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Jordan revisits relationship with Muslim Brotherhood

  • January 13, 2021

These twisted relations were forged through a narrow political window and were based on political interests and regional political competition in a region where pre-globalization conflicts raged and where the consequences of World War I and World War II had a role to play. This is not to mention the emergence of the liberation and independence movements, and the nonstate actors, especially political groups and organizations that shaped international politics and interstate relations. It appears that these relations will exit from the political door now as well, given the existing backgrounds and contexts.

Omar al-Raddad, a strategic security expert and CEO and founder of Middle Path for Strategic Consulting in Amman, told Al-Monitor that despite the official announcement of the dissolution of the group, two important points must be heeded.

First, the issue of the Muslim Brotherhood is “primarily a security issue subject to coordination between political and security apparatuses in Jordan. Second, decisions toward the group are subject to general and objective political contexts that the Brotherhood contributed to their establishment, throughout decades of organizational ties to the international Muslim Brotherhood,” he said.

Raddad noted that the government decision “is not at bay from the local and international contexts. At the local level, it appears [that the decision] is a message from the Jordanian government to put an end to the ambiguous organizational formation of the Muslim Brotherhood, which is politically embodied by the Islamic Action Front. The party participated in the elections that took place on Nov. 10 and suffered a resounding defeat, adding to other defeats in professional unions, student unions and other representative bodies.”

He added, “At the international and regional levels it is likely that the decision reflects the Jordanian government’s step to end what was called the ‘no peace and no war’ relations with the Muslim Brotherhood. In fact, there was no complete rupture between the government and the group in Jordan as is the case in Egypt, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. The Jordanian government did not forge alliances with the group as is the case with Turkey and Qatar.”

Today, questions arise on a large scale whether or not the Jordanian step comes within the framework of preparing for the arrival of Democrats to power in the United States, and an attempt to prevent US criticism of steps to clamp down on political Islam, as was seen in the wake of the Arab Spring.

Mansour Mala, a Jordanian writer and journalist, told Al-Monitor, “The announcement came in the context of Jordan’s [political] repositioning, paving the way for a new ruling strategy that goes beyond the so-called state and Brotherhood dichotomy. This is not to mention the framework of redefining the political actors in the state and the return to the state’s previous political levers, namely, the tribes and the army.”

It appears that the current government debate and gradual escalation have come to an end between the two sides and that Jordan has officially settled this matter once and for all.

Ibrahim Gharaibeh, a Jordanian researcher and writer, told Al-Monitor, “The announcement constitutes a decisive stage in the history of the Brotherhood that had been engaged in the public sphere for over 70 years. The group had four members of parliament in 1956, which resulted in the formation of a political cabinet headed by Suleiman al-Nabulsi — who was the head of the National Socialist Party and was premier from 1956 to 1957. The Muslim Brotherhood had won one or two seats in parliament in every election. This number doubled in 1984, and the Brotherhood had 22 seats in 1989.”

“This announcement has ended the group legally and on the ground. The Muslim Brotherhood will have to accept now that it is a legally dissolved party, which is its way out of any financial and legal claims. It will not be able to take this to courts because it simply cannot face off with pro-government agencies,” Gharaibeh concluded.

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