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No US Euphoria Because Mubarak Was Protecting
Israel
By Eric Walberg
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, February 21, 2011
US-Egypt: `Why?'
Western media always welcomes the overthrow of a dictator -- great
headline news -- but this instance was greeted with less than euphoria by
Western -- especially American -- leaders, who tried to soft-peddle it much
as did official Egyptian media till the leader fled the palace. Egypt's
president Hosni Mubarak was a generously paid ally
for the US in its Middle East policy of protecting Israel, and the
hesitancy of the Western -- especially US -- governments in supporting fully
what should have been a poster-child of much-touted US ideals was both
frustrating and highly instructive.
Canadian government support for
Mubarak was even more staunch until vice-president Omar Suleiman's 20 second
resignation speech 11 February, clearly written with a metaphorical gun to
one or both of their heads. This craven loyalty to an autocrat reviled by
his people was the US-Israeli preferred solution. Much better to cool the
passionate revolutionaries, allow the system, so beneficial to Israel, to
adjust and survive.
But perhaps more important, much better to
continue Egypt's state-of-emergency laws that allow the regime to keep
Israel critics and devout Muslims under raps, and just as important, allow
the US to "render" undesirable Muslims there to be tortured. Imagine if the
records of these renditions over the past decade by the US (and Canada) to
Egypt were to come to light, falling into the hands of the revolutionaries,
much like Britain's secret treaties in WWI fell into the Bolsheviks' hands?
"They're not going to put the toothpaste back in the tube," quipped
Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper glumly. He could well be articulating
-- in his own tasteless way -- the sentiments of the Egyptian military
establishment, which had no use for a Mubarak dynasty and sided with the
rebels, though at a considerable cost. Those now in power, nominally headed
by Minister of Defence and Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces Mohammed
Tantawi, must push determined demonstrators out of Tahrir Square, get people
back to work, shut down further strikes, and keep their US military advisers
(not to mention the US president himself) assured that the centrepiece of
Egyptian foreign policy remains in place. Truly a messy task.
It is
hard to believe now that just a few weeks ago, Mubarak was invincible, his
visage gracing at least one page in every newspaper every day, meeting with
some Western leader, posing with Israeli notables, confident that he was in
control of his desert ship-of-state. After the initial euphoria, and as
evidence of his misrule and the perilous state that he left Egypt in pours
out of newly liberated media, people are overwhelmed, irritable and
depressed. People have undergone a wrenching shift in their thinking in the
past three weeks.
Iranian leaders note the eerie coincidence with
their own revolution of 11 February 1979 overthrowing the shah (1941-79). A
national holiday, more than half the population of Iran was out on the
streets celebrating along with Egyptians when Mubarak finally resigned last
Friday evening. US commentators prefer to compare the revolution to the
overthrow of Philippines president Ferdinand Marcos (1965-87) and Indonesian
president Suharto (1968-98). They even suggest it could lead to another
Iranian revolution.
Despite the many differences, Iran and Indonesia
are the closest parallels: an anti-colonial revolt against a repressive
pseudo-Muslim autocrat whose corruption and nepotism undid him. Those
revolts triumphed when the army and police gave up supporting the US-backed
leader, much as Egypt's security apparatus did. The long repressed Muslim
Brotherhood is the Sunni equivalent of the Iranian clerics. Even if the US
can steer Egypt into the secular Indonesian model, it will still have to
come to terms with the fact that Indonesia does not recognise Israel, that
any future Egyptian government will almost surely renegotiate the 1979 peace
agreement with Israel.
It seems that Egypt's suffering and oppression
are something alien to Western experience. But this is far from the truth.
As the fervour spread like wildfire during the first few weeks, I recalled
how the leftist community in Toronto is just as self-righteous and eager for
change, how neoliberalism has left Canadian society with yawning income
disparities not much different than those of Egypt. The most obvious
difference being that the general standard of living in Canada is higher and
the middle class (still) more numerous. But the very idea of such a
spectacular event as happened here to address issues of social justice is
impossible to imagine there or in the US.
It struck me that the most
stark and instructive parallel is not with Indonesia or Iran, but between
pre-revolution Egypt and the current US, which, like Egypt, has reached the
end of the same gruelling 30-year neoliberal road that Egypt did under
Mubarak's reign, jettisoning any pretense of a just society. The
coincidences abound: both the US and Egypt began their ill-fated journeys in
that very 1981, with the ascendancy of US president Ronald Reagan and the
assassination of Egyptian president Anwar El-Sadat, though El-Sadat had
actually pre-empted Reaganomics with his infitah, dismantling of much of
Egypt's socialism.
Each US presidency since then has either embraced
or been pressured by the exigencies of capitalism and electoral democracy to
enact greater and great tax cuts for the wealthy and corporations, meanwhile
cutting social services and increasing spending on so-called defence. Each
"new" government has regularly flouted the consensus of the electorate on
all major issues, from the environment, social services, jobs, to weapons
production, invasions, drug laws and the Cubas and Irans which in defiance
dare to flout the empire.
Income disparity is arguably the strongest
impulse to revolt. As measured by the Gini coefficient (0 is perfect
equality) Egypt stands in a far better light at .34 than the US .45 (Canada
is .32).
So why did Egyptians succeed spectacularly where Americans
-- in even greater need of a revolution -- fail spectacularly?
Egyptians seem to be much more politically astute than their American
counterparts, more willing to admit that their leaders take bribes, lie,
follow policies dictated by business or lobbies and which counter public
opinion.
But the key to understanding why a revolution like Egypt's
is impossible in the US is the fact that, unlike Egypt's army (composed
mostly of conscripts), the US has a mercenary (excuse me, professional)
army, which would have little compunction to fire on any group threatening
the sanctity of the political establishment. Conscription is a vital brick
in building a democratic society, an safeguard allowing the society to be
dismantled if it turns into a jail or a brothel, a brick which has been lost
to the US and its satellites. A brick that Egyptian protesters used to
telling effect.
Senator John Kerry said that the Egyptian people
"have made clear they will settle for nothing less than greater democracy
and more economic opportunities". So what are Egypt's prospects of creating
a thriving democracy? They would be wise to listen to Kerry and to observe
the US system, though not to copy it but on the contrary to learn from its
sorry state.
Why would Americans expect a president to be fair and
hear them when he must raise a billion dollars from corporations to outspend
his equally compromised rival in elections? New York Times analyst Bob
Herbert looked enviously at Egyptians' longing for democracy, comparing the
US political system to a "perversion of democracy", bemoaning that at the
very moment Egyptians are discovering it, "Americans are in the
mind-bogglingly self-destructive process of letting a real democracy slip
away."
And yet Americans blissfully pledge their allegiance, weep on
4 July and during presidential inaugurations, despite the unassailable
evidence of the injustices both domestically and abroad of the system they
live under. Egyptians, though just as nationalistic, were able to see
through the facade of their pseudo-democracy and rise up to overthrow the
guilty parties. They are the heroes of all true democrats in the world. The
few people particularly in North America who see through their own quite
transparent political facade can only look on wistfully.
What became
the anthem of the revolution — "Why?" by Mohamed Munir — was written,
presciently, a month before the 25 January spark that burned away (let's
hope) much of the chaff accumulated during 30 years of neoliberal "reforms".
He cries out to his homeland like a spurned lover who vows to take his
country back from the usurpers:
If love of you was my choice My
heart would long ago have changed you for another But I vow I will
continue to change your life for the better Till you are content with me.
How different from the equivalent American song — Bruce Springsteen's
"Born in the USA" — self-pitying and hopeless in this, the world's sole
superpower:
You end up like a dog that's been beat too much `Till
you spend half your life just covering up.
***
Eric Walberg can be reached at
http://ericwalberg.com/
shamireaders@yahoogroups.com
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