Tuesday, April 19, 2016

Hand in Hand: Untold Story of Muslim Brotherhood's Collusion With Daesh

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There are certain links between the Muslim Brotherhood, a transnational Sunni Islamist organization, and Daesh (ISIS/ISIL), according to Egyptian journalist Eman Nabih; the journalist nails Washington for its irresponsible backing of Muslim Brothers.

The Muslim Brotherhood was founded in 1928 in Egypt and has earned a bad reputation for its terrorist attacks, political assassinations and regime change attempts in the Middle East.


The Brotherhood allegedly collaborated with the Nazis in the 1940s and then cooperatied with the US intelligence services in the late 1970s-1980s, when jihadists flooded Afghanistan in order to fight against Soviet military forces and the secular government in Kabul.

According to Egyptian journalist and social media expert Eman Nabih, the Muslim Brotherhood's covert activity in the Middle East and North Africa has led to a series of military coups in the Arab world in 2011-2012 and the emergence of Daesh.

"The Muslim Brotherhood is the parent of all terrorist groups, including ISIS (Daesh). Hassan al-Banna, founder of the Muslim Brotherhood, sought to restore a worldwide Islamic Caliphate… 

 Under al-Banna's stewardship, the Brotherhood developed a network of underground cells, stole weapons, trained fighters, formed secret assassination squads, founded sleeper cells of subversive supporters in the ranks of the army and police, and waited for the order to go public with terrorism, assassinations, and suicide missions," the journalist writes in her article for Voltairenet.org, adding that the group has a long record of collaboration with Islamic extremists and fascist regimes.


In one of his interviews with Sputnik, Syrian expert Ghassan Kadi narrated that since 1928 the Muslim Brotherhood has beefed up its presence in the Levant, including in Syria and Lebanon, and beyond.


"The ideologies of the MB [Muslim Brotherhood] and Al-Qaeda are identical. In this same basket, you can include the Wahhabis, the Salafis, and all other Islamist groups," Kadi told Sputnik.

"Without the Muslim Brotherhood, al-Qaeda and Daesh would not have come into existence… After all, Ayman Al-Zawahiri, the current al-Qaeda leader, was once a prominent Muslim Brotherhood member," the expert emphasized.

According to Nabih, there is enough evidence of certain links between the Muslim Brotherhood and Daesh terrorists. She cites a wide range of Arab sources to illustrate her point.

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