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The problem of violent extremism is not "political" requiring  "only a political solution" in the shrill words of Asghar Bukhari of the Muslim Public Affairs Committee which claims to be the UK's "leading Muslim civil liberties group". MPACUK may not be part of the Brotherhood but it is an example of how successful the Movement has been in getting other Muslim groups to adopt their narrative.

No, the problem of violent extremism lies with the political and ideological strain injected into Islam by the Muslim Brothers for 85 years — a strain which is not, at its heart, compatible with a pluralistic, open-minded, tolerant, liberal society. Woolwich was the very extreme end of this ideology: a misplaced grievance narrative, cosmic anti-Semitism, and violently inflammatory rhetoric. To deny that this brew cannot possibly be a product of the political variant of Islam (as distinct from its religious one) is not merely complacent. It is also irresponsible.

But here is a question: why are so few fair-minded people in this country not prepared to admit and confront the malign influence that the Muslim Brotherhood has brought here? 

Steven Merley has fought a long, lone battle to get people even to acknowledge the existence of a global Brotherhood network. By exhaustive attention to detail, he has patiently built up a picture that ought to worry anyone. Yet the Brotherhood scarcely rates a mention in the most of the media. The centre ground seems to have lost its nerve.

What particularly worries Merley is that extreme right-wing groups here and in America are filling this vacuum. They claim that all Muslims are the problem and that the Koran is at the heart of a Muslim master-world plot. This is as dangerous as it is unjust.

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Anonymous
August 21st, 2013
8:08 PM
a very interesting article and pertinent to what is going on with the MB in Egypt today. Their spokesperson Mona is on every Western media TV channel trying to promote them as victims and 'peaceful' demonstrators when there is evidence, armed protesters, to the contrary. They burn christian churches and schools and attack the security services, yet this scarcely rates a mention in western media why? The MB must take a long hard look at its advocating of violent extremism if it wants to remain a viable political party

Frank P
July 10th, 2013
6:07 PM
Glad to see one of the stalwarts of TV investigative journalism on the case. Mr Ware, I suggest you and Steven Merley team up with Clare M Lopez and produce a documentary delineating the progress of the MB since the time of Eisenhower. It would be a timely intervention (Qaradawi's dalliance with Red Ken the erstwhile Toytown Mayor could be featured as a cameo). : http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/3672/muslim-brotherhood-us-government Her seminal article was published on the morning of the Boston Marathon massacre and belies the assertion in your article that the FBI are up to speed on the MB. On the contrary, they appear to have been infiltrated by it. Sorry to note your departure from Panorama; you were one of the last bastions of the old school. Hope you screwed as good a pension from them as some of the recently departed parasites?

Saksin
July 4th, 2013
5:07 PM
Why is it so difficult to understand that "political Islam" traces directly to the life, acts and teachings of its prophet? Mohammed personally led troops in battle against those who would not accept his message. The only reason we know his name and that of the religion he founded is that its armies swept across the world in bloody wars of expansionist conquest in its founding era. It was the booty of those wars that fuelled the much vaunted flowering of Islamic civilization. There is a stark contrast in tone and content between portions of the Qur'an composed before and after Mohammed gave up on winning over the population of Mecca by persuation, and turned to force instead (Hejira episode, inaugurating the Muslim era by marking the first year of the Muslim calendar). Those who would have us believe that Islam is a "religion of peace" cite verses from the pre-Hejira Qur'an, while the rest of the Qur'an and the facts of Islamic history remind us that it is a religion of war. It expanded by bloody conquest until it was stopped by force, and once constrained to live by its own resources, entered centuries of stagnation. Having caught the scent of weakness at its borders, the religion that commands all who would stand against it to submit, has again started stirring.

grassmarket
July 3rd, 2013
2:07 PM
"Let me be clear: followers of the Brotherhood in Britain are not advocating violent jihad here." Of course not! They would be crazy to foul their own next. Britain is far, far to valuable to them as a safe haven for recruitment, financing, logistics, propaganda and intelligence gathering. Naturally they do not want crazed lone wolfs like the murderers of Lee Rigby directing attention towards themselves. And please do not allow the left to get away with claiming "we would be condemning the Brotherhood if only it weren't for all those nasty right-wingers". The left love the Brotherhood because they think they can use it to advance their own ambitions. And vice versa.

jstewart
July 3rd, 2013
10:07 AM
[Typo in last submission] Kudos to you Mr. Ware, and to Mr. Merley, for your principled stand that warns of us of the very real danger posed by Islamism while not taking the ill-advised "next step" advocated by the writer below. That step, represented by the "anti-Shariah" cult and its US leaders Pamela Geller and Robert Spencer, would have us demonize all Muslims as a "threat to post-Judeo Christians" and runs a serious risk of tearing our societies apart through internecine conflict. Anybody who believes that "There is no Islamism, there is only Islam.." is so profoundly ignorant about the subject that we may safely ignore their hateful advice. Carry on with your valuable work!

Abulhaq
July 3rd, 2013
10:07 AM
in addition the pernicious Protocols of the Elders of Zion is a available for download on militant and some not so militant, Arabic language sites. In fact the World Jewish conspiracy theory is very much alive and well, in Arabic. In English, the veil descends.

Abulhaq
July 3rd, 2013
9:07 AM
There is no excuse for ignorance where Islam is concerned. A raft of literature on the subject is out there for consultation. including the Qur'an itself. That few choose to bother or prefer to listen to some media friendly and very pc experts gives great cause for concern. Meta commentary on Islam by Muslims also strikes a discordant note. Christianity is rarely allowed the luxury of that treatment. Atheists, agnostics, ex-es even Muslims step forward to do the job. Practising Christians need not bother. As truthseeker comments there is no secular in Islam. Secularism is a "western" concept. When used by "liberal" Muslims it still means that Islamic principles would inform the state with the Qur'an and shari'a as the ultimate sourcebooks. We seem to tolerate from Islam things that we would not except from Christians or Jews or Hindus. Islam is not about glazed tiles, calligraphy and doves flying over inner courts of friday mosques, it is about the hard reality of power, control, subjection.and showing disdain for God's enemies the unbelievers and punishing them by taxes or death if they will not submit. Submission to a particular God is at the heart of Islam, very bad for your health if you are not so inclined. But we already know that don't we?

Nick F.
July 2nd, 2013
4:07 PM
This is an interesting article. However, a couple of points. First, Islam and Islamism are not one and the same but the distinction drawn by the author, between an Islam which is religious and one that is political is simply incorrect. Islam is and always has had political language. See e.g., B. Lewis, The Political Language of Islam. Two, Islamism is a real interpretation of Islam but not the only interpretation. What is going on here is closer to what scholar Barry Rubin notes, which is multiple hands attempting to grab the steering wheel of a vehicle. At the moment, Islamism has its hands on the steering wheel in much of the Islamic world so that it, not more traditional Islamic movements, has the upper hand. Which is to say, Islamism is likely, in many parts of the Muslim world, to be the majority version of Islam. Third, there has never been a version of Islamism which is compatible with democracy. Islamism considers democracy to be a rejection of Allah's law. Fourth, the primacy of the dispute between Israelis and Arabs, while an important dispute, is not causal. Islamism is the work of the clerical class, which hopes to restore its power and prestige and to make Islam the supreme political force in the world. Israel is only one of many grievances but, to note, as the author correctly states, grievances are central to Islamism. As such, whatever occurs in the world that might somehow impact on Muslims will be spun by the Islamists to be a grievance. It is true, lastly, that Antisemitism goes to the heart of Islamism. Jews were said, before Israel's creation, to have conspired with Attaturk (or, in some versions of the story, Attaturk was a secret Jews) to eliminate the Caliphate and, hence, to emasculate Islamic power.

Christopher C.
July 2nd, 2013
4:07 AM
"Let me be clear: followers of the Brotherhood in Britain are not advocating violent jihad here. They condemned the beheading in May of Drummer Lee Rigby by two Muslims on a London street in broad daylight. Their organisations have civic-sounding names; they emphasise human rights, respect for democracy and integration." There is a good Islamic word for those public pronouncements. It is taqqiya - religiously-sanctioned misrepresentation (to say it most politely). But "ordinary" Muslims - are they representative of Islam? Here's a suggestion - what if Hassan al-Banna and others like him are the leaders of an Islamic Reformation. The original Reformation, after all, followed Gutenberg, and the much greater availability of the Bible. Luther and thousands of other Christians went to the source and made their own judgements about the Bible's meanings. So, is there a parallel between post-Gutenberg Europe and the Middle East of the early 20th C.? I suggest that Hassan al-Banna and those of his ilk were, for perhaps the first time, a critical mass for the study of the Koran and the adhadith. And they took the exhortations of both seriously. The language is plain. And it is aggressive. It demands the imposition (not the free acceptance) of sharia. In other words, it demands of Muslims that they be total in their acceptance of Islam, and to ensure that everybody else submit as well (after all, that is what Islam means - submission). The point? "Ordinary" Muslims, in the sense that such persons present no threat to post-Judeo Christians, do not really exist. Those who do not wish to compel others to follow Islam are not really Muslims. The West is in very great trouble that even writers such as Mr Ware can part-recognise the danger, but not travel the last, few necessary steps to describe what we are really faced with.

truthseeker
July 1st, 2013
12:07 PM
The article says the Muslim Brotherhood has made Islam political instead of only religious. In fact, Islam makes no distinction between the political and the religious, as sharia law demonstrates. There is no Islamism, there is only Islam.

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