Friday, August 22, 2025

Israel Can’t Win Without Beating the Muslim Brotherhood: And the Same is True for America; Ted Cruz vs. the Muslim Brotherhood

Israel Can’t Win Without Beating the Muslim Brotherhood:
And the same is true for America.
Why can’t the United States of America or Israel ever seem to win their ‘endless wars’? Because they have yet to fight the real enemy. Israel’s air strikes on Iran at least targeted the actual IRGC backers of Oct 7, while the U.S. has yet to deal with the Saudi, Qatari and Pakistani governments behind 9/11. But there is a hidden enemy that can’t just be droned.
What did Osama bin Laden and Hamas have in common? Both were part of the Muslim Brotherhood. Even more than Iran or any government, it’s the Muslim Brotherhood that binds together worldwide terrorist threats with political domestic pressure campaigns. The spectrum of Brotherhood influence combines together not only armed Jihadis, but Qatar’s Al Jazeera and other media influence operations, CAIR and other internal Democrat pressure groups and a majority of the mosques operating inside the United States. And that’s only the beginning.
Created in Egypt in the first half of the century with Nazi funding, the Brotherhood is a political Jihadist movement operating through both terrorist armies and front groups to seize power. The Muslim Brotherhood’s many arms are as comfortable setting off bombs on buses as they are meeting with members of Congress, preaching murder and pretending to be moderates.
The Brotherhood, which was strongest at universities in Egypt and parts of the Middle East, now also controls most elite campuses in America, and most Muslim organizations in America. In Israel, the Brotherhood maintains multiple front groups, including some that serve in Israel’s Knesset parliament, that run mosques across the country and effectively run all of Gaza.
After Oct 7, Hamas pulled back into its tunnels with its hostages and put up a limited fight even as its ‘civilian’ or as the media calls it ‘political arm’ continued running hospitals, the police, aid groups, local and regional media, which it used to fake a torrent of ‘atrocities’ by Israel.
Western diplomats, leaders and ‘experts’ have claimed that Israel won the war on Hamas, and should retreat and make some sort of deal, but as long as Hamas is, as the international community refers to them, the “de facto authorities’ on the ground, then nothing has been won.
After Israel reclaimed Gaza in the Six Day War, the Muslim Brotherhood, which had worked hand-in-glove with the Egyptian government to use Gaza as a base for crossing the border and carrying out massacres in Israel, pretended that it had changed and was now peaceful. It used its control over Gaza mosques and social service groups to indoctrinate the Muslim population into waging a Jihad even while the Israelis, like our governments, hoped that the Muslim Brotherhood had moderated and was willing to live and let live. --->READ MORE HERE
Ted Cruz vs. the Muslim Brotherhood:
Amid growing concerns about the infiltration of transnational Islamist movements into American political and security spheres, Republican Senator Ted Cruz has reintroduced a bill that designates the Muslim Brotherhood as a terrorist organization. The bill draws on a range of historical evidence and security considerations that reinforce Cruz’s conviction about the necessity of such a designation. This is the fourth time the bill has been reconsidered since 2015, and it reflects accumulated political and security concerns regarding the Brotherhood’s role in supporting extremist groups in the Middle East and influencing public discourse through media and charitable networks operating legally in the West.
What distinguishes the current version of the bill from previous ones is its methodological shift—from attempting to classify the loosely structured, multinational parent organization to targeting its active branches that have been proven to be involved in terrorist acts or direct support of groups already designated by the United States as terrorist organizations, such as Hamas. This shift reflects political realism, recognizing that designating a global, non-centralized entity carries legal and diplomatic consequences. The bill therefore authorizes the State Department to identify and classify Brotherhood-affiliated branches based on specific criteria related to funding, incitement, and involvement in violence. An initial list is to be issued within 90 days of the bill’s passage, creating a flexible framework for addressing security threats without engaging in transnational ideological debates.
The Brotherhood’s historical context strengthens the case for designation. Since its founding in 1928 by Hassan al-Banna in Egypt, the group has combined religious advocacy with political ambition, but quickly became involved in armed violence—particularly through its “Special Apparatus,” which carried out assassinations and bombings targeting prominent officials such as Mahmoud al-Nuqrashi and Ahmed al-Khazindar. Later, with the rise of Sayyid Qutb’s ideology in the 1950s and 1960s, concepts like “Hakimiyyah” (divine sovereignty) and “Jahiliyyah” (ignorance) became ideological foundations for terrorist organizations like al-Qaeda and ISIS. This has led many American policymakers to view the Brotherhood as the intellectual reference point for modern violence, even if it is not the direct perpetrator.
The bill’s security dimensions also focus on the Brotherhood’s support for armed factions that claim ideological affiliation, such as the Hasm Movement and the Revolutionary Brigade in Egypt—both previously identified by the U.S. State Department as Brotherhood-linked. Additionally, lawmakers accuse the group of using charitable and media networks in the West to spread hate speech and incitement. Reports from institutions like the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD) have pointed to financial entities tied to the Brotherhood that support illicit activities. These concerns are echoed by powerful lobbying groups like AIPAC, which argue that the Brotherhood poses not only an ideological threat but a tangible danger to U.S. interests and its allies in the Middle East—particularly Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE, all of which designated the Brotherhood as a terrorist organization years ago. --->READ MORE HERE
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