Monday, December 19, 2011

Muslim Brotherhood Organizations in America: Goals, Idelologies, and Strategies

From FPRI:

THE 15TH ANNUAL TEMPLETON LECTURE


ON RELIGION AND WORLD AFFAIRS



MUSLIM BROTHERHOOD ORGANIZATIONS IN AMERICA:








MUSLIM BROTHERHOOD ORGANIZATIONS IN AMERICA:


GOALS, IDEOLOGIES, AND STRATEGIES


by Lorenzo Vidino



December 19, 2011



Lorenzo Vidino, Ph.D., is an academic and security expert

who specializes in Islamism and political violence in Europe

and North America. Currently a visiting fellow at the Center

for Security Studies, ETH Zurich, and a lecturer at the

University of Zurich, he previously held positions at the

RAND Corporation, the Belfer Center for Science and

International Affairs, Kennedy School of Government, Harvard

University, the U.S. Institute of Peace, and the Fletcher

School of Law and Diplomacy. He has taught at Tufts

University, the University of Maryland, and the National

Defense University. He is the author of two books (his

latest, The New Muslim Brotherhood in the West, was

published by Columbia University Press in the fall of 2010)

and frequent articles in several prominent newspapers (The

International Herald Tribune, The Wall Street Journal, The

Washington Post, The Boston Globe) and academic journals

(Studies in Conflict and Terrorism, The Washington

Quarterly, Terrorism and Political Violence). He has

testified before the U.S. Congress and consults with

governments, law firms, think tanks and media in several

countries. A native of Milan, Italy, he holds a law degree

from the University of Milan Law School and a doctorate in

international relations from the Fletcher School of Law and

Diplomacy. This essay is a revised version of the Templeton

Lecture he delivered in Philadelphia on May 19, 2011.



Available on the web and in pdf format at:

http://www.fpri.org/enotes/2011/201112.vidino.muslimbrotherhood.html

Audio and video available at:

http://www.fpri.org/multimedia/20110519.vidino.muslimbrotherhood.html

Previous Templeton lecture available at:

http://www.fpri.org/education/templetonlecture.html



THE 15TH ANNUAL TEMPLETON LECTURE

ON RELIGION AND WORLD AFFAIRS



MUSLIM BROTHERHOOD ORGANIZATIONS IN AMERICA:

GOALS, IDEOLOGIES, AND STRATEGIES



by Lorenzo Vidino



A story is illustrative of many of the dynamics I am going

to address. It is the story of Abdul Rahman Alamoudi, an

Eritrean-born biochemist, a member of the upper class in his

country, who came to the United States in 1980 for graduate

school at Boston University. After earning his degree, he

moved to Washington, D.C. and became involved in several

mainstream Muslim organizations. He began to develop an

impressive network of contacts within the upper echelons of

the U.S. political establishment. In 1990, Mr. Alamoudi co-

founded the American Muslim Council and soon became a

regular visitor to the White House, establishing good

relationships with both Republican and Democratic

administrations. He held frequent meetings in Congress, and

even managed to lobby Congress successfully to host the

first opening invocation from an Islamic leader in Congress.





The Department of Defense put Mr. Alamoudi in the powerful

position of training and vetting the imams who attend to the

religious needs of Muslims in the military. His

organization was praised by the FBI as the most mainstream

Muslim group in the United States. The State Department

appointed Mr. Alamoudi as Goodwill Ambassador, asking him to

travel throughout the world representing American Muslims.

Washington's establishment clearly considered Mr. Alamoudi a

successful representative and moderate Muslim leader who

could be a spokesman and model for the American Muslim

community.







In 2003, however, an unexpected discovery during a routine

customs inspection at London's Heathrow Airport undid

Alamoudi's accomplishments. He was found to have concealed

more than $300,000 in a suitcase. The investigation that

followed revealed that Alamoudi had been smuggling cash from

Libya illegally since 1995. That specific amount of money

was intended to support a murky plot linked to al Qaeda to

assassinate Saudi Crown Prince Abdullah. A year later, Mr.

Alamoudi pled guilty to all charges and is currently serving

a 23-year sentence in jail. The investigation also showed

that Alamoudi had financial dealings with Hamas and al

Qaeda, among other organizations.



Interestingly, to many people in Washington, Alamoudi's ties

did not come as a complete shock. Since 1990, in fact, law

enforcement had been monitoring Alamoudi's links to

suspected terrorist elements in the United States and

abroad. In addition, over the years, Alamoudi often made

comments that displayed his sympathy and ties for Islamist

groups banned in the United States. Once Mr. Alamoudi was on

the phone with an interlocutor and said that the 1998

bombing of the U.S. Embassies in East Africa were to be

condemned, but only because "Many African Muslims had died

and not a single American had died." But Alamoudi also

expressed his political views in public venues. In October

2000, speaking at Washington's Lafayette Park, only a block

from the White House, Alamoudi proudly proclaimed, "Hear

that, Bill Clinton, we're all supporters of Hamas. I wish

they added that I'm also a supporter of Hezbollah."



Now, the case of Alamoudi and the American Muslim Council

(AMC) raises several questions. In 1996, AMC claimed to have

5,000 members, out of a population of American Muslims it

estimated quite generously to be seven million. (The numbers

in reality were actually much lower than that.) How could

the head of an organization that by its own calculations

represented no more than .07 percent of the American Muslim

population, whose leadership had never been elected by the

Muslim community, and whose leaders were known to the

intelligence community as tied to terrorist groups, become

the de facto spokesman for the American Muslim community

for Washington's establishment?



The height of Mr. Alamoudi's fall makes his case unique.

But the issues raised by this story are not limited to him.

It tells us about three interrelated issues. First, there is

the nature and the modus operandi of the Muslim Brotherhood

globally and here in the United States. The second issue

relates to the organizational dynamics of the Muslim

community here in the United States. And finally, there is

the issue of the U.S. government's attitudes regarding the

Muslim community and the Muslim Brotherhood-two very

different issues.



THE NATURE OF THE MUSLIM BROTHERHOOD

The Muslim Brotherhood is the oldest and most influential

Islamist movement. It was founded in Egypt in 1928. And,

like most of the grassroots movements that appeared in Egypt

at the time, it was strongly opposed to colonial rule and

advocated Egyptian independence. But while most of the

movements that opposed British colonialism at the time in

Egypt took from Western ideologies, the Brotherhood based

its discourse on Islam. Creating what would become the model

of generations of Islamists, the Brotherhood saw in Islam

the answer to Western military, political, economic, and

cultural influence over the Muslim world.



Hassan al-Banna, the Brotherhood's founder, viewed Islam as

a complete, all-embracing system governing all aspects of

life-both private and public. For him, Islam was not just

"empty acts of frustration, but politics, society, economy,

law and culture." Solutions to all problems of Egypt and

more broadly of the entire Muslim community world-wide could

be found in this system, according to the Brotherhood.



In its ideology, the Brotherhood was looking at a mythical

past as a solution for its current problems. Yet its modus

operandi was very modern, and used many methods of modern

political movements to both spread its ideas and mobilize

support. The Brotherhood sought bottom-up Islamization of

society for the creation an Islamic state, through

proselytizing, spreading the ideas of the group, and

convincing people to buy into this interpretation of

Islamism



If grassroots Islamization was the main method that the

Brotherhood used from the beginning, it must also be said

that violence was part of the original equation. From the

1930s and 1940s, the Brotherhood used violence against its

opponents, whether the British, the Jewish community or the

Egyptian government. For decades, the Brotherhood was

subjected to very harsh persecution by the Egyptian

government. The worst time was in the 1960s, at the hands of

Gamal Abdel Nasser. This time included torture camps,

executions, and, for the lucky ones, deportations.



THE GLOBALIZATION OF THE MUSLIM BROTHERHOOD

This heavy suffering at the hands of Nasser led to three

developments. First, one wing of the Brotherhood decided to

embrace violence completely. Proselytizing was impossible.

The Brotherhood had to use violence to overthrow the

Egyptian regime and any other regime that was not Islamic

enough. So when we hear that the Muslim Brothers are the

forefathers of al Qaeda, it is a simplification, but it's

partially true. The belief that only violence can achieve

the goal of creating an Islamic state has its origin in the

thinking of Brotherhood theoretician Sayyid Qutb in the

1960s.



Second, a wing of the Brotherhood in the 1960s decided that

violence wasn't going to achieve any success. The

Brotherhood was too weak to confront Nasser and the Egyptian

regime. Only grassroots activities-"bottom-up

Islamization"-was the way forward. The Brotherhood we see

today in Egypt, participating in elections, comes from this

wing of the Brotherhood. They decided to find a modus

vivendi with the Egyptian regime, although technically

outlawed for decades in Egypt. Nevertheless, they

participated in political life and most importantly in

social life, providing social services and working on this

bottom-up Islamization.



Finally, the third development, that took place the 1960s,

was that some members migrated to other countries. Rather

than opting for violence, or participation in the system,

they chose to leave Egypt for other countries. Many went to

the Arab Gulf, to Saudi Arabia and other countries where

they held leading positions in government and the education

system. But quite a few actually came to the West and

received political asylum, whether in Europe or in North

America.



Today, groups in more than 80 countries trace their origins

to the Muslim Brotherhood and have adopted different forms

and tactics according to the environment in which they

operate. In a country like Jordan, they can participate in

elections. This has been true for a long time so they are a

political party. In Syria, the Muslim Brotherhood has been

outlawed for many decades and survives underground. And the

Brotherhood in Syria may well be reemerging. In the

Palestinian territories, it took a peculiar turn and became

Hamas. Entities belonging to this global movement succeeded

based on an informal but very sophisticated network-with

personal, financial, organizational, and most importantly

ideological ties. There is a global Muslim Brotherhood in

which organizations work according to a common vision but

with operational independence.



Every branch, in every country, is free to choose its

tactics and goals independently. There are consultations and

constant communication but there is independence. It is not

a monolithic organization. As noted, this global movement

has a presence in the West-including the United States. The

formation of these networks in the United States, as in most

Western countries, follows a similar pattern. The small

number of Brotherhood refugees who escaped persecution in

Egypt and Syria, and other countries, and came to the West

started interacting with more students from upper-middle

class of their home countries. These latter students came to

the United States and to Europe to study as graduate

students like Mr. Alamoudi in European and American

universities.



These small milieus formed in the 1960s and '70s bore

immediate fruit, as they formed the first Muslim

organizations in Europe and North America. In the United

States, the Muslim Student Association was created in 1963

at the University of Illinois. The West's freedoms allowed

the Brotherhood to do what was prohibited back home. Their

activism soon attracted other Muslim students and small

numbers of Muslim immigrants who had had no contact with

Brotherhood ideology in their home countries. It is

important to note that the first Brothers coming to America

or to Europe were not part of a concerted plot to Islamize

the West. Yet, the small organizations that spontaneously

formed in the 1960s and '70s soon developed beyond the most

optimistic expectations of their founders.



Today, thanks to ideological flexibility, unrelenting

activism, and access to large funding, the networks

originally established by the Brotherhood have grown

exponentially. Although their membership has remained small,

the "Western Brothers" have shown an enormous ability to

monopolize the Islamic discourse, making their

interpretation of Islam and political events the most

readily available. Moreover, in many countries, the Western

Brothers have positioned themselves at the forefront of the

competition to be the main interlocutors of local

establishments. Mr. Alamoudi is a good example. It is

apparent that no other competing Islamic movement has the

visibility, the political influence, and the access to

Western elites that the Western Brothers have obtained over

the last 20 years.



AMERICAN BROTHERHOOD ORGANIZATIONS

In the United States, the nucleus that started with the

Muslim Student Association in the 1960s spawned a myriad of

organizations like the Islamic Association of North America

(ISNA) and the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR).

Each has its own magazine, website, annual conference, and

regional branches. But their unity is shown by common

financial sources, interlocking board of directors, and

occasional participation in common initiatives. The few

hundred individuals who run them form a small social network

united by family, business and most importantly ideological

ties.



Affluent, well-connected, highly educated and motivated,

they are a clique of leaders with few followers but ample

clout. They are often the people U.S. authorities reach out

to when seeking to engage the Muslim community, as the story

of Mr. Alamoudi showed. They are not the only ones. It is

not a monopoly, but certainly something close to it. Why is

this? I think it's a combination of three reasons. The

first is organizational skills. They are visible, vocal, and

they lobby. They have offices a few blocks from Capitol

Hill; and are Washington based. And they are very active.



Secondly, competing Islamic organizations don't share these

strengths. The American Muslim community tends to be very

well integrated. Most live in suburbs, scattered throughout

a huge country. They are extremely divided in terms of

ethnicity and origin. Most American Muslims do not have

affiliations. Some might belong to mosques, but simply at

the local level. They have little reason or incentive to

organize at the national level. Islamists do because they

have a political agenda. So it's fair to say that a well-

organized minority has managed to position itself as the

unappointed, yet de facto, voice of a largely unorganized

and silent majority. These organized minorities have views

and positions that are not necessarily shared by most of the

people they claim to represent.



Third, the Brotherhood organizations have this quasi-

monopoly with access to government due to dynamics inside

the U.S. government.



We cannot really speak of the Muslim Brotherhood in America

if we seek to identify offshoots of any Middle Eastern

branch of the Brotherhood, whether Egyptian or any other.

There is no "Muslim Komintern," with Cairo in the place of

Moscow, as one scholar has expressed it. The organizations

here have historical, organizational, and most importantly

ideologically ties to the Middle East but they are

independent. I think we should take a non-formalistic

approach. In the United States we have organizations with

ties to the Muslim Brotherhood. As such, we can call them

American or Western Brotherhood organizations.



Over the last 20-30 years, these organizations have

significantly readjusted their tactics and goals. The

Brotherhood is a pragmatic movement that would not blindly

apply what the Brotherhood and its founder had prescribed

for Egypt in 1930 to modern London or Philadelphia.

Undoubtedly, Western offshoots of the Brotherhood support

the formation of Islamic states in the Middle East. But

their goals for the West are different. Critics argue that

Western Brotherhood organizations have the goal of

establishing Sharia Law in the West. I do believe that the

prospect looms in their imagination. But introducing Sharia

in the West is hardly the Western Brothers' goal at this

stage.



Pragmatic and keenly aware of what they can and cannot do,

the Brothers' priorities lay elsewhere. And foremost among

their goals is the preservation of an Islamic identity among

American and Western Muslims in general. But unlike some

other conservative Muslim organizations, like Salafis for

example, Brotherhood organizations seek to strengthen the

Islamic identity of Western Muslim not by isolating them

from mainstream society. What they advocate is a sort of

conservatism without isolation, an openness without melting,

which of course, is not an easy task.



The second goal that is common to all of these organizations

is to be designated as official representatives of the

Muslim community of their country. Despite their unrelenting

activism and access to ample resources, the Brothers have

not been able to create a mass movement and attract the

allegiance of large numbers of American Muslims. The

majority of U.S. Muslims either rejects or simply ignore the

message coming from Brotherhood organizations. So the

Brothers understand that a preferential relationship with

American elites could provide them with financial and

political capital, and legitimacy. This would allow them to

significantly expand their reach and influence inside the

community. They would be the ones, like Mr. Alamoudi, who

would be in charge of appointing imams in the prison system,

and in the military. They would be the ones the media would

call when seeking the "Muslim opinion," if there is such a

thing. They would, in some cases, receive subsidies to

administer different social services. This is a more common

practice in Europe than in the United States.



So making a clever political calculation, Western

Brotherhood organizations are seeking to be recognized as

representatives of the Muslim community in order to actually

become it. And, of course, they would use this position of

preferential access to government to lobby government on

anything that has to do with Islam, whether it is domestic

or foreign policy.



THE U.S. GOVERNMENT DIVIDE: THE OPTIMISTS VS. THE PESSIMISTS

There is a divide within the policymaking community that

mirrors the divide we see when it comes to the Muslim

Brotherhood and Islamist movements overseas. So, we have

two extremes-the optimists and the pessimists. On one hand,

we see the optimists who argue that Western Brotherhood

organizations are essentially a socially conservative force

that encourages the integration of Muslim communities,

offers a model in which Muslims can live there faithfully

and maintain a strong Islamic identity while becoming

actively engaged citizens. So, according to optimists,

governments should not view these organizations with

suspicion, but rather harness their grassroots activities

and cooperate with them on common issues, including

terrorism and radicalization.



Pessimists, on the other hand, see a much more sinister

nature in the Western Brotherhood. In this view, Western

Brotherhood organizations are engaged in a slow but steady

social engineering program aimed at Islamizing Western

Muslim populations. Ultimately, they will compete with

Western governments for their allegiance. The fact that

these organizations are not engaging in violence but

participate actively in the democratic process is seen

simply as a cold calculation on their part. According to

pessimists, officials of Brotherhood-linked organizations

have understood that infiltrating the system rather than

attacking it head on is the best way to get what they want.

After all, the tactics used by al Qaeda are not really going

to work here. Instead, a slow, steady infiltration of the

system will. And the pessimists see significant evidence

pointing to duplicity in the tactics of Brotherhood

organizations. It might be useful to make a comparison to

the tactics used by the Communist party in the United

States, 50-plus years ago. In fact, one significant example

comes from Philadelphia.



Some may be familiar with the largest terrorism financing

case in American history. It was a case tried four years ago

in Texas against a charity called the Holy Land Foundation.

This charity was collecting millions of dollars allegedly

for orphans in the Palestinian territories, but in reality

for Hamas. The money was clearly going to finance terrorist

operations in the Palestinian territories and in Israel.

During that trial, the Department of Justice introduced

ample evidence of the presence of the Muslim Brotherhood

behind this charity and their activities inside the United

States. Some of the most interesting documents come from a

meeting at a Marriott Hotel, close to the Philadelphia

International Airport. There, about 20 top Hamas and Muslim

Brotherhood officials met in 1993. This was right after the

Oslo Agreements had been signed. They talked about how their

organization could continue their activities as they knew

Hamas was about to be designated as a terrorist

organization. This meeting had been bugged by the FBI. It's

a fantastic spy story because the FBI has the tapes of

everything these individuals said during the meeting. It's a

fascinating read. Those gathered were debating their two

conflicting directions: supporting Hamas but at the same

time not looking to Americans as if they were supporting

terrorism. Obviously, they faced a difficult situation.

But they argued that the Brotherhood in the United States

should have opted for a two-pronged approach that

differentiated between its internal and external strategy.



Within the Muslim community, the group vowed to maintain its

support for Hamas by collecting funds, hence the formation

of the charity the Holy Land Foundation. Yet, at the same

time, they sought to spread hatred of Israel and Jews among

the American-Muslim community. And one participant was

intercepted as saying, "We don't want the children of the

American-Muslim community, who are raised here in our

Islamic schools, to grow up surrendering to the issue of

peace with the Jews." Participants discussed how to

camouflage such views to the American public and influence

policies and opinions. As one attendee argued, "This can be

achieved by infiltrating the American media outlets,

universities, and research centers, by working with Islamic

political organizations and the sympathetic ones." One

participant agreed that hiding the group's real aims when

dealing with the American public was a necessary tactic. "I

swear by Allah that war is deception. Deceive, camouflage,

pretend that you're leaving while you're walking that way."

Another stressed the importance of tailoring the discourse

to the American sensitivity. He said, "Let's not hoist a

large Islamic flag." And he argued that organizations

should have nice sounding names, like Holy Land Foundation.



The one document that the pessimists have really used is an

internal memorandum that was also introduced as evidence by

the Department of Justice during the trial. It was written

by a senior member of the Brotherhood in the United States,

and in one of its points stated, "The process of settlement

in America of the Muslim Brotherhood is a civilization,

Jihadist process, with all the word means. The Brothers must

understand that their work in America is a kind of grand

Jihad in eliminating and destroying the Western civilization

from within and sabotaging its miserable house by their

hands."



THE U.S.-EUROPEAN DIVIDE

There is a divide between the United States and Europe when

it comes to government. The FBI and the Central

Intelligence Agency in the United States tend to be neutral

regarding these organizations. The Europeans tend to be very

vocal about their concerns. The Dutch Domestic Intelligence

writes,



Not all Muslim Brothers or their sympathizers are

recognizable as such. They do not always reveal

their religious loyalties, an ultra-orthodox

agenda to outsiders. Apparently moderate in their

attitude toward Western society, they certainly

have no violent intent. But they are trying to

pave the way for ultra-orthodox Islam to play a

greater role in the Western world. This is

accomplished by exercising religious influence

over Muslim immigrant communities and by forging

good relations, with relevant opinion

leaders-politicians, civil servants, mainstream

social organizations, known Islamic clerics,

academics, journalists and so on. This policy of

engagement has been more noticeable in recent

years and might herald a liberalization of the

movement's ideas. It presents itself as a widely

supported advocate and legitimate representative

of the Islamic community. But the ultimate aim,

though never stated openly, is to create then

implant and expand an ultra-orthodox Muslim block

inside Western Europe.



Pretty tough words. They come from a government entity and

Dutch Intelligence is quite well respected. But in the

Netherlands, as in any other Western country, including the

United States, there is no common assessment. There is no

white paper coming from the top and telling all branches of

government, all agencies, and all government officials how

to identify, assess and engage Brotherhood organizations.

Positions swing erratically from the optimist to the

pessimist point of view based on personal views, which in

many cases are not informed by facts. And for a variety of

reasons, politics also comes into play often, as you can

imagine, creating a very chaotic situation.



THE CASE OF CAIR

In the United States, this chaotic dynamic is exemplified by

the FBI's relationship with CAIR. This organization is

arguably the most visible and controversial of the U.S.-

based organizations that trace their origins to the Muslim

Brotherhood. Opinions about CAIR could not be more divided

within the FBI. On the one hand, we have FBI officials who

have gone on record and publicly thanked CAIR for its role

in "keeping the nation safe" and praising it for "its

commitment to maintaining a dialogue leading to the frank

and honest exchange of ideas." In 2006, the Washington, D.C.

FBI sent CAIR a commendation letter praising it for its

"dedication in representing the heart of the Muslim-American

community." These officials are optimists. At the same time,

top officials in the FBI, individuals like Steve Pomerantz,

who was the former Assistant Director and former Chief of

Counterterrorism at the FBI, has publicly stated that:



It is clear from a review of CAIR statements and

activities that one of its goals is to further the

agenda of radical Islamic terrorist groups by

providing political support. By masquerading as a

mainstream public affairs organization, CAIR has

taken the lead in trying to mislead the public

about the terrorists and their feelings of

militant Islamic movements.



In the wake of the Holy Land Foundation terrorism financing

trial in 2008, the FBI formally cut its ties to CAIR.



I'm singling out the FBI, but I could take examples from

other organizations within the U.S. government-and within

any Western government. The FBI specifically, unlike the

Dutch Intelligence Agency mentioned earlier, has a very

narrow mandate. The FBI looks at criminal cases. If you are

breaking the law, the FBI opens a file on you and they are

extremely tough. However, if you're not breaking the law,

they don't look at you.



The Dutch Intelligence Agency has a broader mandate. It

reviews all kinds of threats to society. It has a broader

institutional mandate and approach. While Western

Brotherhood organizations may not be engaged in criminal

activities, they might have an agenda that is in the long

term subversive. But in the United States, there is no

agency that really looks at organizations that can be seen

as subversive. By mandate the FBI doesn't look at anything

that is not specifically a threat to national security.

Several European intelligence agencies do look beyond

national security threats and take a broader view. In the

FBI, it is either black or white-criminal or good. In

European intelligence, there is a gray area.







There is also the fact that CAIR, specifically when it comes

to terrorism, plays games. In some cases they are extremely

uncooperative. The hearings of Rep. Peter King in March 2011

were, of course, very controversial. Yet they highlighted

one very interesting story of a Somali community leader in

Minneapolis. Al Shabab, the al Qaeda affiliate from Somalia,

has been targeting the Somali community in Minneapolis. Some

20 American Muslims of Somali descent have been going to

Somalia to fight, and a few have actually died fighting

there. So this community leader who testified before

Congressman King's panel recounted how, when he reached out

to the FBI to work with them, to stop this recruitment

taking place in the community, CAIR and the other

organizations ostracized him and started a smear campaign

against him.



At the same time, we have had cases in which CAIR has been

cooperative with the FBI. There was the case of five kids

from Northern Virginia who went to Pakistan to obtain

training from al Qaeda affiliates there. CAIR was contacted

by individuals in the Muslim community and CAIR went to the

FBI. Put yourselves in the FBI Director's shoes: you don't

want to burn bridges with CAIR. Consequently, there is a

kind of understanding that as much as they are not the ideal

partners for the FBI when engaging the Muslim community,

they are a necessary one.



U.S. POLICY TOWARD BROTHERHOOD ORGANIZATIONS

How should governments interact with this organization?

First, the issue is very complex. Conceptualizing a movement

that mixes politics and religion, particularly a religion

about which most policymakers know very little, is extremely

complicated. There is a lot of sensitivity in the United

States, in particular, but in the West generally, about

dealing with religion from a political point of view.

Moreover, in some cases Brotherhood organizations display

the kind of moderation and pro-integration stance that

Western governments are so desperately seeking in their

Muslim interlocutors. In other cases, it is apparent that

they harbor an agenda and embrace values that are opposed to

those of a Western liberal democracy. So policymakers

understandably find themselves in a bind. Again, we go back

to the pessimists and optimists, and what the extremes of

the debate suggest.



Many pessimists call for policies that would exclude Western

Brotherhood organizations from any engagement. They consider

the Brotherhood deceitful actors seeking to destroy the same

freedoms that have allowed them to flourish. Critics argue

that these organizations should be marginalized or even

outlawed. In this view, they are considered the political

wing of a global Islamist insurgency. I think that, while

this position highlights some troubling aspects of the

Western Brotherhood organization's nature and agenda, this

position is unrealistic and arguably dangerous. Western

Brotherhood organizations do represent a cross section of

the Muslim community. If the government's aim is to hear all

voices, it makes little sense to exclude an important one.

Talking only to those Muslim leaders whose positions square

with the government's is not a constructive policy. When

these groups act outside of the law, as when they provide

financial support to organizations designated as terrorists,

like in the case of the Holy Land Foundation, they should be

prosecuted. However, since most of their activities are

within the law, these organizations are a reality that

cannot be ignored and should be engaged.



Now the optimists argue that Western Brotherhood

organizations are reliable partners that should be engaged

in order to favor integration and stem radicalization. This

approach is also very problematic. There is ample evidence

showing that the aims of the Western Brothers do not

necessarily correspond to those stated in public. So

assigning an almost monopolistic control of the community to

a handful of self-appointed leaders, whose aims are at best

unclear, seems naive. I think there's a better way.



ENGAGE BUT DON'T EMPOWER

There is a preferred way that lies in between the optimist

and the pessimist approach. It is what I call "engage but

don't empower." This approach is developing to some degree

in Europe; in the United States only to a lesser degree. It

involves three steps. First, understanding that assigning a

monopolistic control of the community to these organizations

is mistaken. The Muslim community is extremely diverse.

Speaking only to the most visible and vocal self-appointed

representatives, the lowest hanging fruits, is a mistaken

policy. Governments should be proactive and seek out many

other organizations, many other voices, which might not have

the structure, the sophistication that Brotherhood

organizations possess. Yet they represent important cross

sections of the community. So the activism and visibility of

Brotherhood organizations should not be mistaken for

universal representativeness.



Secondly, we need a more refined approach. There are indeed

advantages in not isolating Western Brotherhood

organizations. Although nobody can really predict the long-

term developments, engagement could lead to a moderation of

the movement. That is the approach taken for example in

France. Isolation, in contrast could have negative

repercussions, further radicalizing the movement and also

allowing it to use the "martyr card" in the community. But

this engagement needs to be based on a firm understanding of

the history, characteristics, connections, modus operandi,

and most importantly, aims of Brotherhood organizations. So

only an informed engagement can lead to a realistic and

constructive approach.



I think many policymakers are increasingly aware of the

difference between engagement and empowerment. So

establishing a permanent dialogue, and even occasionally

limited forms of partnership with Western Brotherhood

organizations, can produce some positive

outcomes-particularly in the security field. I know that's

controversial. Striking the right balance between engagement

and empowerment is not easy, but necessary not to give an

undue advantage to these organizations.



Finally, as we look ahead, no organization is static and

Brotherhood networks are evolving. The networks that were

created some 40-50 years ago have changed with time. The

first generation of pioneers, who created these networks, is

slowly being replaced by a second generation of Western-born

activists who will inevitably add their perspectives in

guiding these organizations. So, today the debate is more

moderate, more in line with Western attitudes and

sentiments. These organizations' language is increasingly

striking a chord with Western interlocutors. Is a genuine

change taking place inside these organizations? Some

scholars, especially French scholars, would argue that these

organizations are like the Euro-Communists: in the 1950s

they wanted a dictatorship of the Proletariat, they wanted

to turn France into a Communist country linked to Moscow;

yet, by the 1970s, they just desired fair wages and a good,

cushy 35-hour-a-week work week. They were no longer dreaming

of a Communist state. Some scholars argue this is what is

going to happen with these organizations. They no longer

want to implement that civilizational Jihad that the

pioneers of these organizations talked about. They are just

going to be a socially conservative force. Other people

contend that this pro-democracy, pro-integration statement

of the new generation is just a carefully devised

smokescreen for the movement's more nefarious aims.



Only time will tell what's going to happen with these

organizations. It is likely that, in this milieu, some of

the organizations will go in one direction and others in a

different direction. But for the time being, I think, given

this uncertainty, a policy of cautious and informed

engagement appears to be the most appropriate.



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Copyright Foreign Policy Research Institute

(http://www.fpri.org/).

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