By Raymond Ibrahim on February 4, 2014
CBN News - interview with Raymond Ibrahim
As former Egyptian President Muhammad Morsiâs trials continue, itâs enlightening to consider what is likely to be one of the centerpieces of the trial: longstanding accusations that Morsi and his Muslim Brotherhood party worked with foreign terrorist organizations, including al-Qaeda, against the national security of Egypt.
Based on these accusations of high treason, Morsi and others could face the death penalty.
Concerning some of the more severe allegations, one of Egyptâs most widely distributed and read newspapers, Al Watan, recently published what it said were recorded conversations between Morsi and Muhammad Zawahiri, al-Qaeda leader Ayman Zawahiriâs brother.
In these reports, Watan repeatedly asserts that Egyptian security and intelligence agencies confirmed (or perhaps leaked out) the recordings.
Much of the substance of the alleged conversations is further corroborated by events that occurred during Morsiâs one-year-rule, most of which were reported by a variety of Arabic media outlets, though not by Western media.
In what follows, I relay, summarize, and translate some of the more significant portions of the Watan reports (verbatim statements are in quotation marks). In between, I comment on various anecdotes and eventsâmany of which were first broken on my websiteâthat now, in light of these phone conversations, make perfect sense and independently help confirm the authenticity of the recordings.
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The first recorded call between Muhammad Morsi and Muhammad Zawahiri lasted for 59 seconds. Morsi congratulated Zawahiri on his release from prison, where he had been incarcerated for jihadi/terrorist activities against Egypt, and assured him that he would not be followed or observed by any Egyptian authorities, and that he, Morsi, was planning on meeting with him soon. Prior to this first call, Refaâ al-Tahtawy, then Chief of Staff, mediated and arranged matters.
The presidential palace continued to communicate regularly with Muhammad Zawahiri, and sources confirm that he was the link between the Egyptian presidency and his brother, Ayman Zawahiri, the Egyptian-born leader of al-Qaeda.
It should be noted that, once released, the previously little-known Muhammad Zawahiri did become very visible and vocal in Egypt, at times spearheading the Islamist movement.
The next recording between Morsi and Zawahiri lasted for 2 minutes and 56 seconds and took place one month after Morsi became president. Morsi informed Zawahiri that the Muslim Brotherhood supports the mujahidin (jihadis) and that the mujahidin should support the Brotherhood in order for them both, and the Islamist agenda, to prevail in Egypt.
This makes sense in the context that, soon after Morsi came to power, the general public did become increasingly critical of him and his policies, including the fact that he was placing only Brotherhood members in Egyptâs most important posts, trying quickly to push through a pro-Islamist constitution, and, as Egyptians called it, trying in general to âBrotherhoodizeâ Egypt.
This second phone call being longer than the first, Zawahiri took it as an opportunity to congratulate Morsi on his recent presidential victoryâwhich, incidentally, from the start, was portrayed by some as fraudulentâand expressed his joy that Morsiâs presidency could only mean that âall secular infidels would be removed from Egypt.â
Then Zawahiri told Morsi: âRule according to the Sharia of Allah [or âIslamic lawâ], and we will stand next to you. Know that, from the start, there is no so-called democracy, so get rid of your opposition.â
This assertion comports extremely well with his brother Ayman Zawahiriâs views. A former Muslim Brotherhood member himself, some thirty years ago, the al-Qaeda leader wrote Al Hissad Al Murr (âThe Bitter Harvestâ), a scathing book condemning the Brotherhood for âtaking advantage of the Muslim youthsâ fervor by ⊠steer[ing] their onetime passionate, Islamic zeal for jihad to conferences and elections.â An entire section dedicated to showing that Islamic Sharia cannot coexist with democracy even appears in Ayman Zawahiriâs book (see âSharia and Democracy,â The Al Qaeda Reader, pgs. 116-136).
The call ended in agreement that al-Qaeda would support the Brotherhood, including its international branches, under the understanding that Morsi would soon implement full Sharia in Egypt. After this, Muhammad Zawahiri and Khairat al-Shater, the number-two man of the Muslim Brotherhood organization, reportedly met regularly.
It is interesting to note here that, prior to these revelations, U.S. ambassador Anne Patterson was seen visiting with Khairat al-Shaterâeven though he held no position in the Morsi governmentâand after the ousting and imprisonment of Morsi and leading Brotherhood members, Sens. John McCain and Lindsay Graham made it a point to visit the civilian Shater in his prison cell and urged the Egyptian government to release him.
The next call, recorded roughly six weeks after this last one, again revolved around the theme of solidifying common cooperation between the Egyptian presidency and the Muslim Brotherhood on the one hand, and al-Qaeda and its jihadi offshoots on the other, specifically in the context of creating jihadi cells inside Egypt devoted to protecting the increasingly unpopular Brotherhood-dominated government.
As I reported back in December 2012, Egyptian media were saying that foreign jihadi fighters were appearing in large numbersâone said 3,000 fightersâespecially in Sinai. And, since the overthrow of the Brotherhood and the military crackdown on its supporters, many of those detained have been exposed speaking non-Egyptian dialects of Arabic.
During this same call, Zawahiri was also critical of the Morsi government for still not applying Islamic Sharia throughout Egypt, which, as mentioned, was one of the prerequisites for al-Qaeda support.
Morsi responded by saying âWe are currently in the stage of consolidating power and need the help of all partiesâand we cannot at this time apply the Iranian model or Taliban rule in Egypt; it is impossible to do so now.â
In fact, while the Brotherhood has repeatedly declared its aspirations for world domination, from its origins, it has always relied on a âgradualâ approach, moving only in stages, with the idea of culminating its full vision only when enough power has been consolidated.
In response, Zawahiri told Morsi that, as a show of good will, he must âat least release the mujahidin who were imprisoned during the Mubarak era as well as all Islamists, as an assurance and pact of cooperation and proof that the old page has turned to a new one.â
After that call, and as confirmed by a governmental source, Morsi received a list from Zawahiri containing the names of the most dangerous terrorists in Egyptian jails, some of whom were on death row due to the enormity of their crimes.
In fact, as I reported back in August 2012, many imprisoned terrorists, including from Egyptâs notorious Islamic Jihad organizationâwhich was once led by Ayman Zawahiriâwere released under Morsi.
One year later, in August 2013, soon after the removal of Morsi, Egyptâs Interior Ministry announced that Egypt was âpreparing to cancel any presidential pardons issued during Morsiâs era to terrorists or criminals.â
During this same call, and in the context of pardons, Morsi said he would do his best to facilitate the return of Muhammadâs infamous brother and al-Qaeda leader, Ayman Zawahiri, back to Egyptââwith his head held high,â in accordance with Islamist wishesâas well as urge the U.S. to release the âBlind Sheikhâ and terrorist mastermind, Omar Abdul Rahman.
In March 2013, I wrote about how Morsi, during his Pakistan visit, had reportedly met with Ayman Zawahiri and made arrangements to smuggle him back to Sinai. According to a Pakistan source, the meeting was âfacilitated by elements of Pakistani intelligence [ISI] and influential members of the International Organization, the Muslim Brotherhood.â
The gist of the next two calls between Morsi and Muhammad Zawahiri was that, so long as the former is president, he would see to it that all released jihadis and al-Qaeda operatives are allowed to move freely throughout Egypt and the Sinai, and that the presidential palace would remain in constant contact with Zawahiri, to make sure everything is moving to the satisfaction of both parties.
Zawahiri further requested that Morsi allow them to develop training camps in Sinai in order to support the Brotherhood through trained militants. Along with saying that the Brotherhood intended to form a ârevolutionary guardâ to protect him against any coup, Morsi added that, in return for al-Qaedaâs and its affiliatesâ support, not only would he allow them to have such training camps, but he would facilitate their development in Sinai and give them four facilities to use along the Egyptian-Libyan border.
That Libya is mentioned is interesting. According to a Libyan Arabic report I translated back in June 2013, those who attacked the U.S. consulate in Benghazi, killing Americans, including Ambassador Chris Stevens, were from jihadi cells that had been formed in Libya through Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood support. Those interrogated named Morsi and other top Brotherhood leadership as accomplices.
More evidenceâincluding some that implicates the U.S. administrationâhas mounted since then.
Next, Watan makes several more assertions, all of which are preceded by âaccording to security/intelligence agencies.â They are:
- That Morsi did indeed as he promised, and that he facilitated the establishment of four jihadi training camps. Morsi was then Chief in Command of Egyptâs Armed Forces, and through his power of authority, stopped the military from launching any operations including in the by now al-Qaeda overrun Sinai.
- That, after Morsi reached Pakistan, he had a one-and-a-half hour meeting with an associate of Ayman Zawahiri in a hotel and possibly spoke with him.
- That, after Morsi returned to Egypt from his trip to Pakistan, he issued another list containing the names of 20 more convicted terrorists considered dangerous to the national security of Egypt, giving them all presidential pardonsâdespite the fact that national security and intelligence strongly recommended that they not be released on grounds of the threat they posed.
- That the Muslim Brotherhoodâs international wing, including through the agency of Khairat al-Shater, had provided $50 million to al-Qaeda in part to support the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt.
One of the longer conversations between Morsi and Zawahiri reported by Watan is especially telling of al-Qaedaâs enmity for secularist Muslims and Coptic Christiansâwhose churches, some 80, were attacked, burned, and destroyed, some with the al-Qaeda flag furled above them, soon after the ousting of Morsi. I translate portions below:
Zawahiri: âThe teachings of Allah need to be applied and enforced; the secularists have stopped the Islamic Sharia, and the response must be a stop to the building of churches.â (An odd assertion considering how difficult it already is for Copts to acquire a repair permit for their churches in Egypt.)
Zawahiri also added that âAll those who reject the Sharia must be executed, and all those belonging to the secular media which work to disseminate debauchery and help deviants and Christians to violate the Sharia, must be executed.â
Morsi reportedly replied: âWe have taken deterrent measures to combat those few, and new legislative measures to limit their media, and in the near future, we will shut down these media stations and launch large Islamic media outlets. We are even planning a big budget from the [Brotherhood] International Group to launch Islamic and jihadi satellite stations to urge on the jihad. There will be a channel for you and the men of al-Qaeda, and it can be broadcast from Afghanistan.â
Undeterred, Zawahiri responded by saying, âThis [is a] Christian mediaâand some of the media personnel are paid by the [Coptic] Church and they work with those who oppose the Sharia⊠secularist forces are allied with Christian forces, among them Naguib Sawiris, the Christian-Jew.â
Morsi: âSoon we will uphold our promises to you.â
In fact, there was a period of time when the secular media in Egyptâwhich was constantly exposing Brotherhood machinationsâwere under severe attack by the Brotherhood and Islamists of all stripes (comedian Bassem Youssef was the tip of the iceberg). In one instance, which I noted back in August 2012, six major media stations were attacked by Brotherhood supporters, their employees severely beat.
The last call recorded between Muhammad Morsi and Muhammad Zawahiri took place on the dawn of June 30, 2013 (the date of the June 30 Revolution that ousted Morsi and the Brotherhood). Morsi made the call to Zawahiri in the presence of Asad al-Sheikha, Deputy Chief of Presidential Staff, Refaâ al-Tahtawy, Chief of Presidential Staff, and his personal security.
During this last call, Morsi incited Zawahiri to rise against the Egyptian military in Sinai and asked Zawahiri to compel all jihadi and loyalist elements everywhere to come to the aid of the Muslim Brotherhood and neutralize its opponents.
Zawahiri reportedly responded by saying âWe will fight the military and the police, and we will set the Sinai aflame.
True enough, as I reported on July 4, quoting from an Arabic report: âAl-Qaeda, under the leadership of Muhammad Zawahiri, is currently planning reprisal operations by which to attack the army and the Morsi-opposition all around the Republic [of Egypt].â The report added that, right before the deposing of Morsi, Zawahiri had been arrested and was being interrogatedâonly to be ordered released by yet another presidential order, and that he had since fled to the Sinai.
Also on that same first day of the revolution, Khairat al-Shater, Deputy Leader of the Brotherhood, had a meeting with a delegate of jihadi fighters and reiterated Morsiâs request that all jihadis come to the aid of the presidency and the Brotherhood.
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As Morsiâs trial continues, itâs only a matter of time before the truth of these allegationsâand their implications for the U.S.âis known. But one thing is certain: most of them comport incredibly well with incidents and events that took place under Morsiâs government.
http://www.raymondibrahim.com/from-the-arab-world/exposed-the-muslim-brotherhoodal-qaeda-connection/
It gets more and more interestingâŠ
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Khairat al-Shater
Obama Funds the Egyptian Government $1.5 billion. (2012) âŠIn October 2010, on the eve of the Islamic revolution that the media fancies as âthe Arab Spring,â the Supreme Guide of the Muslim Brotherhood called for jihad against the United States.You might think that this all but unnoticed bombshell would be of some importance to policymakers in Washington. It was not. It is not. This week, the Obama administration quietly released $1.5 billion in foreign aid to the new Egyptian government, now dominated by a Brotherhood-led coalition in parliament â soon to be joined by an Ikhwan (i.e., Brotherhood) luminary as president.It is not easy to find the announcement. With the legacy media having joined the Obama reelection campaign, we must turn for such news to outlets like the Kuwait News AgencyâŠ
âŠ.Shater is Washingtonâs new darling. That much is clear from an unintentionally hilarious dispatch from the New York Timesâ David Kirkpatrick, who portrays the Brotherhood as Americaâs âindispensable ally against Egyptâs ultraconservatives.â Sure, they may be the worldâs leading exemplar of what Kirkpatrick gently calls âpolitical Islam,â but our policy geniuses reckon the Brothers are much to be preferred over the âSalafisâ â reputedly, the more hardcore Islamic supremacists. As the Times elaborates, the Obama administration is alarmed by the rise of a charismatic Salafist, Hazem Salah Abu Ismail, who has shot to second place in the polls. Shater, the theory goes, could overtake Ismail and lead Egypt in the Brotherhoodâs more âpragmatic direction.â
What the Times neglects to tell you is that Ismail, the extremist, is actually an Ikhwan guy. His father was a popular Islamist and he has already run for office twice as a Brotherhood candidate. These impeccable Islamist credentials make him broadly appealing not only to Salafists but to Brotherhood enthusiasts, as the Hudson Instituteâs Samuel Tadros details in the best report to date on state of the Brotherhood in the aftermath of the revolution. (It is found in the latest edition of the essential series, Current Trends in Islamist Ideology.) There is little substantive daylight between Ismail and Shater â the Brotherhood and Salafists disagree mainly on the pace of change, not the direction.
And what about Shater? The Times dutifully reports that he embodies âthe Brotherhoodâs pragmatic focus on stable relations with the United States and Israel and free-market economics.â But what is most pragmatic about him and his Brothers is their understanding of Western opinion elites â gullible, biddable, and desperate to believe Middle Eastern Islam, which the Brotherhood exemplifies, is unthreatening. The Brotherhoodâs actual agenda is to destabilize the United States and destroy Israel. And touching as the Timesâ newfound fondness for free-market economics may be, the Brotherhoodâs goal is to smash the Western model and impose sharia economics â a major component in a program whose totalitarian elements may have some allure for the Obama Left but which few Americans would regard as âfree.â
Shater is the MBâs âDeputy Guide.â He is a revered figure: jailed by the Mubarak Regime for much of the past two decades and regarded as the âIron Manâ of the Brotherhood movement. Naturally, the Western press â the folks who package the Brothers as âmoderates,â âpragmatists,â and even âsecularistsâ â render Shater as a âbusinessman.â But he happens to be the businessman the Brotherhood has tasked to shape its comprehensive strategy for post-Mubarak Egypt. The Ikhwan refer to this as âthe Nahda Projectâ â the Islamic Renaissance.
It turns out that a year ago in Alexandria, Shater delivered a lengthy, remarkable lecture, âFeatures of Nahda: Gains of the Revolution and the Horizons for Developing.â The Hudson Institute learned of the lecture, which is now available on YouTube, and this week released the first installment of a translation. Speaking in Arabic to like-minded Islamists rather than credulous Congress critters, Shater was emphatic that the Brotherhoodâs fundamental principles and goals never change â only the tactics by which they are pursued. âYou all know that our main and overall mission as Muslim Brothers is to empower Godâs religion on earth, to organize our life and the lives of the people on the basis of Islam, to establish the Nahda [i.e., the ârenaissanceâ or âriseâ] of the Ummah [the notional global Muslim nation] and its civilization on the basis of Islam, and to subjugate people to God on earth.â He went on to reaffirm the time-honored plan of the Brotherhoodâs founder, Hassan al-Banna, stressing the need for both personal piety and internal organizational discipline in pursuing the goal of worldwide Islamic hegemony.
Moreover, even as the Times portrayed him as Americaâs salvation from a Salafi-controlled Egypt, Shater was cutting a deal with what the Associated Press described as âhard-line Salafi scholars and clerics.â In exchange for their support, he promised to form a âcouncil of clericsâ that would review all legislation to ensure that it complies with shariaâŠ.
Continued:Â http://mediachecker.wordpress.com/2013/06/25/obama-funds-the-egyptian-government/
Related:
Whoâs Who in Egyptâs Muslim Brotherhood
Muslim Brotherhood Spokesman and Former Clinton Foundation Employee Arrested in Cairo
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