The Muslim Brotherhood As Assassins
Written by Thierry MEYSSAN on 13/07/2019
The “Arab Spring” as experienced by the Muslim Brotherhood
In 1951, building on the foundations of the old organisation of the same
name, the Anglo-Saxon secret services put together a secret political society
called the Muslim Brotherhood. At first they used it to assassinate
personalities who resisted them, and then, starting in 1979, as mercenaries
against the Soviets. At the beginning of the 1990’s, they incorporated the
Brotherhood into NATO, and in 2010, attempted to force it into power in the
Arab countries. The Muslim Brotherhood and the Sufi Order of the Naqshbandi
were financed with at least $80 billion annually by the ruling Saudi family,
which made them one of the most powerful armies in the world. All jihadist
leaders, including the leaders of Daesh, belong to this military structure.
The Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood
Four empires disappeared during the First World War – the German Reich, the
Austro-Hungarian Empire, the Tsarist Holy Russian Empire, and the Ottoman
Sublime Porte. The victors utterly lacked any sense of reason in the conditions
they imposed on the defeated. Thus, in Europe, the Treaty of Versailles
determined conditions which were unacceptable and unbearable for Germany,
falsely blamed as the sole responsible for the conflict. In the Orient, the
carving up of the Ottoman Caliphate was not going well. At the San Remo
Conference (1920), in accordance with the secret Sykes-Picot agreements (1916),
the United Kingdom was authorised to set up a Jewish homeland in Palestine,
while France was allowed to colonise Syria (which included, at the time, what
is now Lebanon). However, in what was left of the Ottoman Empire, Mustafa Kemal
led a revolt both against the Sultan, who had lost the war, and against the
Western powers, who were taking control of his country. At the Sèvres
Conference (1920), the Caliphate was chopped into little pieces in order to
create a variety of new states, including a Kurdistan. The Turko-Mongol
population of the provinces of Thrace and Anatolia rose up and carried Kemal to
power. Finally, the Lausanne Conference (1923) traced the frontiers we know
today, gave up on the idea of Kurdistan, and organised gigantic population
transfers which caused more than half a million deaths.
But just as in Germany, Adolf Hitler was to contest his country’s lot, so,
in the Near East, a man stood up against the new division of the region. An
Egyptian schoolteacher founded a movement to re-establish the Caliphate which
the Westerners had defeated. This man was Hassan al-Banna, and his organisation
was the Muslim Brotherhood (1928).
In principle, the Caliph was the successor of the Prophet, to whom all owe
obedience – it was therefore a very coveted title. There had been several great
lines of Caliphs in succession – the Omeyyads, the Abbassids, the Fatimids and
the Ottomans. The next Caliph would have to be the man who seized the title –
and as it happened, this was the “General Guide” of the Brotherhood, who was
quite comfortable with the idea of becoming the master of the Muslim world.
The secret society spread rapidly. Its intention was to work from within
the system in order to re-establish Islamic institutions. Applicants had to
swear fealty to the founder not only upon the Qu’ran, but also on a sabre or a
revolver. The aim of the Brotherhood was exclusively political, even though it
expressed itself in religious terms. Hassan al-Banna and his successors never
spoke about Islam as a religion, nor did they evoke Muslim spirituality. For
them, Islam is no more than a dogma, a submission to God and the exercise of
Power. Obviously, the Egyptians who supported the Brotherhood did not see it
this way. They followed it because it claimed to follow God.
For Hassan al-Banna, the legitimacy of a government was not to be measured
by its representativeness, the way we evaluate that of Western governments, but
by its capacity to defend the “Islamic way of life”, in other words, the way of
life of 19th century Ottoman Egypt. The Brotherhood never considered that Islam
has a History, and that Muslim ways of life vary considerably according to
region and era. Neither did it imagine that the Prophet had revolutionised the
Bedouin society in which he lived, or that the way of life described in
the Qu’ran is no more than a stage meant for those particular
men. For them, the disciplinary rules of the Qu’ran – Sharia –
do not correspond to a given situation, but fix inalterable laws upon which
Power can rely.
For the Brotherhood, the fact that the Muslim way of life had often been
imposed by the sword justified the use of force. The Brotherhood would never
admit that Islam may have been spread by example. This did not prevent al-Banna
and his Brothers from standing for election – and losing. If they condemned
political parties, it was not because of opposition to the multi-party system,
but because by separating religion from politics, they would succumb to
corruption.
The doctrine of the Muslim Brotherhood was the ideology of “political
Islam” – “Islamism” – a word which was destined to become all the rage.
In 1936, Hassan al-Banna wrote to Egyptian Prime Minister Mostafa El-Nahas
Pasha. He demanded:
– legislative reform, and the conformity of all tribunals with Sharia law;
– recruitment within the armies to create a volunteer force under the banner of jihad;
– connection between all Muslim countries, and the preparation for the restoration of the Caliphate, in realization of the unity demanded by Islam.
– legislative reform, and the conformity of all tribunals with Sharia law;
– recruitment within the armies to create a volunteer force under the banner of jihad;
– connection between all Muslim countries, and the preparation for the restoration of the Caliphate, in realization of the unity demanded by Islam.
During the Second World War, the Brotherhood declared itself to be neutral.
In reality, it mutated into an Intelligence service for the Reich. But from the
point at which the United States entered the war, when the fortune of arms
seemed to be changing sides, it played a double game, and sold information
about Germany to the British. In this way, the Brotherhood revealed its total
absence of principles and pure political opportunism.
On 24 February 1945, the Brothers tried their luck and assassinated the
Egyptian Prime Minister in the middle of a parliamentary session. This was
followed by an escalation of violence – a movement of repression against the
Brotherhood, and a series of political assassinations, going as far as the
murder of the new Prime Minister on 28 December 1948, and in retaliation, the
killing of Hassan al-Banna himself, on 12 February 1949. A short time
afterwards, a tribunal instituted by martial law condemned most of the
Brotherhood to prison sentences, and dissolved their association.
This secret organisation was in reality no more than a band of assassins
who hoped to grab power by masking their ambition behind the Qu’ran.
Its story should have ended there. Unfortunately, it did not.
The Brotherhood reinstated by the Anglo-Saxons, and the separate peace with
Israel
The capacity of the Brotherhood to mobilise people and turn them into
assassins obviously intrigued the major Powers.
Despite his denials,
Sayyid Qutb was a Freemason. He published an article entitled « Why I became a
Freemason », published in the magazine al-Taj al-Masri (the « Crown of Egypt
»), on 23 April 1943.
Two and a half years after its dissolution, a new organisation was formed
by the Anglo-Saxons, who re-used the name “Muslim Brotherhood”. Because all its
historical leaders were incarcerated, ex-judge Hassan al-Hudaybi was selected
as General Guide. Contrary to what is often believed, he represented no
historical continuity between the old and the new Brotherhood. It transpired
that a unit of the old secret society, the “Secret Section”, had been tasked by
Hassan al-Banna with perpetrating attacks for which he denied all
responsibility. This organisation within the organisation was so secret that it
had not been affected by the dissolution of the Brotherhood, and was now
available to his successor. The Guide decided to disown the “Secret Section”, and
declared that he wanted to attain his objectives only by peaceful means. It is
difficult to establish exactly what happened at that moment between the
Anglo-Saxons, who wanted to recreate the old society, and the Guide, who
believed he was simply reviving its audience from within the masses. In any
case, the “Secret Section” survived, and the authority of the Guide waned in
favor of other Brotherhood leaders, triggering a great internecine struggle.
The CIA gave Sayyid Qutb a leadership position within the Brotherhood. Qutb, a Freemason, was the theoretician of
jihad, whom the Guide Hudaybi had condemned, before being forced to come to
terms with MI6.
It is impossible to specify the relations and degrees of hierarchy between
these men, on one hand because each foreign branch enjoyed its own autonomy,
and on the other, because the secret units within the organisation no longer
necessarily answered either to the General Guide, or the local Guide, but
sometimes directly to the CIA and MI6.
During the period following the Second World War, the British attempted to
re-organise the world in order to keep it out of Soviet hands. In September
1946, in Zurich, Winston Churchill launched the idea of the United States of
Europe. On the same principle, he also launched the Arab League. In both cases,
the aim was to unify these regions without Russia. From the beginning of the
Cold War, the United States, for their part, created associations tasked with
accompanying this movement for their own profit – the American Committee on
United Europe and the American Friends of the Middle East. In the Arab world,
the CIA organised two coups d’état, first of all in favour of General Hosni
Zaim in Damascus (March 1949), then with the Free Officers in Cairo (July
1952). The goal was to support the nationalists who were believed to be hostile
to the Communists. It was in this state of mind that Washington sent SS General
Otto Skorzeny to Egypt, and Nazi General Fazlollah Zahedi to Iran, accompanied
by hundreds of ex-Gestapo officers, with whom they hoped to direct the
anti-Communist conflict.
Unfortunately, Skorzeny schooled the Egyptian police in a tradition of
violence. In 1963, he chose the CIA and the Mossad over Nasser. As for Zahedi,
he created the SAVAK, the cruelest political police force of the time.
While Hassan al-Banna had defined the objective – seizing power by
manipulating religion – Sayyid Qutb defined the means – jihad. Once the adepts
had admitted the supremacy of the Qu’ran, it could be used as a foundation for
organising them into an army and sending them into combat. Qutb developed a
Manichean theory which distinguished “Islamist” from “evil”. This brainwashing
enabled the CIA and MI6 to use adepts to control the nationalist Arab
governments, then to destabilise the Muslim regions of the Soviet Union. The
Brotherhood became an inexhaustible reservoir of terrorists under the slogan –
“Allah is our goal. The Prophet is our leader. The Qu’ran is our law. The jihad
is our way. Martyrdom is our vow”.
Qutb’s ideas were rational, but not reasonable. He applied an ironclad
rhetoric of Allah – Prophet – Qu’ran – Jihad – Martyrdom,
which left no room for any discussion at any point. He placed the superiority
of his logic over human reason.
Reception of a delegation of the secret society by President Eisenhower at
the White House (23 September 1953).
The CIA organised a conference at Princeton University on “The Situation of
Muslims in the Soviet Union”. It was the occasion for the United States to
receive a delegation of the Muslim Brotherhood led by Sa’id Ramadan, one of the
heads of its armed branch. In his report, the CIA officer in charge of the
summary noted that Ramadan was not a religious extremist, but rather resembled
a fascist – a way of underlining the exclusively political character of the
Muslim Brotherhood. The conference ended with a reception at the White House,
hosted by President Eisenhower, on 23 September 1953. The alliance between
Washington and jihadism was formed.
(From left to right) Hassan el-Banna married his daughter to Saïd Ramadan,
which made Ramadan his successor. The couple gave birth to Hani (Director of
the Islamic Centre in Geneva) and Tariq Ramadan (who became a full professor
with the chair of contemporary Islamic studies at the University of Oxford).
The CIA, which had resuscitated the Brotherhood to use against the
Communists, first of all used it to help nationalists. At that time, the Agency
was represented in the Middle East by middle-class anti-Zionists. They were
rapidly ousted and replaced by senior civil servants of Anglo-Saxon and Puritan
origin, graduates from major universities, all favourable to Israel. Now
Washington entered into conflict with the nationalists, and the CIA turned the
Brotherhood against them.
Said Ramadan and Abdul Ala Mawdudi hosted a weekly broadcast on Radio
Pakistan, a station created by the British MI6.
Sa’id Ramadan had commanded a few combatants from the Brotherhood during
the brief war against Israel in 1948, then helped Sayyid Abul Ala Maududi to
create the paramilitary organisation Jamaat-i-Islami in Pakistan. The point was
to fabricate an Islamic identity for the Muslim Indians so that they could
constitute a new state, Pakistan. Jamaat-i-Islami in fact drew up the Pakistani
constitution. Ramadan married the daughter of Hassan al-Banna, and became the
head of the armed branch of the new “Muslim Brotherhood”.
Meanwhile, in Egypt, the Brotherhood had taken part in the coup d’état by
General Mohammed Naguib’s Free Officers – Sayyid Qutb was their liaison
officer. They were tasked with eliminating one of their leaders, Gamal Abdel
Nasser, who had opposed Naguib. Not only did they fail, on 26 October 1954, but
Nasser took power, subdued the Brotherhood, and put Naguib under house arrest.
Sayyid Qutb would be hanged a few years later.
Forbidden in Egypt, the Brotherhood fell back to the Wahhabi states (Saudi
Arabia, Qatar and the Emirate of Sharjah), and to Europe (Germany, France and
the United Kingdom, plus neutral Switzerland). Each time, they were received as
Western agents fighting the growing alliance between the Arab nationalists and
the Soviet Union. Sa’id Ramadan was issued a Jordanian diplomatic passport, and
settled in Geneva in 1958. From there that he directed the destabilisation of
the Caucasus and Central Asia (both Pakistan-Afghanistan and the Soviet Fergana
Valley). He took control of the Committee for the construction of a mosque in
Munich, which enabled him to supervise almost all the Muslims in Western
Europe. With the assistance of the American Committee for the Liberation of the
Peoples of Russia (AmComLib), which is to say the CIA, he had at his command
Radio Liberty /Radio Free Europe, a radio station financed directly by the US
Congress to spread the philosophy of the Brotherhood.
After the Suez Canal crisis and the spectacular about-face of Nasser to
join the Soviets, Washington decided to provide unlimited help to the Muslim
Brotherhood in the fight against the Arab nationalists. A senior officer of the
CIA, Miles Copeland, was charged – in vain – with selecting a personality
within the Brotherhood who could play, in the Arab world, a role equivalent to
that of Pastor Billy Graham in the United States. It was not until the 1980’s
that a preacher of that calibre was found – the Egyptian Yusuf al-Qaradawi.
In 1961, the Brotherhood established a connection with another secret
society, the Order of the Naqshbandis. This was a sort of Muslim Freemasonry
which mixed Sufi initiation with politics. One of their Indian theorists, Abu
al-Hasan Ali al-Nadwi, published an article in the Brotherhood’s magazine. The
Order is ancient, and represented in many countries. In Iraq, the grand master
was none other than the future vice-President, Izzat Ibrahim al-Douri. He would
support the attempted coup d’état by the Brotherhood in Syria, in 1982, and
then the “Return to Faith Campaign” organised by President Saddam Hussein in
order to restore an identity to his country after the imposition of the Western
no-fly zone.
In Turkey, the Order would play a more complex role. It would include as
its directors both Fethullah Gülen (founder of the Hizmet movement) and
President Turgut Özal (1989-1993), as well as Prime Minister Necmettin Erbakan
(1996-1997), founder of the Justice Party (1961) and the Millî Görüş movement
(1969). In Afghanistan, ex-President Sibghatullah Mojaddedi (1992) was the
Order’s grand master. In 19th century Russia, with the help of the Ottoman
Empire, the Order had raised up Crimea, Uzbekistan, Chechnya and Daghestan
against the Tsar. Until the fall of the USSR, we would hear nothing more of
this branch – just as in the Chinese Xinjiang region. The proximity between the
Brotherhood and the Naqshbandis is very rarely studied, given the a priori
Islamist opposition to mysticism and Sufi orders in general.
The Saudi headquarters of the World Islamic League. In 2015, its budget was
superior to that of the Saudi Ministry of Defence. The world’s major buyer of
weapons, Saudi Arabia acquired arms which the League distributed to the
organisations of the Muslim Brotherhood and the Naqshbandis.
In 1962, the CIA encouraged Saudi Arabia to create the Muslim World League
and finance both the Brotherhood and the Naqshbandi Order to work against the nationalists
and the Communists. The organisation was first of all financed by Aramco
(Arabian-American Oil Company). Amongst the twenty or so founding members, we
note the presence of three Islamist theorists whom we have already mentioned –
the Egyptian Sa’id Ramadan, the Pakistani Sayyid Abul Ala Maududi, and the
Indian Abu al-Hasan Ali al-Nadwi.
De facto, Arabia, which suddenly disposed of enormous liquidities thanks to
the commerce in oil, became the godfather of the Muslim Brotherhood all over
the world. At home, the monarchy entrusted them with the educational system for
schools and universities, in a country where almost no one knew how to read or
write. The Brotherhood had to adapt to its hosts. Indeed, their allegiance to
the King prevented them from swearing loyalty to the General Guide. In any
case, they organised around Mohamed Qutb, Sayyid’s brother, in two tendencies –
the Saudi Brotherhood on one side, and the “Sururists” (adepts of Sheikh Surur)
on the other. The Sururists, who are Saudis, attempted to create a synthesis
between the Brotherhood’s political ideology and Wahhabi theology. This cult,
of which the royal family are members, lived by an interpretation of Islam
which was born of the Bedouin tradition, iconoclast and anti-historic. Until
Riyadh came into all its petro-dollars, it made traditional Muslim schools
anathema, which, in return, considered it heretical.
In reality, the politics of the Brotherhood and the Wahhabist religion have
nothing in common, although they are compatible – except that the pact linking
the Saud family with the Wahhabist preachers cannot exist within the
Brotherhood – the idea of a “divine right” monarchy clashes with the
Brotherhood’s greed for power. It was therefore agreed that the Sauds would
support the Brotherhood everywhere in the world, on the condition that they
abstain from entering politics in Arabia.
The Saudi Wahhabi support for the Brotherhood provoked extra rivalry
between Arabia and the two other Wahhabi states – Qatar and the Emirate of
Sharjah.
From 1962 to 1970, the Muslim Brotherhood took part in the civil war in
North Yemen, and attempted to re-enlist the monarchy on the side of Saudi
Arabia and the United Kingdom against the Arab nationalists, Egypt and the USSR
– a conflict which foreshadowed what was to happen over the next half-century.
In 1970, Gamal Abdel Nasser managed to negotiate an agreement between the
Palestinian factions and King Hussein of Jordan, which put an end to the “Black
September” terrorist group. But on the evening of the Arab League summit which
met to ratify the agreement, he died, officially from a heart attack, but was
far more probably assassinated. Nasser had three vice-Presidents – one from the
left wing who was extremely popular; a centrist, a very public figure; and a
conservative at the bidding of the United States and Saudi Arabia – Anwar
el-Sadat. Under pressure, the left-wing vice-President declared himself unfit
for the function. The centrist vice-President preferred to abandon politics.
Sadat was therefore designated as the Nasserian candidate. This drama is played
out in many countries – the President chooses a vice-President from among his
rivals in order to extend his electoral base, but when he dies, the
vice-President replaces him and ruins his heritage.
Sadat, who had served the Reich during the Second World War, and professed
great admiration for the Führer, was an ultra-conservative soldier who served
as Sayyid Qutb’s alter-ego, a liaison officer between the Brotherhood and the
Free Officers Movement, the group of nationalist authors who instigated the
1952 revolution in Egypt. As soon as Sadat gained power, he freed the Muslim
Brothers who had been imprisoned by Nasser. The “faithful President” was the
Brotherhood’s ally for anything concerning the Islamisation of society (the
“Corrective Revolution”), but its rival when politically profitable for him.
This ambiguous relationship was illustrated by the creation of three armed
groups, which were not factions within the Brotherhood, but exterior units under
its orders – the Islamic Party of Liberation, the Islamic Jihad (under Sheikh
Omar Abdul Rahman), and Excommunication and Immigration (the “Takfiri”). All of
them claimed to be following the instructions of Sayyid Qutb. Armed by the
secret services, the Islamic Jihad launched attacks against the Coptic
Christians. Far from mitigating the situation, the “faithful President” accused
the Copts of sedition, and imprisoned their Pope and eight of their bishops.
Finally, Sadat intervened in the government of the Brotherhood and took a
stance in favor of the Islamic Jihad against the General Guide, whom he
arrested.
On instructions from US Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, Sadat convinced
Syria to join with Egypt to attack Israel and restore Palestinian rights. On 6
October 1973, while the Israelis were celebrating Yom Kippur, the two armies
took the Hebrew country in a pincer movement. The Egyptian army crossed the
Suez Canal, while the Syrian army attacked from the Golan Heights. However,
Sadat only partially deployed his anti-aircraft cover, and halted his army 15
kilometres to the East of the Canal – meanwhile, the Israelis attacked the
Syrians, who discovered that they were trapped and screamed conspiracy.
It was only when the Israeli reserve forces had been mobilised, and the
Syrian army was surrounded by Israeli troops, that Sadat ordered his army to
continue its progression, before halting it once again to negotiate a
cease-fire. Observing the Egyptian treason, the Soviets, who had already lost
an ally with the death of Nasser, threatened the United States and demanded an
immediate cessation of combat.
Ex-liaison officer with Sayyid Qutb for the « Free Officers » and the
Brotherhood, the « believer president », Anouar el-Sadate, was to be proclaimed
as the « sixth caliph » by the Egyptian parliament. Here, this admirer of Adolf
Hitler is in the Knesset alongside his partners Golda Meïr and Shimon Peres.
Four years later – still pursuing the CIA plan – President Sadat went to
Jerusalem and signed a separate peace treaty with Israel, to the detriment of
the Palestinians and of Syria. From then on, the alliance between the Muslim
Brotherhood and Israel was sealed. All the Arab peoples decried this treason,
and Egypt was excluded from the Arab League, whose headquarters were moved to
Algiers.
Responsible for the « Secret Wing » of the Muslim Brotherhood, Ayman
al-Zawahiri (currently the head of Al-Qaïda) organised the assassination of
President Sadate (6 October 1981).
In 1981, Washington decided to turn the page. The Islamic Jihad was ordered
to eliminate Sadat, who had outlived his usefulness. He was assassinated during
a military parade, while the Parliament was preparing to proclaim him the
“Sixth Caliph”. In the presidential box, seven people were killed and 28
wounded, yet sitting next to the President, his vice-President General Mubarak
survived. He was the only person in the box wearing body armour. He succeeded
the “faithful President”, and the Arab League could now be repatriated to
Cairo.
Source: Voltaire Network
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