IF THE BROTHERHOOD HAD A SLOGAN IT WOULD BE: TODAY EGYPT, TOMORROW THE WORLD

http://www.investors.com/NewsAndAnalysis/Article/562686/201102091912/A-Movement-Of-Brotherly-Hate.htm

A Movement Of Brotherly Hate

Islamofascism: If the Muslim Brotherhood had a slogan, it might be “Today Egypt, tomorrow the world.” Yet the Obama administration is intent on seeing this global jihadist group in a good light.

If you think the political upheavals in Egypt are frightening, read the self-proclaimed objectives of the opposition group that President Obama says should have representation in the next government.

The Israel-based media watchdog Palestinian Media Watch on Tuesday released an English translation of “Jihad is the Way,” the final volume of “The Laws of Da’wa” by Mustafa Mashhur, who ran Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood from 1996 to 2002.

The Jerusalem Post says Mashhur wrote the Brotherhood’s goal is “realizing the great task of establishing an Islamic state and strengthening the religion and spreading it around the world.” His book states “the banner of Jihad … shall continue to be raised, with the help of Allah, until every inch of the land of Islam will be liberated, and the State of Islam established.”

Palestinian Media Watch founder Itamar Marcus warned the Israeli newspaper of the dangers of downplaying the organization’s ideology, or expecting it to moderate once it gets power, because it differs from terrorist groups like al-Qaida only as to tactics, not goals.

The objectives of this organization have never really been a big secret. In 2007, PBS ran a documentary by Newsweek investigative reporters Mark Hosenball and Michael Isikoff on the Muslim Brotherhood.

At the time, Isikoff said “their publicly proclaimed goal is the creation of a worldwide Islamic caliphate that would govern according to Shariah, Koranic law.” The terror group Hamas is “the Palestinian branch of the Muslim Brotherhood,” he also said.

Chillingly, Isikoff also noted that in covering the global war on terror since the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, “in every step of the way we kept running into the Muslim Brotherhood.”  He pointed out that “many of the most prominent figures in international terrorism — Osama bin Laden,—(bin Laden right-hand man Ayman) Zawahiri himself — grew out of the Muslim Brotherhood.”

A comparison might be made with Ireland’s Sinn Fein. Like the Muslim Brotherhood, it was founded in the first half of the 20th century, gained great popularity as a broad-based political organization in the aftermath of an armed uprising, went dormant for decades and then re-emerged as the political arm of terrorists before formally gaining political power at the ballot box.

Yet President Obama has been courting the Brotherhood from his first day in power. As Jihad Watch founder Robert Spencer said Tuesday in Human Events, the president “chose the leader of a Muslim Brotherhood-linked group that had been named an unindicted co-conspirator in a Hamas terror funding case to give a prayer during his inauguration ceremonies.”

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