First Egypt, now Saudi Arabia declares Muslim Brotherhood a terrorist group
Pamela Geller / Atlas Shrugs
First Egypt, now Saudi Arabia designates Obama’s party Muslim Brotherhood a terrorist group. Shocking that America would become a force for Islamic terror and supremacism the world over.
Imagine, Obama punished the Egyptian people bu withdrawing aid after they threw off the Islamic yoke of tyranny imposed by The Muslim Brotherhood. Obama presents a very real danger to freedom loving people.
Egypt Backs Saudi Arabia’s Branding of Muslim Brotherhood as Terrorists
“Saudis Put Terrorist Label on Muslim Brotherhood” NY Times, March 7, 2014
CAIRO — Saudi Arabia on Friday declared the Muslim Brotherhood
a terrorist organization, escalating a new campaign against the group
across the region with a sweeping ban that imposes lengthy prison
sentences for even expressing sympathy with it.
The Saudi decree equates the Brotherhood,
which has long denounced violence, with widely designated terrorist
organizations, including Al Qaeda, Hezbollah, the Islamic State of Iraq
and Syria and the Syria-based Nusra Front. The inclusion of the
Brotherhood appeared to signal the beginning of a Saudi effort to
eradicate the group, demonstrating the deepening polarization that is
spreading across the region after the Egyptian military’s ouster of
President Mohamed Morsi, a Brotherhood leader, last summer.
The decree was the Saudi monarchy’s latest
gesture of support for attempts by the new military-backed government in
Egypt to crush the Brotherhood. But it was also a pointed message to a
neighboring Persian Gulf state, Qatar,
which has provided refuge and support to Egyptian Brotherhood leaders
since the takeover. Consistently sympathetic coverage of the Brotherhood
by the Qatari-owned news network Al Jazeera has outraged Cairo and the
other gulf monarchies.
The Saudi royal family has always viewed
the Muslim Brotherhood with apprehension, fearing its rival blend of
Islam and politics as well as its avowed embrace of democracy. The Saudi
government prefers to align itself with a more puritanical approach to
Islam, Salafism, which teaches heavy deference to Muslim rulers. But
Brotherhood members living in Saudi Arabia have not usually felt the
need to hide their affiliation for fear of arrest.
Since Mr. Morsi was deposed, though, the
Saudi monarchy seems to have embarked on an all-out campaign against the
group. As the dominant force in the gulf, Saudi Arabia appears to have
led a campaign against Qatar over its support of the Islamists. This
week, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Egypt withdrew their ambassadors
from Doha, Qatar’s capital, in protest. Saudi Arabia and other gulf
states donated more than $12 billion to the military-backed government
in Cairo almost immediately after it removed Mr. Morsi.
The decree’s scope remained a puzzle. It
was unclear if Saudi Arabia meant to extend the terrorist label to every
affiliate or ally of the Brotherhood in the region. That would include
the prime ministers of Turkey and Morocco, the leading party in Tunisia,
and recognized opposition parties in Jordan and Bahrain. Some analysts
asked if the Saudis would jail Islamist public officials from those
countries if they visited, say, on a pilgrimage to Mecca.
Saudi Arabia is also a close ally of the
Syrian Muslim Brotherhood in their shared battle against President
Bashar al-Assad of Syria. And less than two years ago, King Abdullah of
Saudi Arabia met in Riyadh with Mr. Morsi on his first foreign trip
after his election. The United States and other Western countries do not
consider the Brotherhood a terrorist group.
In a statement
issued by its London office, the Brotherhood said it was surprised and
distressed by the decree. Unlike the militant groups listed, the
Brotherhood said it never declared any government to be “infidel” or a
legitimate target of violence. “The Brotherhood takes no stance of
enmity or confrontation with the state, but rather acts as an adviser or
a guider,” it said.
“The Muslim Brotherhood also cooperates
with all nations politically in order to achieve common goals, such as
having a dignified and free life,” the group said.
Jamal Khashoggi, a Saudi commentator, noted
in an interview with the Saudi-owned news network Al Arabiya that the
Brotherhood was the only organization on the terrorist blacklist that
was not an armed group.
“What are the activities of the Muslim
Brotherhood in the kingdom?” he asked. “These are not so easy to
describe, and the authorities will need to answer the question of how
they plan to respond to the group.”
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