October 27, 2006 6:44 PM

WH On Wrong Side Of Muslim Brotherhood

(The Nation)  This column was written by Stephen Glain.

Kemal Helbawy is a founding member of the Muslim Association of Britain and a member of the Muslim Brotherhood, the Egyptian-based Islamist movement with chapters throughout the Islamic world, including Hamas in the Palestinian territories. It comprises the largest opposition bloc in the Egyptian parliament, with eighty-eight seats, and it administers a network of social services that is far more efficient and responsive than those provided by the state. Brotherhood leaders have been at the vanguard of Egypt's grassroots push for political reform, consistent with the Bush Administration's policy of democratizing the Middle East.

But on October 18, Helbawy found out what all that hard work and credibility is worth, at least as far as the White House is concerned. The London-based religious scholar was tightly buckled into his aisle seat on an American Airlines flight bound for New York, where he was to be the lead speaker at a conference on the Muslim Brotherhood. Within minutes after leaving the gate, the flight captain announced a departure delay and the aircraft was towed back. Helbaway was asked to come forward, where he was met by an official of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and informed he had been rendered inadmissible for entry to the United States without a visa issued by the U.S. embassy in London.

It didn't matter to the agent that, as a British citizen, the 80-year-old Helbawy did not require a visa, nor that Helbawy had traveled frequently to the United States a decade ago as part of a university lecture series. Orders were orders, and Helbawy was escorted off the plane.

The State Department would not say why Helbawy was barred from the United States. Increasingly, however, the Bush Administration is using broad interpretation of the USA Patriot Act to keep out foreign scholars critical of White House policies. According to State Department documents obtained by the American Civil Liberties Union through a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit, the act's "ideological exclusion" provision may apply to anyone who "endorses or espouses" terrorism or who voices "irresponsible expressions of opinions."

The same provision was used in July to revoke a visa issued to the Swiss Islamic scholar Tariq Ramadan after he was offered a job at the University of Notre Dame as a professor of Islamic studies. When Notre Dame officials pressed for an explanation, the State Department initially declared Ramadan a terrorist sympathizer before backing away for lack of evidence. It then accused Ramadan of giving money to charities blacklisted by the United States for funding Hamas. But Ramadan made his donations years before the United States blacklisted the groups; how could he have known of their activities, he and his supporters point out, before the United States itself knew?

Ramadan, a vocal critic of U.S. foreign policy as well as Islamic extremists, is active in ecumenical affairs. He is also a grandson of Hassan al-Banna, the founder of the Muslim Brotherhood, and that alone could be enough to make you persona non grata in post-9/11 America. For years, U.S. diplomats in Egypt were allowed informal contacts with Brotherhood members, a source of valuable information given how intimately twinned the group is with Egyptian society. Since 9/11, however, the State Department has frozen even unofficial relations with the group, and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice pointedly excludes Brotherhood members from meetings in Cairo with secular--and significantly less influential — leaders of Egypt's reform movement.

The estrangement calcified early this year after Hamas's electoral victory in the Palestinian territories and its refusal to recognize the state of Israel. Hard-liners in the White House blame the Muslim Brotherhood for Hamas's recalcitrance, though the group's influence over its affiliates is thought to be passive at best. For their part, Helbawy and other Brotherhood members say they would embrace a mutually acceptable conclusion to the Israeli-Palestinian dispute.

"We disagree with U.S. policy," Helbawy said by telephone from his London home. "But we would be happy to see the issue resolved. And for this I am refused permission to attend a conference in New York?"

In taking on the Muslim Brotherhood, the Bush Administration has aligned itself against the most powerful and authentic political movement in the Arab world. Established in 1928 in opposition to foreign occupation and Zionism, the Brotherhood is the closest thing to an established, centrist party in an Arab world that over the years has shifted rightward on a riptide of outrage. Egyptians are drawn in by the group's message of moderation and tolerance and by their contempt for U.S. Middle East policy, which includes support of Hosni Mubarak, the country's brutal, secular president. The group renounced violence decades ago and has condemned Osama bin Laden and his acolytes as apostates. It is not on the U.S. list of terrorist organizations and gets high praise from many Egyptians — secular as well as religious, Christian as well as Muslim — for its civic-mindedness.

Unlike Al Qaeda, the Muslim Brotherhood knows how to contest and win elections. While bin Laden and President Bush indulge in existential combat in which the average Muslim has little if any personal stake, the Brotherhood has been winning hearts and minds through assiduous and nonsectarian ward-heeling. While Bushism has wrought war, anarchy, occupation and the specter of the lethal Zionist-Crusader alliance that bin Laden warned of in the run up to 9/11, the Muslim Brotherhood salves some of the deprivations and inequities of ordinary life. It is what makes the group the hardest target yet in Bush's "war on terror," and the likely successor to the aging Mubarak.

Attempts to sideline the Muslim Brotherhood by locking its members out of America will only raise the price of dealing with its leaders when there is no one else in Cairo to talk to.

By Stephen Glain
Reprinted with permission from The Nation

The Nation
Add a Comment
by bluestardad October 30, 2006 3:04 PM EST
January 21, 2001 soon after gas hit two dollars a gallon. The great decider was on the move. America grabbed its ankles cause he was not gentle. Most of us lined up for his game but now we are tired of his lies he has been telling us, and are a little sore, tired, and need a smoke. We do not want to %u201CStay the Course%u201D anymore and are about to dump this chimp.
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by cathaleen October 30, 2006 1:00 PM EST
There have always been religious wars and conflict. But they were wars between religions (ex. Catholics & Protestants in N Ireland). You knew who your so called enemy was. Or at least they were indentifiable.

But with the Muslims - it seems they want to blow up everyone - jews, catholics, protestants, etc.

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by yborangel October 30, 2006 12:43 PM EST
Whatever happened to the policy of keep your friends close, and your enemies CLOSER??

Because we disagree with their veiws and opinions of us, we stop communicating with them altogether...sounds like the behavior of a gaggle of fourth grade girls on the playground--not what we should expect from world leaders. This administration needs to GROW UP!

And yes, there probably will be more muslims than christians in the future. While a few may blow themselves up, they are constantly recruiting others to their side, while we antagonize the world and keep taking our birth control pills!
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by ronniehm October 30, 2006 6:02 AM EST
"Sooner or later there will be as many if not more Muslims in the world than Christian."
I doubt it. Christians rarely blow themselves up. Anyway, if muslims want my tolerance, they'll have to earn it by taking control of their own radicals so we don't have to do it ourselves. I'm tired of caring more about the muslim image more than muslims do.
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by willowing October 30, 2006 2:27 AM EST
Did anyone notice that it's not possible to comment on Mona Charen's editorial? Unbelievable!
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by catt42701 October 30, 2006 1:25 AM EST
We must learn tolerance of all religions. Sooner or later there will be as many if not more Muslims in the world than Christian. Christians and Muslims have been at war for centuries. Isn't it time for everyone to grow up and play peacefully in this big playground of a world. If we don't this world will no longer be a playground but a house of horrors. I am getting to the point of saying that the only good religion is a dead religion. It seems that religion fires most of the violence in this world and prevents aid to those that need it despiratlely.
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by djconklin October 29, 2006 8:44 PM EST
Talk about shooting one's self in the foot! We need a new administration NOW!
Reply to this comment
by PhiylAmid October 29, 2006 7:16 PM EST
but try viewing it against the Five Government split (Britain,France,Denmark,Switzerland & Austrailia) over Documents Exposing the Monpalisation of Upper Government by Private Consortium. Now Leaked by london MP.
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