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Professors and Politicos Fooled by the Muslim Brotherhood
by Cinnamon Stillwell • Jul 27,
2012 at 5:01 pm
Engagement with
Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood is the consensus among elite opinion and certainly
among the ranks of North American Middle East studies academics, the
"experts" tasked with informing the public and, often,
policy-makers on foreign policy in the region. Since the Egyptian revolution,
these academics have whitewashed
the Muslim Brotherhood, downplayed its Islamist
agenda, and urged U.S. cooperation—a policy suggestion the Obama
administration has clearly taken to heart.
Many have been shocked by the speed with
which the Obama administration has pursued this policy of outreach.
The current
debate within Congress about the potential influence of the Muslim
Brotherhood on Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton and the State Department—a deliberation that crosses party
lines—demonstrates just how deeply the influence has spread.
The symbiotic relationship between the
academic and political spheres came to the fore in April of this year. No
sooner had representatives of the Freedom and Justice Party (FJP), the
political wing of Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood, met
with White House officials than the same delegation was taking part in a panel discussion at
Georgetown University's Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal Center for Muslim-Christian
Understanding (ACMCU) on April 4, 2012 (click here to watch).
That the Saudi-funded
ACMCU and its founding director John
Esposito—a notorious apologist for radical
Islam and the moderator of the panel discussion—would host the FJP makes
perfect sense. So, too, did the FJP representatives' deceptive
claims to uphold democratic rights, women's rights, religious and
political pluralism, and a pro-American foreign policy, even as the Muslim
Brotherhood's Islamist philosophy, stated goals, and the words of its own
members—when directed towards Arabic-speaking audiences—all indicate
otherwise. In reality, the Muslim Brotherhood's goal of establishing a
global caliphate in which Sharia (Islamic) law reigns supreme remains
unchanged. (In the U.S., as noted
by Middle East Forum president Daniel Pipes, this entails replacing the
"Constitution with the Koran.") The challenging question and answer
period indicated that the audience at Georgetown was not entirely misled by
the FJP's façade of moderation, despite the fact that they were given a
platform by a prestigious institution in the field of Middle East studies.
Unfortunately, the same cannot be said for
the Obama administration, which seems determined to forget the lessons
of the 1979 Iranian "Islamic revolution." From the halls of academe
to the corridors of power, the advice of "experts" can have
far-reaching consequences.
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Sunday, July 29, 2012
Professors and Politicos Fooled by the Muslim Brotherhood
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