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Master Strategists

BOMBSHELL ALERT: Son of Hamas Exposes Global Jihad Reset

Mosab Hassan Yousef Unveils Hamas’ Sinister Reset: Indoctrination Over Governance, Gaza’s Ruin Fuels Global Jihad

Son of Hamas
Son of Hamas

In a chilling exposé that’s already sparking global debate, Mosab Hassan Yousef, the son of a Hamas co-founder turned Israeli spy and Christian convert, has laid bare the terror group’s insidious "long game."

Known as "The Green Prince" for his daring infiltration of Hamas, Yousef warns that any move by the group to step down from governing Gaza isn’t a surrender. It’s a calculated pivot, allowing them to shed the burdens of administration while harvesting the chaos they sowed to fuel a worldwide jihadist revival.

Yousef, whose autobiography Son of Hamas became a bestseller and whose testimony helped thwart countless attacks, draws on his intimate knowledge of the organization’s inner workings. Speaking out he argues that Hamas, the Palestinian branch of the Muslim Brotherhood, isn’t a fleeting militant outfit but a patient architect of an Islamic caliphate. "They’re not disappearing," Yousef asserts in his latest statement. "They’re going underground, rebuilding their network of mosques, schools, and charities to groom the next wave of jihadis."

The Brotherhood’s Blueprint: Preach, Educate, Then Strike

For nearly a century, the Muslim Brotherhood has mastered a dual strategy: dawa (preaching and proselytizing) paired with "financial jihad", disguising militant funding as humanitarian aid. Unlike the impulsive brutality of ISIS, the Brotherhood emulates the Prophet Muhammad’s 15-year patience in Mecca: building faith through community institutions before unleashing force from Medina.

Hamas, founded in 1987 as the Brotherhood’s Gaza offshoot, mirrored this tactic. For 15 years, they shunned direct confrontation with Israel, instead embedding ideology in Palestinian society via a web of schools, mosques, and charities. This "soft power" offensive shifted loyalties from secular nationalism to Islamist jihadism. By the First Intifada in 1987, they were primed; by 2006, they’d seized Gaza through elections, fortifying it with tunnels and terror infrastructure.

But Yousef sees opportunity in the ashes. If Hamas steps down, potentially even disarming under a ceasefire, they evade accountability for the devastation while the international community funnels in reconstruction billions. Estimates peg the cost at $70 billion, with pledges pouring in from the U.S., EU, Qatar, and Gulf states. "Let others handle the rubble they caused," Yousef charges. "They’ll exploit Gaza’s tragedy to demonize Israel and radicalize globally—turning despair into devotion."

This isn’t retreat; it’s repositioning. In Jordan, Brotherhood affiliates play diplomatic roles; in the West, they masquerade as charities. Their endgame, an Islamic caliphate from "the river to the sea", remains unchanged. Diplomacy when it suits, violence when it doesn’t.

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