The General Guide And The Renunciation
Of Senior Positions
04 April 2012
By Mshari al-Zaydi
During the celebrations held by the General Guide
of the "ruling" Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt to mark
the inauguration of the Brotherhood's new branch in
the city of Beni Suef, Mohammed Badi spoke about his
group's "abstention" from high profile positions.
According to "Al-Ahram" newspaper, the General Guide
opened fire again on the Ganzouri government,
criticizing its performance in all economic and
security fields. He wondered at Ganzouri and his
ministers' desire to cling on to the frayed ropes of
their government, and called upon them to declare
their absolute failure.
Badi added: "We are not seeking positions". This is
an idealist statement embodying the evasive language
of the Brotherhood, especially in the Egyptian branch.
On the one hand, they have political and global
ambitions, and on the other, they raise the banner of
religion, asceticism and moral integrity. The Muslim
Brotherhood in Egypt have caused everyone to be wary,
including their military friends from the recent past,
after developing a voracious appetite to control all
hinges of power and marginalize everyone else, or at
least restrict them to superficial roles.
They Brotherhood said they wouldn't put forward a
presidential candidate. But now they say a different
thing. Earlier, they said that they wouldn't step in
with full force to control the parliament and that
they would take into account the international balance
of power and the concerns of others in Egypt. However,
they have operated the electoral machine to the
maximum and now control the majority of parliamentary
committees. Then they dealt the fatal blow by
monopolizing the constituent assembly. They did so in
explicit betrayal of the pledges they had made
earlier. This has forced some of the Brotherhood's
friends, who boarded their political ship and sailed
into the high seas of politics with them, to
subsequently withdraw out of shame.
All the aforementioned fatty power dishes are being
placed on the Brotherhood's table one after the other,
and the Brotherhood cannot stop devouring them.
Nevertheless, their General Guide humbly says that
they are not position seekers. Isn't the General Guide
supposed to distance himself from politics and devote
his entire attention to social work? After all, at
least from a legal point of view, there is a party
already operating on behalf of the Brotherhood, and
the General Guide should have nothing to do with it.
This kind of discourse is reminiscent of that of
Hezbollah of Lebanon. The latter has always said that
it was neither interested in power nor politics and
that its sole aim was to mount resistance. It has
always claimed that it only entered the world of
politics to protect the resistance project. Hassan
Nasrallah has always reiterated that cliché, stating
that Hezbollah was not interested in positions,
parliamentary seats or ministerial portfolios.
However, in the end, especially with Najib Mikati's
government, Hezbollah proved that indeed it was not
interested in "limited" positions, but rather in
consuming power as a whole, or as a revolutionary poet
once said: "Either it will be Life, which pleases the
friend, Or Death, which angers the enemy."
Strangely enough, the discourse of Hezbollah, which
happens to be the ruling party in Lebanon, still
adopts the tone of the aggrieved, the victim and the
underdog. A knowledgeable Lebanese friend of mine, who
is opposed to Hezbollah and its camp, recalled a
discussion he had with a member of the party, in which
the Hezbollah representative repeated that same old
discourse of injustice. So my friend told him: We are
more entitled than you to adopt this discourse now,
especially after the Beirut invasion. Only you possess
weapons and missiles which you say are capable of
reaching the heart of Israel, whereas people like us
have nothing to defend ourselves with except kitchen
knives. Who then should really talk along the lines of
being the underdog? Then my friend concluded his story
by saying: They have monopolized everything, even the
sense of injustice and vulnerability.
It seems that the rhetoric of the Brotherhood's
General Guide, Mohammed Badi, with regards to his
group's renunciation of senior positions, despite
their apparent appetite for power, is not too far away
from the remarks made by my Lebanese friend.
A Saudi journalist and
expert on Islamic movements and Islamic fundamentalism
as well as Saudi affairs. Mshari is Asharq Al-Awsat's
opinion page Editor, where he also contributes a
weekly column. Has worked for the local Saudi press
occupying several posts at Al -Madina newspaper
amongst others. He has been a guest on numerous news
and current affairs programs as an expert on Islamic
extremism