US document reveals cooperation between Washington and Brotherhood
Studies commissioned by the president concluded that the US should back ‘moderate Islamists’ in the region
Dubai: For the past decade, two
successive US administrations have maintained close ties to the Muslim
Brotherhood in Egypt, Tunisia, Syria and Libya, to name just the most
prominent cases.
The Obama administration
conducted an assessment of the Muslim Brotherhood in 2010 and 2011,
beginning even before the events known as the “Arab Spring” erupted in
Tunisia and in Egypt. The President personally issued Presidential Study
Directive 11 (PSD-11) in 2010, ordering an assessment of the Muslim
Brotherhood and other “political Islamist” movements, including the
ruling AKP in Turkey, ultimately concluding that the United States
should shift from its longstanding policy of supporting “stability” in
the Middle East and North Africa (that is, support for “stable regimes”
even if they were authoritarian), to a policy of backing “moderate”
Islamic political movements.
To this day, PSD-11 remains
classified, in part because it reveals an embarrassingly naïve and
uninformed view of trends in the Middle East and North Africa (Mena)
region.
The revelations were made by Al Hewar centre in Washington, DC, which obtained the documents in question.
Through an ongoing Freedom of
Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit, thousands of pages of documentation of
the US State Department’s dealings with the Muslim Brotherhood are in
the process of being declassified and released to the public.
US State Department documents
obtained under the FOIA confirm that the Obama administration
maintained frequent contact and ties with the Libyan Muslim Brotherhood.
At one point, in April 2012, US officials arranged for the public
relations director of the Libyan Muslim Brotherhood, Mohammad Gaair, to
come to Washington to speak at a conference on “Islamists in Power”
hosted by the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
A State
Department Cable classified “Confidential” report says the following:
“Benghazi Meeting With Libyan Muslim Brotherhood: On April 2 [2012]
Mission Benghazi met with a senior member of the Muslim Brotherhood
steering committee, who will speak at the April 5 Carnegie Endowment
`Islamist in Power’ conference in Washington, D.C. He described the
Muslim Brotherhood’s decision to form a political party as both an
opportunity and an obligation in post-revolution Libya after years of
operating underground. The Brotherhood’s Justice and Construction Party
would likely have a strong showing in the upcoming elections, he said,
based on the strength of the Brotherhood’s network in Libya, its broad
support, the fact that it is a truly national party, and that 25 per
cent of its members were women. He described the current relationship
between the Brotherhood and the TNC (Transitional National Council) as
`lukewarm.’”
Another State Department
paper marked “Sensitive But Unclassified (SBU)” contained talking points
for Deputy Secretary of State William Burns’ scheduled July 14, 2012
meeting with Mohammad Sawan, the Muslim Brotherhood leader who was also
head of the Brotherhood’s Justice and Construction Party. The document
is heavily redacted, but nevertheless provides clear indication of
Washington’s sympathies for the emergence of the Muslim Brotherhood as a
major political force in the post-Gaddafi Libya. The talking points
recommended that Secretary Burns tell Sawan that the US government
entities “share your party’s concerns in ensuring that a comprehensive
transitional justice process is undertaken to address past violations so
that they do not spark new discontent.”
The Burns paper described the
Libyan Muslim Brotherhood: “Prior to last year’s revolution, the Muslim
Brotherhood was banned for over three decades and its members were
fiercely pursued by the Gaddafi regime. The Libyan Muslim Brotherhood
(LMB) returned to Libya last year after years in exile in Europe and the
United States, selected new leadership and immediately began to plan
for an active role in Libya’s political future.” After a redacted
section, the document continued, “The LMB-affiliated Justice and
Construction party, led by Misratan and former political prisoner under
Gaddafi Mohammad Sawan, was created in March 2012. Sawan himself was not
a candidate in the elections but wields significant influence as the
head of the largest political party and most influential Islamist party
in Libya.”
The July 14 meeting was
attended by both Secretary Burns and Ambassador Christopher Stevens. On
September 11, 2012, Ambassador Stevens and three other American
diplomats were killed in a premeditated terrorist attack on US mission
and CIA facilities in Benghazi.
An undated State Department
cable revealed further courting of the LMB and its Justice and
Construction Party. “Mohammad Sawan, Chairman of Justice and
Construction Party, received yesterday at his office in Tripoli,
Ambassadors of US, UK, FR and IT. The Ambassadors requested the meeting
to get acquainted with the party’s position on the current events in
Libya, the Government, the Party’s demand to sack the Prime Minister,
the Constitution, GNC lifetime arguments, dialogue initiatives and
Party’s assessment of political and security situation in Libya and the
region. During the meeting, which took an hour and a half and attended
by Mohammad Talb, party’s International Relations officer, and Hussam
Naeli, acting liaison officer, Sawan explained that the Government has
not been able to achieve any success in the core files such as security
and local government, which both are under the direct supervision of the
Prime Minister. Such a failure resulted in the lack of security,
continuous assassinations, kidnappings, crimes, smuggling and attacks on
public and private property, halt oil exports and disruption of water
and electricity supply. Sawan stressed that a solution is possible and
the party presented a clear solution, but the Government is not in
harmony. He added we are responsible only for ministries that we take
part in.”
The State Department cable
noted that “On their part, the Ambassadors praised the active role of
the Party in the political scene and confirmed their standing with the
Libyan people and Government despite its weaknesses and they are keen to
stabilize the region... At the end of the meeting, Sawan thanked his
guests and all stressed the need to communicate. The guests affirmed
that they will assist through Libyan legitimate entities as they did
during the revolution.”
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