Document Type
Original Study
Abstract
The beginning of the emergence of radical Islamic organizations was in the middle of the twentieth century, and the Muslim Brotherhood Party was the first Islamic party, and its origins were in the Arab Republic of Egypt. Its origins were not initially a political one, as it was a mixture of Arab sentiments and noble sentiments that were dominated by the whiffs of the past and the return. Due to the victories of the Arabs and their global state, and with the passage of time and the differences in the policies of local countries and their fear of the revolutions of the belonging youth and their desire for seats of government, opinions and ideologies became complicated.
These religious organizations were to change their ambitions and religious character into a political formula and secret organizations whose goal was to reach power. The regional and international sides were not isolated from these political organizations. The United States of America installed these religious movements to make them a cheap fighter on its behalf against the communist ideology. The Soviet Union, whose bright, soft ideas swept the world, was proselytizing that communism was blasphemy, and that Muslims must wage jihad. It was in Afghanistan, and the sponsorship of the mujahideen was unlimited and continued to be so, even if the Soviet Union disintegrated, America withdrew and went away.
Recommended Citation
Thajil, Yassin Hadi
(2024)
"Radical Islamic movements, non-state actors, Ansar al-Sharia organization in Yemen as a model,"
Imam Ja'afar Al-Sadiq University Journal of Legal Studies: Vol. 4:
Iss.
2, Article 9.
Available at:
https://ijsu.researchcommons.org/ijsu/vol4/iss2/9