Former Egyptian Terrorism Official Exposes the Muslim Brotherhood’s Terror Networks
http://unconstrainedanalytics.org/former-egyptian-terrorism-official-exposes-muslim-brotherhoods-terror-networks/
On my recent trip to Egypt, I
met with Col. Khaled Okasha (ret), one of Egypt’s top former
counter-terrorism officials, to discuss the developing security
situation and to address a question that has received a lot of
international media attention:
Is the Muslim Brotherhood directly engaged in terrorism?
Okasha, the director of the
National Center for Security Studies, has literally written the books on
the development of militant networks in Egypt. He graciously met with
me for five hours upon my arrival in Cairo to discuss these issues.
He later sat down for a
three-hour, on-the-record interview on the Muslim Brotherhood’s terror
networks, the transcript of which is presented below.
TRANSCRIPT:
Thank you, Mr. Okasha, for meeting with us again today. Could you briefly describe your professional career?
I started beginning in 1987 as
special forces in the counter-terrorism unit active around Cairo until
the early 1990s in the suburbs of Cairo, including Imbabah, Ain Shams,
and Haram where the Gamaa Islamiya were very active back then.
You mentioned earlier
about Gamaa Islamiya in the 1990s. Could you talk about your role when
you were stationed in Upper Egypt, and what your later role was in
Sinai?
After I served in Cairo there, a
movement from the Gamaa Islamiya in Upper Egypt, specifically in Assiut
and Minya, they were working on two perspectives. One of them was to
wage a political war on the regime of Egypt, and the other was to
recruit more jihadis to join the Afghanistan war. And that ended with
the Luxor massacre in 1997, where I was stationed.
And Sinai?
I served in Sinai from 2008
until 2012, and I quit about six months after Morsi took office. Since
then I’ve dedicated my time to research and to publish a lot of material
on the jihadis and the militant Islamists.
In the U.S. we hear
repeatedly from the media that the Muslim Brotherhood renounced violence
in the 1970s. Is that really the case?
Back at the time, the
Brotherhood had a strategy to play a double game so that they could earn
a place in the Arabic community all over the region before they started
their armed militias.
That’s why at the beginning the
Brotherhood began approaching the syndicates and political parties
creating coalitions to push new faces into the political community and
to play the card that they are only trying to be a political partner in
ruling the country.
But in terms of their overall strategy, violence still remained a component to their activity?
Violence back then was based on
the strategy of using other groups — other terrorist groups — to
conduct their operations on their behalf.
Especially at this time was the
peak of the Arab-Afghan jihadi and mujahideen network. That’s why they
could use others to conduct their business.
At the same point, they were
introducing themselves to the political and intelligence communities in
the Arab world that they are the moderate face of Islamists, and they
offered to work with them because they’re the peaceful face. They used
the same tactic with the West, especially in the U.S., UK, and Germany,
of course.
When we spoke the other
day, you mentioned that after the June 30 protests and Morsi’s removal
on July 3, and then the clearing of the Rabaa and Nahda protest sites,
those events caused a crisis within the Brotherhood. Could you explain
that?
At the beginning of the Arab
Spring the Brotherhood were working to gain their dominance in the
countries that were infected by the Arab Spring. They succeeded in some
countries, they failed in others, and they’re suffering in some
countries. In Egypt and Tunisia they politically succeeded in securing
the Parliament and then the presidential elections.
Egypt is very special when it
comes to the Brotherhood, because the Supreme Guide comes from Egypt,
and according to their own constitution the Supreme Guide is the highest
spiritual guidance for the Brotherhood all over the world. So they
worked hard to maintain their power grabs on the establishments in
Egypt.
When they were attacked by the
people themselves and felt threatened, they were very afraid to lose all
that they had been working on over the last two years to secure their
power grab. So it was a real disaster for them because Egypt is the
place where they started and the place where they had their
headquarters.
And as we discussed the
other day, the Brotherhood established two different fronts in response
to Morsi’s removal that was a divided effort between Upper Egypt and
Sinai. Could you start off discussing the role of Mohamed Kamal, who was
a senior Muslim Brotherhood leader, and his role in establishing the
terror networks and cells operating in Upper Egypt?
As a matter of fact Mohamed
Kamal was one of the youngest members of the Guidance Bureau, and he
originally came from Assiut. He was responsible for memberships, and
running the Brotherhood all over the governorates of Egypt. He had very
wide connections with the Brotherhood in Assiut, and during the time
that the Brotherhood was in power politically he was very careful not to
establish any terror cells so that he wouldn’t attract the attention of
the security apparatus in Egypt.
So at that time, the
Brotherhood worked hard to present themselves to the Egyptian
establishment that they are working politically to advance their
position with the Gamaa Islamiya and the remnants of Islamic Jihad. They
allowed them to establish their own political parties, and these
political parties were used as a cover for the militants. At that time
the Brotherhood would use the Gamaa and Jihad to conduct their militant
operations and keep their hands clean of any terror attacks that were
taking place at the time because they were in power politically.
How did Mohamed Kamal structure his terror cells, and what were some of the groups that were under his control?
The terror cells that are
blatantly Brotherhood were formed after June 30 by Mohamed Kamal. It was
a mix between the Gamaa Islamiya youth that were ready and trained to
deal with a crisis like what happened on June 30 for the Islamists, and
the other group of people he used were the Muslim Brotherhood youth.
Some of those were at Rabaa and Nahda, while others were elsewhere, but
they were shocked that they were ejected. They were not equipped, or
they couldn’t form any sort of reaction to what happened, so he made his
cells between those components, the Gamaa Islamiya and the Brotherhood
youth.
He used them throughout 2013
and 2014, and the remnants of them are still active on the streets. Some
of the groups were called Ajnad Misr, Helwan militias, Civil
Resistance, another group called the Molotov Movement, another called
Walaa, and then lately Hassm and Liwa al-Thawra.
Another very important
component was the Hazemoon group, led by Hazem Salah Abu-Ismails, who
was actually one of those political allies of the Brotherhood. He had a
trained and armed group within his political group. The alliance between
him and the Brotherhood started from 2011, and he was entrusted with
sending the mujahedeen youth to Syria. So after June 30 Kamal used the
Hazemoon group with the other two components to train and equip the
Brotherhood youth who were not very familiar with the militant activity.
That’s why in a matter of weeks you had active and operating terror
cells all over Egypt. They were very focused on Cairo, Giza, and
Alexandria.
Two of the other groups
we heard a lot about during this period of time was Revolutionary
Punishment and Popular Resistance. Were they also part of Mohamed
Kamal’s network?
Yes, Popular Resistance is the
Civil Resistance I mentioned earlier. Revolutionary Punishment was of
course part of the groups I just listed, I just forgot to mention it,
but it’s the same MO, it’s the same formation, it’s the same activity,
and of course they both belong to the cells that Mohamed Kamal
established.
What kinds of activities were these cells involved in?
They had two main targets when
they started: security forces and security personnel, and also the armed
forces that were stationed to protect public buildings. They conducted
more than 25 to 30 successful operations that resulted in casualties,
and they conducted more than 50 operations that had no casualties. The
other main target was any public service establishment, like power
stations, communications towers, railways, and subways. The point was to
keep the pressure on, and to let the people know that they will always
be under terror attacks, and these operations would go on at least
weekly to keep the people in a constant panic mode.
One of the things we
saw after August 14, when Rabaa and Nahda were cleared, were the attacks
on the churches, particularly in Upper Egypt. What exactly was the
strategy for the Brotherhood in the attacks on the churches?
After June 30 the larger
strategy of the Muslim Brotherhood was composed of three main points.
Number one was Sinai, and that entails all the terror cells in Sinai,
and their main target was to control the cities like Al-Arish and Rafah
and establish an Islamic emirate on the borders with Gaza. The second
strategy was creating many terrorist cells all over Egypt. That plan
failed so they decided to focus on the central cities like Giza and
Cairo as I said before. And number three they targeted the Christians,
their buildings and business in order to start a sectarian war in Upper
Egypt to put the new regime after June 30 in the midst of a sectarian
war in Egypt.
But it doesn’t appear that strategy worked?
They were betting that
Christians would fight back with arms, and that is what they were hoping
would take place to destabilize the new government. But the pope went
on television and told the Christians and June 30 supporters to not
defend the churches the Brotherhood was attacking, saying that the
churches could be rebuilt but not human lives.
How was Kamal’s network financed?
After August 14, 2013, it was
very clear that they didn’t have enough financial resources, and that
was clear in the type of terrorist operations they conducted before that
time. But starting from 2014, after about seven months, it seemed that
another financial system was put in place and was injecting large
financial amounts to the terror cells. Later on it was figured out that
they received external transfers but those transfers would come through
the foreign exchange businesses operating across Egypt that were handed
over to unknown persons, “new faces” that the security services didn’t
know about. Those persons would then deliver the money to the operation
room that was operated by Mohamed Kamal.
The Egyptian security was able
to figure out who was running the financial side of the Muslim
Brotherhood after August 2013, and that’s why they suffered financially
for seven or eight months. Those seven or eight months was the time they
needed to explore new avenues to provide financially for the
Brotherhood. They used the foreign exchange companies, and they used the
Brotherhood sisters to create bank accounts and to receive outside
transfers, because usually the security forces had never before targeted
the women of the Brotherhood, so that was a new avenue they used.
We saw that Mohamed
Kamal was killed by security forces in October 2016. What led up to
that, and what has been the fall out since his death?
When the Brotherhood started
counting on Kamal to run the terror cells, and it was obvious to the
Brotherhood that they had an armed militia operating, they began talking
between themselves that Kamal was the new spiritual guide because he
had full control over the youth of the Brotherhood and full control over
the money injected into Egypt. He used the money to finance the terror
cells and he used the money to support the families of the Brotherhood
all over Egypt. So the youth of the Brotherhood began to call for Kamal
to be their supreme guide and that caused a major rift between the old
guard and the new guard, and they started exchanging communiques between
them back and forth, and of course the old guard refused to have
Mohamed Kamal as the new supreme guide, and the new young MB refused to
bow to the old guard again.
Because they were all chased by
the security back then, there were a war of statements between three
fronts: the Mohamed Kamal front, the old guard front, and the
Brotherhood in Turkey who were very supportive of the old guard against
Mohamed Kamal, and they issued a statement that they would never accept
or approve of Kamal taking the role of supreme guide. So the whole thing
remained in stagnation or in the realm of statements because they were
being chased by security. It took almost a year of statements and
anti-statements beginning in early 2015 until Mohamed Kamal was killed
in October 2016 to resolve itself.
So the Brotherhood’s
international organization wanted to have both sides working with each
other, like the MB leaders in prison, and the MB in Qatar or outside the
country in any way, and they wanted those to run the organization, but
they wanted Mohamed Kamal to be the leader of the militants of the
Brotherhood, so that’s why they didn’t take any side between both sides,
and they wanted very hard to reconcile them with each other so they
could work together. Again, on the political level, the social level,
and the armed level.
The international organization
communicated to Mohamed Kamal that they could not take his side against
the old guard, because Kamal’s group have gone out and spoke about
explicit violence against the regime. So the international organization
were very afraid that their reputation would be affected if took his
side with his people calling for violence, so that started worrying
other branches of the Brotherhood, especially in Morocco, Tunisia, and
very specifically in Jordan, and they began talking about leaving the
Brotherhood for good, so that’s why the international organization
wanted both sides to reconcile and work together.
So the old guard against
Mohamed Kamal figured that the war of statements went into a point of no
return, and no part was able to take over the other part. At that time,
the security forces were gathering information on the operations room,
and it seems that the old guard in the prison decided to snitch on
Mohamed Kamal and let one of their snitches leak his whereabouts to
police. That’s when police arrived at his safehouse and found it a
highly secured location with lots of explosives, bombs, bomb vests, and
Kalashnikovs. There was a big fight going on with a lot of police
officers injured, but none died, and they had to kill those, Mohamed
Kamal and five others with him.
At this point you have to know
that it’s part of the Brotherhood operation that when someone goes rogue
on the organization, they either take the decision to assassinate him,
or throw him to the police forces for them to take care of them. What
proves this point is after the death of Mohamed Kamal everything went to
normal within the organization again, and their problems suddenly
vanished.
Now it seems that one of the
leaders, an unknown name so far, decided to change the MO and focus on
only two groups, the largest groups, because the smaller ones were
easily taken by security. So they decided to merge the rest of them into
two large groups. That ended up with Hassm and Liwa al-Thawra. Those
guys are much more professional than the other cells, and it seems they
have received some training in Sinai, and that’s very obvious in their
preparedness and the type of operations they conduct. Still the name is
not known of the person who is running the scene after Mohamed Kamal,
but it’s very possible that each of those groups has their own leader,
but that’s all we know so far.
And so we have pretty
good reason to believe that Hassm and Liwa al-Thawra are still operating
at the direction and support of the Brotherhood?
Without any doubt, yes.
There is no doubt that Hassm
and Liwa al-Thawra are serving the Muslim Brotherhood. They were created
by Mohamed Kamal, not after Mohamed Kamal. They started their
operations during Mohamed Kamal’s time.
Second, all their operations,
all the attacks they conducted were very serving to the Brotherhood and
falls within their best interests. For example, when the Brotherhood
cases were being discussed in courts, they attacked the judges that were
hearing the cases of the Brotherhood. All of the videos that they have
on the internet talking about Mohamed Morsi and using the same
Brotherhood rhetoric about fighting the regime, so there’s no doubt that
these guys belong to and serve the Brotherhood.
You’ve literally
written the book on the development of the terror networks in the Sinai.
Could you talk about the development of Ansar Beit al-Maqdis, and what
role the Brotherhood and Hamas played in their development?
Right after January 2011 there
was a flow of those who call themselves mujahedeen, from around Egypt,
and outside of Egypt, the old mujahedeen those who served in Afghanistan
and Chechnya, they arrived in Sinai and they established up to twelve
cells. One of those was ABM.
At this time I was stationed in Sinai, and I was close to Al-Arish, Sheikh Zweid, and Rafah.
It was very obvious that there
was consistent support from the Brotherhood or interest that these new
organization that they were formed and stationed in Sinai at this time.
Two examples on the
relationship between the Brotherhood and those organizations. Those who
were managing and supporting the new organizations in Sinai were people
from North Sinai that later on when the Brotherhood’s Freedom and
Justice Party was formed they were the leaders of the FJ Party in Sinai.
Some of those guys ran for the Parliament and were elected. Some went
to the Parliament and others the Shura Council. That was during the SCAF
time during the transition.
The second example that these
groups were serving the Brotherhood or acting on their orders and
supervision is that they didn’t conduct any operations. They would only
be activated whenever there were negotiations taking place between SCAF
and the Brotherhood. At any given point when the Brotherhood were
negotiating on something with the SCAF you would witness a pattern with
the uprising of terror attacks in the Sinai, like the bombing of the gas
pipelines between Egypt and Israel, attacking the army stations in
Sinai, so it all depended on whether the Brotherhood were negotiating
something with the SCAF.
There were four major political
events taking place back then. That was the March Constitution, the
Parliament elections, the Shura Council elections, and then the
presidential elections when Mohamed Morsi was elected. Each time we were
approaching one of those major political events, terrorism would
suddenly disappear and the same vehicles that were armed with RPG’s and
Kalashnikovs, they would take the arms from off the cars and stickers
and they would use it for supporting the Brotherhood politically all
over the place. Then they would bring people for political gatherings,
and stuff like that. There was no clearer indication than this.
It would be safe until the political situation was over, and then you would witness another attack.
So what were these terror networks doing under Mohamed Morsi? How did he handle the Sinai terror problem?
To close this chapter, under
Mohamed Morsi there was total peace and calm in the area. But then the
August 2012 Rafah massacre took place and that was conducted so Morsi
could get rid of the SCAF old guard. It was basically a move against the
army, and it was used to get rid of the SCAF leaders and the
intelligence chief, Gen. Muwafi.
After the Rafah massacre there
was an announcement of the Operation Eagle by the army to counter
terrorism in Sinai, but within a couple of weeks we realized it was a
stunt declaration because Mohamed Morsi gave explicit orders to the
army, to the intelligence, and to state security to stop pursuing the
terrorists, or anything terrorism-related. And after that there was no
terrorist activity taking place in Sinai, those groups went to secluded
areas in Sinai to regroup and train.
After this point I had to quit
because I realized that things are bound to get out of hand, so that’s
when I submitted my resignation.
What was the role of
Mahmoud Ezzat, the current acting Supreme Guide, in activating Ansar
Beit al-Maqdis after Mohamed Morsi’s removal?
Ezzat’s role with Ansar Beit
al-Maqdis started before Morsi was removed. It started when Morsi made
it to the president’s office. All the Brotherhood leaders were busy in
their power grab over Cairo and the rest of Egypt, so Mahmoud Ezzat had
very good connections with Hamas, and he trusted Hamas to organize and
coordinate the communication between the twelve terrorist groups. They
figured that most of them are small except two, that’s ABM and Tawhid
and Jihad. They were left under the management of Hamas because the
Brotherhood wanted to separate themselves publicly from dealing with any
terrorist organizations.
But at the same time, Khaled
al-Shater, the strongest man in the Brotherhood organization, sent his
own ambassadors to deal, manage and arrange the terrorist groups so that
they were basically under the Guidance Bureau.
Three very important names that
we have to mention here. The most famous, or infamous, of these
ambassadors was Mohamed Zawahiri, and he was used because he was the
brother of Ayman Zawahiri, and most or all of these groups were al-Qaeda
ideologues; Safwat Hegazy, and he was responsible for the financial
operations and the moving of arms from Libya and Gaza to Sinai; and the
last Ayman Abdel Raouf, an official adviser to Morsi and his office was
in the presidential palace. These guys were seen visiting with the
terrorists, and their meetings were monitored and all their back and
forth communications between the Guidance Bureau and the terrorist
organizations were all recorded.
Security did see that, and all
of these guys are in prison at the moment facing trails. The problem was
that all the information we had when Morsi was in office we couldn’t
use. We were ordered to stand down. Abdel Raouf used to travel to Sinai
to attend these meetings in presidential cars. He was stopped twice by
traffic and security checks, and they would receive a phone call from
the presidential office to ask them to let him pass because he was going
on an official mission for the president.
This whole thing is proof
enough on the relations between the Brotherhood and the terrorist
organizations in Sinai. This comes as no surprise at all, because all
these things have been going on since before Morsi took office. These
things are proved officially and are being discussed in court right now.
What was the strategy with them pledging bayat to al-Baghdadi, because the narrative back in America is that ISIS is opposed to the Brotherhood?
After June 30th the
Brotherhood issued orders through Hamas that the twelve organizations
join the largest one of them, which is ABM, because they were all
shocked by the June 30 protests. No one expected it. And they found that
the army was expanding their work in Sinai against the terrorists. So
they decided to merge under ABM.
In 2014, ISIS expanded to Mosul
and announced the caliphate. At this point the groups in Sinai figured
they made the wrong bet on the Brotherhood, that the Brotherhood might
not restore their power against the June 30 regime. They decided to bet
on the winning horse, so that when the Brotherhood loses they cannot
gain what they were promised, which was the Islamic caliphate along the
Gaza borders.
The Brotherhood found a major
gain in ABM joining ISIS: It would debunk the theory that they are
working in cooperation, since all this had been known to everyone. That
would clear their names and Hamas’ names, especially at that time
Egyptian security was publicly accusing Hamas of supporting the
mujahedeen.
The second point is that they
wanted to help ABM by pledging allegiance to ISIS, ISIS would support
ABM. Because the Brotherhood at this point were not able to support them
logistically or financially since the army had taken extreme measures
to cut the financial networks and cut any possibility of smuggling
weapons to and from Gaza through the security zone. All this would have
weakened ABM. So rather than sacrificing ABM they saw an opportunity for
ISIS to take over reinforcing them again.
Are they still connected with the Brotherhood?
The most blatant connection is
the operations that ABM conduct in favor of the Brotherhood. To give you
an example, first they accepted the training of some of the Hassm and
Liwa al-Thawra cadres for the Brotherhood. Second, they assassinated
four attorney generals in Al-Arish on the day that the Brotherhood
Supreme Guide was sentenced to death. They feel the gratitude because
the Brotherhood helped create and support them since 2011. So they do
mutual services for each other, yes.
Also, they have not completely
cut ties with Hamas. If we can put it in percentage, we can say they
still have about 20 percent cooperation of what they used to have.
That’s how they remain in service of the Brotherhood, because otherwise
if Hamas turned against them there would be no breathing room for them
in the area anymore, and they would be weakened again. So there is still
a major connection between those terrorist organizations and the
Brotherhood.
When the army stopped the flow
of the non-Egyptian jihadis that used to join those groups, ABM and
those terrorist groups started recruiting from the natives of Sinai. But
those natives are basically related to the Brotherhood and the
Salafists in Egypt, so that’s the only the source to make more militants
to their groups. All of these reasons among others make it impossible
to cut ties with the Brotherhood, otherwise they would just vanish.
Is the Muslim Brotherhood a terrorist organization?
With all what we have witnessed
since the establishment of the Brotherhood back in the 1920s up until
today we are definitely up against a terrorist organization.
Even in the times when the
Brotherhood claimed that they had renounced violence and introduced
themselves as an active political faction of the community all over the
Islamic world, the Arab world, and even the West, they had very strong
alliances with active terrorist organizations. They had alliances with
al-Qaeda. They had alliances with Gamaa Islamiya in Egypt. They had
alliance with Islamic Jihad. They had alliances with Al-Shabaab in
Somalia. They are the ones who established Boko Haram in Nigeria. They
were basically a founding members of all the terrorist organizations
operating in Libya after 2011. Before that they were the only terrorist
organization operating in Libya before the Arab Spring.
What would you tell
U.S. lawmakers as they are weighing their options in asking for the
designation of the Muslim Brotherhood as a terrorist organization?
I would advise the lawmakers to
look closely at what took place in the last five or six years. We are
facing a major terror threat all over the world. And it’s time that the
lawmakers declare or designate all the terrorist organizations as
terrorist organizations, and on top of them all the Muslim Brotherhood,
so that we prosecute them all over the world. Not just the Brotherhood,
but anyone who is threatening our safety.
The Brotherhood was established
basically to rule the Arab and the Muslim world. That’s in their
manifesto. They use too many fake masks to introduce themselves to the
Western world. They use, rather they abuse, major countries like the
U.S., the U.K., and other major European countries in pressuring the
Arab and Muslim countries to accept them within the political system.
And we have witnessed that after the Arab Spring with how the jumped and
grabbed power once there is any sort of instability.
I would also like them to know
that the Muslim Brotherhood is the most dangerous of all the terrorist
organizations because this is the oldest surviving organization from the
1920s until today. So we are facing a great threat.
What would you say to
the think tanks and the so-called experts in America who say that the
Muslim Brotherhood has nothing to do with terrorism?
I would say that they lack any
real information. I would say that they get their information from the
media, and the Muslim Brotherhood are very clever when they are promote
fake news in the media. I would say you need to dig a little deeper to
understand what you’re facing.
I would advise them to listen
to those who faced and suffered from the Muslim Brotherhood, literally,
not virtually. We have lived with them. We have tried them politically,
and we have known that they are extremists, they are bigots, they are
hateful, and they hate other religions. They’re sectarians and they are
against freedom of speech, so we advise them to understand those who
actually suffered and dealt with the Brotherhood on the ground, face to
face, not through the media.
Thank you very much, Mr. Okasha.
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