One might be
led to think that if international law enforcement authorities and Western
intelligence agencies had discovered a twenty-year old document revealing a
top-secret plan developed by the oldest Islamist organization with one of the
most extensive terror networks in the world to launch a program of “cultural
invasion” and eventual conquest of the West that virtually mirrors the tactics
used by Islamists for more than two decades, that such news would scream from
headlines published on the front pages and above the fold of the New York Times, Washington Post, London Times, Le Monde, Bild, and La Repubblica.
If that’s what you might think, you would be
wrong.
In fact, such a document was recovered in a
raid by Swiss authorities in November 2001, two months after the horror of 9/11.
Since that time information about this document, known in counterterrorism
circles as “The Project”, and
discussion regarding its content has been limited to the top-secret world of
Western intelligence communities. Only through the work of an intrepid Swiss
journalist, Sylvain Besson of Le
Temps, and his book published in October 2005 in France, La conquête de
l'Occident: Le projet secret des Islamistes (The Conquest of the West: The Islamists'
Secret Project), has information regarding The Project finally been made public.
One Western official cited by Besson has described The Project as “a totalitarian ideology of infiltration
which represents, in the end, the greatest danger for European
societies.”
Now FrontPage readers will be the first to
be able to read the complete English translation of The
Project.
What Western intelligence
authorities know about The Project
begins with the raid of a luxurious villa in Campione,
Switzerland
on November 7,
2001. The target of the raid was Youssef
Nada, director of the Al-Taqwa Bank of Lugano, who has had active association
with the Muslim Brotherhood for more than 50 years and who admitted to being one
of the organization’s international leaders. The Muslim Brotherhood, regarded as
the oldest and one of the most important Islamist movements in the world, was
founded by Hasan al-Banna in 1928 and dedicated to the credo, “Allah is our objective. The Prophet is our
leader. Qur’an is our law. Jihad is our way. Dying in the way of Allah is our
highest hope.”
The raid was conducted by Swiss law enforcement at
the request of the White House in the initial crackdown on terrorist finances in
the immediate aftermath of 9/11. US and Swiss investigators had been looking at
Al-Taqwa’s involvement in money laundering and funding a wide range of Islamic
terrorist groups, including Al-Qaeda, HAMAS (the Palestinian affiliate of the
Muslim Brotherhood), the Algerian GIA, and the Tunisian Ennahdah.
Included in the documents seized during the raid
of Nada’s Swiss villa was a 14-page plan written in Arabic and dated December 1,
1982, which outlines a 12-point strategy to “establish an Islamic government on
earth” – identified as The
Project. According to testimony given to Swiss authorities by Nada, the
unsigned document was prepared by “Islamic researchers” associated with the
Muslim Brotherhood.
What makes The Project so different from the
standard “Death of America! Death to Israel!” and
“Establish the global caliphate!” Islamist rhetoric is that it represents a
flexible, multi-phased, long-term approach to the “cultural invasion” of the
West. Calling for the utilization of various tactics, ranging from immigration,
infiltration, surveillance, propaganda, protest, deception, political legitimacy
and terrorism, The Project has served
for more than two decades as the Muslim Brotherhood “master plan”. As can be
seen in a number of examples throughout Europe – including the political
recognition of parallel Islamist government organizations in Sweden, the recent
“cartoon” jihad in Denmark, the Parisian car-burning intifada last November, and the 7/7
terrorist attacks in London – the plan outlined in The Project has been overwhelmingly
successful.
Rather than focusing on terrorism as the sole
method of group action, as is the case with Al-Qaeda, in perfect postmodern
fashion the use of terror falls into a multiplicity of options available to
progressively infiltrate, confront, and eventually establish Islamic domination
over the West. The following tactics and techniques are among the many
recommendations made in The
Project:
- Networking and
coordinating actions between likeminded Islamist organizations;
- Avoiding open alliances with known terrorist
organizations and individuals to maintain the appearance of
“moderation”;
- Infiltrating and taking
over existing Muslim organizations to realign them towards the Muslim
Brotherhood’s collective goals;
- Using deception to mask
the intended goals of Islamist actions, as long as it doesn’t conflict with shari’a law;
- Avoiding social conflicts
with Westerners locally, nationally or globally, that might damage the
long-term ability to expand the Islamist powerbase in the West or provoke a
lash back against Muslims;
- Establishing financial
networks to fund the work of conversion of the West, including the support of
full-time administrators and workers;
- Conducting surveillance,
obtaining data, and establishing collection and data storage
capabilities;
- Putting into place a
watchdog system for monitoring Western media to warn Muslims of “international
plots fomented against them”;
- Cultivating an Islamist
intellectual community, including the establishment of think-tanks and
advocacy groups, and publishing “academic” studies, to legitimize Islamist
positions and to chronicle the history of Islamist movements;
- Developing a
comprehensive 100-year plan to advance Islamist ideology throughout the
world;
- Balancing international
objectives with local flexibility;
- Building extensive social
networks of schools, hospitals and charitable organizations dedicated to
Islamist ideals so that contact with the movement for Muslims in the West is
constant;
- Involving ideologically
committed Muslims in democratically-elected institutions on all levels in the
West, including government, NGOs, private organizations and labor
unions;
- Instrumentally using
existing Western institutions until they can be converted and put into service
of Islam;
- Drafting Islamic
constitutions, laws and policies for eventual implementation;
- Avoiding conflict within
the Islamist movements on all levels, including the development of processes
for conflict resolution;
- Instituting alliances
with Western “progressive” organizations that share similar goals;
- Creating autonomous
“security forces” to protect Muslims in the West;
- Inflaming violence and keeping
Muslims living in the West “in a jihad frame of mind”;
- Supporting jihad movements across the Muslim
world through preaching, propaganda, personnel, funding, and technical and
operational support;
- Making the Palestinian
cause a global wedge issue for Muslims;
- Adopting the total
liberation of Palestine from
Israel and
the creation of an Islamic state as a keystone in the plan for global Islamic
domination;
- Instigating a constant
campaign to incite hatred by Muslims against Jews and rejecting any
discussions of conciliation or coexistence with them;
- Actively creating jihad terror cells within
Palestine;
- Linking the terrorist
activities in Palestine with the
global terror movement;
- Collecting sufficient funds to
indefinitely perpetuate and support jihad around the
world;
In reading The Project, it should be kept in mind
that it was drafted in 1982 when current tensions and terrorist activities in
the Middle East were still very nascent. In many respects, The Project is extremely prescient for
outlining the bulk of Islamist action, whether by “moderate” Islamist
organizations or outright terror groups, over the past two
decades.
At present, most of what is publicly known
about The Project is the result of
Sylvain Besson’s investigative work, including his book and a related article
published last October in the Swiss daily, Le Temps, L'islamisme
à la conquête du monde (Islamism
and the Conquest of the World), profiling his book, which is only available
in a French-language edition. At least one Egyptian newspaper, Al-Mussawar, published the entire Arabic
text of The Project last November.
In the English-language
press, the attention paid to Besson’s revelation of The Project has been almost
non-existent. The only mention found in a mainstream media publication in the
US has been
as a secondary item in an article in the Weekly Standard (February 20,
2006) by Olivier Guitta, The
Cartoon Jihad. The most extensive commentary on The Project has been by an American
researcher and journalist living in London, Scott Burgess,
who has posted his analysis of the document on his blog, The Daily Ablution. Along with his
commentary, an English translation of the French text of The Project was serialized in December
(Parts I,
II,
III,
IV,
V,
Conclusion).
The complete English translation prepared by Mr. Burgess is presented in its
entirety here with his permission.
The lack of public
discussion about The Project
notwithstanding, the document and the plan it outlines has been the subject of
considerable discussion amongst the Western intelligence agencies. One
US
counterterrorism official who spoke with Besson about The Project, and who is cited in
Guitta’s Weekly Standard article, is
current White House terrorism czar, Juan Zarate. Calling The Project a Muslim Brotherhood master
plan for “spreading their political ideology,” Zarate expressed concerns to
Besson because “the Muslim Brotherhood is a group that worries us not because it
deals with philosophical or ideological ideas but because it defends the use of
violence against civilians.”
One renowned international scholar of Islamist
movements who also spoke with Besson, Reuven Paz, talked about The Project in its historical
context:
The Project was part of the charter of the international organization
of the Muslim Brotherhood, which was official established on July 29, 1982. It
reflects a vast plan which was revived in the 1960s, with the immigration of
Brotherhood intellectuals, principally Syrian and Egyptians, into
Europe.
As Paz notes, The Project was drafted by the Muslim
Brotherhood as part of its
rechartering process in 1982, a time that marks an upswing in its organizational
expansion internationally, as well as a turning point in the alternating periods
of repression and toleration by the Egyptian government. In 1952, the
organization played a critical support role to the Free Officers Movement led by
Gamal Abdul Nasser, which overthrew King Faruq, but quickly fell out of favor
with the new revolutionary regime because of Nasser’s refusal to follow the
Muslim Brotherhood’s call to institute an ideologically committed Islamic state.
At various times since the July Revolution in 1952, the Brotherhood has
regularly been banned and its leaders killed and imprisoned by Egyptian
authorities.
Since it was rechartered in
1982, the Muslim Brotherhood has spread its network across the
Middle East, Europe, and even America. At
home in Egypt,
parliamentary elections in 2005 saw the Muslim Brotherhood winning 20 percent of
the available legislative seats, comprising the largest opposition party block.
Its Palestinian affiliate, known to the world as HAMAS, recently gained control
of the Palestinian Authority after elections secured for them 74 of 132 seats in
the Palestinian Legislative Council. Its Syrian branch has historically been the
largest organized group opposing the Assad regime, and the organization also has
affiliates in Jordan,
Sudan, and
Iraq. In the
US, the
Muslim Brotherhood is primarily represented by the Muslim American Society
(MAS).
Since its formation, the Muslim Brotherhood has
advocated the use of terrorism as a means of advancing its agenda of global
Islamic domination. But as the largest popular radical movement in the Islamic
world, it has attracted many leading Islamist intellectuals. Included among this
group of Muslim Brotherhood intellectuals is Youssef Qaradawi, an Egyptian-born,
Qatar-based Islamist cleric.
As one of the leading
Muslim Brotherhood spiritual figures and radical Islamic preachers (who has his
own weekly program on Al-Jazeera), Qaradawi has been one of the leading
apologists of suicide bombings in Israel and
terrorism against Western interests in the Middle East. Both Sylvain Besson
and Scott Burgess provide extensive comparisons between Qaradawi’s publication,
Priorities of the Islamic Movement in the
Coming Phase, published in 1990, and The Project, which predates Qaradawi’s
Priorities by eight years. They note
the striking similarities in the language used and the plans and methods both
documents advocate. It is speculated that The Project was either used by Qaradawi
as a template for his own work, or that he had a hand in its drafting in 1982.
Perhaps coincidentally, Qaradawi was the fourth largest shareholder in the
Al-Taqwa Bank of Lugano, the director of which, Youssef Nada, was the individual
in whose possession The Project was
found. Since 1999, Qaradawi has been banned from entering the
US as a
result of his connections to terrorist organizations and his outspoken advocacy
of terrorism.
For those who have read The Project, what is most troubling is
not that Islamists have developed a plan for global dominance; it has been
assumed by experts that Islamist organizations and terrorist groups have been
operating off an agreed-upon set of general principles, networks and
methodology. What is startling is how effectively the Islamist plan for conquest
outlined in The Project has been
implemented by Muslims in the West for more than two decades. Equally troubling
is the ideology that lies behind the plan: inciting hatred and violence against
Jewish populations around the world; the deliberate co-opting and subversion of
Western public and private institutions; its recommendation of a policy of
deliberate escalating confrontation by Muslims living in the West against their
neighbors and fellow-citizens; the acceptance of terrorism as a legitimate
option for achieving their ends and the inevitable reality of jihad against non-Muslims; and its
ultimate goal of forcibly instituting the Islamic rule of the caliphate by shari’a in the West, and eventually the
whole world.
If the experience over the past quarter of a
century seen in Europe and the US is any indication, the “Islamic researchers”
who drafted The Project more than two
decades ago must be pleased to see their long-term plan to conquer the West and
to see the Green flag of Islam raised over its citizens realized so rapidly,
efficiently and completely. If Islamists are equally successful in the years to
come, Westerners ought to enjoy their personal and political freedoms while they
last.
To read the English translation of The Project, click
here.
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