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France has finally mapped what the UAE dismantled years ago:
The Muslim Brotherhood’s deep, structured, and ideological presence across Europe.
This isn’t theory — it’s fact, finance, and infiltration.
Here’s the breakdown (Thread)⬇️
As their influence collapses in the Middle East, the Muslim Brotherhood has rebranded in the West:
No longer loud, no longer obvious, but deeply embedded in schools, NGOs, mosques, and think tanks.
France’s 2025 report exposes it in full…
In France, the Brotherhood operates through a civil and educational front:
🔘Musulmans de France (139 mosques, 280 associations, ~91,000 worshippers weekly)
🔘IESH Château-Chinon (imam training)
🔘Collège Averroès (private Islamic school)
🔘 Youth networks: EMF, JMF
Their European web is vast:
🔘 FEMYSO (youth front)
🔘 CEM (Council of European Muslims, HQ in Belgium)
🔘 Europe Trust, owns £20M in real estate.
All interconnected, quietly shaping policy and identity across the EU
Financing?
💸 Islamic Relief, flagged multiple times, is one of the Brotherhood’s key financial vehicles.
🧾 Between 2018–2019 alone, they received public EU funding while promoting Muslim Brotherhood-linked projects.
Ideology? It’s not “faith” , it’s strategy.
🔘 Political Islam wrapped in moderation.
🔘 “Double discourse”: peaceful in French, radical in Arabic.
🔘 “Cercle restreint”: secret oath-based structure at the core.
Recruitment is not open, it’s engineered:
🏠 Halaqas in private homes.
🤝 Loyalty pledges after vetting.
🧠 Indoctrination via social, educational, and religious pipelines.
This is a covert system, not spontaneous belief…
Key operatives named:
👤 Tariq & Hani Ramadan
👤 Ibrahim El-Zayat (Europe Trust financier)
👤 Hassan Iquioussen, Amar Lasfar, Abdallah Ben Mansour
Each deeply embedded in European Muslim Brotherhood infrastructure.
France is late. The UAE was not.
🇦🇪 In 2013, 94 Muslim Brotherhood affiliates from Al-Islah were arrested.
🇦🇪 In 2014, the Brotherhood was banned and designated a terror group.
🇦🇪 Counter-influence operations began across Europe years before this report.
This isn’t a religious debate, it’s geopolitical.
France is tracing a shadow war. The UAE cut the roots years ago.
While Europe maps the network, we dismantled it.
France’s move is late, yes, but far ahead of those still in denial.
This is more than security. It’s awareness, will, and the courage to name the threat.
🧵End of Thread…
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The Muslim Brotherhood isn’t a party, it’s a blueprint.
And in Bosnia, that blueprint was quietly laid in the rubble of war.
While the West focused on peace agreements, the Muslim Brotherhood built networks, ideology, and influence.
A Thread…
Post-war Bosnia became fertile ground: a traumatized Muslim population, weak institutions, and foreign money pouring in.
What came with it?
Muslim Brotherhood-linked NGOs, religious preachers, and cultural programs cloaked in charity and “Islamic revival.”
They didn’t wear the label. They didn’t need to.
The Muslim Brotherhood operates through soft power:
The Muslim Brotherhood is not a traditional movement. It is a political deepfake. Just as a deepfake mimics the surface of a person to deceive, the Muslim Brotherhood mimics the behaviors of democracy such as elections, civil society, and free speech while hiding an entirely different agenda underneath. This thread breaks down how and where this deception operates.
In Tunisia, the Muslim Brotherhood’s affiliate Ennahda presented itself as a pro-democracy actor after the Arab Spring. It joined transitional governments and defended pluralism. But internally it stalled judicial reform, resisted equal rights legislation, and shielded clerical networks. A 2023 report from the Tunisian Observatory for Democratic Transition found that Ennahda-linked individuals held 40 percent of key public positions despite only winning 27 percent of the vote.
In the United Kingdom, Muslim Brotherhood-linked organizations such as the Muslim Association of Britain have been cited in UK Parliament reports for hosting extremist speakers while presenting themselves as inclusive community actors. The 2015 UK Government review noted how the Muslim Brotherhood promotes grievance-based narratives while embedding itself in civil institutions using entryist tactics.