One of the more clandestine groups in radical Islam is
the Muslim Brotherhood. Originating in Egypt in 1928, the group has been
outlawed in Egypt yet it members hold seats in the Egyptian government.
That this radically fundamentalist Islamist group is the parent
organization to some of the most violent terror groups operating today.
It thrives as a pseudo professional association for terrorists while
feigning legitimacy as a political movement. So, what is the Muslim
Brotherhood and why should every American be concerned about its
activities both within the United States and around the world?
The Muslim Brotherhood has become a central issue in
federal court proceedings now taking place in Dallas, Texas. These
proceedings involve what, until now, has been portrayed as an Islamist
philanthropic organization, The Holy Land Foundation. But the Muslim
Brotherhood, the Holy Land Foundation and over 300 unindicted
co-conspirators are enabling and funding terrorist groups around the
world with money derived from people right here in the United States.
The
Muslim Brotherhood is the name of a world-wide Sunni Islamist
movement, which has spawned several religious and political
organizations in the Middle East, including Hamas and Palestinian
Islamic Jihad, dedicated to the jihadi credo:
"God is our objective, the Quran is our Constitution, the
Prophet is our leader, struggle is our way, and death for the sake of
God is the highest of our aspirations."
It should be noted that al Qaeda’s number two,
Ayman al-Zawahri, joined the Muslim Brotherhood at age fourteen. It
should also be noted that the Muslim Brotherhood was responsible for the
assassination of Egyptian President Anwar Sadat.
The Muslim Brotherhood was
conceived in 1928 by Hasan al-Banna, a 22-year-old elementary school
teacher, as a fundamentalist Islamic movement in the aftermath of the
collapse of the Ottoman Empire and the subsequent ban of the caliphate
system. Al-Banna believed that Islam was not only a religious dogma but
an all-inclusive way of life. Al-Banna based his fundamentalism on the
tenets of Wahhabism, supplementing the radically fundamentalist Islamic
education for the Society's male students with jihadi training.
As stated in the organization’s charter and on its
website, the Muslim Brotherhood seeks to install an Islamic empire ruled
under Sharia Law and a Caliphate across the Muslim world and ultimately
the entire world, through stages designed to “Islamisize,”
incrementally, targeted nations. We can witness this very action taking
place in Europe today.
The Muslim Brotherhood has been active in the United
States since the 1960s. Its goals, both stated and as perceived through
their actions, have included propagating Islam and creating havens for
and integrating Muslims into the US. One of their main strategies for
achieving these objectives has been dawah or Islamic renewal and
outreach. In the 1960s, groups such as US military personnel, prison
inmates and African-Americans were specifically targeted for dawah.
The Muslim Brotherhood has
succeeded in setting up numerous US front groups since the 1990s
that should be regarded as hostile and a threat to the United States,
according to Stephen Coughlin, a lawyer and military intelligence
specialist on the Pentagon Joint Staff.
Islamist activists involved with the Muslim Brotherhood
have started organizations in the US including the Muslim Students
Association in 1963, North American Islamic Trust in 1971, the Islamic
Society of North America in 1981, the American Muslim Council in 1990,
the Muslim American Society in 1992, and the International Institute of
Islamic Thought in the 1980s.
In a September 2007 memorandum, Coughlin explains that
many US Muslim aid and civil rights groups viewed as moderate by the
Justice Department and other government agencies are linked to the
pro-jihadi Muslim Brotherhood. The groups are also engaged in influence
and deception operations designed to mask their activities and the
overriding goal of their organization, that being the advancement of
Islamofascist doctrine within the United States.
In December 2001, the US Department of the Treasury's
Office of Foreign Asset Control joined the European Union in designating
the
Holy Land Foundation as a Specially Designated Global Terrorist
group.
In July of 2004, a federal grand jury in Dallas, Texas,
returned a 42 count indictment against the Holy Land Foundation. The
charges levied against the organization included: conspiracy, providing
material support to a foreign terrorist organization, tax evasion and
money laundering. The indictment alleged that the Holy Land Foundation
provided more than $12.4 million to individuals and organizations linked
to the terrorist group Hamas from 1995 to 2001.
The ensuing trial has exposed a direct connection between
the Holy Land Foundation and the Muslim Brotherhood in the release into
evidence of several documents, one of these documents being the "Ikhwan
in America."
The “Ikhwan in America” is essentially a 20 point plan to
replace the American Democratic Republic with an Islamist State ruled
under Sharia Law. This document reveals that the Muslim Brotherhood
engages in activities ranging from going to camps to do weapons training
(referred to as Special work by the Muslim Brotherhood), to engaging in
counter-espionage against US government agencies such as the FBI and CIA
(referred to as Securing the Group).
One key excerpt of this 20 point plan is as disturbing as
it is revealing:
"The process of settlement is a 'Civilization-Jihadist
Process.' 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."
Recently, the Justice Department participated in a
conference held by the Islamic Society of North America in Chicago. The
ISNA, directly linked to the Muslim Brotherhood, is one of 300
unindicted co-conspirator groups, including the Council on
American-Islamic Relations, named in the Holy Land Foundation
indictments.
Congressman Peter Hoekstra of Michigan and Congresswoman
Sue Myrick of North Carolina wrote to then Attorney General Alberto
Gonzales to express their concern over the Justice Department's
attendance at the ISNA conference describing their participation as a
"grave mistake" as it would serve to legitimize a group with "extremist
origins." The Justice Department’s response was that its participation
at the weekend meeting was part of an "outreach efforts...to educate the
public about how the department works to protect religious freedom,
voting rights, economic opportunity, and many other rights."
When one reconciles this statement from the “Ikhwan in
America,”
“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...”
with this statement from the Justice Department’s
response to Congressmen Hoekstra & Myrick,
“...participation at the weekend meeting was part of an
"outreach efforts...to educate the public about how the department
works...”
one can successfully argue that the US Justice Department
was walking into – and continues to facilitate – information gathering
activities by an organization whose goal is to replace the sovereignty
and authority of the US Constitution with Sharia Law in their quest for
a global Caliphate.
The Muslim Brotherhood, an ideologically radical and
fundamentalist jihadi group, is, in essence, the ideological association
that binds all Islamist jihadi groups together. It is global, it has
massive financial means and it is targeting Western Civilization.