http://www.nationalreview.com/articles/print/258419

 

Andrew C. McCarthy 

 


January 31, 2011 4:00 A.M.

Fear the Muslim Brotherhood 

At the Daily Beast, Bruce Riedel has posted
<http://www.thedailybeast.com/blogs-and-stories/2011-01-27/muslim-brotherhoo
d-could-win-in-egypt-protests-and-why-obama-shouldnt-worry/>  an essay
called “Don’t fear Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood,” the classic,
conventional-wisdom response to the crisis in Egypt. The Muslim Brotherhood
is just fine, he’d have you believe, no need to worry. After all, the
Brothers have even renounced violence!

One might wonder how an organization can be thought to have renounced
violence when it has inspired more jihadists than any other, and when its
Palestinian branch, the Islamic Resistance Movement, is probably more
familiar to you by the name Hamas — a terrorist organization committed by
charter to the violent destruction of Israel. Indeed, in recent years, the
Brotherhood (a.k.a., the Ikhwan) has enthusiastically praised jihad and even
applauded — albeit in more muted tones — Osama bin Laden. None of that,
though, is an obstacle for Mr. Riedel, a former CIA officer who is now a
Brookings scholar and Obama administration national-security adviser.
Following the template the progressive (and bipartisan) foreign-policy
establishment has been sculpting for years, his “no worries” conclusion is
woven from a laughably incomplete history of the Ikhwan.

By his account, Brotherhood founder Hassan al-Banna “preached a
fundamentalist Islamism and advocated the creation of an Islamic Egypt, but
he was also open to importing techniques of political organization and
propaganda from Europe that rapidly made the Brotherhood a fixture in
Egyptian politics.” What this omits, as I recount in
<http://www.amazon.com/Grand-Jihad-Islam-Sabotage-America/dp/1594033773/ref=
sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1296250238&sr=1-1> The Grand Jihad, is that
terrorism and paramilitary training were core parts of Banna’s program. It
is by leveraging the resulting atmosphere of intimidation that the
Brotherhood’s “politics” have achieved success. The Ikhwan’s activist
organizations follow the same program in the United States, where they enjoy
outsize political influence because of the terrorist onslaught.

Banna was a practical revolutionary. On the one hand, he instructed his
votaries to prepare for violence. They had to understand that, in the end —
when the time was right, when the Brotherhood was finally strong enough that
violent attacks would more likely achieve Ikhwan objectives than provoke
crippling blowback — violence would surely be necessary to complete the
revolution (meaning, to institute sharia, Islam’s legal-political
framework). Meanwhile, on the other hand, he taught that the Brothers should
take whatever they could get from the regime, the political system, the
legal system, and the culture. He shrewdly realized that, if the Brothers
did not overplay their hand, if they duped the media, the intelligentsia,
and the public into seeing them as fighters for social justice, these
institutions would be apt to make substantial concessions. Appeasement, he
knew, is often a society’s first response to a threat it does not wish to
believe is existential.

Here’s Riedel again:

By World War 2, [the Brotherhood] became more violent in its opposition to
the British and the British-dominated monarchy, sponsoring assassinations
and mass violence. After the army seized power in 1952, [the Brotherhood]
briefly flirted with supporting Gamal Abdel Nasser’s government but then
moved into opposition. Nasser ruthlessly suppressed it.

This history is selective to the point of parody. The Brotherhood did not
suddenly become violent (or “more violent”) during World War II. It was
violent from its origins two decades earlier. This fact — along with
Egyptian Islamic society’s deep antipathy toward the West and its attraction
to the Nazis’ virulent anti-Semitism — is what gradually beat European
powers, especially Britain, into withdrawal.

Banna himself was killed in 1949, during the Brotherhood’s revolt against
the British-backed monarchy. Thereafter, the Brotherhood did not wait until
after the Free Officers Movement seized power to flirt with Nasser. They
were part of the coup, Nasser having personally lobbied Sayyid Qutb (the
most significant Ikhwan figure after Banna’s death) for an alliance.

Omitting this detail helps Riedel whitewash the Brothers’ complicity in what
befell them. The Ikhwan did not seamlessly “move into the opposition” once
Nasser came to power. First, it deemed itself double-crossed by Nasser, who
had wooed the Brotherhood into the coup by signaling sympathy for its
Islamist agenda but then, once in power, declined to implement elements of
sharia. Furthermore, Nasser did not just wake up one day and begin
“ruthlessly suppressing” the Brotherhood; the Ikhwan tried to assassinate
him. It was at that point, when the Islamist coup attempt against the new
regime failed, that the strongman cracked down relentlessly.

Riedel next asserts: “Nasser and his successors, Anwar Sadat and Mubarak,
have alternatively repressed and demonized the Brotherhood or tolerated it
as an anti-communist and right-wing opposition.” This, too, is hopelessly
wrong and incomplete. To begin with, regardless of how obdurately
progressives repeat the claim, Islamism is not a right-wing movement. The
Brotherhood’s is a revolutionary program, the political and economic
components of which are essentially socialist. It is no accident that
Islamists in America are among the staunchest supporters of Obamacare and
other redistributionist elements of the Obama agenda. In his Social Justice
in Islam, Qutb concludes that Marx’s system is far superior to capitalism,
which Islamists deplore. Communism, he argues, faltered principally in its
rigid economic determinism, thus missing the spiritual components of Allah’s
totalitarian plan — though Qutb compared it favorably to Christianity, which
he saw as insufficiently attentive to earthly concerns.

Nasser’s persecution of the Ikhwan led many of its leading figures to flee
Egypt for Saudi Arabia, where the Brothers were welcomed because they were
perceived, quite correctly, as urbane but stalwart jihadists who would
greatly benefit a backwards society — especially its education system (Banna
and Qutb were both academics, and the Brotherhood teemed with professionals
trained in many disciplines). The toxic mix of Saudi billions and
Brotherhood ideology — the marriage of Saudi Wahhabism and Brotherhood
Salafism — created the modern Islamist movement and inspired many of the
terrorist organizations (including al-Qaeda) and other Islamist agitators by
which we are confronted today. That Wahhabism and Salafism are
fundamentalist doctrines does not make them right-wing. In fact, Islamism is
in a virulent historical phase, and is a far more daunting challenge to the
West than it was a half-century ago, precisely because its lavishly funded
extremism has overwhelmed the conservative constraints of Arab culture.

Sadat pivoted away from his predecessor’s immersion of Egypt into the Soviet
orbit. He did indeed invite the Ikhwan to return home, as Riedel indicates.
Sadat knew the Brothers were bad news, but — much like today’s geopolitical
big thinkers — he hubristically believed he could control the damage,
betting that the Ikhwan would be more a thorn in the side of the jilted
Nasserite Communists than a nuisance for the successor regime. Riedel’s
readers may not appreciate what a naïve wager that was, since he fails to
mention that the Brotherhood eventually murdered Sadat in a 1981 coup
attempt — in accordance with a fatwa issued by Sheikh Omar Abdel Rahman
(later of World Trade Center–bombing fame) after Sadat made peace with the
hated “Zionist entity.”

Sadat’s successor, Mubarak, is undeniably a tyrant who has kept emergency
powers in force through the three decades since Sadat’s assassination. Any
fair assessment, however, must concede that he has had his reasons. Egypt is
not just plagued by economic stagnation and inequality; it has been
brutalized by jihadist terror. It would be fair enough — though by no means
completely convincing — for Riedel and others to argue that Mubarak’s reign
has been overkill. It makes no sense, though, to ignore both the reason
emergency powers were instituted in the first place and the myriad excuses
jihadists have given Mubarak to maintain them.

On that score, the Brotherhood seems comparatively moderate, if only because
the most horrific atrocities have been committed by two even worse terrorist
organizations — Abdel Rahman’s Gamaat al Islamia and Ayman al-Zawahiri’s
Islamic Jihad, both precursors to al-Qaeda (in which Zawahiri is bin Laden’s
deputy). Of course, Zawahiri — like bin Laden and such al-Qaeda chieftains
as 9/11 architect Khalid Sheikh Mohammed — came of age as a Muslim Brother,
and Abdel Rahman notoriously had a close working relationship with the
Ikhwan. But even if we close our eyes to the Ikhwan’s contributions to
terrorist violence in Egypt since its attempted forcible overthrow of the
regime in 1981, we must not overlook the sophisticated game the Ikhwan plays
when it comes to terrorism.

Occasionally, the Brotherhood condemns terrorist attacks, but not because it
regards terrorist violence as wrong per se. Instead, attacks are criticized
either as situationally condemnable (al-Qaeda’s 1998 embassy bombings,
though directed at American interests, killed many Muslims and were not
supported by an authoritative fatwa), or as counterproductive (the 9/11
attacks provoked a backlash that resulted in the invasion and occupation of
Muslim countries, the killing of many Muslims, and severe setbacks to the
cause of spreading Islam). Yet, on other occasions, particularly in the Arab
press, the Ikhwan embraces violence — fueling Hamas and endorsing the murder
of Americans in Iraq.

In addition, the Brotherhood even continues to lionize Osama bin Laden. In
2008, for example, “Supreme Guide” Muhammad Mahdi Akef lauded
<http://www.investigativeproject.org/685/muslim-brotherhood-friend-or-foe-ne
w-ipt-profile>  al-Qaeda’s emir, saying that bin Laden is not a terrorist at
all but a “mujahid,” a term of honor for a jihad warrior. The Supreme Guide
had “no doubt” about bin Laden’s “sincerity in resisting the occupation,” a
point on which he proclaimed bin Laden “close to Allah on high.” Yes, Akef
said, the Brotherhood opposed the killing of “civilians” — and note that, in
Brotherhood ideology, one who assists “occupiers” or is deemed to oppose
Islam is not a civilian. But Akef affirmed the Brotherhood’s support for
al-Qaeda’s “activities against the occupiers.”

By this point, the Ikhwan’s terror cheerleading should surprise no one — no
more than we should be surprised when the Brotherhood’s sharia compass,
Sheikh Yusuf Qaradawi, approves suicide bombings or unleashes rioting over
mere cartoons; no more than when the Ikhwan’s Hamas faction reaffirms its
foundational pledge to destroy Israel. Still, just in case it is not obvious
enough that the “Brotherhood renounces violence” canard is just that, a
canard, consider Akef’s explicit call
<http://www.investigativeproject.org/1161/muslim-brotherhood-leader-encourag
es>  for jihad in Egypt just two years ago, saying that the time “requires
the raising of the young people on the basis of the principles of jihad so
as to create mujahideen [there’s that word again] who love to die as much as
others love to live, and who can perform their duty towards their God,
themselves, and their homeland.” That leitmotif — We love death more than
you love life — has been a staple of every jihadist from bin Laden through
Maj. Nidal Hasan, the Fort Hood killer.

To this day, the Brotherhood’s motto remains, “Allah is our objective, the
Prophet is our leader, the Koran is our law, Jihad is our way, and dying in
the way of Allah is our highest hope. Allahu akbar!” Still, our
see-no-Islamic-evil foreign-policy establishment blathers on about the
Brotherhood’s purported renunciation of violence — and never you mind that,
with or without violence, its commitment is, as Qaradawi puts it, to
“conquer America” and “conquer Europe.” It is necessary to whitewash the
Ikhwan’s brutal legacy and its tyrannical designs in order to fit it into
the experts’ paradigm: history for simpletons. This substitute for thinking
holds that, as Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice famously told an Egyptian
audience in 2005, America has too often opted for stability rather than
freedom. As a result, the story goes, our nation has chosen to support
dictators when we should have been supporting  . . .  never mind that.

But we have to mind that. History is rarely a Manichean contest between good
and evil. It’s not a choice between the pro-Western shah and Iranian
freedom, but between the shah and Khomeini’s ruthless Islamist revolution.
It’s not a choice between the pro-Western Musharraf and Pakistani freedom,
but between Musharraf and a tense alliance of kleptocratic socialists and
Islamists. Back in the 1940s, it was not a choice between the British-backed
monarchy and Egyptian freedom, but between the monarchy and a conglomeration
of Nasserite pan-Arab socialists, Soviet Communists, and Brotherhood
Islamists. And today, the choice is not between the pro-American Mubarak and
Egyptian freedom; it is a question of whether to offer tepid support to a
pro-American dictator or encourage swift transition to a different kind of
tyranny — one certain to be a lot worse for us, for the West at large, and
for our Israeli ally: the Muslim Brotherhood tempered only, if at all, by
Mohamed ElBaradei, an anti-American leftist who willfully abetted Iran’s
nuclear ambitions while running the International Atomic Energy Agency.

History is not a quest for freedom. This is particularly true in the Islamic
ummah, where the concept of freedom is not reasoned self-determination, as
in the West, but nearly the opposite: perfect submission to Allah’s
representative on earth, the Islamic state. Coupled with a Western myopia
that elevates democratic forms over the culture of liberty, the failure to
heed this truth has, in just the past few years, put Hamas in charge of
Gaza, positioned Hezbollah to topple the Lebanese government, and presented
Islamists with Kosovo — an enduring sign that, where Islam is concerned, the
West can be counted on to back away even from the fundamental principle that
a sovereign nation’s territorial integrity is inviolable.

The Obama administration has courted Egyptian Islamists from the start. It
invited the Muslim Brotherhood to the president’s 2009 Cairo speech, even
though the organization is officially banned in Egypt. It has rolled out the
red carpet to the Brotherhood’s Islamist infrastructure in the U.S. — CAIR,
the Muslim American Society, the Islamic Society of North America, the
Ground Zero mosque activists — even though many of them have a documented
history of Hamas support. To be sure, the current administration has not
been singular in this regard. The courting of Ikhwan-allied Islamists has
been a bipartisan project since the early 1990s, and elements of the
intelligence community and the State Department have long agitated for a
license to cultivate the Brotherhood overtly. They think what Anwar Sadat
thought: Hey, we can work with these guys.

There is a very good chance we are about to reap what they’ve sown. We ought
to be very afraid.

—  Andrew C. McCarthy, a senior fellow at the National Review Institute, is
the author, most recently, of The Grand Jihad: How Islam and the Left
Sabotage America
<http://www.nationalreview.com/redirect/amazon.p?j=1594033773> .

 



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