As Egypt descends into chaos Western governments have been
toning down the rhetoric. They has left it to the media to open the war for
international public opinion.
Many commentators, on the left and the right, have chosen to
portray the Muslim Brothers as peaceful protesters who have suffered the heavy
hand of military repression. From their perspective, within the mythos that
they use to interpret history, right wing, fascistic military organizations are
the enemy of people’s legitimate aspirations for democracy and freedom.
The New York Times editorialized this morning:
With
yet another blood bath in the streets of Cairo on
Wednesday, Egypt’s ruling generals have demonstrated beyond any lingering
doubt that they have no aptitude for, and apparently little interest in,
guiding their country back to democracy. On the contrary, the political
obtuseness of Gen. Abdul-Fattah el-Sisi, Egypt’s de facto leader, and the
brutal repression he has unleashed now threaten to produce the worst of all
possible outcomes to an already inflamed situation: a murderous civil war.
The Guardian compared the Muslim Brotherhood to the pro-democracy
protesters who occupied Tienanmen Square two decades ago:
The
bloodshed caused by interior ministry troops opening fire with shotguns,
machine guns and rooftop snipers on largely peaceful sit-ins took its first
major political casualty on Wednesday evening. The leading liberal who had
supported the military coup, Mohamed El Baradei, resigned as acting vice-president. The streets
around Rabaah al-Adawiya became Egypt's Tiananmen Square.
The view is not limited to those on the left. Writing in National Review Daveed Gartenstein-Ross
sounds a similar tone:
The
Egyptian military’s slaughter of hundreds of protesters on Wednesday leaves the
United States with a single clear, albeit difficult, course of action:
condition future aid to Egypt on a series of immediate reforms, and stop providing
it if these conditions aren’t satisfied. …
Whatever
one thinks of the Brotherhood — and I’m extremely critical of it — the status
quo helps nobody. The dead protesters did not deserve to be killed. The moral
costs for the U.S. are too high; and from a pragmatic perspective, the
country’s image is further damaged in the region because it’s associated with
the present atrocities. The mass killings are likely to radicalize the
opposition, and predictions that the Brotherhood or significant factions
therein could return to anti-government violence look more prescient each day.
And al-Qaeda’s narrative is furthered, as Ayman al-Zawahiri’s dark predictions
about Egyptian politics seem to be proven correct.
His policy prescription amounts to a call for the Obama
administration to side with the Muslim Brotherhood:
Instead,
the U.S. should offer a firm and concrete ultimatum that future aid is
conditioned on Egypt’s undertaking a series of changes. For starters, the
Egyptian regime should unequivocally apologize for the slaughter of protesters;
the officers who ordered Wednesday’s massacre should be held to account and
court-martialed; and there should be no further willful mass killings. If Egypt
doesn’t comply, 100 percent of the U.S.’s military aid should be suspended.
Gartenstein-Ross failed to notice that administration sympathy
for the Brotherhood contributed to the crisis.
National
Journal’s Michael Hirsh adds what has become a standard talking point
of those who prefer not to fight terrorists. In his view cracking down on
terrorists only produces more terrorists:
As the Egyptian
military consolidates control by murdering pro-Muslim Brotherhood protesters
and declaring a state of emergency, we may be witnessing the most dangerous
potential for Arab radicalization since the two Palestinian intifadas.
Hirsh seems to believe that we have now lost the moral high ground and that democracy
has suffered a grievous defeat:
Suddenly,
in one awful day, the exercise of the democratic rights and ideals that are so
dear to America's self-image—and which have formed the heart of U.S. foreign
policy since the end of the Cold War—were rendered all but irrelevant to many Arabs,
especially because of Washington's mild response. Apart from a few dissenters
such as ElBaradei, the once-inspiring secularists who massed in Tahrir Square
to oust Hosni Mubarak have now repudiated those democratic rights and values by
continuing to support the bloody crackdown. And while the Obama administration
issued a rote condemnation, the lack of any more dramatic response continues to
fritter away what little moral authority America has left.
By this reasoning, we need to assert our moral authority by
throwing our moral support behind the murderous thugs of the Muslim
Brotherhood, the ones who responded to the military assault by burning down Coptic Churches.
The myth of rebellion
against oppressive police force is so compelling that many thinkers have not
considered that the Brotherhood wanted a violent confrontation in order to
portray itself as an innocent victim, to better to gain moral support and
financial aid from the West.
In The New Yorker Peter Hessler reports on conversations he had with Egyptians. He helps to put the
situation into perspective:
On
Tuesday, when I telephoned a good friend from Cairo, the situation was still
peaceful, but he insisted that the military would act within the next two days.
He had no inside information—just a sense from the mood on the street. “The
Army feels pressure from the people,” he said. “People in Cairo want the Army
to do something. They’re saying that the army seems weak if it can’t get rid of
the sit-ins.” This morning, after the death toll rose into the hundreds, and
the interim government declared a state of emergency, I called my friend again.
“Now that we’re in a state of emergency, the police and the army can do
whatever they want,” he said. He expected that the majority of Egyptians would
approve of this course of action, and blame the Brotherhood for resisting
security forces. “The Brotherhood are losing every bit of popular support they
once had,” he said. “Nobody is happy with them. There isn’t the least bit of
sympathy for them. It’s like dogs dying in the street. Nobody cares.”
Even though the Brotherhood had no idea of how to govern, Hessler
says, it was adept at manipulating the foreign media:
Their
approach to governance seemed abstract and theoretical—for a group with a
reputation for grassroots organizing, the Brotherhood was surprisingly out of
touch with what was actually happening in Egypt. This quality has only worsened
since Morsi’s ouster. Over the past month and a half, the Brotherhood’s main
strategy has been to appeal to the foreign press and diplomatic corps. In some
ways, this has been effective—the organization clearly has the moral high
ground, given that its elected government was removed in a military coup, and
that its leader is being held incommunicado. But it has become dangerously
isolated from the main currents of Egyptian society, and its tactic of
disrupting Cairo traffic has created even more enemies in the capital.
Certainly, Hessler does not sympathize with the military.
Yet, he closes his column with a very telling remark from an Egyptian engineer:
“We’re
just like football fans here,” an engineer named Mohamed Latif told me, in a
village called El-Araba. “When somebody scores, we cheer. But it doesn’t
matter. Do you really think that anything we do here matters? Why do you want
to talk to us? I voted for Morsi, and I prayed for him, but he failed. I’m
against what happened. We should have kept him as an honorary figure. We could have
given the power to the Army and others, but left Morsi as the President in
name.”
I asked
him if he believed that the coup had been a mistake. “No,” he said. “He failed.
I won’t vote for them again. I don’t want democracy.” He continued, “Does China
have democracy? How is its economy doing? I don’t care about democracy and
freedom.”
People who feel that they cannot have both free enterprise
and free elections, but who have to choose one, will invariably choose free
enterprise. We like to think that the American way is a beacon to the world’s
people, but increasingly the Chinese way is taking over that role. And it’s not
because we have lost the moral high ground.
Jonathan Tobin offers a more realistic perspective on the
situation on the Commentary Contentions
blog:
But the
notion that the Brotherhood is the innocent victim of a nasty junta seeking to
bring back Mubarak-era authoritarianism is only half right. Though the military
government is an unsavory partner for the United States, no one should be under
any illusions about the Brotherhood or why the majority of Egyptians (who went
to the streets in their millions to support a coup) probably approve of the
military’s actions.
Proof
of the true nature of the Brotherhood was available for those who read accounts
in the last weeks of life at their Cairo encampments that were policed by
Islamist thugs with clubs and other weapons. Brotherhood gunmen fought the
police in pitched battles. Non-violent civil disobedience isn’t in the
Brotherhood playbook. Even more damning was the Brotherhood response elsewhere
in Egypt. As the International
Business Times reports:
Supporters
of ousted Egyptian president Mohamed Morsi have attacked churches in Dilga,
Menya and Sohag after government security forces backed by armored cars and
bulldozers stormed
protest camps outside Cairo’s Rabaa al-Adawiya mosque.
The
Churches of Abraham and the Virgin Mary in Menya were burning after Morsi
supporters set fire to the outside of the building exteriors and smashed
through doors. … Muslim Brotherhood members also threw firebombs at Mar Gergiss
church in Sohag, a city with a large community of Coptic Christians who
represents up to 10 percent of Egypt’s 84 million people, causing it to burn
down, the official MENA news agency said. Protesters threw Molotov cocktails
at the Bon Pasteur Catholic Church and Monastery in Suez, setting it ablaze and
breaking windows.
Tobin concludes:
If the
U.S. seeks to cripple the military, they won’t be helping the cause of
democracy. The Brotherhood may have used a seemingly democratic process to take
power in 2012, but they would never have peacefully relinquished it or allowed
their opponents to stop them from imposing their will on every aspect of
Egyptian society. As difficult as it may be for some high-minded Americans to
understand, in this case it is the military and not the protesters in Cairo who
are seeking to stop tyranny. Though the military is an unattractive ally,
anyone seeking to cut off vital U.S. aid to Egypt should remember that the only
alternative to it is the party that is currently burning churches.
And David Goldman offers this analogy:
Suppose
the German military had overthrown the democratically-elected leader of Germany
and massacred his loyal followers, say, in 1936? The world, presumably, would
have condemned the blatant use of force against an elected leader even if, hypothetically,
a third of the German population already had taken to the streets to demand
Hitler’s ouster. The Muslim Brothers are Nazis bearing a crescent rather
than a swastika.
Goldman is being slightly naïve here. If it had happened that the
German military had overthrown the elected leader of Germany in 1936, most of
the news media would, in the name of liberty and democracy, have supported
them. On the grounds that we had to occupy the moral high ground.
They would have
argued that we need to respect the outcome of a democratic process and that, aside
from a few restrictions on Jewish rights and an occasional pogrom, the National
Socialists were not such a bad bunch.
5 comments:
I am So Tired of being told by my betters "What We Should Do" about various countries & Civs. In college, I was taught that was "ethnocentrism". It sounded like pap at the time, but I've grown to respect the concept.
(Ironically, many of the Leftist scholars who propounded it are now WWSD types. Samantha Power comes to mind)
A Brit diplomat said, "Every country has the right to have its own War Of The Roses". We had our terrible Civil War.
We're still under the Hubristic spell of our successes w/Germany, Japan, S.Korea. Those were special cases.
Democracy is simply indigestible to many countries and Civs. E.g., Russia, Islam. Heck, it's indigestible in Chicago!
We can't afford, nor can we impose, a worldwide Benevolent Imperium. That idea is cognate w/the most dangerous philosophy in history - Utopianism.
Book review in WSJ, "Tender Warriors". One main character: young American woman in Afghanistan, tireless in our Hearts & Minds policy. An Afghan man burned her alive. -- Rich Lara
Operation Save Obama is in full swing, especially since it double-serves as Operation Save Hillary.
Here's Ralph Peters on the debacle in Egypt:
http://www.nypost.com/p/news/national/this_blood_is_on_the_hands_of_muslim_olptNuF89CVqLiPBzOu6OL
One other thing: for the Obamaites, the bloodbath in Egypt could not have come along at a more useful time. It sure beats talking about Syria, Libya, and sundry domestic "phony scandals".
History lesson. Hitler was never elected, he was appointed chancellor by president Hindenburg. The Nazis never won a majority in a free election.
I think Lincoln got 39% at best. Clinton never broke 50. Better than squalid deals in parliamentary systems. W/respect, Hitler Analogies are Odious.
I also think Democracy is a pious fraud. We live in an Oligarchy. Less than 50% vote. Many w/no ID.
A majority of Americans are clueless @ the foundations of our Republic and its procedures. They know more about Gilligan's Island.
Maybe that's for the best. -- Rich Lara
Doesn't this all seem familiar? For most all of my adult life, and what I have read, the Middle East has been a continuing problem.
They start wars with each other, kill a lot of people, and then we step in and create a truce. Then it starts all over again.
There is a reality here if one pays attention to history. A war will never be over until one side or the other wins decisively. Our interference, because of good intentions, only exacerbates the problem and leads to a larger growing number of people getting killed.
As harsh as it sounds to let these people fight it out it is far more compassionate in the long run to stay out of it. The only way we should have any involvement is when it directly affects us.
Is it compassionate to make people beholding to the state and thereby create long term poverty or is it compassionate to expect more out of the people involved? This question is true of our international involvement as well.
We should be looking at the long term vice the short term solution which only delays dealing with the problem.
An aside here. We are not a Democracy. We are a Republic with what is supposed to be a representative government. Whether that is true now is another question. For myself I am more optimistic about the American people.
The word Democracy gets used to define us in error. The ultimate result of Democracy is Totalitarianism whose affects were well known to the Founders.
If one considers the polls and includes the non responders Clinton was much lower than 50%. How random is a poll that has a large number of non responders?
One should be very careful to pay heed to the internals and not listen to a "media" that seems not to be conversant with the "nuances" of any field outside journalism if one can call it that.
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