The Muslim Brotherhood is trying to maneuver its way between its fierce
anti-Israel ideology and the realities of governing as it ascends to
leadership in Egypt for the first time in its history and faces the key
question of how to deal with the country's peace treaty with the Jewish
state.
The fundamentalist group's stance on the accord — opposition but not
renunciation — is a telling sign of its broader style of politics. It
can play down its hardline doctrine in favor of short-term pragmatism as
it looks to the long term, leaves its options open and engages in a
degree of double-talk to pave the way.
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