pbel
Gold Member
- Feb 26, 2012
- 5,653
- 449
- 130
Yes folks, the beat goes on and on...Israel refuses to negotiate and share Jerusalem, while Islamists prepare to challenge her everywhere!...Sure, destroy Iran's Nuclear, the Arabs would love to see two enemies destroy each other...
Expect the Gulf States and Saudi Arabia to fall to Islamists within5-7 years...the War of Attrition marches on.
Peace now or pay later...its Israel's choice.
Egypt's Brotherhood fields presidential candidate - Yahoo! News
CAIRO (AP) Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood, in control of almost half the seats in parliament, announced on Saturday it was fielding its own presidential candidate. It was a reversal of an earlier decision to stay out of the race and could put the group on a collision course with the nation's ruling generals.
The Brotherhood nominated chief strategist and deputy leader Khayrat el-Shater, a multimillionaire businessman considered one of the key leaders guiding the group through the tumultuous transition since the ouster of Hosni Mubarak.
If he wins, it would make the formerly outlawed group the dominant force shaping the post-Mubarak era. But going head-to-head with the military is a major gamble for a formerly outlawed movement whose strategy for decades seemed to be to patiently bide its time.
The movement's decision to nominate one of its own is likely to antagonize Egypt's military rulers, who are accused of seeking to preserve the army's privileges and are likely not to want too much power concentrated in the hands of a single group.
It will also widen the gap with liberals and secularists, who fear that the movement which has largely espoused moderate rhetoric in the past year will implement a hardline Islamist agenda once it has solidified its political position.
Expect the Gulf States and Saudi Arabia to fall to Islamists within5-7 years...the War of Attrition marches on.
Peace now or pay later...its Israel's choice.
Egypt's Brotherhood fields presidential candidate - Yahoo! News
CAIRO (AP) Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood, in control of almost half the seats in parliament, announced on Saturday it was fielding its own presidential candidate. It was a reversal of an earlier decision to stay out of the race and could put the group on a collision course with the nation's ruling generals.
The Brotherhood nominated chief strategist and deputy leader Khayrat el-Shater, a multimillionaire businessman considered one of the key leaders guiding the group through the tumultuous transition since the ouster of Hosni Mubarak.
If he wins, it would make the formerly outlawed group the dominant force shaping the post-Mubarak era. But going head-to-head with the military is a major gamble for a formerly outlawed movement whose strategy for decades seemed to be to patiently bide its time.
The movement's decision to nominate one of its own is likely to antagonize Egypt's military rulers, who are accused of seeking to preserve the army's privileges and are likely not to want too much power concentrated in the hands of a single group.
It will also widen the gap with liberals and secularists, who fear that the movement which has largely espoused moderate rhetoric in the past year will implement a hardline Islamist agenda once it has solidified its political position.