Former NSA executive Maj. Gen. Mohamed Sadek exposes the backstage of terrorist groups in a special interview with the Reference
Former executive of the National Security Authority Major General Mohamed Sadek, is considered one of the most important experts on the security scene in Egypt and a security official during the late nineties of the last century. He was also appointed assistant interior minister.
In an interview with the Reference, Sadek
clarified the truth about the ideological reviews that the Muslim Brotherhood
was objected to, as one of the officials who supervised these reviews. He
confirmed that ideological confrontation with armed groups pays off more than
security confrontation.
Q: At first, what is the history of takfiri
and jihadist groups in Egypt?
A: The first
jihadist group in Egypt dates back to the mid-seventies of the last century; it
was called the Military Academy Organization, led by Saleh Sereya, a Syrian of
Palestinian origin, who was convicted with coordinating terrorist operations
with the Muslim Brotherhood in 1974.
The Takfir wal-Hijra group followed the
Military Academy Organization. It was founded in 1977 by Islamist Shukri
Mustafa in 1977; then in 1979, the Islamic Jihad terrorist group was formed. This group managed to steal a weapon from the British Embassy
guard force and shoot a guard soldier.
The same group assassinated president Anwar
Sadat; all the 24 assassins, including Khalid Islambouli, were tried before an
Egyptian court-martial and the Supreme State Security Court in another case.
Q: As one of the supervisors who oversaw
the ideological confrontation with jihadist groups, can such confrontations
succeed with the Muslim Brotherhood?
A: It is
different, as these groups from the 90s did not belong to an international
organization that decides for them, however, their leaders were behind bars.
The Muslim Brotherhood, on the other hand,
cannot make a decision using ideological confrontation without consulting with
leaders of the international organization of the brotherhood.
Q: Does the Muslim Brotherhood has a hand
in what happens in Sinai?
A: First of
all, everyone should know that all terrorist organizations are evil branches
that grew out of the Muslim Brotherhood’s tree, watered by Sayyid Qutb’s
jihadist and takfiri ideas.
What our brave armed forces are going
through in Sinai at the moment is not only about encountering terrorist groups,
but a real war between Egypt and a number of countries and foreign intelligence
services that seeks to encumber the Egyptian army.
Terrorism in the 90s:
Q: Why did terrorists chose the 90s in
particular to surface and carry out many operations against the state?
A: The mid-90s
coincided with the return of many jihadists from the war in Afghanistan
following the dissolution of the Soviet Union, so attacks by jihadist groups
increased as these groups were fighting in a war on behalf of Israel and the
United States.
Therefore, the Mossad and the C.I.A. managed
to recruit Arab militants and send them to Afghanistan.
During that period, the Islamist group in
Upper Egypt committed the Luxor Massacre.
Q: Did you encounter any of these groups
yourself?
A: I was one
of the officers who arrested the Takfir wal-Hijra group, which in July 1977
killed former minister of endowments, Mohamed al-Dhahaby (1915-1977), who wrote
a book against the takfiri ideology; they were planning to dump Dhahaby’s body
in Al-Zumar Canal in Omraneyah, Giza.
I also foiled the assassination attempts of
journalist Makram Mohamed Ahmed and former interior ministers Hassan Abu Basha
and Mohammed Nabawi Ismail. Moreover, I chased Magdy al-Safty, one of the top
leaders of the organization, who managed to escape to Libya in 1988, and when
he returned, I was able to arrest him in 1992.
I also took part in arresting the “Survivors
of Hell” and “Stop and Discern” terrorist groups, the latter believed that all
Muslims of Egypt cannot be called Muslim unless their truth is being discerned.
Founders of such groups were members of the
Muslim Brotherhood who got out of jail and got influenced by Sayyid Qutb as
they embraced violence against the country.
Assassination of Anwar Sadat
Q: What about the assassination of
president Anwar Sadat?
A: I went to search Abbud al-Zumar’s house around 13 days
before the assassination took place as we already had intel that the Islamic
Jihad group, which included Abbud and his cousin Tarek al-Zumar, was planning
to assassinate Sadat; so we searched the house and found papers that exposed a
plan to assassinate Sadat during a tour in Mansoura governorate.
The plan, however, changed after Khalid
Islambouli, a former Egyptian army officer who planned and participated in the
assassination, informed the group that he was to participate in the annual
victory parade held in Cairo to celebrate Operation Badr; so the group decided
to assassinate Sadat during the parade. The assassination was undertaken by
Islambouli.
Two months later, a shootout led to the
capture of Abbud, Tarek al-Zumar and Abdullah Salem.
At the time, Abbud al-Zumar was a military
intelligence colonel, and used to go to the Anas Ibn Malek Mosque in
Mohandessin district where leader of the Tabligh
and Dawah group, Ibrahim Ezzat, would perform sermons and religious lectures.
Also, Muhammad abd-al-Salam Faraj, a radical Islamist who led the Cairo branch
of Al-Jihad group, used to go to the same mosque. A document titled Al-Farida
al-gha'iba (The Neglected Duty), penned by Faraj, was like a constitution
for Jihadist groups.
Q: You were a NSA inspector in Minya back
in the 90s, did you take part in any reconciliation initiatives led by Islamist
groups?
A: Yes, I
attended all these ideological reviews; but let me tell you first about the
problem that faced the security authority back then. There were more than 4,500
members of the Islamic Group detained, by the power of the State Emergency Law,
despite completing their sentences; so the problem was, what would we do with
these prisoners if the emergency law got lifted?
Starting from this point, we began, as NSA
officers, to believe that thoughts are only fought with thoughts, and that a
security confrontation comes after an ideological one, so we took it upon
ourselves to initiate ideological confrontation with such groups.
There were 13 leaders in the Islamic Group,
including Nageh Ibrahim, Osama Hafez, Karam Zuhdi, Hamdy Abdul-Rahman, and
Fouad al-Dawalibi, who asked us to provide them with original Islamic books to
compare them with their thoughts, and so they did. After a while, we gathered
them in the Scorpion Prison, without the knowledge of our leaders at the time,
they kept arguing, even quarrelling inside the prison.
We also provided them with all means of
communication with fugitive leaders, including some in Afghanistan, and we
offered them the full opportunity to debate. In the end, they all were
convinced that violence must be renounced; after a while, we allowed them to
move between prisons to discuss the matter and convince other members of the
group.
This experience is the best proof that
ideological confrontation with armed groups is more important than security
confrontation, and that we already succeeded to save the country from the
danger of 4,500 men; each one of them could have been a time bomb, against the
country.
The destiny of ideological
confrontation:
Q: The media sees that the initiative
failed, how would you comment on that?
A: As compared
to some cases like Assem Abdel Maged, or Safwat Abdel Ghany, some may assume
the failure of the ideological confrontation method; however, we must take into
consideration the success of the method with more than four thousand members of
the Islamic Group. Some young members of the group would come down from the
hills to surrender their weapons and confess their crimes; they are now free
active members of the society. So, how would anyone assume that this initiative
failed?
Q: What about Assem Abdel Maged and Tarek
al-Zumar? After embracing the violent ideology again, they were seen during the
Rabaa al-Adawiya protests.
A: Only these two, out of many who the Muslim Brotherhood
bought and got enticed with privileges and lack of security pursuits. All of
those who recoiled to violence after getting out of prison, could be counted on
one hand; therefore, the initiative scored a perfect success.
Q: Are the Muslim Brotherhood willing to go
through ideological confrontations?
A: As I elaborated earlier, the Muslim Brotherhood has an
international organization, and leaders across the world; these leaders has
interests in keeping the current scene as it is, by overburdening the army.
Muslim Brotherhood leaders in Qatar, Turkey and London are living off their
human assets in Egypt.
It is pertinent to mention that the
ideology of Sayyid Qutb controls leaders of the brotherhood and that Qutbism excommunicates
the society and the leader.
We must not forget the history of the
Muslim Brotherhood; they committed violence during the king’s era, they killed El
Nokrashy Pasha, Judge Ahmed Al-Khazindar, and others. These people used to
killing from the beginning of their organization, despite that during that
time, there was an active multi-party system and a cabinet reshuffle every two
months.
After the 1952 Revolution, reconciliation
took place, and all parties were dismantled, except for the Muslim Brotherhood.
They then got struck by late president Gamal Abdel Nasser, as they demanded a
claim for authority, until they got released by late president Anwar Sadat from
prisons, and were allowed political participation and integration into the
society, but in the end, they assassinated him.
Terrorist recruitment:
Q: Which kind of youths do terrorist
organizations target for recruitment?
A: In general, organizations target young people who are
unaware of Islamic legislation or do not have any religious or cultural
knowledge; there are many young people who integrated into these organizations
for their lack of knowledge. Despite the criticism towards Al-Azhar, such
groups could never manage to recruit any Azhar graduate, for they received the
rightful teachings and legislation, which posed as a shield against being brainwashed
by these groups.
Q: How would you describe the criticism
directed towards Al-Azhar by some liberal and secular movements?
A: The attack on Al-Azhar is misplaced; there have always
been attempts to hold Al-Azhar from carrying out its role since its
establishment; the reason is that it is a religious national institution that
seeks to spread forgiveness and adopts a moderate view of religion. I would not
be exaggerating if I deemed any attempt to bring down Al-Azhar a threat against
Egypt’s national security, and the state itself.
We must all know a serious fact, in case
Al-Azhar is brought down, its alternative would be terrorist groups such as Al
Qaeda and Daesh; such extremist groups take advantage of breaking the trust of
young people in their religious figures, and therefore, attracts them. Imagine
how would it be if the castle of all these figures is demolished itself.
Q: As for Daesh, how do you see its
emergence, declaring a caliphate in Syria and Iraq, and being brought down this
way?
A: Daesh was a
natural development of Al Qaeda, and Al Qaeda was a natural development of
Al-Jihad Group, and all of these groups emerged from the Muslim Brotherhood,
they are deeply infiltrated, and are being used by the intelligence services of
foreign countries to execute 4th generation wars on their behalf.
These wars are based on a very important
base, which is “Zero war cost, self-destruct”, Israel for example is the
biggest beneficiary of the Arab Spring revolutions, as they resulted chaos and
destruction of foundations, and that is exactly what terrorists seek. All of
these groups are being funded and armed by foreign countries that wat to
destabilize the whole Arab region.
Q: What are your expectations of the large
counter-terrorism campaign conducted by the Armed Forces in Sinai
(Comprehensive Operation – Sinai 2018)?
A: This
operation was very essential, as most of the jihadist and takfiri leaders, who
were released from prisons by ousted president Mohamed Morsi, are the ones
being encountered in Sinai now; this in addition to a number of fugitives who
fled Syria to Sinai. As a conclusion, this war had to be entered; these
terrorists are backed by intelligence services and foreign countries, hoping to
destabilize Egypt.
Foreign intelligence and terrorism
Q: You mentioned the role of foreign intelligences operating in
Sinai, could you please elaborate?
A: The United States is the main
controller of all the terrorist organizations around the world. It is a known
fact for anyone who worked in an intelligence service authority that the U.S.
policy is of double standards, based on its interests; it forms an
international alliance to strike Daesh in Iraq but rejects Egypt’s strikes
against Deash in Libya.
There is also no doubt that the Mossad has a hand in this
conspiracy to destabilize Sinai by providing terrorist groups with arms and
information. Moreover, after Egypt directly took part in Operation Decisive Storm in Yemen, Iran
seeks to get preoccupied so that it could carry out its plans in the Gulf
region.