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Mubarak's Muslim Brotherhood ProphecySo they [Brotherhood and affiliates] took advantage of the economic situation by handing out money, to one man 100 Egyptian pounds, or about $30 dollars, [saying,] "Here take this bag of glycerin and throw it here," or do this or that—to create a state of instability in Egypt. And these groups—don't ever believe that they want democracy or anything like that. They are exploiting democracy in order to eliminate democracy. And if they ever do govern, it will be an ugly dictatorship. …. Once a foreigner [likely a Westerner] told me, "Well, if that's the case, why don't you let them form parties?" I told him, "they'd attack each other." He said, "So let them attack each other." I came to understand that by "attack each other" he thought I meant through dialogue. For years we've been trying to dialogue with them, and still are. If the dialogue is limited to words, fine. But when the dialogue goes from words to bullets and bombs… [Mubarak shakes his head, and then gives anecdotes of Egyptian police and security being killed by Brotherhood and affiliates, including how 104 policemen were killed in 1981, and how one officer was shot by them trying to save a boy's life.] The point is, we don't like bloodshed, neither our soldiers nor our officers. But when I see that you're firing at me, trying to kill me—well, I have to defend myself! Then the international news agencies go to these [Islamist] groups for information, and they tell them, "they're killing us, they're killing us!" Well, don't you [news agencies] see them killing the police?! I swear to you, not one of the police wants to kill them—not one of us. Then they say, "So Mr. President, you gave orders to the police to open fire indiscriminately?"—I cannot give such an order, at all. It contradicts the law. I could at one point be judged [for it]. Whatever one thinks of Hosni Mubarak—and his final assertion concerning himself is especially prophetic—he certainly understood the Brotherhood and their strategies well. Consider especially the following three points he made about them and how they have all proven true:
·
Mubarak: "And these groups—don't ever
believe that they want democracy or anything like that. They are exploiting
democracy in order to eliminate democracy. And if they ever do govern, it
will be an ugly dictatorship." Quite so. While paying lip service to
democracy, once the Brotherhood came into power under former president
Muhammad Morsi, they became openly tyrannical: Morsi gave himself
unprecedented powers for an Egyptian president, appointed Brotherhood members
to all important governmental posts, "Brotherhoodizing" Egypt (as
Egyptians called it), and quickly pushed through a Sharia-heavy constitution.
Under Morsi's one year of rule, many
more Christians were attacked, arrested, and imprisoned for
"blasphemy" than under Mubarak's thirty years.
·
Mubarak: "Then the international news
agencies go to these groups [Brotherhood] for information, and they tell
them, 'they're killing us, they're killing us!' Well, don't you [news
agencies] see them killing the police?!" Now that the Brotherhood has
been ousted and is promoting
terrorism in Egypt—especially
against its Christian minority—trying to push the nation into an all-out
civil war, they are, in fact, feeding the international media the old lie
that they are innocent, peaceful victims in order to garner Western sympathy.
·
Mubarak: "they took advantage of the
economic situation by handing out money." Funded by rich Wahhabi states,
the Islamist organizations bought their way into Egyptian society and power.
Prior to elections, they paid—that is, bribed—Egyptians
to vote for them; and after their ousting, they're paying people (along with beating
and forcing them) to stay with them in Ra'ba al-Adawiya, and provide them
with numbers for practical and propagandistic purposes.
Finally, consider Mubarak's exchange with "a foreigner," most
likely an American or European, who instantly interpreted Mubarak's
"they'd attack each other" in Western political terms of
"dialogue." This habit of projecting Western approaches onto
Islamists—who ironically represent the antithesis of the West—is one of the
chief problems causing the West to be blind to reality, which must ever and
always be articulated through its own paradigm, one that insists that violence
is always a product of political oppression and that Islamists are
perpetually misunderstood victims.In Egypt, however, one soon learns that, when "dialogue" doesn't go the Islamists' way, it's back to terrorism. This requires a more realistic approach, or, in the words of Mubarak, a man who, like his predecessors, especially Gamal Abdel Nasser, is intimately acquainted with the Brotherhood: "when I see that you're firing at me, trying to kill me—well, I have to defend myself!" Raymond Ibrahim is author of Crucified Again: Exposing Islam's New War in Christians (published by Regnery in cooperation with Gatestone Institute, April 2013). He is a Shillman Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center and an associate fellow at the Middle East Forum. |
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Monday, August 19, 2013
Mubarak's Muslim Brotherhood Prophecy :: Ibrahim at Gatestone
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