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Monday, May 07, 2012

Syria: Muslim Brotherhood's Clandestine Revolution

From the Guardian:

(Reuters) - At a meeting of Syria's opposition, Muslim Brotherhood officials gather round Marxists colleagues, nudging them to produce policy statements for the Syrian National Council, the main political group challenging President Bashar al-Assad.

With many living in the West, and some ditching their trademark beards, it is hard to differentiate Brotherhood from leftists. But there is little dispute about who calls the shots.

From annihilation at home 30 years ago when they challenged the iron-fisted rule of Hafez al-Assad, the Brotherhood has recovered to become the dominant force of the exile opposition in the 14-month-old revolt against his son Bashar.

Careful not to undermine the council's disparate supporters, the Brotherhood has played down its growing influence within the Syrian National Council (SNC), whose public face is the secular Paris-based professor Bourhan Ghalioun.

"We chose this face, accepted by the West and by the inside. We don't want the regime to take advantage if an Islamist becomes the Syrian National Council's head," former Brotherhood leader Ali Sadreddine al-Bayanouni told supporters in a video.

The footage is now being circulated by Brotherhood opponents, seeking to highlight its undeclared power.

"We nominated Ghalioun as a front for national action. We are not moving now as Muslim Brotherhood but as part of a front that includes all currents," said Bayanouni.

4 comments:

  1. Jihad is not revolution.
    Syria will become just another faceless part of the Ummah along with Egypt.
    The Christians there will end up eating dust.
    To deal with radical Islam, Hafez ElAssad committed massacre after massacre. There was no problem with Muslims because he killed so many of their mujahidis.
    It's too bad Bashar doesn't have the resources and the guts his father did.
    Because force, fear and blood is all that speaks to his unruly subjects.

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  2. Didn't somebody in the Obama administration recently say that the Arab Spring has been a success for freedom? Pffft.

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  3. Jay Carney, that's who
    The State dept when they recently said the war on terror was over, that's who

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