<strong>The collapse of the Muslim Brotherhood</strong><br><em>Akhbar el-Yom, Egypt, December 13</em>
Since a number of its leaders fled abroad, the Muslim Brotherhood appears to be living in an isolated bubble, detached from reality. Its media messaging and the activity of its online committees point to a clear state of confusion rooted in false assumptions, while its organizational cells are showing signs of collapse both inside and outside the country.
No one disputes the scale of the economic and social challenges confronting Egypt, yet the Brotherhood insists on peddling falsehoods and inflammatory rumors rather than engaging with these challenges as issues requiring realistic solutions. History shows that the chaos such groups seek to ignite leads only to devastation, and that societies pushed into the unknown rarely recover unscathed.
The Brotherhood’s discourse remains imprisoned by the same conspiratorial mindset that has dogged the organization since its founding. Nearly 15 years after the January events, the group has failed to comprehend the profound transformations the state has undergone, or to recognize that Egypt is a firmly rooted state, unmoved by fabricated reports or voices broadcasting from abroad, drawing its resilience from established institutions and deep historical foundations.
This is a reality the group has consistently failed to grasp, persisting in dealing with the state through the narrow logic of an organization rather than the responsibilities of governance.
The Brotherhood’s gravest mistake was its belief that power could be exercised from the Guidance Bureau, the Brotherhood’s highest executive body, instead of through official state institutions. This miscalculation marked the beginning of its unraveling, followed by an escalation in terrorist operations that ultimately backfired, turning the group into both a security and intellectual liability at home and abroad.
As terrorist attacks increased, so too did the cohesion between the public, the army, and the police, and the state’s resolve to confront violence decisively became unmistakable.
The Brotherhood did not stop there, instead seeking backing from abroad and adopting a narrative that portrayed Egypt as a country in turmoil. Reality, however, proved far sturdier than propaganda transmitted from exile. Egypt consolidated its regional and international standing, built one of the strongest military forces in the region, and preserved the unity of its territory.
In contrast, the Brotherhood’s overseas maneuvers resembled little more than desperate bids for relevance, yielding a steady erosion of international sympathy and prompting many countries to designate it a terrorist organization.
Internally, the January events marked a critical turning point, granting the group an opportunity to govern but exposing the fragility of its project and the poverty of its political vision.
With the fall of figures from its historic leadership generation, and the disintegration of internal cohesion under the weight of judicial rulings and factional splits, it became evident that the organization had lost its center of gravity and had nothing substantive left to offer.
In hindsight, January can be seen as both the beginning and the end of the Brotherhood: the start of a rapid ascent and the conclusion of a dramatic collapse, bringing to an end illusions that had persisted since its inception. The group entered power under the banner of preaching, and exited under the stigma of terrorism, taking with it the claims of “virtue” it long promoted and that many had accepted at face value.
Today, the Egyptian state continues to press forward despite ongoing challenges, while the Brotherhood remains trapped in the rhetoric of the past, incapable of reading a reality that no longer acknowledges its presence.
<strong>Forgotten Sudan is on the brink of famine</strong><br><em>An-Nahar, Lebanon, December 13</em>
Sudan is living through one of the darkest chapters in its modern history, as a devastating war tears the country apart and reshapes the daily lives of its people through fear, hunger, and mass displacement.
According to the latest World Food Program reports, approximately 21.2 million Sudanese are now suffering from acute food insecurity, a figure that reflects not only a lack of food but also a profound collapse of health systems, social welfare, and basic protections. The country is rapidly edging toward the abyss of widespread famine, while waiting for assistance feels like struggling to breathe amid an unrelenting storm.
Despite aid reaching nearly four million people each month, the gulf between surging needs and available resources continues to widen. The challenge is no longer confined to procuring food supplies, but to ensuring that humanitarian organizations can physically reach those in need within a landscape fractured by violence and destroyed infrastructure. Relief experts warn that Sudan has become one of the most dangerous and complex environments for humanitarian operations worldwide, where every mission carries extraordinary risk.
In Darfur and Kordofan, airstrikes by aircraft and drones obstruct the movement of aid convoys, while the constant shifting of control over towns and roads sharply escalates the dangers on the ground. Compounding the crisis is a severe shortfall in international funding, limiting the World Food Program and its partners’ ability to expand transport, distribution, and cash assistance networks – lifelines for millions of displaced people and families pushed beyond exhaustion.
United Nations officials caution that the current funding gap could soon deprive millions of civilians of aid, reviving the specter of famine across vast swaths of the country.
Yet the food crisis represents only one dimension of a broader national tragedy. Mass displacement is accelerating at an alarming pace, with fears of even larger waves should fighting spread to regions such as the Nuba Mountains.
With more than 12 million people internally and externally displaced since the war began, Sudan now ranks among the world’s largest humanitarian crises, a stark testament to the rapid erosion of its social fabric and collective resilience. Sudan today stands on the edge of total breakdown, yet rescue remains possible if the political will can be summoned.
Crises are not acts of fate, and what Sudan is enduring is the product of human decisions that can still be changed. In a world already overwhelmed by disasters, Sudan’s agony will stand as a defining test of whether the international community can uphold human dignity when everyday existence itself becomes a struggle for survival.
– Abdel Moneim Suleiman
Translated by Asaf Zilberfarb. All assertions, opinions, facts, and information presented in these articles are the sole responsibility of their respective authors and are not necessarily those of The Media Line, which assumes no responsibility for their content.