But among anti-Muslim groups like the
Center for Security Policy, which has close ties to Cruz, this document
is still held up as definitive proof that peaceful Muslim groups in the
U.S. are hellbent on committing “civilization jihad.”
Cruz cited the “civilization jihad”
memorandum in his press release this week. In the previous version of
the Muslim Brotherhood bill he introduced last year, he named CAIR and two other groups ― ISNA and the North American Islamic Trust ― as “affiliates” of the Muslim Brotherhood.
And during his 2016 presidential
campaign, his national security advisers included the Center for
Security Policy’s founder and president, Frank Gaffney, and its vice president, Clare Lopez.
Under the helm of Gaffney, the Center
for Security Policy has arguably done more than any other group to push
the “civilization jihad” conspiracy theory. It is listed as a hate group by
the Southern Poverty Law Center, whose website describes Gaffney
as “gripped by paranoid fantasies about Muslims destroying the West from
within, suspicious that Barack Obama was actually born in Kenya, and a
proponent of a new version of the infamous House Un-American Activities
Committee to root out suspected Muslim subversives.”
Gaffney has also baselessly accused
multiple political figures ― including Hillary Clinton aide Huma Abedin
and conservative activists Grover Norquist and Suhail Khan ― of
infiltrating the U.S. government on behalf of the Muslim Brotherhood.
“The Muslim Brotherhood has become a
boogeyman for these people and it’s just become the dirty word you can
connect these groups to,” said Eli Clifton, a fellow at the Nation
Institute and co-author of the Center for American Progress’ 2011 report
“Fear Inc.: The Roots of the Islamophobia Network in America.”
In the worldview of the Center for
Security Policy and similar anti-Muslim groups, Lean said, if someone’s
“brother-in-law’s cousin’s nephew’s half-brother was once in the grocery
store lane with a man who was in the Muslim Brotherhood … that’s
sufficient evidence that that particular individual or group is
representative of the Muslim Brotherhood. That’s hyperbole in a way, but
that is the sort of the logical leap that these people make.”
The reality, Lean said, is that “there
is never evidence” that CAIR or ISNA or the International Institute of
Islamic Thought ― to name a few of the Islamophobes’ targets ― are on
the brotherhood’s payroll or otherwise represent the brotherhood.
Ted Cruz introduced this bill back in 2015 when it didn’t have a prayer of passing under the Obama Regime.
After Trump’s election, anti-Muslim
groups in the U.S. were in a celebratory mood. The day after the
election, Gaffney told Breitbart Radio that Trump’s win was “literally a
blessing from God” and that declaring the Muslim Brotherhood a
terrorist group would be a key part of Trump’s “strategy of victory over
jihad.”
And then, as if to encapsulate his own
conspiracy theory, Gaffney said, “We’ve got to stop taking counsel from
[the Muslim Brotherhood], direction from them, and allowing them to
operate in our midst subversively, and that’s what’s been going on for
some 50 years now.”
Brigitte Gabriel, founder of Act for
America ― which the Southern Poverty Law Center has also listed as a
hate group ― bragged in a Dec. 13 fundraising email that her group had a
“direct line” to the Trump White House and that his presidency would be
a “four-year window of opportunity” to declare the Muslim Brotherhood a
terror group, among other objectives.
And Jamie Glazov, managing editor of
the anti-Muslim site FrontPage Magazine, said on Nov. 12, “What a sweet
moment, what a miraculous moment. CAIR, ISNA, and other Brotherhood
front groups should be shaking in their boots.” Those who worry about
the rights and safety of American Muslims have been less joyous since
the election.
The Islamophobia Industry author Lean
warned that if the U.S. declared the Muslim Brotherhood a terror group,
it’s likely the government could launch “wholesale surveillance” of the
Muslim community ― much as the New York Police Department once did,
“which violated [Muslims’] rights.”
And that, Lean suggested, would be the
relatively “benign” outcome. “When you render a group a terrorist
group,” he said, “that opens up the door for a lot of really damaging
possibilities, like endless prosecution of Muslim Americans that simply
hold different political or religious positions than Cruz, [Ben] Carson,
Gaffney, Trump and that band of fear-mongers.” When groups like CAIR
are weakened or dismantled, the people they represent become more
vulnerable to persecution.
Proposed DNC Chairman Keith Ellison (D-MN), a Muslim convert, has close ties to several Muslim Brotherhood front groups:
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