platform in
decades. The platform explains, in plain terms, the agenda of the
Brotherhood in Egypt and the Islamic world. It calls for: "Spreading and
deepening the true concepts of Islam as a complete methodology that
regulates all aspects of life." Here are some other notable excerpts from
the platform:

- "The intentions of the Islamic Shari'ah which aim for the realization of
the important aspects and needs and good achievements in the realm of
religion and spirit and the self and property and intellect and wealth
represent the ruling policy in the defining of the priorities of the goals
and strategic policies."
- "Islam has developed an exemplary model for a state."
- "The Islamic methodology aims to reform the state of limited capabilities
to make it into a strong Islamic state."

Whatever moderating stance the platform takes, in August 2004, the
Brotherhood issued a public appeal of support for those fighting coalition
forces in Iraq,[47] and the following month, spiritual guide Yusuf
al-Qaradawi issued a fatwa deeming it a religious duty for Muslims to fight
America in Iraq.[48] 

The Brotherhood also plays an active role today in promoting terrorism
against American interests. The Brotherhood actively supports Hamas to "face
the U.S. and Zionist strategy" in the Occupied Territories and supports
their "legitimate resistance."[49]

A November 2007 interview with Brotherhood Supreme Guide Muhammad Mahdi Akef
shows the group remains committed to violence against those it views as
occupiers.

Akef, the Supreme Guide, pledged 10,000 fighters for Palestine but said it
was up to a government to arm and train them. In the same interview, Akef
denied the existence of Al Qaeda:

"All these things are American Zionist tricks," Akef said. "The Shi'ites
attack one another, the Sunnis attack one another, and the Shi'ites attack
the Sunnis. But the Muslim Brotherhood has a principle, which I declared
from day one: The Shi'ites and Sunnis are brothers."
[...]
"I'd like to go back to the issue of Al-Qaeda. There is no such thing as
Al-Qaeda. This is an American invention, so that they will have something to
fight for..."

Interviewer: "What about Osama bin Laden, Al-Zawahiri, and the Islamic State
of Iraq?"

Akef: "When one man, or two or three, fight this tyrannical global
superpower - is it worth anything?"[50]

Interviewer: "Thousands have carried out attacks in the Iraq in the name of
Al-Qaeda..."

Akef: "That is a lie. Who says so?"

Interviewer: "They do."

That argument fits with a theory offered by Lt. Col. (res.) Jonathan
Dahoah-Halevi, senior researcher of the Middle East and radical Islam at the
Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs. He argues that Al Qaeda and the
Brotherhood share the same final goal - the establishment of a global
Caliphate - but the Brotherhood fears "that an Al-Qaeda attack against the
West at this time might hamper the Islamic movement's buildup and focus the
West on the threat implicit in Muslim communities."[51]

Thus, the Muslim Brotherhood and spiritual guide al-Qaradawi condemned al
Qaeda's actions in the aftermath of the attacks on the World Trade Center
and Pentagon.

However, in an interview on May 23, 2008 with the online Arabic news service
Elaph,[52] Akef seemed to change his approach. He was asked: "Regarding
resistance and jihad, do you consider Osama Bin Laden a terrorist or an
Islamic Mujahid?" In response, Akef said, "In all certainty, a mujahid, and
I have no doubt in his sincerity in resisting the occupation, close to Allah
on high."[53] He was then asked about his previous denial about the
existence of al Qaeda, and said, "The name is an American invention, but al
Qaeda as a concept and organization comes from tyranny and corruption."

The interviewer followed with this question: "So, do you support the
activities of al Qaeda, and to what extent?" Akef said, "Yes, I support its
activities against the occupiers, and not against the people."

Two days later, in another interview the Saudi-owned pan-Arab daily Al-Sharq
al-Awsat, Akef tried to clarify some of his comments about al Qaeda after
receiving criticism from religious and political leaders about his remarks
in the May 23 interview. He said:

We (the Brotherhood) have nothing to do with al Qaeda or Osama bin Laden...
we are against violence except when fighting the occupier...When he [bin
Laden] fights the occupier then he is a mujahid, and when he attacks
civilians, then this is rejected. The word al Qaeda is an American
illusion...Bin Laden has a thought ...his thought is based on violence, and
we do not approve of violence under any circumstances except one and that is
fighting an occupier. We have nothing to do with al Qaeda or Osama bin
Laden...we condemn any thought that leads to violence. When bin Laden fights
the occupier then he is a mujahid, when he attacks the innocent and citizens
then this is rejected.[54]

Al-Qaradawi's condemnation of 9/11 was based on his assertion that the
passengers in the plane and the people in the World Trade Center were
civilians. However, in an interview on Al-Jazeera in 2004, al Qaradawi
elaborated on the concept of the civilian:

When I was asked, I said that I forbid the killing of civilians. I said that
it is permitted to kill only those who fight. Islam forbids killing women,
youth, and so on. I said so openly, but I asked, "Who is a civilian?" When
engineers, laborers, and technicians enter [Iraq] with the American army,
are they considered civilians? Is a fighter only the one inside the tank or
also the one servicing it? I am speaking of the interpretation of the word
"civilian".[55]

By this logic, it can be argued that anyone providing support to a military
force in a Muslim country - whether it be a tank mechanic, a worker at a
defense factory, or even an American taxpayer - is no longer considered a
civilian.

In June 2008, Mohammad Habib, the first deputy chairman of the Muslim
Brotherhood, sat down with an interviewer from Al Ahrar, an Egyptian daily.
In the long interview, Habib spoke to the international Muslim Brotherhood:

Al-Ahrar: But what about the view that the Muslim Brotherhood will perish in
the coming twenty years?

Dr. Habib: On the contrary, I see that the future is ours, and we will reach
our aspirations. The group is gaining every day more territories and a depth
in the consciousness of the Egyptian people. Add to this, the group is not
confined to Egypt, it has offshoots in various countries all over the world,
it continuously grows, achieves more successes at all levels. 

Al-Ahrar: What about the international Muslim Brotherhood?

Dr. Habib: There are entities that exist in many countries all over the
world. These entities have the same ideology, principle and objectives but
they work in different circumstances and different contexts. So, it is
reasonable to have decentralization in action so that every entity works
according to its circumstances and according to the problems it is facing
and in their framework.
This actually achieves two objectives: First: It adds flexibility to
movement. Second: It focuses on action. Every entity in its own country can
issue its own decision because it is more aware of the problems,
circumstances and context in which they are working. However, there is some
centralization in some issues. These entities can have dialogue when there
is a common cause that faces Arabs or Muslims over their central issues like
the Palestinian cause. At that time, all of them must cooperate for it. I
want to confirm that while some see that Palestine caused rifts among the
Arabs, we see that this cause is the one for which all Arabs unite.[56]

The Brotherhood in the West
In the United States, the Brotherhood has had an active presence since the
1960s. They have been represented by various organizations such as the
Muslim Students' Association (MSA) founded in 1963, the North American
Islamic Trust (NAIT) 1971, the Islamic Society of North America (ISNA) 1981,
the International Institute of Islamic Thought (IIIT) 1981, the Islamic
Association for Palestine (IAP) 1981, the United Association for Studies and
Research (UASR) 1989, the American Muslim Council (AMC) 1990, the Muslim
American Society (MAS) 1992, the Muslim Arab Youth Association (MAYA), the
Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) 1994, and others. In fact,
nearly all prominent Islamic organizations in the United States are rooted
in the Muslim Brotherhood.

An internal Brotherhood memorandum, released during the terror-support trial
of the Holy Land Foundation for Relief and Development (HLF) trial in July
2007 shows that the Brotherhood's jihad can take more subtle and long range
approaches. Dated to May 22, 1991, the memo states:

The Ikhwan must understand that their work in America is a kind of grand
Jihad in eliminating and destroying the Western civilization from within and
'sabotaging' its miserable house by their hands and the hands of the
believers so that it is eliminated and God's religion is made victorious
over all other religions.[57]

That theme was picked up four years later by a Yusuf al-Qaradawi, a Muslim
Brotherhood spiritual leader attending a conference in Toledo, Ohio.
Al-Qaradawi has been offered the post of General Guide of the Muslim
Brotherhood twice, but has turned it down in favor of building and managing
several Islamist organizations in the West and the Middle East associated
with the Brotherhood.[58] At the Ohio conference hosted by the Muslim Arab
Youth Association (MAYA), he said, "Our brothers in Hamas, in Palestine, the
Islamic resistance, the Islamic Jihad, after all the rest have given up and
despaired, the movement of the Jihad brings us back to our faith."[59]

He later added:

What remains, then, is to conquer Rome. The second part of the omen. "The
city of Hiraq [once emperor of Constantinople] will be conquered first," so
what remains is to conquer Rome. This means that Islam will come back to
Europe for the third time, after it was expelled from it twice. Conquest
through Da'wa [proselytizing], that is what we hope for. We will conquer
Europe, we will conquer America! Not through sword but through Da'wa.
.

But the balance of power will change, and this is what is told in the Hadith
of Ibn-Omar and the Hadith of Abu-Hurairah: "You shall continue to fight the
Jews and they will fight you, until the Muslims will kill them. And the Jew
will hide behind the stone and the tree, and the stone and the tree will
say: 'Oh servant of Allah, Oh Muslim, this is a Jew behind me. Come and kill
him!' The resurrection will not come before this happens." This is a text
from the good omens in which we believe.[60]

Prominent Brotherhood organizations in Europe include the Forum of European
Muslim Youth and Student Organizations, the Muslim Association of Britain,
the European Council for Fatwa and Research, the Islamische Gemeinschaft
Deutschland (IGD), and the Union des Organisations Islamiques de France
(UOIF). 

Muslim Brotherhood-affiliated organizations in the West have successfully,
but disingenuously, positioned themselves as gatekeepers to the
Muslim-American community. The underlying goal of these groups is to
redefine moderate Islam and to oversee a separation between Western Muslim
communities and their secular host societies in order to promote Islamism
reinforce loyalty to the global ummah. Inherent in these goals is a strategy
to weaken Western resistance to Islamism. Presenting themselves as the
moderate voices of Islam, they have created a narrative to their community
that the US government's campaign against terrorism is, rather, a
generalized "war against Islam" that must be shunned, discouraged, and
monitored. This characterization serves to demonize the efforts of the U.S.
government and the West, which ultimately serves to radicalize and alienate
Western Muslims.

To a large degree, the narrative propagated by these organizations is a
corollary of the primary message of radical Islam at large: That there is a
conspiracy by the West to subjugate Islam. This self-victimization fuels
paranoia that Muslims are being selectively targeted for racist reasons,
because of "special interests," or due to anti-Muslim bias in Western
foreign policy. This, in turn, inflames self-alienation and degrades any
positive connections between Western Muslim communities and their host
state. The foundation and histories of these intertwined organizations in
America, as well as their actions in the West, should be examined in an
effort to shed a light on the radicalizing effect on the local Muslim
communities.

Over the last forty years, the movement that began in 1963 with the MSA has
transformed itself into a network of like-minded organizations most commonly
identified by a wide array of acronyms. ISNA grew directly out of MSA.
According to Muslim activist Ihsan Bagby who has long been involved in ISNA
leadership, "ISNA has always sought inspiration and guidance from the
intellectual leaders of the modern Islamic movement (Maududi, Sayyid Qutb,
Hasan al-Banna, etc.)" 

NAIT serves as the financial arm of ISNA and holds the deeds to numerous
ideologically compatible mosques and Islamic institutions. Groups such as
ISNA attract Muslims of all backgrounds to their conferences. Yet, the
leadership has remained committed to uphold the values of conservative
Islamism, which looks to Islamicize society within the confines of a very
specific interpretation. These organizations have been supported by funding
from the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.

In 1993, there was a meeting of the Palestine Committee of the Muslim
Brotherhood in North America on how to advance the cause of Hamas. As a
result of those discussions, three officials from the pro-Hamas, Islamic
Association for Palestine (IAP) founded the Council of American-Islamic
Relations (CAIR). CAIR's stated mission is "to enhance understanding of
Islam, encourage dialogue, protect civil liberties, empower American
Muslims, and build coalitions that promote justice and mutual
understanding." By observing the Washington, D.C. based leadership of CAIR,
and some of CAIR's local branch leaders throughout the United States for
twelve-years, it has become clear that CAIR has branched out beyond their
stated mission. CAIR resources have consistently been utilized to block any
action against radicalism. Since its inception, CAIR has intimidated and
silenced critics - even fellow Muslims - while spreading disinformation
about any who attempt to oppose or compete with them. Personal attacks on
reporters, government officials and others who address issues of radical
Islamism are dispatched in lieu of responding substantively to allegations.
Almost every time there is a terrorist prosecution or an asset forfeiture of
an Islamic charity linked to a terrorist group, CAIR, and other groups such
as the Muslim American Society (MAS) - an organization that has been
identified by a top Muslim Brotherhood leader as one of their own - condemns
it as a fishing expedition meant to demonize Muslims. CAIR does indeed also
work to protect the civil liberties of Muslims, an important endeavor, but
does so in a way that projects an "us vs. them" mentality to American
Muslims, purposefully fomenting isolation from the rest of the country.

Despite the known ties of the above mentioned organizations to the Muslim
Brotherhood, the U.S. government insists on engaging in "outreach" and
dialogue with them. This has led to an almost comical situation in which one
side of the Department of Justice labels CAIR as an unindicted coconspirator
in what has been alleged to be the biggest case of terrorist financing in
the history of the Republic while the other side of the Department of
Justice meets with CAIR officials and attends CAIR conferences in an effort
to perform outreach with the Muslim-American community. 

While it can be argued that outreach with the Muslim-American community is a
necessary component to a successful counterterrorism strategy, there is
absolutely no reason that this outreach has to go through organizations that
ascribe to the ideology of the Muslim Brotherhood. Alternatively, outreach
can be performed at the grassroots level and through individuals respected
in the Muslim-American community, like doctors and local businessmen,
instead of through groups such as CAIR, ISNA, and MAS. 

Muslim voices which promote accountability, democracy, human rights and
freedoms must be elevated and embraced. Short of that, organizations,
individuals and institutions in the West and in the Muslim world that are
knee-jerk anti-American, and pro-terrorist, or, at a minimum, apologists for
terrorism, should be denounced and avoided. The U.S. should not seek to
embrace or promote the "least worst option" for lack of a better solution.
All organizations with ties to the Muslim Brotherhood need to be treated for
what they are: fascistic, paternalistic organizations that seek the return
of the Caliphate, and organizations that are apologists for radical Islam
and terrorism, and are not prepared to be responsible actors in democratic
systems, and will not support the future pluralistic liberal institutions
which much be built throughout the Muslim world in order to strengthen the
promotion of democracy.

Rather than countering the ideology promoted by the Muslim Brotherhood and
the terrorist groups that it has spawned, the U.S. has empowered the Muslim
Brotherhood and, by extension, its uncompromising message by reaching out to
the group itself in a poorly targeted effort to find allies in the Muslim
world. Domestically, government agencies, departments, and officials at the
federal, state, and local levels have unwittingly empowered front groups of
the Muslim Brotherhood by making them the dominant focus of their outreach
to the Muslim community and thus anointing groups with an extremist bent and
a documented ulterior agenda as the gatekeepers to the Muslim-American
community. This policy, which continues to this day despite the criminal
connections of many of these organizations, can only end in disaster for the
interest of the United States both domestically and abroad.

Current and future U.S. outreach efforts need to be viewed through this
lens, as the promotion and legitimacy of dangerous elements needs to be
avoided at all costs, lest we allow short term and short sighted efforts of
outreach, that mostly serve our goals only for the sake of appearances, yet
do much damage to legitimate and genuine moderates by promoting elements
which seek to exclude moderate voices, trump the more important long term
needs and goals of the region, and U.S. national security. 

The Muslim Brotherhood movement should be considered a strategic enemy of
the United States. It should be designated as a foreign power and a threat,
from a counterintelligence point-of-view, to the national security of the
United States. The Muslim Brotherhood has stated clearly that it considers
the United States to be its enemy, despite claims by some commentators that
there exists a moderate wing of the movement that somehow does not support
the movement's core goals and ideology.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------
----

[1] They are also known as the Muslim Brothers, The Brothers (al-Ikhwan), or
the Society of Muslim Brothers (Jama'at al-Ikhwan al-Muslimun). 

[2] Born in Mahmoudiyya, Egypt, Hassan al-Banna was the son of the prominent
Imam Sheikh Ahmad al-Banna. He studied at Al-Ahzar University and joined a
Sufi order there. He then moved to Cairo as a school teacher in 1932
establishing the Muslim Brotherhood branch there. Al-Banna was assassinated
by the Egyptian government on February 12th, 1949 as part of an Egyptian
government crackdown on the Brotherhood. 

[3] Sharia'h is the body of Islamic religious law. It is primarily based on
the Quran and the Sunnah.

[4] Hassan al-Banna, quoted in, Richard P. Mitchell, The Society of Muslim
Brothers (New York City: Oxford University Press, 1969), p. 207.

[5] Fereydoun Hoveryda, The Broken Crescent, (Westport, CT: Praegar
Publishers, 2002), p. 56. 

[6] Richard P. Mitchell, The Society of Muslim Brothers (New York City:
Oxford University Press, 1969), p. 193-4.

[7] "The Covenant of the Islamic Resistance Movement," The Avalon Project at
Yale Law School, August 18, 1988,
http://www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/mideast/hamas.htm (Accessed June 9, 2008).

[8] Hassan al-Banna, quoted in: Caroline Fourest, Brother Tariq: The
Doublespeak of Tariq Ramadan (Encounter Books, 2008), p. 19.

[9] Sayyid Qutb, Milestones.

[10] The six Secretaries General of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt are:
Hassan al-Banna (1928-1949), Hassan Ismai'l al-Hudaybi (1951-1973), Omar
al-Telmesany (1976-1986), Muhammed Hamid Abu al-Nasr (1986-1996), Mustafa
Mashour (1996-2002), Ma'amun al-Hodeiby (2002-2004), and current leader
Mohammed Mahdi Akef. 

[11] Statement of Richard A. Clarke before the U.S. Senate Banking
Committee, October 22, 2003.

[12] Lt. Col. (res.) Jonathan Dahoah-Halevi, "The Muslim Brotherhood: A
Moderate Islamic Alternative to al-Qaeda or a Partner in Global Jihad?"
Jerusalem Viewpoints, Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs, November 1, 2007.

[13] Raymond Ibrahim, The Al Qaeda Reader (Doubleday: New York, 2007), p.
116.

[14] Hassan al-Banna, quoted in, Mitchell, Society of Muslim Brothers, p.
14.

[15] The term Salafiyyah comes from the phrase as-salaf as-saliheen or
"pious predecessors" of early the Muslim community, referring primarily to
Muhammad's companions (sahaba). 

[16] Mitchell, Society of Muslim Brothers, p. 207.

[17] Hassan al-Banna, "Jihad,"
http://www.youngmuslims.ca/online_library/books/jihad/ (Accessed June 9,
2008). 

[18] Al-Banna, "Jihad."

[19] Ibid.

[20] Ibid.

[21] Ibid.

[22] "The Principles of the Muslim Brotherhood" IkhwanWeb.Org, Official
Muslim Brotherhood Website (Cached),
http://64.233.169.104/search?q=cache:2_Lj7AHyW7oJ:www.muslimbrotherhood.co.u
k/Home.asp%3FID%3D4584%26Lang%3DE%26Press%3DShow%26System%3DPressR%26zPage%3
DSystems+%22the+basis+controlling+the+affairs+of+state+and+society%22+iSLAMI
C&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=9&gl=us 

[23] Mitchell, Society of Muslim Brothers, p. 13.

[24] Risalat Al-Mu'tamar al-khamis (Message of the Fifth Congress), quoted
in Mitchell, Society of Muslim Brothers, p. 14.

[25] Ibid, 15. 

[26] Ibid.

[27] This work, written while Qutb was languishing in an Egyptian jail cell
(1954-1964), is a 30 volume commentary (tafsir) on the Quran. A highly
popular work, Qutb in his commentary advocates for shari'ah to be
implemented in all Muslim societies. It also contains significant amounts of
vitriol directed primarily at Jews. 

[28] Zawahiri, also a member of the Brotherhood since the age of fourteen
(1965) became familiar with Qutb's writings while he was in Saudi Arabia.
There he came under the tutelage of Sayyid's brother Muhammad Qutb, who fled
Egypt in 1972 and began teaching his brother's philosophy while a professor
at King Abdel-Aziz University in Jeddah and the Umm al-Qura University in
Mecca. Osama Bin Laden also reportedly attended Muhammad Qutb's lectures
there too. 

17 Jim Landers, "Muslim Extremists Justify Violence on Way to Restoring
Divine Law," Dallas Morning News, November 3, 2001. 

[30] The 9/11 Commission Report: Final Report of the National Commission on
Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States 

[31] Qutb spent ten years in prison from 1954 to 1964 after being arrested
for being a member of the Brotherhood (he joined in 1953) when Nasser
outlawed the organization in 1954. Milestones was published when Qutb
emerged from prison in 1965, even though Qutb was arrested and jailed again
for preaching for an Islamic state in Egypt. He was executed on August 29th,
1966 with excerpts from Milestones used against him during his trial. After
his execution he became a "Martyr" (Shaheed) to his followers. 

[32] Jahiliyyah can be loosely translated as a state of "ignorance of divine
guidance" referring to the conditions in pre-Islamic Arabian society before
the revelations of the Quran by Allah and the Prophet Muhammad. 

[33] Also written as Maududi, Maudoodi, or Mawdudi. He founded the Pakistani
Islamic group Jamaat-e-Islami in 1941 with the goal of establishing an
Islamic state in South Asia. He headed the party until 1973 and was well
known for his writings on Islam. 

[34] National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States, The
9/11 Commission Report: Final Report of the National Commission on Terrorist
Attacks Upon the United States (New York: Norton, 2004), p. 51.

[35] Qutb, Sayyid. Milestones. (Syria: Damascus, Dar al-Ilm), 9. 

[36] Ibid., 124. 

[37] Ibid., 55. 

[38] Ibid., 21. 

[39] The Dar al-Harb (Abode of War) traditionally is considered to be
countries and places where Islam is not predominant or areas not ruled by
Muslims. 

[40] Milestones, 72. 

[41] Ibid., 66. 

[42] "The Principles of the Muslim Brotherhood" IkhwanWeb.Org, Official
Muslim Brotherhood Website (Cached),
http://64.233.169.104/search?q=cache:2_Lj7AHyW7oJ:www.muslimbrotherhood.co.u
k/Home.asp%3FID%3D4584%26Lang%3DE%26Press%3DShow%26System%3DPressR%26zPage%3
DSystems+%22the+basis+controlling+the+affairs+of+state+and+society%22+iSLAMI
C&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=9&gl=us (Accessed June 10, 2008). 

[43] "Reading into The Muslim Brotherhood's Documents," IkhwanWeb.Org,
Official Muslim Brotherhood Website, June 13, 2007,
http://www.ikhwanweb.org/Article.asp?ID=818&LevelID=2&SectionID=116
(Accessed May 29, 2008).

[44] Robert S. Leiken and Steven Brooke, "The Moderate Muslim Brotherhood,"
Foreign Affairs, March-April 2007.

[45] Douglas Farah, Youssef Ibrahim, Patrick Poole, and others.

[46] Barbara Zollner, "Prison Talk: The Muslim Brotherhood's Internal
Struggle During Gamal Abdel Nasser's Persecution, 1954-1971" (International
Journal of Muddle East Studies, 39, 2007), pp. 411-433.

[47] "The Muslim Brotherhood Movement in Support of Fighting Americans
Forces in Iraq," MEMRI Special Dispatch Series, September 3, 2004.

[48] "Cleric Says It's Right to Fight U.S. Civilians in Iraq," Reuters,
September 2, 2004.

[49] "Reading into The Muslim Brotherhood's Documents," IkhwanWeb.Org,
Official Muslim Brotherhood Website, June 13, 2007,
http://www.ikhwanweb.org/Article.asp?ID=818&LevelID=2&SectionID=116
(Accessed May 29, 2008).

[50] Special Dispatch - Jihad & Terrorism Studies Project, MEMRI TV Project,
December 18, 2007.

[51] Lt. Col. (res.) Jonathan Dahoah-Halevi, "The Muslim Brotherhood: A
Moderate Islamic Alternative to al-Qaeda or a Partner in Global Jihad?"
Jerusalem Viewpoints, Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs, November 1, 2007.

[52] Interview with Mohammad Akef, Elaph, May 23, 2008,
http://65.17.227.80/ElaphWeb/AkhbarKhasa/2008/5/332823.htm (Accessed May 28,
2008).

[53] Ibid.

[54] Abd-al-Sattar Ibrahim, "Akif tells Al-Sharq al-Awsat: The Brotherhood
is Against Al-Qa'idah Organization Targeting Civilians; Bin Ladin's Thought
is Based on Violence" Al-Sharq al-Awsat, May 25, 2008, FROM: BBC Monitoring
International Reports.

[55] Yusuf al-Qaradawi, Al-Jazeera, November 20, 2004.

[56] "Interview with MB Deputy Chairman in Al Ahrar Daily," IkhwanWeb.Org,
Official Muslim Brotherhood Website, June 16, 2008,
http://www.ikhwanweb.com/Article.asp?ID=17267&LevelID=1&SectionID=0
(Accessed June 17, 2008).

[57] U.S. v. Holy Land Foundation, 04-CR-240 Government exhibit 3-85.

[58] Mona El-Ghobashy, "The Metamorphosis of the Egyptian Muslim Brothers,"
International Journal of Middle East Studies (Cambridge University Press,
2005) p. 385.

[59] Yusuf al-Qaradawi, MAYA Conference, 1995, Toledo, Ohio.

[60] Ibid.


July 10, 2008 10:00 AM    Print
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