The West and the Muslim Brotherhood After the Arab Spring

The West and the Muslim Brotherhood After the Arab Spring

Author(s): Lorenzo Vidino, Benedetta Berti, Steven Brooke, Jean-François Daguzan, Martyn Frampton, Hernando Miguel De Larramendi Martinez, Shiraz Maher, Roel Meijer, Ana Planet, Guido Steinberg, Alex Wilner
Editor(s): Lorenzo Vidino
Publisher(s): Foreign Policy Research Institute
Publication Year: 2013

Few observers foresaw the Arab Spring, but it should not have surprised anyone that the Islamist movements - the most organized movements in the Arab world - became the main beneficiaries of the turmoil that ensued. Islamism, in its gradualist and pragmatic approach embodied by the Muslim Brotherhood and its offshoots worldwide, seems ready to reap the rewards of its three decades-old decision to abandon violence and focus on grassroots activities. This monumental change has created many concerns among liberals, religious minorities and, more generally, all non-Islamists in the countries where Islamists have won. In addition, Arab states ruled by non-Islamist regimes have expressed concern. The former worry that Islamist ideology - even in its more contemporary, pragmatic form - remains deeply divisive and anti-democratic, often at odds with their values and interests. The latter believe that on foreign policy issues, most of the positions of various Brotherhood-inspired parties are on a collision course with the policies of established regimes in the region.
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