Today's Deltas and the current WAR.
If MB wanted to run terrorist cells around the world, would the sheep even recognize the signs? No. No they wouldn't. Because the DEVIL COMES WITH A SMILE.
Iran’s Muslim Brotherhood Ties Overshadow Rapprochement with Egypt
The Supreme Leader of Iran recently announced his support for normalizing relations with Egypt. Iranian media is also promoting the Sultan ofOman’srecent visit to Tehran as a possible attempt at mediation. Informed sources have told Al-Arabiya that the two countries have agreed to form a joint committee to coordinate the restoration of relations.
Tehran and Cairo have had a rugged relationship since the 1979 Revolution in Iran. Initially, the fallout resulted from strictly political grievances because Egypt ceased hostilities with Israel following theCamp David Accords,which was anathema to the intensely anti-Israeli Islamists in Iran. A little later, President Sadat granted asylum to the former Shah of Iran and refused to extradite him to the revolutionary regime in Tehran.
Although these two early eventscast a long shadowover the Iranian-Egyptian relationship, it is indeed the ideological affinity and cooperation between the Islamist regime in Iran and its counterpart in Egypt, namely the Muslim Brotherhood, which has posed an existential threat to whatever government has been in power in Cairo since the mid-twentieth century that keep the relationship between the two countries frigid.
Similarities between the Khomeinist Movement and the Muslim Brotherhood
The Muslim Brotherhood ideology inspired the Khomeinist movement in Iran, and Sayyid Qutb, one of the most influential Brotherhood theorists, has always been popular among Iranian Islamists. Although Ruhollah Khomeini, the founder of the Islamic Republic, did not openly acknowledge the Brotherhood’s influence, it is true that the current Supreme Leader of Iran Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has translated Qutb’s work into Farsi. According to Mohsen Kadivar, a prominent Iranian theologist, Qutb is Khamenei’s favorite writer.
The Muslim Brotherhood and the Khomeinist version of Islamism entertain an apocalyptic vision of the world. They are invested in the totalitarian ideology of Islamism, which holds that Islam is a total way of life that must supplant all other ways of life, including liberal democracy. The Islamic Republic and the Muslim Brotherhood detest and disregard the Westphalian order that is the basis of modern international law and seek to establish a pan-Islamic superstate through the conquest of the Middle East and, eventually, the rest of the world. They both share anti-Western, anti-Israeli, and anti-GCC sentiments.
The Iranian Islamists learned a lot from their Sunni brethren early on. They followed the Brotherhood’s model of infiltrating the West’s political, cultural, and academic institutions and guiding public opinion to legitimize their positions and gain leverage in the Middle East. In the U.S., the Shiite Student Islamic Association was founded as a splinter cell of the Brotherhood’s Muslim Students’ Association in North America in the 1960s.
The Islamic Center of Hamburg, the foremost Shiite institute of influence in the West at the time, closely followed in the Brotherhood’s footsteps when it implemented a sophisticated program of proselytization and engagement with European public intellectuals. That approach can still be seen in the lobbying practices of the institutions affiliated with the Iranian regime in the West.
The Muslim Brotherhood also taught the Iranian revolutionaries how to take up arms. During the 1960s and 1970s, many Iranian Islamists and radical Leftists were trained in guerrilla camps in Egypt and Syria under the auspices of Brotherhood-sympathetic army officers.
moar Obama fuckery
https://gulfif.org/irans-muslim-brotherhood-ties-overshadow-rapprochement-with-egypt/#:~:text=However%2C%20in%20his%20memoirs%2C%20Ebrahim,always%20been%20welcome%20in%20Iran.