Political Analyst from the UAE, Passionate about Youth and Cultural Affairs | 🇦🇪
Jun 21 • 5 tweets • 2 min read
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While the world watches missiles fly, the real danger is brewing below the headlines, in oil routes, bond markets, and balance sheets. The Iran-Israel war isn’t just military, it’s economic warfare by other means.
A thread on the fault line nobody’s pricing in 🧵
Iran–Israel hostilities now sit at the intersection of three fragilities: Gulf security, global energy continuity, and already-stressed capital markets.
One precision strike too many near Isfahan or in the Gulf waters could turn the Strait of Hormuz, gateway for ~20 % of world oil, into a risk premium nobody can price.
Jun 19 • 10 tweets • 2 min read
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When we speak about Muslim Brotherhood influence in Europe, attention goes to France, Germany, or the UK. But quietly and more deeply, it’s Sweden where the ideological roots run deeper than most realize. Here’s why…
🧵A thread.
Since the early 1990s, Sweden became a strategic node for the Muslim Brotherhood in Europe. Its openness, public funding system, and political correctness allowed Islamist networks to grow unchecked. They entered not with violence, but bureaucracy.
Jun 16 • 7 tweets • 2 min read
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The Muslim Brotherhood’s influence in the UK is not a myth, but a documented strategy…
Since the 1990s, the UK has been a key hub for Muslim Brotherhood activity. Why? Because the UK offered legal status, media access, and freedom to operate. London became a launchpad, not for terrorism, but for ideological expansion.
🧵Here’s the breakdown⬇️
Key figures like Kamal Helbawy (former Muslim Brotherhood spokesman), Anas Altikriti (CEO, Cordoba Foundation), and groups like MAB (Muslim Association of Britain) used UK platforms to push Muslim Brotherhood narratives. Altikriti’s group was directly named in the 2015 UK government review as linked to the Muslim Brotherhood.
Jun 14 • 10 tweets • 2 min read
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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…
Jun 12 • 7 tweets • 1 min read
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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.”
Jun 7 • 7 tweets • 2 min read
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.