Ikhwanweb :: The Muslim Brotherhood Official English Website

Wed926 2018

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by: Shadi Hamid 2008-10-15
Did McCain really show integrity after a questioner said "[Obama’s] an Arab"? McCain’s response was that Obama was, in fact, a decent family man, so apparently, by definition, he can’t be an Arab. We all know, of course, that Arabs mistreat their women, and, almost ..

by: Shadi Hamid 2008-10-10
The fortunes of the Jordanian Muslim Brotherhood may be shifting after three difficult years that saw the group’s worst electoral result in history, reports of diminished influence, and sustained government repression. After hitting an..

by: Shadi Hamid 2008-9-24
It’s strange that they have waited this long to fight for "a better Jordan." While nonviolent Islamist groups, including the Muslim Brotherhood, were being repressed by the government, we did not hear from them this talk of rights and freedoms. When Jordan witnessed the most blatantly rigged elections in its history (in 2007), we did not hear this outrage. We heard mostly a silent acquiescence, in part because Arab liberals have long feared that if there were, in fact, free and fair el..

by: Shadi Hamid 2008-9-16
It’s been 7 years since 9/11 and, yet, it’s really quite remarkable how we have done very little to recast our relationship with Saudi Arabia. I bring this up because a ..

by: Shadi Hamid 2008-9-2
At what point will the failure to finesse properly the politics of hundreds of million of people of varying cultures, sectarian devotions and tribal loyalties half a world away be credited to the impossibility of the task and not the inadequacy of the tools? ..

by: Shadi Hamid 2008-8-30
The rise of "declinist" literature (that’s not really a word, is it?) has been well-documented by others - these efforts aimed at recording (or perhaps inviting) the end of the American era. The gist is of the thesis is that America will remain strong, but will increasingly find itself challenged by rising powers, among them China, Russia, and India. America’s declining influence under Bush is, it seems, often used a ..

by: Shadi Hamid 2008-7-1
Our challenges in the Middle East are not simply about policy; they are about narratives, and our failure to understand their importance. I was reminded of this again last week, when some relatives from Egypt were visiting for a wedding. I had mentioned 9/11 in the context of civil rights for Muslims in America. ..

by: Shadi Hamid 2008-5-17
Ever since the Muslim Brotherhood won nearly 20% of the vote and 88 seats in the fall 2005 parliamentary elections, the Egyptian regime has launched a sustained campaign of repression against the group...

by: Shadi Hamid 2008-4-16
How you feel about the following YouTube video probably says something about how you feel about the broader effort to promote Middle East democracy..

by: Shadi Hamid 2008-3-25
While Barack Obama’s speech on race earlier this week was geared primarily toward domestic concerns, as an American of Middle Eastern origin, watching from a café in Jordan, I was struck by the possibilities it offered not only for race relations at home, but for our relationship with Arabs and Muslims abroad...

by: Shadi Hamid 2008-2-27
Last Wednesday, Khaled Hamza, an influential (although low-profile) moderate in the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood, was arrested. Hamza is the editor-in-chief of Ikhwanweb, the Brotherhood’s official English website...

by: Shadi Hamid 2008-2-7
Granted, this is anecdotal, but still. A friend was telling me that one of her Dutch friends, after watching the Obama South Carolina victory speech, said "I was listening to it and I wanted to be an American."..

by: Shadi Hamid 2008-2-4
I have to say that I get really troubled by the assertion that “elections alone don’t make a democracy.” Of course, it’s true as far as descriptive statements go. But the implications are troubling. I know this isn’t what Patrick was trying to say in his post, but too many others are saying it – that the U.S. has made a mistake by emphasizing elections, and, therefore, the U.S. should de-prioritize elections...

by: Shadi Hamid 2008-1-19
I’m not sure there’s very much the US government can or should do, in practice, to push Egypt into becoming a democracy...

by: Shadi Hamid 2008-1-8
What would a Democratic victory mean in 2008? It’s worth considering one additional point (as if you needed more), that isn’t often made, at least not explicitly...

by: Shadi Hamid 2007-12-28
Ok, this is really weird. David Frost is interviewing Benazir Bhutto on his Al Jazeera program (from November)...

by: Shadi Hamid 2007-12-27
If Islamists within the military or ISI did this, then we have the possibility that this is the beginning of something more ominous than the surface event. The collapse of Pakistan into a Jihadist nuclear power is the great nightmare. ..

by: Shadi Hamid 2007-12-23
I was actually joking. “These Muslims don’t have any respect for British mainstream culture. They walk around drenched in black, covering their faces, wearing their niqabs. If they’re going to come here, they should at least have respect for our values!” A statement like this would have inspired confusion among those who know me, since I am Muslim, but not British. My conversation partner, ..

by: Shadi Hamid 2007-12-13
I find it surprising that nearly every conservative commentator out there is decrying the NIE on Iran’s nuclear program...

by: Shadi Hamid 2007-12-6
There’s been an interesting discussion in the blogosphere recently on “moderate Muslims” and the broader issue of whether there is or will be a “Muslim reformation” (see here, here, here, as well as Matt Yglesias’s response here). Often, the conversation takes on a patronizing tone. What’s up with these Muslims, and why can’t they get their act together? It is a bit ironic that it’s those on the American Right (and far-right) - the very people who have so indulged Christian fundamental..

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