Confirmed: Obama Aligned With Muslim Brotherhood To Have Role In Egyptian Government

Wehrwolfen

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May 22, 2012
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Guest Post by Mara Zebest
July 7, 2013

Obama is very predictable if you understand his alliance with Islam via Al-Qaeda, and the Muslim Brotherhood. Just review his playbook throughout his history which can be summed up in the Odinga flashback to 2008 video below—a blueprint for what we see from the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt today. Obama was behind his cousin Odinga’s illegal push into power. The goal is always to enact warfare to have Obama-agenda supporters kill off the opposition.

[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=htgipPbZ7E0]Have courage - elect McCain - YouTube[/ame]

[Excerpt]

Read more:
Confirmed: Obama Aligned With Muslim Brotherhood To Have Role In Egyptian Government | The Gateway Pundit

Remember Obama has told us to judge him by those that surround him. He's either chosen his friends wisely or very badly, depending on who is evaluating his choices.
 
Brotherhood fallin' outta favor in Egypt...
:clap2:
Arrest warrants issued against Muslim Brotherhood spiritual leader
Wednesday 10th July, 2013 - Egypt's new military-led government Wednesday issued formal arrest warrants for the Muslim Botherhood's top spiritual leader and at least nine other senior figures accused of inciting deadly protests.
The general prosecutor's office said Mohamed Badie along with top officials in the group's Freedom and Justice Party and allied Islamist political parties were wanted for "planning, inciting and aiding criminal acts" outside the Republican Guard headquarters in Cairo on Monday where they believed ousted president Mohamed Morsi was being held in military custody. Many Muslim Brotherhood members are in detention and warrants are said to have been issued for hundreds more.

Meanwhile, foreign ministry spokesman Badr Abdul Atti has said ousted Morsi is being held in a "safe place". Atti told reporters he did not know where the 61 year old Morsi was, but that he was being treated in a "very dignified manner". "For his own safety and for the safety of the country, it is better to keep him in a safe place. Otherwise, the consequences will be dire," he added.

The Brotherhood supporters have been staging protests outside the capital's Rabaa al-Adawiya mosque, not far from the barracks, demanding Morsi's release and reinstatement. Newly-appointed Prime Minister Hazem al-Beblawi has begun the work on forming a new cabinet, a week after the army ousted Morsi. Beblawi, a liberal economist who was finance minister and deputy prime minister, is expected to offer posts to the Muslim Brotherhood, but the Islamist party has refused to co-operate with what it says is a coup.

The US said it was "cautiously encouraged" by the move towards reform. The timetable for new elections was announced by interim President Adly Mansour on Monday evening, hours after at least 51 people - mostly Muslim Brotherhood members - were killed outside the military barracks in Cairo. The decree laid out plans to set up a panel to amend the suspended Islamist-drafted constitution within 15 days. Mohamed ElBaradei, the Nobel Peace Prize-winning diplomat, will serve as interim vice president, the fledgling government said.

- See more at: The Africa News - Arrest warrants issued against Muslim Brotherhood spiritual leader

See also:

EGYPT TO INVESTIGATE MORSI FOR 2011 JAILBREAK
Jul 12,`13 -- Prosecutors will investigate allegations that Egypt's ousted president escaped from prison during the 2011 revolution with help from the Palestinian militant group Hamas, officials said.
Chief prosecutor Hesham Barakat has received testimony from a court in the Suez Canal city of Ismailia that will be the base for an investigation by state security prosecutors into the jailbreak by Mohammed Morsi and more than 30 other Muslim Brotherhood leaders, according to the officials who spoke on condition of anonymity Thursday because they were not authorized to speak to the media. The question of whether Hamas helped them escape during the chaos surrounding the 2011 uprising that toppled Hosni Mubarak has been debated in the media for months and proved a political headache for Morsi during his one-year rule as Egypt's first freely elected president. Critics in the opposition and judiciary have suggested that proof of foreign intervention on Egyptian soil could lead to treason charges.

The issue has taken on more significance since Morsi was ousted on July 3 by the military following a wave of protests in which millions of Egyptians called on him to step down. The toppled Islamist leader has been kept at an undisclosed Defense Ministry facility and no charges against him have been announced. Hamas has denied any role in the Jan. 29, 2011, jailbreak at Wadi el-Natroun prison northwest of Cairo. Morsi and other Brotherhood leaders have said local residents helped them escape after most inmates left the facility.

The investigation stems from a court case against a former inmate, but judge Khaled Mahgoub turned what was in effect a low-profile trial into a public inquiry into the escape by Morsi and the other Brotherhood officials. A series of prison officials, police and intelligence agents testified, some behind closed doors. In the end, Mahgoub referred the testimony he collected to the chief prosecutor's office with a request that he investigates the matter further.

The trial in Ismailia fits into a picture of strained relations between Morsi and the judiciary after what many judges saw as his encroachment on the independence of the judiciary. A string of top police, prison and intelligence officials have blamed Hamas, a close ally of Morsi's Brotherhood, saying the militant group sent fighters from the Gaza Strip to join with Bedouins from the Sinai Peninsula to storm prisons and break out the jailed Hamas members.

MORE http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/storie...ME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT&CTIME=2013-07-12-01-15-54
 
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Cut off the head of a snake and the body will die...
:cool:
Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood appears at risk of falling apart
August 20,`13 — The world’s most influential Islamist movement is in danger of collapse in the land of its birth — its leaders imprisoned, its supporters slain and its activists branded as terrorists in what many are describing as the worst crisis to confront Egypt’s 85-year-old Muslim Brotherhood.
In the week since Egypt’s new military-backed rulers ordered a brutal crackdown on camps filled with protesters calling for the reinstatement of ousted president Mohamed Morsi, the group that used its organizational muscle to win the country’s first democratic elections, held in late 2011 and early 2012, has been cast into disarray. Analysts worry that its members, bitter and angry after the deaths of more than 1,000 Morsi supporters in the past week, could abandon the Brotherhood’s decades-long commitment to nonviolence, particularly as its leadership loses its grip on them. Some pro-Morsi demonstrators have been spotted with weapons, and attacks against security forces in the volatile Sinai Peninsula have intensified since Morsi was deposed July 3.

2013-08-20T075710Z_01_AMR056E_RTRIDSP_3_EGYPT-PROTESTS.jpg

Muslim Brotherhood leader Mohammed Badie sits at a police station after security forces arrested him. More than two dozen off-duty police recruits were slain by gunmen in the restive Sinai Peninsula on Monday, Egyptian authorities said.

Meanwhile, the movement is battling a level of popular hostility perhaps unprecedented in its history. The Brotherhood’s strategy of confronting the government with sit-ins and marches in recent weeks seems only to have inflamed public opinion. On Tuesday, Brotherhood supporters vowed that they would not resort to violence as they continued to challenge the interim government installed by the military after Morsi, the group’s standard-bearer, was toppled. “Our only option is the peaceful method,” Khaled Hanafi, secretary general of the Brotherhood’s Freedom and Justice Party, said at a news conference in Cairo on Tuesday. The detention overnight of the Brotherhood’s “supreme guide,” Mohammed Badie, would not change the group’s approach, he said. “We regret the arrest of Dr. Badie, but we have chosen a path, and regardless of the sacrifices, we must continue,” Hanafi said.

Badie was interrogated and remanded into pretrial detention Tuesday on a variety of charges, including inciting the killing of protesters outside the Brotherhood’s Cairo headquarters in June. He is also accused of possessing arms, running an illegal gang and assaulting the military. He is scheduled to go on trial with two other Brotherhood leaders this month. The detention of the Islamist movement’s spiritual leader, whose image was broadcast repeatedly on television after his overnight arrest, seemed to complete the humiliation of the Brotherhood’s leadership. The mass arrests and deaths of its officials have left the group splintered and unable to take coordinated action, analysts say.

An existential crisis

See also:

For Muslim Brotherhood, a Painful Day of Reckoning
August 16, 2013 — A month of deadly conflict between security forces and the mostly Islamist supporters of Egypt's ousted president has battered the country's once-powerful Muslim Brotherhood, leaving it with diminishing prospects for restoring its former pre-eminence.
At least 42 people were killed in clashes around Egypt on Friday, according to officials, in violence set off two days previously when police raids on Muslim Brotherhood protests in Cairo left hundreds dead, in modern Egypt's worst violence in memory. As Brotherhood supporters defied martial law and faced off Friday with government security forces and civilians, leaders of the group upped the ante by announcing they were calling for a Week of Departure—protests aimed at ousting the head of Egypt's armed forces, Gen. Abdel Fattah Al Sisi. But the group, which was the country's most popular political force as recently as two years ago, now faces an openly hostile national media, shriveling public good will and a huge security apparatus intent on destroying it. Many of its leaders are in jail. Those who remain free have been driven underground—declining to appear in public even for Friday's funeral of a top leader's daughter.

Some of these leaders met in secret Friday, said one Brotherhood leader, to debate their "alternatives and next steps." Their moves appear limited. The group has called for its supporters to keep pressing for the reinstatement of Mohammed Morsi, the elected Muslim Brotherhood president who was removed by the military on July 3, spurring several deadly clashes in recent weeks with security forces. By remaining on the streets, the group runs the risk of even more violence—a scenario that would not only antagonize the same polity that blessed them in elections, but also play into the government's position, increasingly voiced by Egyptians, that its security forces are battling a terrorist menace intent on seizing the state and imposing Islamic law.

But ending the protests, group leaders say, would erode the organization's claim to legitimacy. Since the Brotherhood renounced violence in the 1970s, it has sought to distinguish itself as a moderate Islamist organization deserving of a place in Egypt's nascent democracy. Without a viable political outlet, Egypt risks seeing some of the Brotherhood's vast membership radicalize and split off, said experts on political Islam. "If the Brotherhood continues like this, it's self-suicide," said Khalil Al Anani, an expert on Islamist organizations and a senior fellow at the Washington-based Middle East Institute.

Leaders of the group have used word-of-mouth and social-networking sites to urge demonstrators not to bring weapons to protests or attack the police. While the group has said its unarmed protesters have come under attack, public anger has been inflamed by accounts of protesters using machine guns and other weapons against security forces. Egyptian state television on Friday showed images of what appeared to be pro-Morsi protesters firing an AK-47 from a bridge in central Cairo. These protesters don't answer to the group, Brotherhood leaders have said. "There are some young people, ordinary people, who are trying to say that it doesn't make sense to face this peacefully," said Amr Darrag, a leader in the Brotherhood's political party and a former minister under Mr. Morsi. "We are trying to calm people down and the only way is to remain peaceful. We say that we can never match the force that the security police and military have."

More For Muslim Brotherhood, A Painful Day of Reckoning - WSJ.com
 
WW-III?

-Geaux

[youtube]vwU2sMjx8x8[/youtube]

[youtube]LiXH5j2cNVU[/youtube]
 
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