Posted on 12/01/2011 5:20:45 PM PST by goldstategop
Much of the mass media seems to be saying, to paraphrase John Lennon and Yoko Ono, All we are saying is give the Muslim Brotherhood a chance.
There are three arguments supporting this policy that are worth discussing in large part because the Muslim Brotherhoods advocates dont have any others.
The first, which one hears everywhere, is that the Muslim Brotherhood is full of factions that are moderate and hip young people who want real democracy. If this were true it should be easy to prove. Here are some of the ways to do that:
Who are the leaders of these factions? What is their composition? Where have the put forward alternative positions? What posts do they hold in the movement? Was there a battle among factions on choosing the Brotherhoods parliamentary or presidential candidates? How have they reinterpreted in a more liberal way Sharia law? Do their opponents in Egypt recognize the existence of these factions? Do those who defected from the Brotherhood say that the movement they formerly thought to be irredeemably radical has changed?
At the same time, the Brotherhoods leadership continues to come up, without contradiction in the ranks, with the most extreme, intolerant, and bloodthirsty positions. Even if it were to be established that other factions exist one would have to show that these factions had some chance of directing policy.
And the young hip people in Turkeys old fogey Islamist movement have now been running the country for almost a decade, carrying out the work of fundamental transformation in that once secular polity toward being an Islamist state. They are far from finished.
It used to be that public debates depended on the ability of those arguing for a given thesis to provide proof. Now they are conducted by one side simply censoring out the other. Apparently on the question of Muslim Brotherhood moderation, the science is settled.
Incidentally, in countering my view on this point, the BBC interviewer kept referring to a New Statesman article on the Brotherhood which he said showed the group was becoming moderate. Not to my surprise, the author was Fawaz Gerges, a propagandist for the Islamists who has done zero research on the subject.
A second argument, expressed, for example, by former British Prime Minister Tony Blair, is that we must hope for the best. Theres nothing wrong with hoping for the best but thats not the most effective type of national strategy. In this case, hope means doing nothing, saying nothing, and thinking nothing. And we should also remember that hope in the Palestinian Authoritys moderation even as it forms a partnership with Hamas and refuses to negotiate with Israel.
So the problems with hope are: it can paralyze action including efforts to shape the situation; it comes too late, after the new dictators are already in power; and it quickly goes over into being wishful thinking.
Its also nice if theres some evidence for having a belief that things will turn out all right. The poet Emily Dickenson wrote that hope is the thing with feathers. So is cowardice.
Dickenson wrote of hope:
Ive heard it in the chilliest land,/And on the strangest sea;/Yet, never, in extremity,/It asked a crumb of me.
Precisely, hope requires you to do nothing. No need for action, confrontation, responsibility, or risk. And some cannot distinguish between the call of that little bird and that of the Sirens, who lured the ships (of state?) onto the rocks where all aboard perished.
Third, theres the This is what democracy looks like argument. Wadah Khanfar, former head of al-Jazira, has an op-ed entitled, Islamisms Positive Side, that appeared in the Guardian and also The Age, in Australia. Naturally, readers are not told that al-Jazira is an Islamist operation. Its sort of like presenting a Communist in his role as leader of a front group to tell you that the Communists are very trustworthy.
Still, it is refreshing that Khanfar admits:
In the Arab world, too, there has been mounting tension between Islamists and secularists, who feel anxious about Islamic groups. Many voices [there] warn that the Arab Spring will lead to an Islamic winter, and that the Islamists, though claiming to support democracy, will soon turn against it.
Well, perhaps the secularists and others who fear Islamism in the Arabic-speaking world actually know something. After all, they are the ones who are going to be oppressed, imprisoned, killed, and fleeing for refuge in the West.
He continues, Stereotypical images that took root in the aftermath of 9/11 have come to the fore again.
You mean like the image that Islamists are extremists who hate Jews and Christians and willing to use violence?
No, he only means the image that Islamists only use violence as a means and an end.
He complains that groups like al-Qaeda, is called `Islamist in the West, despite the fact it rejects democratic political participation. Read that carefully. He is actually daring to say that al-Qaeda has hijacked the word Islamist.
But of course Khanfar knows well that the Islamist electoral strategy is very recent and is being used only because Islamists think and theyre right that they can gain state power that way.
All the points Khanfar and the other advocates of Islamism make are purely tactical. For example, he writes, Reform-based Islamic movements, such as the Muslim Brotherhood, work within the political process.
But work within the political process to do what? To pass laws that oppress women, suppress minorities, destroy human rights, sabotage Western interests, and wipe Israel off the map, thats what.
His final argument is that the West has made Islamists mad by supporting dictatorial regimes. But Islamists have their own ideology, agenda, and worldview. This is the same approach for Western policy that made the Carter Administration try to be nice to the new Iranian revolution in 1979 and the Obama Administration to cuddle with the Syrian regime. Didnt work then; wont work now.
Moreover, the West never supported dictatorial regimes because it liked the form of government but because those regimes were helpful to Western interests. Now the Islamist apologists want the West to support what will soon be dictatorial regimes that hate them and seek to do them harm.
What does Khanfar want specifically? He tells us: The West should not support moderate democratic opposition parties. Of course, this is already Western policy in Iran, Lebanon, Syria, and Turkey. While the Islamists help each other with money and other assistance, the West should shut out the real pro-democratic forces so they die. Alternative media will be shut down; human rights groups harassed; dissidents imprisoned.
And heres a bonus, the fall-back excuse: Well, they havent done anything yet so lets wait and see. Thats fine for regular people. But analysts are supposed to tell people whats happening and give some sense of the trends. In this case, you have a radical grouptwo radical groups now that we have the Salafists, too with a 70-year-long record and thats making statements every day (in Arabic). We have the case of Turkey, too, which is milder but gives a sense of the direction of events.
Another group thats supposed to do more than just wait, see, and react is the government. Thats true, of course, unless the government (of the United States in this case) is enthusiastically positive about the Brotherhood victory, apologizes for the Brotherhood, doesnt help real moderates, and is trying to beat down the only hope for containing the radicals, the armed forces.
With no serious opposition or criticism abroad, majority support at home, and with the opposition increasingly intimidated at home, the Islamists will rule forever even if they do hold elections, especially when they as we have seen in Iran are counting the ballots. This is what theocracy looks like.
Question: Are the elite newspapers in the United State, the United Kingdom, and France running op-eds warning about Islamism as twenty-first century totalitarianism? I havent seen any.
A short history of Obama Middle East policy:
November 2011: We believe that Islamism is not a threat and that they will become more moderate once in power. There is nothing to worry about.
October 2012: Oops! Sorry about that!
Thanks goldstategop.
Coddlers are also our mortal enemies.
So are the politicians who are on OPEC’s payroll.
Four: The Process of Settlement:
- In order for Islam and its Movement to become a part of the homeland in which it lives, stable in its land, rooted in the spirits and minds of its people, enabled in the live of its society and has firmly-established organizations on which the Islamic structure is built and with which the testimony of civilization is achieved, the Movement must plan and struggle to obtain the keys and the tools of this process in carry out this grand mission as a Civilization Jihadist responsibility which lies on the shoulders of Muslims and - on top of them - the Muslim Brotherhood in this country. Among these keys and tools are the following:
- A shift from the mentality of caution and reservation to the mentality of risk and controlled liberation.
- A shift from the mentality of the elite Movement to the mentality of the popular Movement.
- A shift from the single opinion mentality to the multiple opinion mentality.
- A shift from the collision mentality to the absorption mentality.
- A shift from the abstract ideas mentality the true organizations mentality [This is the core point and the essence of the memoiandum].
The process of settlement is a Civilization-Jihadist Process with all the word means. 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 Gods religion is made victorious over all other religions.
Much more...here...
http://babylonscovertwar.com/Analysis/Muslim%20BrotherHood_Plans_GOV_Exh_003_0085.pdf
Thanks very much to FReeper BCW the above post/link on FR...here...
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2808812/posts
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