Why does the BHO administration defend the Muslim Brotherhood?
 
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Commentary
 
Why Does the Muslim Brotherhood Attack Churches?
 
_Jonathan S. Tobin_ 
(http://www.commentarymagazine.com/author/jonathan-s-tobin/)  | 
_@tobincommentary_ (http://twitter.com/tobincommentary)  08.14.2013 


 
 
The world is focusing much of its sympathy today on the members of the 
Muslim  Brotherhood that were gunned down in the streets of Cairo by armed 
police and  soldiers seeking to end the Islamist attempt to put Mohamed Morsi 
back into  power. The violence is regrettable and the casualties are widely 
interpreted as  evidence of the brutality of the military regime that toppled 
Morsi and his  Brotherhood regime last month. But the notion that the 
Brotherhood is the  innocent victim of a nasty junta seeking to bring back 
Mubarak-era  authoritarianism is only half right. Though the military 
government is 
an  unsavory partner for the United States, no one should be under any 
illusions  about the Brotherhood or why the majority of Egyptians (who went to 
the streets  in their millions to support a coup) probably approve of the 
military’s  actions. 
Proof of the true nature of the Brotherhood was available for those who 
read  accounts in the last weeks of life at their Cairo encampments that were 
policed  by Islamist thugs with clubs and other weapons. Brotherhood gunmen 
fought the  police in pitched battles. Non-violent civil disobedience isn’t 
in the  Brotherhood playbook. Even more damning was the Brotherhood response 
elsewhere  in Egypt. As the International Business Times reports: 
Supporters of ousted Egyptian president Mohamed Morsi have attacked  
churches in Dilga, Menya and Sohag after government security forces backed by  
armored cars and bulldozers _stormed protest camps outside Cairo’s Rabaa  
al-Adawiya mosque_ 
(http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/articles/499015/20130814/egypt-cairo-morsi-portest-killed-camp-military.htm)
 . 
The Churches of Abraham and the Virgin Mary in Menya were burning after  
Morsi supporters set fire to the outside of the building exteriors and smashed 
 through doors. … Muslim Brotherhood members also threw firebombs at Mar  
Gergiss church in Sohag, a city with a large community of Coptic Christians  
who represents up to 10 percent of Egypt’s 84 million people, causing it to  
burn down, the official MENA news agency said. Protesters threw Molotov  
cocktails at the Bon Pasteur Catholic Church and Monastery in Suez, setting it 
 ablaze and breaking windows.
Why is the Brotherhood attacking churches as part of its argument with the  
military government? 
The first reason is because the Christian minority, unlike the military, is 
 vulnerable. Throughout the long year when Egypt suffered under Morsi’s 
Islamist  rule, Christians and their churches were increasingly subject to 
attacks as the  Muslim movement sought to make the position of the religious 
minority untenable.  As the Brotherhood seeks to demonstrate that it is still a 
viable force in the  country’s streets even after its Cairo strongholds are 
uprooted, expect more  attacks on Christians to remind Egyptians that the 
Islamists are still a force  to be reckoned with. 
Second, the attacks on churches are not just a regrettable sideshow in what 
 may be soon seen as a civil war as the Islamists seek to regain power 
after  losing in the wake of the massive street protests that encouraged the 
army to  launch the coup that ended Morsi’s rule. Rather, such attacks are an  
inextricable part of their worldview as they seek to transform Egypt in 
their  own Islamist image. In the Muslim Brotherhood’s Egypt, there is no room 
for  Christians or even secular Muslims. That is why so many in Egypt 
applauded the  coup as perhaps the last chance to save the country from 
permanent 
Islamist  rule. 
The church attacks should remind the West that the stakes in the conflict 
in  Egypt are high. If the U.S. seeks to cripple the military, they won’t be 
helping  the cause of democracy. The Brotherhood may have used a seemingly 
democratic  process to take power in 2012, but they would never have 
peacefully relinquished  it or allowed their opponents to stop them from 
imposing 
their will on every  aspect of Egyptian society. As difficult as it may be for 
some high-minded  Americans to understand, in this case it is the military 
and not the protesters  in Cairo who are seeking to stop tyranny. Though the 
military is an unattractive  ally, anyone seeking to cut off vital U.S. aid 
to Egypt should remember that the  only alternative to it is the party that 
is currently burning  churches.

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