http://www.americanthinker.com/articles.php?article_id=5969

 

Islam's Useful Idiots
October 23rd, 2006

The international press
<http://www.thenews.com.pk/update_detail.asp?id=11553>  cried foul on
October 19 after the U.S. denied a visa to a senior Muslim Brotherhood
leader. Newsweek <http://msnbc.msn.com/id/15320752/site/newsweek/> , Reuters
<http://today.reuters.com/news/articlenews.aspx?type=domesticNews&storyID=20
06-10-19T163222Z_01_N19444094_RTRUKOC_0_US-SECURITY-USA-MUSLIM.xml&WTmodLoc=
USNewsHome_C2_domesticNews-1> , ABC News, The National
<http://www.nationalinterest.org/Article.aspx?id=12622>  Interest and other
media complained that the "moderate" Muslim Association of Britain (MAB)
founder Kamal Helbawy was barred from appearing at New York University's
Center for Law and Security. The U.S. also barred
<http://www.nypost.com/seven/10202006/news/regionalnews/nyu_in_islam_furor_r
egionalnews_david_andreatta.htm>  entry to Egyptian doctor and MB "guidance
counsel" Abd El Monem Abo El Fotouh, who was scheduled to speak in the same
discussion on the Muslim Brotherhood. 

Helbawy claims to be "moderate." The U.S. should not prevent "moderates from
talking and discussing," Helbawy stated
<http://msnbc.msn.com/id/15320752/site/newsweek/>  after being pulled off
his flight. El Fotouh is purportedly also temperate. 

"At the end of the day, [Islam and the West] have a set of common humanist
values: justice, freedom, human rights and democracy," 

he told The Economist in September 2003. Arabists consider El Fotouh "one of
<http://arabist.net/?cat=16&paged=2%20>  the brightest stars"  of the MB's
so-called "middle generation." 

The Department of Homeland Security didn't explain their actions. One can
only surmise-and applaud. Consider:

. In 2005, Prime Minister Tony Blair denounced suicide bombings
everywhere-even in Israel. "Well he is wrong," Helbawy replied. "He is not a
<http://jamestown.org/terrorism/news/article.php?issue_id=3427>  Mufti,"  he
told the Jamestown Foundation. In the same interview, Helbawy blamed "[T]he
events in Afghanistan, Iraq and Palestine" as "a factor" behind the July 7,
2005 London bombings-along with U.K. participation in Iraq and its "policy
toward the issue of Palestine."  

. "[T]he United States . invaded Iraq to divide Muslims," El Fotouh told
<http://talismangate.blogspot.com/2006/08/new-column-quietly-smiling-update.
html>   the New York Times on August 3, 2006. It was "better to support a
Hezbollah-Iranian agenda than an 'American-Zionist' one," he added.

. Islam's war against Israel is not "a conflict of borders and land only. It
is not even a conflict over human ideology and not over peace," Helbawy told
<http://counterterrorismblog.org/2006/10/muslim_brotherhood_member_barr.php>
a December 1992 Muslim Arab Youth Association gathering, taped by terror
expert Steve Emerson. "[I]t is an absolute clash of civilizations, between
truth and falsehood. Between two conducts-one satanic, headed by Jews and
their co-conspirators-and the other is religious, carried by Hamas, and the
Islamic movement in particular and the Islamic people.." Muslims should
never befriend "Jews and Christians," who are only "allies to each other,"
he warned.

. Islamic scholars had performed their "basic religious duty
<http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2003/631/eg7.htm> "  in calling on Muslims to
join jihad against the U.S., El Fotouh stated in March 2003. Al Azhar had
rightly urged them to "defend themselves and their faith" against an "enemy"
stepping "on Muslims' land"-which the scholars called "a new Crusader battle
targeting our land, honour, faith and nation." Al Azhar's decree, El Fotouh
stated, was "no more than an attempt on the part of its scholars to fulfill
their duty before God." The U.S. had "plans to enslave the Arab nation," he
also claimed.

The New
<http://www.nypost.com/seven/10202006/news/regionalnews/nyu_in_islam_furor_r
egionalnews_david_andreatta.htm>  York Post,  Counterterrorismblog.org
<http://counterterrorismblog.org/2006/10/muslim_brotherhood_member_barr.php>
and New York Sun likewise saw through the MB facade.

Although the Muslim Brotherhood describes itself as a political and social
revolutionary <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muslim_Brotherhood>
organization, the group is widely (and correctly) recognized as the parent
of most Islamic terror <http://www.fas.org/irp/world/para/mb.htm>   groups.
Indeed, U.S. authorities most worry about the MB defense of "the use of
violence
<http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/006/704xewyj.
asp>  against civilians," said security and terrorism adviser Juan Zarate
recently. 

Founded in March 1928 by Hassan al-Banna, the MB rejected the West and
sought return to the "original Islam." Its philosophical and ideological
ideas should cause even academics serious concern. The recently exposed 1982
"Muslim
<http://www.frontpagemag.com/articles/readarticle.asp?ID=22416&p=1%20>
Brotherhood 'Project'" orders members worldwide 

"To channel thought, education and action in order to establish an Islamic
power [government] on the earth." 

Today, the MB still calls for "Building the Muslim state.Building the
Khilafa.Mastering the world with Islam <http://www.ummah.net/ikhwan> ."   

MB spiritual leader Yusuf Qaradawi, an Egyptian member of the European
Council for Fatwa and Research, likewise calls for an Islamic conquest of
Europe (starting with Rome and Italy). "[T]he patch of the Muslim state will
expand to cover
<http://www.islamonline.net/servlet/Satellite?pagename=IslamOnline-English-A
sk_Scholar/FatwaE/FatwaE&cid=1119503545004>  the whole earth....,"  he
writes. Qaradawi also praises suicide
<http://www.memri.org/bin/articles.cgi?Area=sd&ID=SP54203>  bombing,
readily accepts wife beating
<http://www.memri.org/bin/articles.cgi?Area=sr&ID=SR2704>  and calls upon
Muslim women to detonate
<http://www.ict.org.il/articles/articledet.cfm?articleid=508>  themselves in
order to kill Jews. 

Despite all evidence to the contrary, on Oct. 19, the Open Forum on The
<http://www.lawandsecurity.org/muslim_brotherhood.cfm>  Muslim Brotherhood
nevertheless praised Helbawy and El Fotouh as peaceful moderates, and their
organization as a peaceful, just, and moderating influence on Middle East
and global politics. Their absence was yet another strike against the Bush
administration, executive director Karen Greenberg stated. "This center
tries to educate one another, policy makers and the public," she added-a job
Greenberg apparently considers more important than public security. 

Former Sunday Times senior reporter Nick Fielding then took the floor. He
denied the risks the MB poses to the West. Helbawy is "a wonderful human
being," he stated, adding that the 2005 election of 22 Muslim Brothers to
Egypt's parliament-and the Hamas victory in the January 2006 Palestinian
Authority votewere cause for celebration. Fielding objected only to "the
reward" Muslims received for their free elections-"the silence of the U.S.
State Department in the face of Egyptian government abuse," and the U.S. and
international boycott of the Hamas-controlled PA. 

The MB is "reformist," according to Fielding. It provides "the best
possibility in the Middle East of leaders who can make deals and stick to
them," he stated, noting their solid political backing in Jordan, Tunisia,
Morocco, Algeria Kuwait and Yemen. The MB, he insisted, has "for the past 30
years.[consistently] followed a non violent" path. The brotherhood's only
problem, Fielding claimed, is its ostracization by such analysts as "The
<http://counterterrorismblog.org/2006/10/muslim_brotherhood_member_barr.php>
Counterterrorism blog,"  whose data he derided.

True democracy would never take root in the Middle East, Fielding predicted.
It's "about as likely as Shari'a being adopted in Washington D.C.," he
joked. 

Despite Islam's inherently political nature-"Muslims want Islam to be a
central part of life," Fielding stated-he dismissed concerns over calls for
a global Islamic caliphate. "We shouldn't terrify ourselves with this rather
silly point," he said. "Refusing to recognize state Shar'ia law in Islamic
[nations]" is what has caused intensifying radicalism. "Countering the
spread of jihadist organizations" requires that the West "address the
grievancesmany of them legitimate-of the jihadist movement," Fielding
concluded.

Sharing Fielding's view is Nixon Center Senior Fellow and ABC news
consultant Alexis Debat-a former adviser to the French transatlantic defense
minister. "Let's stop hyperventilating about the Muslim Brotherhood," he
said. "I hear the same things in a church as I hear in a mosque." Debat
concluded, "Islam is a source of enlightenment." 

Debat also recognized Islam's centrality-as both the Middle East's "primary
source of political action" and "universal"-that is, encompassing every
aspect of life. "We don't know where it starts and where it ends," he
observed. Strangely, however, Debat denied that the Muslim Brotherhood is
"religious." It's chiefly a "political movement, not a party,"-a
"liberation" movement. He admired the group's "highly pragmatic" approach to
becoming "the leader in Egypt."

Islamist cleric Yusuf Qaradawi, Debat allowed, "is the single most
influential Islamic thinker today." He did not condemn Qaradawi's views.
Almost without missing a beat, Debat maintained that the Muslim Brotherhood
is a "progressive" movement, whose ultimate goal "is a better, more just
society." He added, "Social justice is the cornerstone of Islam." 

Regarding the MB vision of a global Islamic caliphate, Debat insisted this
"is completely absent from Muslim Brotherhood rhetoric," even that of
Qaradawi. 

"I guarantee you that no serious official of the Egyptian ikhwan today would
even mention the Caliphate as a program," 

he reiterated in a follow-up email, neglecting the worldwide Brotherhood,
which claims membership in more than 70 countries.

Despite his assurances, Debat opened with a troubling disclaimer: He
admitted "failing to understand the Middle East." His five-year "journey to
understand the Muslim Brotherhood . will be lifelong," Debat stated. And
"there's a limit to what we [Westerners] can understand about the Middle
East," he said. 

Thank goodness Homeland Security does not take advice from those who admit
their failure to understand the Middle East, believe Westerners incapable of
comprehending it-and with such an obvious disregard for established facts.



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