Comments by "craxd1" (@craxd1) on "War With Iran Would be a Dumb Idea: Trump Thankfully Seems to Comprehend This" video.
-
Even though the Ayatollah is on friendly terms with Russia, they're not friendly enough for Russia to save them, unless it's over their oil and gas. Left wing politics still controls Iran somewhat within the Shia, as during Mosaddegh, the National Front had the Communist Party and strong Nazi influence within, which still exists in some parts of the Middle-East, especially Egypt. The only thing the Ayatollah despised about them was their secularism, but many radicals are not secular. The radicals in the National Front of Iran is where a lot of the terrorism originates, even though they were supposedly suppressed in 1981. Of course, when hasn't the Communists or Nazis not been genocidal maniacs?
The Mullah's ties to the MB is the Nazi and Communist connection. A case in point was Yasser Arafat in Palestine, who was a KGB operative that was selected from the MB in Egypt, and was trained and given fake papers, then sent to Palestine. Arafat was a cousin of the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem, who was a Nazi Muslim radical that worked with Hitler, and was the father of today's modern jihad. Today's Grand Mufti is supposedly a part of the same family. The same type of operatives and activists are within Iran today.
When I read about how the National Front Shiites supposedly fled under the Mullahs, I have to laugh. Many of the secular merely went to ground after 1981, and the left wing religious radicals are still within their government. I believe the Ayatollah to be more of a Nazi ideologue myself. Socialism is socialism, no matter if it's National or International.
Today's MB:
"While the parties [MB and Iran] have had informal contacts since the founding of Iran’s Islamic Republic in 1979, the relationship entered a new phase as the Muslim Brotherhood rose to power in Egypt after the 2011 uprising. When the Brotherhood’s candidate, Mohamed Morsi, was elected Egypt’s president in 2012, official contacts between Cairo and Tehran increased. But Morsi, forced to heed the views of Egypt’s military establishment and traditional allies, proved unwilling to reestablish formal diplomatic ties, which had been severed in 1979, during his first and only year in office. Instead, the new Egyptian administration undertook a more gradual approach toward warming relations with Iran."
"The shared basis in political Islam between the Brotherhood, one of the world’s largest and most influential Sunni Islamist movements, and Iran’s Shia Islamic Republic facilitated cooperation between the two sides. Ideologically, both parties advocate for the establishment of an Islamic state, religious proselytism (daawa), and Muslim unity. They also share some common geopolitical aims, including the need to confront Israel and liberate Palestine."
https://carnegie-mec.org/2019/03/19/mismatched-expectations-iran-and-muslim-brotherhood-after-arab-uprisings-pub-78621
1