In reality. Did you forget how the Muslim Brotherhood came to power in Egypt?
Yes, the Egyptians were harboring the Islamist snake that kept attacking the Israelis (while denying knowledge of it, of course), just like the Pakistanis do with the Taliban.
Until one day they realized the snake is trying to swallow them as well. Now they have a new leader in Sissi that has realized this snake needs to be put down, for the sake of the nation.
All Muslim Brotherhood regional affiliates aren't the same and don't all agree with each other. Once again it would benefit you to read a bit about a subject before discussing it with such fervor.
Bin Laden, Al Zawahiri, and many other terrorists like Hamas got their training at the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt. So the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood seems to be the Harvard of Islamic terrorist universities. It was first started by the Nazi Palestinian Mufti, who blended Nazism with Islamism and Arab nationalism into this minster we see today.
Amin Al Husseini Nazi Father of Jihad Al Qaeda Arafat Saddam Hussein and the Muslim Brotherhood - Tell The Children The Truth - Homepage
No they didn't. People like bin Laden drew more inspiration from the Egyptian groups that split from the Muslim Brotherhood during their ideological restructuring (Qutb's "Milestones" Vs. Banna's "Preachers not Judges") The violent aspects rejected Banna's call and form groups like Gamaa al-Islamiyya and Jamaat al-Jihad which would be the groups to go on an support / birth Al Qaeda.
Ignoring this long recognized division simply so that you can lump all of these groups together with the modern Muslim Brotherhood isn't very honest.
So fucking what, just like pot is a gateway to other drugs, the Muslim Brotherhood was undergraduate education for Islamic Jihadism, which many well known terrorists attended.
"By the age of 14, al-Zawahiri had joined the
Muslim Brotherhood. The following year the
Egyptian government executed Qutb for
conspiracy, and al-Zawahiri, along with four other secondary school students, helped form an "underground cell devoted to overthrowing the government and establishing an Islamist state." It was at this early age that al-Zawahiri developed a mission in life, "to put Qutb's vision into action."
[22] His cell eventually merged with others to form al-Jihad or
Egyptian Islamic Jihad."
'Abd al-Rahman al-Banna, the brother of the Muslim Brotherhood founder Hasan al-Banna, went to
Mandatory Palestine and established the Muslim Brotherhood there in 1935.
Al-Hajj Amin al-Husseini, eventually appointed by the British as Grand Mufti of Jerusalem in hopes of accommodating him, was the leader of the group in Palestine.
[138] Another important leader associated with the Muslim Brotherhood in Palestine was 'Izz al-Din al-Qassam, an inspiration to Islamists because he had been the first to lead an armed resistance in the name of Palestine against the British in 1935.
[139] In 1945, the group established a branch in
Jerusalem, and by 1947 twenty-five more branches had sprung up, in towns such as
Jaffa,
Lod,
Haifa,
Nablus, and
Tulkarm, which total membership between 12,000 to 20,000.[
citation needed]
Brotherhood members fought alongside the Arab armies during the
1948 Arab–Israeli war, and, after Israel's creation, the ensuing
Palestinian refugee crisis encouraged more Palestinian Muslims to join the group. After the war, in the West Bank, the group's activity was mainly social and religious, not political, so it had relatively good relations with Jordan, which was in control of the West Bank after 1950. In contrast, the group frequently clashed with the Egyptian government that controlled the Gaza Strip until 1967.
The
Hamas takeover of the Gaza Strip in 2007 was the first time since the Sudanese coup of 1989 that brought
Omar al-Bashir to power, that a Muslim Brotherhood group ruled a significant geographic territory.
[147] However, the 2013 overthrow of the
Mohammad Morsi government in Egypt significantly weakened Hamas's position, leading to a blockade of Gaza and economic crisis"