Roudy
Diamond Member
- Mar 16, 2012
- 59,513
- 17,819
- 2,180
What has the world come to? Egypt now praising how Israel deals with Hamas animals? Perhaps they realized who and what they are. Go Sisi!
Egyptian Gen. Abdel Fattah al-Sisi is set to take the ruthless crackdown on the Muslim Brotherhood to Hamas, its branch next door in the Gaza Strip.
After dispensing with Muslim Brotherhood, Egypt trains its sights on Hamas
Gaza is next, said one senior security official quoted by Reuters.
Sisi, who is likely to run for president, feels that to lead effectively and improve his countrys economy, he needs to stamp out all forms of opposition and terrorism so that people feel secure.
Following in the Arab tradition of strong rulers, Sisi is working to seize complete control of the state apparatus and to eliminate any possible threats, especially from the Muslim Brotherhood and other radical Islamic groups.
It is clear that Sisi understands what the Middle Eastern scholar P.J. Vatikiotis wrote in Islam and the State: The task of the Muslim today is not to seek the truth, but to restore power. This is the significance of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt and the Islamic militant organizations in Pakistan and Iran. The state, both in Islam and according to these groups, is a religious, not a territorial or ethnic, concept. It is even ideological, because it views political power as a means of attaining the religious ideal, i.e. the unfettered application of the Sharia.
The Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt (the founding branch of the movement), like all of its branches in various Muslim states, seeks to first Islamize and take control of the country, and then move on to all of the other states in the region.
Egyptian Gen. Abdel Fattah al-Sisi is set to take the ruthless crackdown on the Muslim Brotherhood to Hamas, its branch next door in the Gaza Strip.
After dispensing with Muslim Brotherhood, Egypt trains its sights on Hamas
Gaza is next, said one senior security official quoted by Reuters.
Sisi, who is likely to run for president, feels that to lead effectively and improve his countrys economy, he needs to stamp out all forms of opposition and terrorism so that people feel secure.
Following in the Arab tradition of strong rulers, Sisi is working to seize complete control of the state apparatus and to eliminate any possible threats, especially from the Muslim Brotherhood and other radical Islamic groups.
It is clear that Sisi understands what the Middle Eastern scholar P.J. Vatikiotis wrote in Islam and the State: The task of the Muslim today is not to seek the truth, but to restore power. This is the significance of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt and the Islamic militant organizations in Pakistan and Iran. The state, both in Islam and according to these groups, is a religious, not a territorial or ethnic, concept. It is even ideological, because it views political power as a means of attaining the religious ideal, i.e. the unfettered application of the Sharia.
The Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt (the founding branch of the movement), like all of its branches in various Muslim states, seeks to first Islamize and take control of the country, and then move on to all of the other states in the region.