It's important to pay attention to the organization that has made the most significant gains through the Arab uprisings—al-Ikhwan al-Muslimun, the Muslim Brotherhood, the godfather of all Islamic supremacist groups. With representative political parties and social organizations throughout Muslim nations, and numerous outreach arms in Western countries, it is perceived by many in the West as a moderate, peaceable association.
"However," notes Steven Simpson in the Canada Free Press,
"if one looks for reality and clarity (unlike the current American
administration which foolishly engages the Brotherhood and views it as
'moderate'), it will be seen that the Brotherhood is a violent fascist
movement that seeks global Islamic domination. Indeed, it is the phalanx
and aegis for all Islamist groups that have emerged throughout the
Muslim world. Bluntly put, it is nothing short of an Islamic hydra, and
an implacable enemy of the West, Israel, and all non-Muslims" ("Why the
Arab Spring Will Descend Into an Islamic Ice Age," April 16, 2012).
The Muslim Brotherhood was founded in Egypt in 1928 by a
schoolteacher and imam named Hassan al-Banna, who desired the revival of
the Islamic caliphate. The caliphate—the international community of
Muslim believers led by a caliph, a successor to Muhammad—had
fallen with the end of the Ottoman Empire at the conclusion of World
War I and the modernizing influence of Kemal Ataturk, who with great
difficulty transformed Turkey into a secular state.
Al-Banna was killed in 1949, and the Brotherhood was banned in Egypt
just before, but it would continue to operate—soon guided by al-Banna's
principal disciple Sayyid Qutb, who had been a bureaucrat in Egypt's
education department.
In the words of former U.S. Attorney General Michael Mukasey: "Qutb
caused enough trouble in Egypt to get himself awarded a traveling
fellowship in 1948 . . . Regrettably for us, Qutb chose to travel to
Greeley, Colorado. And although it would be hard to imagine a more
inoffensive place than post–World War II Greeley, Colorado, for a man
like Qutb it was Sodom and Gomorrah. He hated everything he saw:
American haircuts, enthusiasm for sports, jazz, and what he called the
'animal-like mixing of the sexes,' even in church.
"His conclusion was that Americans were 'numb to faith in art, faith
in religion, and faith in spiritual values altogether,' and that
Muslims must regard 'the white man, whether European or American . . .
[as] our first enemy' . . . [He later] continued to write and agitate
for Islam and against Western civilization, particularly against Jews,
whom he blamed for atheistic materialism and considered the worst
enemies of Muslims" ("Executive Power in Wartime," Imprimis, October 2011).
Qutb later became the leading member of the Muslim Brotherhood and
was eventually hanged in Egypt in 1966. But his brother Muhammad Qutb
fled with other Brotherhood members to Saudi Arabia and eventually
taught Sayyid's ideology to then-obscure figures Osama bin Laden and his
eventual right-hand man Ayman al-Zawahiri, the leader of al-Qaeda since
Bin Laden's death. These al-Qaeda figures and their followers are
sometimes referred to as Qutbists.
Another follower of Sayyid Qutb's writings was Omar Abdel-Rahman,
often called "the Blind Sheik," spiritual advisor to the 1993 World
Trade Center bombers who is currently serving a U.S. sentence of life
imprisonment. Bin Laden and al-Zawahiri called for his release before
the al-Qaeda attack on the U.S.S. Cole in Yemen in 2000. And
they relied on Abdel-Rahman's fatwa calling for the mass-murder of
Americans in perpetrating the horror of 9/11 the next year.
The Blind Sheikh remains a hero among Islamists, so it should
perhaps come as no surprise that the major calls for his release of late
have come not from al-Qaeda but from the current Muslim Brotherhood
leadership of Egypt—the so-called moderates.
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