Anonymous ID: d0ed17 June 7, 2019, 5:34 p.m. No.6697915   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>6695407 pb

 

Muslim Brotherhood, Hamas, and Israel vs. Syria suspicions

 

from Southfront:

"A media source told the Syrian Arab News Agency ...

“The stance of Syria on this issue is principled,” the source said, adding: ”This stance, in the past, was built on the fact that Hamas was a resistance movement against ‘Israel’, but, later it became clear that it is the blood of Muslim Brotherhood that dominates this movement when it supported the terrorists in Syria and engaged in the scheme that Israel wanted.”"

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The idea of converging interests or relationships between Israel, Hamas, and Muslim Brotherhood seems odd.

 

Then we also have a news article saying that Israel created Hamas. But the broadly understood narrative is that Muslim Brotherhood is responsible for establishing and maintaining Hamas.

 

Muslim Brotherhood is being accused of helping wreck Syria because MB does not like nationalism and secular government, perhaps. Both Southfront, above, and UK government, below, have their own agendas of course.

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.pdf attached is ''Muslim Brotherhood Review:

Main Findings'', the declassified notes from a 2014 report to the UK Prime Minister.

 

"The Muslim Brotherhood was established in Egypt in 1928. The founder and first Supreme Guide (spiritual leader), Hassan al Banna, called for the religious reformation of individual Muslims, the progressive moral purification of Muslim societies and their eventual political unification in a Caliphate under sharia law.

 

Al Banna and others argued that secularisation and westernisation were at the root of all contemporary problems of Arab and Muslim societies, and that nationalism was not the answer."

 

14.The Hamas founding charter claims they are the Palestinian branch of the Muslim Brotherhood and the Muslim Brotherhood treat them as such. In the past ten years support for Hamas (including in particular funding) has been an important priority for the MB in Egypt and the MB international network.

 

16.

influenced by his personal experiences in 1940s Egypt, in the US and in prison under Nasser, the key Muslim Brotherhood ideologue, Sayyid Qutb, drew on the thought of the Indo-Pakistani theorist, Abul Ala’a Mawdudi, the founder of the Islamist party Jamaat-e-Islami, to promote the doctrine of takfirism. This has consistently been understood as a doctrine permitting the stigmatisation of other Muslims as infidel or apostate, and of existing states as unIslamic, and the use of extreme violence in the pursuit of the perfect Islamic society. Qutb argued that a self-appointed vanguard of true believers was essential to create an authentically Islamic community and state. Jihad was neither solely spiritual nor defensive. Many contemporary Islamic states were regarded as ‘Un-Islamic’; confrontation with their ‘unjust’ rulers was legitimate and inevitable.

 

17.Sir John concluded on this complex subject that, for the most part, the Muslim Brotherhood have preferred non violent incremental change on the grounds of expediency, often on the basis that political opposition will disappear when the process of Islamisation is complete. But they are prepared to countenance violence – including, from time to time, terrorism - where gradualism is ineffective. They have deliberately, wittingly and openly incubated and sustained an organisation - Hamas - whose military wing has been proscribed in the UK as a terrorist organisation (and which has been proscribed in its entirety by other countries). The writings of the leading Muslim Brotherhood ideologue have been used to legitimise AQ-

related terror. Some leading Muslim Brotherhood members and supporters have endorsed attacks on western forces.