The Trump administration has launched a political bombshell, initiating a process to officially designate the Muslim Brotherhood, a massive, century-old Islamic network with global reach, as a foreign terrorist organization.
An executive order signed Monday directs top aides to conduct a swift, 30-day review, a move that could unleash a firestorm of economic sanctions and travel bans against the group and its members. The White House claims the Brotherhood’s “transnational network” fuels terrorism and runs “destabilization campaigns” against U.S. interests, pointing to its alleged ties to Hamas.
The dramatic move follows a similar shock decision by the state of Texas, which last week branded the Brotherhood a terrorist entity. The administration’s push signals a hardline turn, fulfilling a goal President Trump has considered since his first term. If enacted, the designation would make it a crime to support the group and block its members from entering the U.S., representing the most aggressive U.S. action against the organization in history.

Why It Matters
If we’re keeping it a buck, this is a political declaration of war, not a sober security measure. More of a nuanced policy than about branding a “Major Muslim Group” as the enemy in a single, sweeping stroke.
The administration is deliberately targeting a complex network with a sledgehammer, ignoring that its chapters vary wildly from country to country, including peaceful political parties. By tying the entire Brotherhood to Hamas, they are creating guilt by association to justify a massive escalation. This is also less about confronting a specific threat and more about fulfilling a campaign trail promise and aligning with autocratic allies like Egypt’s Sisi, who have long sought this move.
This is a message, and the message is that a broad swath of Islamic political and social activism is now in the crosshairs. The 30-day review is a mere formality; the decision has already been made. The panic isn’t in the White House—it’s in the communities and allied nations who will bear the brunt of this politically charged, destabilizing move.
















