The New York Times reported on Tuesday that President Donald Trump’s administration has given some thought to designate the Muslim Brotherhood as a foreign terrorist organization (FTO).
While the Times ascribed the decision to pursue this course resulted from a meeting between Trump and Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi last month, the president has looked into this possibility for two years, as this 2017 report from Fox News makes clear.
According to the Times, the designation would mean imposing “wide-ranging economic and travel sanctions on companies and individuals who interact with the targeted group.”
However, despite the fact that both National Security Adviser John Bolton and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo support sanctioning the Brotherhood, “the Pentagon, career national security staff, government lawyers and diplomatic officials have voiced legal and policy objections, and have been scrambling to find a more limited step that would satisfy the White House.”
The Times continued:
As a matter of law, officials have argued that the criteria for designating a terrorist organization are not a good fit for the Muslim Brotherhood, which is less a coherent body than a loose-knit movement with chapters in different countries that either use that moniker or have strong historical ties to it. Several political parties in places like Tunisia and Jordan consider themselves Muslim Brotherhood or have ties to it, but eschew violent extremism.
The report also noted, “such a designation could have rippling consequences, including further stressing relations with Turkey, whose president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, is a staunch Brotherhood supporter.”
I would add that one could describe Erdogan as a staunch opponent (if not, enemy) of the United States.
Needless to say, this effort has caused unhappiness in a lot of people.
For example, The Brookings Institution, which has received millions from Qatar, one of the Brotherhood’s biggest supporters, asserted that all experts agree that designating the Muslim Brotherhood is a bad idea.
Jonathan Schanzer, the Senior Vice President of Research at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, argued two years ago that the administration may face difficult to meet the necessary legal criteria to designate the Muslim Brotherhood in its entirety as a terrorist organization, but they may find ways to go after its affiliates.
Once some Brotherhood branches are designated, it may become easier to target others. When certain branches or even leaders of the Brotherhood are caught providing financial, technical or material support to listed entities, they immediately become candidates for designation.
Also, in a series of tweets, Schanzer, a former Treasury Department official, laid out the process to designate groups as FTO. In other words, regardless of what Trump wants, there is a process to follow.
Andy Ngo pointed out that the Muslim Brotherhood isn’t exactly a liberal group.
One of the more ridiculous arguments against designating was this: “On the rare occasion there is a fair election in the Arab world, parties affiliated with the Muslim Brotherhood tend to win them (see Turkey, Egypt, Palestine, Tunisia). Trump Administration wants to declare it a ‘terrorist’ group…”
So the Muslim Brotherhood is the great democratic savior of the Islamic world? Really.
Let’s see. In assessing Muslim Brotherhood in 2012, the late Barry Rubin wrote:
What is most important to understand about the Brotherhood is that, despite its religion-based ideology, it should be viewed in political, not theological terms. It is and has always been a revolutionary organization seeking to seize state power and then to transform thoroughly the societies where it operates.
And certainly, that’s what we’ve seen in Turkey where Erdogan has compared democracy to a streetcar (or train), saying that “you get off once you have reached your destination.”
Certainly, we’ve seen it in Gaza too, where Hamas rules with an iron fist.
Since the Muslim Brotherhood-affiliated President Mohamed Morsi was deposed, Egypt is still not a democracy. Morsi, had he consolidated his power, showed no more commitment to democracy than his successor el-Sisi.
It isn’t clear that Trump will get the Muslim Brotherhood designated as a terrorist organization, but the group is not the democratic movement that represents freedom to the Muslim world as some believe.
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