http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/News/23056.aspx


OPINION <http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/Portal/21/OPINION/2267/0.aspx>
Terrorism’s Muslim Brotherhood roots
The fight to uproot terrorism and extremism begins at its Muslim
Brotherhood roots, with that organisation’s structure, doctrines and
ideologues, writes *Abdel-Moneim Said*



<http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/WriterArticles/53/%20Abdel-Moneim%20Said/0.aspx>
Abdel-Moneim Said
<http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/WriterArticles/53/%20Abdel-Moneim%20Said/0.aspx>

Articles
<http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/WriterArticles/53/%20Abdel-Moneim%20Said/0.aspx>

Share
<https://www.addtoany.com/share#url=http%3A%2F%2Fweekly.ahram.org.eg%2FNews%2F23056.aspx&title=Terrorism’s%20Muslim%20Brotherhood%20roots%20-%20Al%20Ahram%20Weekly>
Facebook <http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/#facebook> Twitter
<http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/#twitter> WhatsApp
<http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/#whatsapp> Google+
<http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/#google_plus> Telegram
<http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/#telegram> LinkedIn
<http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/#linkedin> Skype
<http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/#skype> Google Gmail
<http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/#google_gmail> Email
<http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/#email>
------------------------------

اقرأ باللغة العربية <http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/News/23110.aspx>
------------------------------

The US government has recently released to the public a large batch of
documents that were recovered in the raid on Osama bin Laden’s compound in
Abbottabad, Pakistan, in May 2011. What strikes one immediately, in these
documents, is how the terrorist ideology that obsessed Bin Laden was rooted
in Muslim Brotherhood ideology. The Al-Qaeda leader was steeped in the
literature published by the Muslim Brotherhood’s founders and ideologues
and he familiarised himself with their ideas directly through his contacts
with Muslim Brotherhood leaders in Yemen.

This phenomenon is hardly unique among prominent terrorists and their
organisations. The Muslim Brotherhood had always served as the “incubator”
and the primary school in which terrorists take their first steps towards
embracing extremist thought and its violent applications. Leaders of such
organisations as Al-Gamaa Al-Islamiya and the Islamic Jihad in Egypt
emerged directly from the folds of Muslim Brotherhood thought and practice.
Among the star students were current Al-Qaeda chief Ayman Al-Zawahri,
Mohamed Ata, who led that terrorist attack against the World Trade Center
in New York on 11 September 2001, and the mastermind of the whole
operation, Khaled Sheikh Mohamed. Although some of those individuals and
organisations had their differences with the Muslim Brotherhood at some
later juncture, their collective “jihadist” thought had its origins with
the founders of the Muslim Brotherhood, whether in its first edition
(Hassan Al-Banna) or its second edition (Sayed Qotb). While Qotb is always
regarded as the father of contemporary terrorists, his ideas and outlooks
can be traced to Al-Banna and the birth of the Muslim Brotherhood in 1928.

If the release of the Bin Laden documents takes us back again to the
origins of extremist Islamist thought, it also reminds us that regardless
of the notoriety that some terrorist organisations, such as Al-Qaeda and
the Islamic State (IS) group, acquire from time to time, the Muslim
Brotherhood remains the mother school. With branches spread across 81
countries, this organisation has managed to “institutionalise” its
operations at the global level and to systematise it strategically,
depending on whether it is experiencing a period of “weakness” or a period
of “empowerment”, each requiring certain organisational, financial,
economic, as well as military arrangements. But regardless of whether it is
experiencing “weakness” or “empowerment”, the ideological and doctrinal
regime remains the same. It is based on the concepts of *hakimiya* (divine
sovereignty), unquestioning obedience, jihad and the inevitable
confrontation with the “other”, meaning non-Muslims, all of which notions
derive from the Kharijite creed. What this means is that, in spite of the
victories against IS in Mosul and Raqqa and the imminent demise of the IS
“caliphate”, terrorism and the ideas on which it is based will not
disappear because the mother organisation still exists and remains capable
of producing new terrorists and new terrorist organisations.

The concepts of “weakness” and “empowerment” are contingent on the balances
of forces. When they are not favourable to the Muslim Brotherhood, the
organisation assumes a façade of moderation and tolerance. This is the
guise its branches assume in North America, the US and the West, in
general, where Muslim Brotherhood leaders have succeeded in positioning
themselves as representatives and spokesmen for Islam and the Muslim
peoples. In the US, the Muslim Brotherhood controls almost all the
societies and organisations that represent the Muslim in the US, such as
the Islamic Society of North America, the Muslim Student Union, Muslim
American Public Affairs Council, the American Society of Muslims and the
Council on American-Islamic Relations. They also dominate the major mosques
and Islamic centres. There, the Muslim Brotherhood projects messages that
utilise such catchwords as democracy (under the banner of Shura, or
consultation), human rights, civil society, equality and rejection of
violence. Here, too, they conceal their real attitudes and intentions
behind such rubric as “in a manner consistent with the principles of Islam”
or “without contravening what is known to be obligatory under Islamic Law”.
Such are the rhetorical loopholes that the Muslim Brotherhood has always
used so as to be able to turn their stated positions on their head. We saw
this in practice in Egypt at the time of the Muslim Brotherhood-controlled
parliament in which their actual positions proved consistently opposed to
civil liberties, full equality between citizens and, of course, women’s
rights.

Whether in a state of “weakness” or “empowerment”, the Muslim Brotherhood
is organised in a highly rigid, hierarchical structure similar to those of
totalitarian fascist and communist regimes, with a military-like line of
command and requiring unquestioning obedience and total secrecy. The
structure is headed by a “Guidance Council” and a “Supreme Guide”, who has
absolute powers, and a “Shura Council” that transmits the lower echelons’
views to the higher echelons. The secrecy, which was required in order to
conceal the names of members and sources of finance, remained largely in
place even after the Muslim Brotherhood acquired legitimacy following the
January 2011 Revolution.

Another permanent feature of the organisation is its three arms: one
financial, one for propaganda and one paramilitary. The financial arm,
which has an international reach, collects money from members and
investments, taking advantage of the tools of “globalisation” which the
organisation probably condemns ideologically but which it uses anyway in
order to conceal its financial resources and to move money as its ends
require.

The propaganda arm starts with the famous Muslim Brotherhood logo: two
inter-crossed swords above a Quran and the command “Be Prepared” written
beneath. The logo reflects the Muslim Brotherhood’s outlook. They are in a
perpetual state of war. Their swords remain unsheathed and their enemies
are everywhere, requiring constant readiness to use armed force. But beyond
symbols, they have an enormous propaganda machine, with press outlets,
television stations, websites, news agencies, armies of social networking
trolls and other means to wage psychological warfare.

The paramilitary arm had its origins in Egypt with the Muslim Brotherhood’s
“Special Organisation” founded in the Hassan Al-Banna era. This underground
wing came to public attention with the assassinations of prime minister
Mahmoud Al-Noqrashi, judge Ahmed Al-Khazindar and the Cairo chief of police
General Salim Zaki. The Muslim Brotherhood have sustained a continuous
record of recourse to violence since then, in Egypt and elsewhere.

The international incubator and school for all terrorist movements does not
confine itself to the educational and “proselytising” functions it performs
through its numerous ideologues and media apparatuses. It also mobilises
support for terrorism, justifies it and censures those who attempt to fight
it. When terrorists are killed, in its eyes, they become “martyrs” who
merit prayers and glorification. And when convenient, the Muslim
Brotherhood does not hesitate to practise violence, as we see today in
Egypt in the actions of the Hasm, Ajnad Misr, Al-Iqab Al-Thawri and other
such Muslim Brotherhood affiliates, or they furnish financial and logistic
assistance to other terrorist organisations.

The fight to uproot terrorism and extremism begins at its Muslim
Brotherhood roots and with that organisation’s structure, doctrines,
mobilisation and support mechanisms, and political and propaganda
practices. Bin Laden and Al-Zawahri are not the first alumni of the Muslim
Brotherhood school and they are unlikely to be the last.
------------------------------

*The writer is chairman of the board, CEO and director of the Regional
Centre for Strategic Studies.*

Kirim email ke