By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Gun GravyGun GravyGun Gravy
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
  • Home
  • Latest News
  • Firearms
  • Tactical
  • Videos
Reading: Trump moves against Muslim Brotherhood as Islamist group spreads in West
Share
Font ResizerAa
Gun GravyGun Gravy
  • Latest News
  • Firearms
  • Tactical
  • Videos
Search
  • Home
  • Latest News
  • Firearms
  • Tactical
  • Videos
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
Gun Gravy > Latest News > Trump moves against Muslim Brotherhood as Islamist group spreads in West
Trump moves against Muslim Brotherhood as Islamist group spreads in West
Latest News

Trump moves against Muslim Brotherhood as Islamist group spreads in West

Jim Flanders
Last updated: November 25, 2025 5:38 pm
Jim Flanders Published November 25, 2025
Share
SHARE

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

President Donald Trump’s new executive order directing the State and Treasury departments to pursue terrorism designations for specific Muslim Brotherhood chapters marks one of the most significant shifts in U.S. policy toward the movement in decades.

Signed on Nov. 24, it launches the first formal review of Brotherhood branches in Egypt, Jordan and Lebanon under U.S. designation laws and redefines how Washington treats Islamist movements with political and militant wings.

Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, praised the move, calling it essential for national security. “The Muslim Brotherhood and its branches encourage, facilitate and provide resources for conducting jihadist terrorism across the world,” he said, urging Congress to advance his Muslim Brotherhood Terrorist Designation Act of 2025.

SCATHING REPORT CALLS ON US TO LABEL ISLAMIST GROUP INFILTRATING ALL ASPECTS OF AMERICAN LIFE AS TERRORIST ORG

Washington has long debated whether the Brotherhood is a unified global movement or a loose network of national branches with different agendas and levels of militancy. That dispute stalled previous attempts to designate the group. Trump’s order bypasses that debate and directs federal agencies to examine individual chapters that analysts say already meet the legal thresholds.

Mariam Wahba, a research analyst at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, said in a statement that the directive “replaces years of debate with concrete action” and forces U.S. agencies to assess Brotherhood entities that function as “real organizations with leadership structures, financing channels and documented ties to terrorist groups.” She said the order “treats Islamist actors according to their behavior, not their branding.”

Across the Arab world, the Brotherhood has been banned for years. Egypt outlawed it in 2013 after accusing the movement of radicalization and efforts to undermine state institutions. Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates designated it soon after, calling it a direct threat to national stability. Bahrain issued similar findings. Jordan dissolved its local chapter this year following arrests tied to illicit weapons activity. Austria has also taken legal action against Brotherhood-linked networks as part of its counter-extremism framework.

Officials in these countries say the Brotherhood uses a blend of religious preaching, political activism, charitable institutions and media platforms to shape public opinion and challenge state authority.

In the West, the Brotherhood operates far more freely. In the United States, Brotherhood-linked organizations function through charities, advocacy centers, mosques, student associations and community groups. This openness has raised concerns among counterterrorism officials, especially after a U.S. federal investigation in the early 2000s uncovered an internal Brotherhood memorandum describing its work in America as a long-term effort to influence and weaken Western institutions from within.

A French government-commissioned report earlier this year warned of the Brotherhood’s influence in the country, but Paris has yet to officially implement a ban. 

TRUMP SIGNALS PLAN TO DESIGNATE MUSLIM BROTHERHOOD A TERRORIST ORGANIZATION

Nov. 30, 2012 - Egyptian protesters chant anti-Muslim Brotherhood slogans as they attend a rally in Tahrir Square, in Cairo, Egypt.

The document, according to Mind Israel think tank research, reflects the Brotherhood’s belief in “long-term social influence” through education, welfare networks and media.

The movement was founded in 1928 by Hassan al-Banna in Egypt after the collapse of the Ottoman Empire. The Brotherhood promoted Islam—according to experts—as the solution to modern political crises and relied on outreach, services and media to expand its base. Influential thinkers like Sayyid Qutb later inspired jihadist movements such as al Qaeda and the Islamic State group.

Although the Brotherhood historically maintained a symbolic “general guide” in Egypt, the movement now operates as a decentralized network across the Middle East, Africa, Europe and North America. Wahba noted that this fragmentation explains why earlier U.S. attempts to impose a blanket designation failed. Instead, Trump’s order adopts the model used when the United States designated Hamas, the Brotherhood’s Gaza branch, in 1997: target the components “that engage in violence, not the ideology itself.”

The decision also comes amid growing Israeli concern about a resurgent Islamist bloc backed by Turkey and Qatar. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu publicly praised Trump’s action, calling the Muslim Brotherhood “an organization that threatens stability throughout the Middle East and beyond,” and said Israel intends to expand its own restrictions.

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

Trump’s new order adopts the model used when the United States designated Hamas, the Brotherhood’s Gaza branch, in 1997: target the components "that engage in violence, not the ideology itself."

Avner Golov, vice president of Mind Israel, argued that the United States should pair the new review process with steps to confront foreign influence in American academia, condition arms deals on behavioral changes and close loopholes exploited by extremist-linked organizations.

As the State and Treasury departments begin assembling evidentiary files, officials say the goal is not a blanket ban, but a targeted legal process grounded in provable ties to terrorism. Analysts say the results could determine how the United States confronts a movement outlawed across the Middle East yet still active across Western societies.

Read the full article here

You Might Also Like

Trump’s strike on cartel vessel off Venezuela sends warning to Maduro: ‘No sanctuary’

Man who allegedly threatened to shoot ICE agents had rifles, body armor and ammo cache, feds say

Employees across America shaken by deadly office attack: What to know to stay safe

‘Everything’s on the table’: Former detective breaks down murder of manager of famed strip club

Why blaming ‘the left’ is easier than deterring violence after Charlie Kirk’s murder

Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Email Print
Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

We Recommend
After Trump declared ISIS defeated, US faces new test as detainees move amid Syria power shift
Latest News

After Trump declared ISIS defeated, US faces new test as detainees move amid Syria power shift

Jim Flanders Jim Flanders January 28, 2026
Man accused of spraying Omar has criminal record as congresswoman vows ‘a–holes’ won’t win
U.S. Begins Multi-Day Military Drills In The Middle East
Federal judge allegedly ‘super drunk’ when he crashed Cadillac
College student assaulted as alleged security lapses let attacker slip onto campus: report
Doomsday Clock Ticks Closer To Midnight
I’ve worked thousands of money laundering cases — fraud is a national security threat
Latest News

I’ve worked thousands of money laundering cases — fraud is a national security threat

Jim Flanders Jim Flanders January 28, 2026
Vandals hit Yosemite National Park with graffiti on boulder, more
Latest News

Vandals hit Yosemite National Park with graffiti on boulder, more

Jim Flanders Jim Flanders January 28, 2026
Meet the HD C4X: Staccato’s Newest 2011 Is a Compensated Compact for Everyday Carry
Latest News

Meet the HD C4X: Staccato’s Newest 2011 Is a Compensated Compact for Everyday Carry

Jim Flanders Jim Flanders January 28, 2026
  • Latest News
  • Videos
  • Tactical
  • Firearms
2024 © Gun Gravy. All Rights Reserved.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?