Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Cairo: The Brotherhood, Erdogan And ISIS

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Cairo: The Brotherhood, Erdogan And ISIS

    THE BROTHERHOOD, ERDOGAN AND ISIS

    Al Ahram, Egypt
    Nov 7 2014

    Political Islam has nothing to offer the region except bad choices
    and worse, writes Galal Nassar

    It is an old strategy to present two grim alternatives and force people
    to choose the lesser of two evils. This was how the Muslim Brotherhood
    presented itself in Egypt, regionally and internationally through their
    international organisation. They were the model of moderate, tolerant
    Islam, capable of restraining the hardliners. In assuming power, they
    would be in a position to serve regional and international interests
    by keeping the rank and file of extremist groups in check because with
    them in the limelight they would put paid to the extremists' claims
    and pretexts that Islamic rule had to prevail in countries that had
    majority Muslim populations. The Muslim Brothers have succeeded in
    marketing this notion in Egypt and elsewhere in the Arab world even
    among some liberal and leftist leaders who advocate accommodating the
    Muslim Brotherhood as a means to halt the violence and end terrorism,
    and who argue that to fight the Muslim Brothers, in spite of the fact
    that they have taken up arms against the state, aggravates tensions,
    violence and bloodshed. In other words, once again we are to choose
    between the lesser of two evils: by embracing the Muslim Brothers we
    avert the dangers of Ansar Beit Al-Maqdis and ISIS.

    The line of argument ignores the well-known fact that the Muslim
    Brotherhood has always been the official sponsor of takfiri thought.

    The ideas of Hassan Al-Banna, Sayed Qotb and other Brotherhood
    ideologues are brimming with intolerance, discrimination, hatred of
    the other (among fellow Muslims if they are Shia) and vilification of
    all who disagree with their thinking. The Muslim Brotherhood version
    of Islam is a far cry in form and substance from moderate Islam as
    epitomised by the outlook and attitudes of Al-Azhar and by the ideas
    of famous Islamic scholars such as the illustrious reformist the Imam
    Mohamed Abdu.

    This brings us to another pair to compare and contrast: Abu Bakr
    Al-Baghdadi, self-proclaimed caliph over the self-proclaimed Islamic
    State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), and Recep Tayyip Erdogan, newly elected
    president of Turkey seen by an Islamist current in Egypt and elsewhere
    in the region as the Muslim who most merits the caliphate.

    So argues that Muslim Brotherhood spiritual leader, the Egyptian/
    Qatari Sheikh Youssef Al-Qaradawi who points out that Turkey was
    the seat of the caliphate. The rise of the Muslim Brothers in most
    countries of the Arab region following the Arab Spring revolutions was
    to be the step that preceded Erdogan's rise to that throne. Erdogan and
    his clique couched this in different terms to his friends in Washington
    and other Western capitals. By means of the Muslim Brotherhood regimes
    in the Arab region he would be able to keep this region under control,
    curb the reach of the Iranian ogre, promote democratic transformation
    in a way that would not harm Western interests and that would draw
    Islamist extremists back from European countries.

    When confronted with the Baghdadi image next to the Erdogan one,
    the observer abroad and the citizen at home is certain to leap
    for the latter as the lesser of two evils if not as the model for
    spearheading development, the fight against corruption and the drive
    for economic growth. When faced with a choice like that, how easy
    it becomes to turn a blind eye to Erdogan's dictatorial tendencies,
    to his repression of civic freedoms and suppression of all opposing
    voices, to the corruption of his family and political party, to his
    designs to craft the law and the constitution in ways to augment his
    personal powers and promote his neo-Ottoman imperial project.

    It is difficult to find any difference between the logic of the
    pro-Erdogan camp and the argument espoused by some Egyptian elites
    in favour of embracing the Muslim Brotherhood as a way of checking
    Islamist extremists in spite of the fact that the Muslim Brothers have
    proven their incompetence in political office and have demonstrated
    how their way of thought and behaviour is inappropriate for those
    at the helm of a society that has long been plagued by corruption
    and repression under many glorious sounding banners and emblems
    and that must now free itself of subjugation to all authorities,
    even to authorities that fly the pennants of religion, the imam,
    the supreme guide or the guardian of the faith.

    With regard to Erdogan's neo-Ottoman imperial project, no major
    Turkish obstacles stand in its way theoretically due to the nature
    of the radical changes brought by the ruling Justice and Development
    Party (JDP) during its decade in government. Economically, the per
    capita income tripled and the Turkish economy soared to the 15th
    strongest in the world and Erdogan has pledged to bring it up to tenth
    before another decade is out. Politically, the JDP has succeeded in
    eliminating the army from politics and breaking long established
    taboos with regard to the Kurdish and Armenian problems (without
    having gone so far as to offer viable solutions to either). Along
    with such inroads, the Erdogan-led governments have decimated all
    opposition and ruthlessly repressed protest demonstrations, an
    approach consistent with his thinking that he made explicit when he
    was mayor of Istanbul to which he was elected in 1994. At the time,
    Erdogan was a member of the Islamist Refah (Welfare) Party headed by
    Necmettin Erbakan. In December 1997, during a rally in Siirt, he chose
    to recite a poem that included verses by an Islamist and pan-Turkish
    nationalist poet that have been translated as: "The mosques are our
    barracks, the domes our helmets, the minarets our bayonets... " He
    was arraigned and found guilty on charges of incitement to criminal
    offences and incitement to religious or racial hatred, and stripped
    of his mayoral position. After serving a 10-month prison sentence
    he was released and soon became head of the Refah Party's successor,
    the JDP, and then prime minister.

    Like his policies towards the Armenians and the Kurds, Erdogan's
    expressed desire to push his country's EU accession bid is something
    of a smokescreen. Realising how slim his chances have become, he
    is set on what may have been his original grand design, which is to
    re-establish Turkey (under his leadership) at the head of the Arab
    and Islamic world under the banner of a resurrected caliphate or any
    other sign that ensures Turkey's place as the uncontested commercial,
    economic and political gateway to the Middle East.

    If parties of whatever ideological trend in this region support or
    feel they can live with Erdogan's mighty political ambitions they
    are fooling themselves, for they are overlooking four centuries of
    history during which Arab capitals such as Cairo, Baghdad and Damascus
    steadily declined from being beacons of civilisation, prosperity and
    enlightenment to rural wastelands and cultural backwaters by the end
    of Ottoman hegemony.

    Political and intellectual elites in the Arab region should also
    bear in mind that the most important weapon in the propaganda and
    military arsenal of the countries that are targeting this region is the
    Islamist trend. In large measure, the danger of this weapon resides
    in the considerable amount of wool that blinds large segments of the
    intelligentsia and the general public to the true nature of this trend
    that continually reproduces its ideas and roles. It is sufficient
    here to conclude with the words of the eminent thinker, geographer
    and historian Gamal Hamdan: "Extremist Islamist groups are a recurrent
    plague that periodically infests the Islamic world... Political Islam
    is a manifestation of a psychological and mental illness... "

    We do not approve the harsher judgement of this man who was one of
    the most vehement opponents to the Egyptian peace accord with Israel:
    "The condition for the progress of Egypt, the Arabs and the Islamic
    world is to hang every member of every last Islamist group by the
    intestines of every last Israeli." However, to all who are running
    after the Erdogan sultanate or the Al-Baghdadi caliphate we will
    echo the cruel truth that Gamal Hamdan reached in his research:
    "The Islamic world is a geographic fact but it is a political myth."

    http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/News/7663/21/The-Brotherhood,-Erdogan-and-ISIS.aspx

Working...
X