European policies toward Brotherhood
The Muslim Brotherhood's history is of full of instances where the Islamist group sought protection from Western countries.
European states
were an important refuge for Brotherhood leaders, especially in the 1950s and
the 1960s, when the group clashed with late Egyptian president Gamal Abdel
Nasser.
The Brotherhood
also turned European capitals into centers where they made schemes against Arab
capitals. They also used the same capitals as lynchpin for incitement campaigns
against Arab governments. They tarnished the image of these governments and
incited Western governments against them.
Western
governments, for their part, use the Brotherhood to further their own agendas of
creating rifts within Middle Eastern states and also gaining a foothold in
predominantly Muslim countries.
These governments
use the Brotherhood as a pressure card against Arab governments and peoples.
The
administration of former US president Barack Obama did this against the
Egyptian government when the Brotherhood lost public support in Egypt.
December 25, 2013
was a decisive day for the Brotherhood in Egypt. On that day, the Brotherhood
was designated as a "terrorist" organization in the Arab state.
Nevertheless, some states, including the United Kingdom, refused to give the
group the same label. This opens the door for questions about the type of links
between Muslim Brotherhood members and leaders in Europe, on one hand, and the
mother organization in Egypt, on the other.
Heading
to Europe
The flight of the
members and leaders of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt and the members of the
Baath Party in Syria to Europe was connected with conditions around these
people at the time. Youssef Nada from Egypt and Youssef al-Attar from Syria
were among the most famous Brotherhood and Baath leaders escaping to Europe
from their countries.
Once in Europe, Brotherhood
leaders formed a huge network of mosques, charities and Islamic organizations.
These entities aimed first and foremost to spread the ideology of the
Brotherhood in Europe. They also worked to offer support to Brotherhood members
escaping to Europe, turning the continent into a fertile ground for terrorists.
The Brotherhood
has a knack for maneuvering, using thoughts and religious edicts. They used to
call Europe a "House of war". However, they changed their mind on
this later in an attempt to win support from European governments and gain
legitimacy for their presence in European countries.
Map
The Brotherhood worked
actively to turn European countries into launch pads for their attacks on Arab
countries. This was why they worked hard to expand their presence in European
states, such as France, the UK and Germany. These countries are important
magnets for Muslims from Arab and Islamic countries. The Brotherhood also
worked to gain presence in the different social associations and organizations
present in Europe.
First,
vertical expansion
The Brotherhood's
expansion in main European states aimed to make the group gain strategic
importance in these states. Here are the states where the Brotherhood has the
most presence:
France
The Federation of
Islamic Organizations, which was founded by Brotherhood members from Tunisia
and Morocco, has 250 mosques and Islamic societies under its umbrella. The
federation also founded ten educational institutions with the aim of creating a
Brotherhood elite in Europe. The group also controls a number of studies and
research centers.
Germany
Muslim
Brotherhood presence in Germany started in 1963 at the Munich Mosque. The
Brotherhood then founded the Central Council for Muslims in Germany, the
Islamic Institution in Germany and the Milli Gorus Islamic Community. The group
also founded Zentralrat, a union of Milli Gorus and the Islamic Institution in
Germany. The new entity has close links with Turkish President Recep Tayyip
Erdogan.
The UK
The Islamic Group
in Pakistan gained presence in the UK before any Islamist organization. It did
this since the 1950s. In 1997, Arab members of the Muslim Brotherhood founded
the British Islamic Society. The society was headed by Kamal al-Helbawi who
worked as the spokesman of Muslims in the UK. The society worked to incite
opposition against Arab and Islamic regimes. The Brotherhood in effect controls
13 organizations and societies in British capital London alone. These
organizations received funds from outside the UK with the aim of investing them
in the European country. These projects aimed to open the door for the presence
of the necessary funding for Brotherhood activities.
Second,
horizontal expansion
The Brotherhood
laid the nucleus of its horizontal expansion in the European continent in 1989.
It did this by founding the Federation of Islamic Organizations in Europe. The
federation acts as a front for all Brotherhood societies and entities in
Europe. It is also a tool of diplomatic representation for the Islamist group.
The federation adopts a discourse that focuses on democracy and human rights.
The federation
also created a number of subsidiary organizations that act as affiliate
agencies. These organizations work to raise funds for Brotherhood entities,
including ones that train mosque preachers. In 1996, the Federation of Islamic
Organizations in Europe established the European Youth Forum. It also
established students' organizations, benefiting from funding arriving from a
number of Arab Gulf states.
European
policies
A reference is made here to the policies of some model
states. Put together, these policies can help us form a theory about European
policies toward the Muslim Brotherhood.
1 –
France
France is the
country most targeted by terrorist groups in Europe. It was the scene of a
series of terrorist operations in the past few years.
These attacks
precipitated a series of measures. In July 2015, the French parliament debated
a number of bills on increasing military spending and financial support to the
judicial system. These measures aimed to boost the national counterterrorism
strategy.
In November 2015,
the French government imposed a nationwide state of emergency. A number of
moderate Islamic centers issued, meanwhile, the Imam Charter on March 28, 2017,
with the aim of correcting some misconceptions about the Islamic religion, ones
propagated by the terrorists.
Nonetheless, the
aforementioned measures came short of putting the lid on extremist and
Brotherhood ideas in France. After all, this European state does not have a
legal mechanism that can help it counter the expansion of Islamist groups in
it, especially the Muslim Brotherhood.
2 – The
UK
The UK had been
the main destination for a large number of Salafist and jihadist figures for a
long time in the past. Nonetheless, it realized the dangers inherent in the
presence of these people in it. This was why it started to find ways to
distance itself from these people.
The UK government
started reconsidering its approach to the Muslim Brotherhood after the release of
a report on the activities of the group in December 2015. Membership in the
group, the report said, is a step on the road to extremism.
Nevertheless, the
UK government refused to label the Brotherhood as a "terrorist"
organization.
There are several
hard line Islamic parties in the UK. These parties use legal conditions in this
European state to increase their presence in European societies.
This shows that
the new British counterterrorism strategy needs legal backing so that it can
keep the lid on the danger posed by the presence of terrorist groups in it.
The UK's
disengagement from the Brotherhood is apparently a tactical move aimed at
making the British government capable of using this group to serve its
interests whenever it wants.