Monday 7 April 2014

Obama Administration Sacrifices Security, Human Rights, And Democracy



Obama Administration Sacrifices


Security, Human Rights, And Democracy


Pharaoh Al-Sisi Takes Control In Egypt

 

 

 

 

A new pharaoh is rising in Egypt.  Gen. Abdel Fata al-Sisi is preparing to grasp supreme power, most likely as the country’s next president.  He is posing as democracy’s savior while his troops are detaining or killing those who oppose him.  The arrests and shootings continued during last week’s constitutional referendum.

After some time out of the news, Egypt has reemerged as perhaps the administration’s greatest foreign policy failure.  Washington has proved impotent in the face of political revolution, Islamist activism, and military repression.  Terrorism is accelerating, and Egypt is likely to end up without stability, liberty, democracy, or prosperity.  America should disengage from a crisis which it helped create but has no ability to resolve.

During the Cold War the U.S. stole Cairo away from the Soviet Union and buried the Egyptian government in cash, enriching political and military elites while the population suffered under authoritarian political and dirigiste economic policies.  When revolution loomed in 2011 the administration endorsed Hosni Mubarak, before trying to work with newly elected President Mohamed Morsi, of the long repressed Muslim Brotherhood.  Whatever his desire, Morsi lacked control of the army, police, judiciary, and bureaucracy, and thus had no opportunity to create an authoritarian Islamic state.  He failed to expand his popular appeal and discredited his movement, making the Brotherhood’s defeat almost certain in the next poll.

However, Gen. Sisi and his confederates were in a hurry to seize power.  The police faded from the streets, inviting chaos.  Business elites created artificial shortages.  And the general encouraged demonstrations to justify military intervention.  He then staged a coup and cemented his personal control.

Gen. Sisi looked to Joseph Stalin for guidance, initiating a show trial of Morsi.  One charge was incitement to murder because the Brotherhood sought to protect the presidential palace from protestors—after the police refused to defend the building.  The regime also contended that the former president had insulted the Mubarak-dominated judiciary.  Last month Morsi was charged with having escaped from prison even as protestors were overthrowing the Mubarak dictatorship.  Morsi also was cited for having “opened channels of communication with the West via Turkey and Qatar.”

Morsi’s supporters are paying an even higher price than Morsi as Gen. Sisi’s forces arrest and shoot those who refuse to genuflect to the new pharaoh.  Although the Brotherhood was not without blame, the military chose repression over reconciliation.  Gen. Sisi killed hundreds or more in the August crackdown in Cairo—probably more than the number killed in Beijing’s Tiananmen Square.  Since then thousands more have died and been arrested.

The putative pharaoh has been actively restoring the Ancien Regime.  Gen. Sisi has tapped military officers as provincial gauleiters, recreated Mubarak’s secret and intelligence police, reinstituted military trials, enacted strict new restrictions on demonstrations, arrested journalists, deployed private thugs against Morsi supporters and regime critics, and prosecuted protestors.  McClatchy’s Amina Ismail and Nancy Youssef reported:  “Egyptians caught in the roundup have told McClatchy they were tortured while awaiting charges.  Islamist leaders claim that the government is rounding up family members in the night as leverage against them.  Lawyers tasked with representing arrested Morsi supporters often are arrested when they go to be with their clients during prison interrogations.”

In November 21 women were sentenced to up to 11 years in prison for protesting Morsi’s trial.  Seven were under 18 years old.  After widespread public outrage, they were freed on appeal.  But the same month the “democratic” interim government issued new regulations banning at the regime’s discretion almost any demonstration.

Last month three democracy activists involved in the 2011 revolution were sentenced to three years each in prison for violating the repressive new rules.  Ahmed al-Maher, one of the three, told his countrymen:  “Torture in police stations remains, while the Ministry of Interior is back to what it was.  The protest law was passed, and the oppression of freedoms is back.  Now the youth of the revolution are in prison.”

On Sunday a prosecutor charged political scientist Amr Hamzawy with insulting the judiciary.  In June the latter  tweeted a criticism a court ruling against three American non-governmental organizations.  The military apparently is determined to exterminate any hint of dissent.  Samer Shehata of the University of Oklahoma told the New York Times:  “Anyone who would question the current rulers is subject to this kind of persecution.”

The press has been a special military target.  Observed the Washington Post:  “A once-diverse press has swung into line behind the government, parroting its far-fetched claims about opponents.”   The regime closed four television stations for allegedly sympathizing with the Brotherhood.  Comedian Bassem Youssef’s television show was banned after he targeted the general.

Newscaster Shahira Amin, dismissed from her position for “implying” the coup was a coup, told the Wall Street Journal that “now is the worst ever.”  She added:  “It’s more Mubarak policies, but more dangerous for journalists.”  In December the Committee to Protect Journalists said Egypt had become the world’s ninth most prolific jailer of journalists.  The Committee on Academic Freedom of the Middle East Studies Association cited a “worsening climate for free speech and peaceable assembly.”

Overall, human rights activists say the situation is worse than under Mubarak.  Bahey al-Din Hassan, head of the Cairo Institute for Human Rights Studies, told the Journal, “It is more horrible than the old regime.”  Gamel al-Eid of the Arabic Network for Human Rights Information argued that the military was sending pro-democracy activists a message:  “It is time to shut up, to stay quiet.  There is only one choice—to support the military or to be in jail.”
Nor does the new constitution matter.  The document maintains the military’s privileged status and protects repressive state institutions from outside control.  Approval was never in doubt:  the regime arrested opponents of the new charter and controlled the vote count.

However, military rule is about more than politics.  Today the Egyptian armed forces are an economically exploitative class, managing as much as 40 percent of the economy.  Officers operate as a caste, with sons following fathers into service.  Robert Springborg of the U.S. Naval Postgraduate School told NPR the officers are collecting “billions and billions and billions” and are “focused on consumption.”

Gen. Sisi has begun to toss unnecessary allies overboard.   For instance, when some of the liberal coup supporters began protesting against his policies, the general arrested them.  The regime even called them Islamists or terrorists.  Coptic Christians were long persecuted by the Mubarak regime and the army, yet Coptic Pope Tawadros II publicly endorsed the coup.  It didn’t help.  When Islamists retaliated by attacking Copts, the military did little to protect them.  Today Gen. Sisi is more interested in appealing to Islamists to draw them away from the Brotherhood.
The regime’s overriding objective is to destroy the group.  Cairo has banned the “terrorist” organization and made it a crime to participate in Brotherhood activities or promote the group “by speech, writing or any other means.”

However, the Brotherhood withstood decades of repression by previous dictators and joined the political process strong enough to win Egypt’s first legislative and presidential elections.  My Cato Institute colleague Dalibor Rohac warned that past prohibitions—at one point membership was a capital offense—“strengthened the organization’s narrative of victim hood and enabled it to reemerge strengthened and relying on broader popular support.”


Moreover, by confirming the extremist critique that democracy is a fool’s errand, Gen. Sisi has left opponents of his incipient dictatorship little choice but to use violence.  Although the organization’s leadership denounced recent bombings, government repression likely will further fragment the leadership and encourage radicalism.  Moving to violence “will be small extremist groups and cells, which probably are only now gelling and will be led by organizers who point to Egypt’s history over the past year as demonstrating that the Brotherhood’s commitment to peaceful political competition is foolish and ineffective,” argued former diplomat Paul Pillar.

In fact, Mubarak’s crackdown on the Brotherhood four decades ago sparked the formation of new radical groups, including al-Qaeda.  Daniel Benjamin and Steven Simon, both formerly with the State Department, explained:  “Repression of Islamists in Egypt was an essential stage in the emergence of contemporary jihadism.  As splinter groups that were significantly more radical than the Muslim Brotherhood formed, Islamists became more violent.”   The result was radical groups leading up to al-Qaeda.  Indeed, before joining al-Qaeda current leader Ayman al-Zawahiri was tortured by the Mubarak regime.

Violent opposition to the Sisi’s incipient dictatorship is rising.  Traditionally the security forces faced little resistance.  However, more than 150 policemen were killed between August and December.  Bombings are increasing in frequency.  Worse for America, warned Max Boot:  “as long as Washington is seen on the side of the generals, some of their violence will be directed our way.”

Egypt’s stability could be at risk.  The London risk consultancy firm Maplecroft warned:  “the impact [of violence] this time is likely to be far worse [than in the past], given wider turmoil in the country and the proliferation of weapons.”  Even modest unrest and sporadic terrorism would discourage investors and tourists.  If Egypt slides toward the sort of civil war which consumed Algeria during the 1990s, the human and economic cost would be incalculable.
However, the Obama administration still refuses to call a coup a coup.  It eventually, though reluctantly, withheld portions of the $1.55 billion in annual foreign aid, while assuring Cairo that doing so was not “punitive.”  Then the administration pushed to relax aid conditions.

But most of the roughly $75 billion given to Cairo over the years enriched political and military elites and funded the purpose of prestige weapons from American arms makers.  The U.S. never received much “leverage” in return.  The knowledge that the Egyptian military would cease to exist after a war with Israel kept the peace.  Cairo never could afford to close the Suez Canal.  The regime could drop preferences currently accorded the Pentagon, but the Egyptian military needs the U.S. more the U.S. needs the Egyptian military.  Washington could respond by cutting off spare parts or maintenance contracts.

Anyway, the U.S. had no credibility to enforce conditions since it never was willing to stop the money.  The administration finally (kind of) did so last fall, but if America runs back to Cairo, cash-in-hand, the former will never again have the slightest hint of leverage.  Moreover, the regime now is flooded with money from Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states and doesn’t need American assistance.

Andrew Cordesman advocated “refocusing U.S. aid to slowly push Egypt’s military toward compromise and restraint, building up Egypt’s more secular and liberal forces, and making it clear that the U.S. supports the role of Egypt’s moderate Islamists.”  However, Washington failed to achieve these ends before despite decades of trying.  The secular and liberal forces are a political nullity.  The military doesn’t need America’s money and won’t let U.S. pressure get in the way of regime preservation.

Sam Holliday of the Armiger Cromwell Center argued that the U.S. should push the Egyptian military “to focus on effective ways to achieve stability within Egypt, rather than relying on suppression tactics and retention of centralized power.”  However, military control is based on centralized power and Gen. Sisi has demonstrated no interest in sharing authority.  Armiger also suggested that Washington “encourage the Egyptian military to form a coalition with business, the judiciary, young liberals, and those Muslims who oppose the Third Jihad.”  But the military doesn’t need them.

Others who support aiding the Egyptian government do so for delusional or even blood-thirsty reasons.  Rep. Michele Bachmann incongruously blamed the Brotherhood for 9/11.  Rep. Louie Gohmert compared blood-drenched Gen. Sisi to both George Washington and Thomas Jefferson.  After the Egyptian military’s slaughter of unarmed men, women, and children, columnist Kurt Schlichter wrote:  “I just can’t work up a lot of caring because a pack of murderous subversives whose declared goal is returning the globe to a permanent state of Seventh Century Bedouin theocracy tried to fight it out with a tough, well-armed and patriotic Egyptian military and got their teeth kicked in.”

Conservative columnist Lucius Madaurus contended that the Brotherhood, which peacefully participated in Egypt’s first free elections in history, “is a terrorist organization that opposes the idea of Western-style democratic government in Egypt.”  While endorsing killing by Egypt’s military, he advocated “selling Western ideas of personal liberty and democracy in the Muslim world.”  Since the Persian Gulf’s corrupt, repressive, and Islamist monarchies “would prefer a return of dynastic rule in Egypt,” USA Today columnist DeWayne Wickham contended:  “The Obama administration and Congress should do the same.”

Jeff Moore of Muir Analytics talked of “massacres,” as if the cold-blooded sniping of civilians was not a massacre.  He seemed upset that decades ago the Brotherhood tried to assassinate Abdel Gamel al-Nasser, a left-wing dictator who allied Egypt with the Soviet Union and battled Israel.  Moore complained that “Egypt’s domestic war is on, yet again,” but ignored the fact that the military fired first.

Some advocates are more practical. Argued John Bolton, “Today’s struggle is ultimately between the Brotherhood and the army.  Like it or not, it is time for the U.S. to choose sides.”  The Journal’s Bret Stephens similarly contended that “Politics in Egypt today is a zero-sum game:  Either the military wins, or the Brotherhood does.  If the U.S. wants influence, it needs to hold its nose and take a side.”

Yet for decades Washington has taken sides and gained little benefit.  Irrespective of Washington’s financial or rhetorical support, Gen. Sisi is likely to take America’s preferred positions out of his country’s own interest.  More important, underwriting a murderous regime inevitably stains the hands of American policymakers.  Who can believe Washington’s bleating about human rights any where when it is actively funding a grotesquely repressive regime in Egypt?

The administration should disengage from Egyptian politics.  There is no reason to support either side.  Explained Charles Dunne of Freedom House:  “It is a matter of standing up for American principles and applying them to America’s own foreign policy.”

Washington should stop underwriting repression and killing.  The U.S. should demonstrate to Egyptians that it does not believe America’s interests, however defined, warrant wantonly sacrificing their lives, liberty, and dignity.  Although Gen. Sisi is widely supported today, his popularity has declined.  Growing repression and declining prosperity likely will ultimately make him very unpopular, like Pakistan’s President Pervez Musharraf.  Washington stepping back would send an equally important message to people elsewhere in the world, who see the U.S. repeatedly back corrupt dictators in the name of stability.


Former Reagan official Daniel Oliver declared:  “however great the interest of the Egyptian people in their own freedom and human rights, it is eclipsed, even if they don’t realize it, by the national security interest of the United States.”  However, promoting U.S. security cannot justify underwriting the slaughter of innocents.  And underwriting the slaughter of innocents will ultimately have disastrous consequences for U.S. security.

It’s time for America to exit the Egyptian imbroglio.  Washington is far more likely to make the chaos along the Nile worse than better.



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And Blessed Are The Ones Who Care For Their Fellow Men!

Wednesday 2 April 2014

محال أن يصلي الملك خلف ارهابي

الفزازي: الملك "كافأني" .. ومُحال أن يصلي خلف إرهابي

أكد الفزازي، أحد أشهر الوجوه السلفية بالمغرب، أن أداء الملك محمد السادس صلاة الجمعة الأخيرة خلفه بأحد مساجد طنجة، هو "أكبر رد للاعتبار، وأعظم جبر للضرر، وتبرئة عملية واقعية لما نسب لي، ذلك لأني موقن مثل كل الشعب المغربي بأن الملك محال وألف محال ويستحيل أن يصلي خلف إرهابي قتال" وفق تعبيره.

وحول ما إذا كان الأمر عبارة عن منعطف جديد في ما بات يعرف إعلاميا بملف "السلفية الجهادية" أو مكافأة خاصة له، أبرز الفزازي أنه "لا يمثل السلفية الجهادية أو أية سلفية أخرى"، لكنه اعتبر الحدث بالمقابل "مكافأة فعلا، وتتويجا على استقامته وما تعرض له من ظلم."

وعاد الفزازي، في حوار ينشر على هسبريس بالصوت والصورة، إلى التأكيد على أن ما دار بينه وبين الملك محمد السادس عقب الانتهاء من صلاة الجمعة الأخيرة، سيبقى "سرا يحتفظ به لنفسه"، مضيفا أن آخر جملة قالها له الملك كانت "تبارك الله عليك آ الفقيه."

الفزازي أفاد، في الحوار ذاته، بأن "الملك بدهائه وحكمته وتبصره يبعث رسائل للداخل والخارج على أن المغرب بلد يسع الجميع، مهما اختلف أبناؤه في أفكارهم وفي أحزابهم وتلاوينهم السياسة والمذهبية" وفق تعبيره.

"المغرب يحتضن كل أبنائه، ويبقى الملك المظلة الكبرى التي تظل هذا الشعب، فالقضية ليست لحية طويلة أو لباسا قصيرا، فالملك لا تعنيه أشكال المواطنين بقدر ما يعنيه المواطن الصالح، بصرف النظر عن شكله وميوله الفكري، فصلاته معي رسالة لمن يهمه الأمر ولمن لا يهمه الأمر" يقول الفزازي.

واسترسل الداعية المغربي بأنه "كان يعرف الملك السلطان، والملك أمير المؤمنين، والملك الذي يحكم المغرب، لكنه اكتشف لأول مرة الملك الإنسان"، واصفا إياه "بالخلوق جدا والحيي، حيث إن الاقتراب منه وحده يجعل المرء يحس بالأمان" يؤكد الفزازي.




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And Blessed Are The Ones Who Care For Their Fellow Men!

Tuesday 25 March 2014

Between the Nuremberg Trials and the “Glorious” Egyptian Judiciary

Between the Nuremberg Trials and the “Glorious” Egyptian Judiciary

 ESAM AL-AMIN






    “We are proud of Egypt’s glorious judiciary system.”

    Field Marshal Abdelfattah Sisi, leader of Egypt’s Military Coup


The Nuremberg Trials (in Nuremberg, Germany)

Charges: Wars of Aggression, War Crimes, Crimes against Humanity.

Number of Victims Declared by the Prosecution at Trial: At least 40 million in Europe alone.

Judges (4): British, American, French, Soviet
Trial Period: November 20, 1945 – October 1, 1946 (316 days)

Number of Court Sessions: 38 full days

Number of People Accused: 23 (Over 200 Nazi leaders were later tried at Nuremberg.)

Number of Accused Convicted: 20

Number of Accused Condemned to Death: 12



The Minya Trials (in el-Minya, Egypt)

Charges: Storming a police station, killing a police officer, rioting, and mass protests in el-Minya (75 miles south of Cairo) in the aftermath of the massacres at Raba’a Al-Adawiyya Mosque and Al-Nahdha Square in Cairo on August 14, 2013, that killed over 1,000 protesters by the army and security officers.

Number of Victims Declared by the Prosecution at Trial: 1 (A police officer.)

Judges (3): Led by presiding judge Said Youssef Sabri.
[Sabri is the same judge that acquitted all officials and police officers accused of killing about two-dozen protesters in the Bani Swaif region in Upper Egypt during the 18 revolutionary days after the January 25, 2011 mass protests.]

Trial Period: March 22-24, 2014 (2 days)

Number of Court Sessions: 2 (totaling 100 minutes)
[The first session on Mar. 22 lasted for 45 minutes where the indictment was officially presented. The second session was on Mar. 24, where the accused were sentenced. It lasted less than one hour.]

Number of People Accused: 545

Number of the Accused Identified as Members of the MB: 122

Number of the Accused Not Identified as Members of the MB: 423

Number of Pages of Police Investigations turned over by the Prosecution to the Judge and Defense Teams on the first day of trial on Mar. 22: Over 14,000.

Number of Government Witnesses Heard by the Judges: 1

(A police officer was the only government witness to offer testimony at trial but was not allowed to be cross-examined.)

Number of Defendants Attending the Trial: 128

Number of Defendants Arraigned by the Presiding Judge: 51

(The remaining 77 were at trial with the other defendants in a cage but were not even acknowledged by the presiding judge.)

Number of Defense Lawyers for all defendants allowed to Attend the Trial by the Presiding Judge: Less than three dozen (many others not allowed)

Number of Witnesses Offered by the Defense Teams: Hundreds

Number of Defense Witnesses Allowed by the Presiding Judge to Testify: None

Number of the Accused Condemned to Death: 529 (including all the defendants attending the trial)

Number of the Accused Condemned to Death but Identified by Defense Lawyers as already Dead before the August Protests: At least 3

Number of the Accused Condemned to Death but Identified by Defense Lawyers as Being Outside Egypt during the August Protests: At least 5

Number of the Accused Condemned to Death but Identified by Defense Lawyers as Minors during the August Protests (it’s unconstitutional to sentence a minor to death in Egypt): At least 2

But what have been the reactions over the death sentences?

(Note the weak reaction and lack of condemnation or outrage by the US and EU.)

Egypt’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs: The death sentences were “only the first verdict in the trial process…It was reached after careful study of the case.”

Marie Harf, a State Department spokeswoman: “It simply does not seem possible that a fair review of evidence and testimony, consistent with international standards, could be accomplished. [I]t’s an important relationship [with Egypt]…so we don’t want to completely cut off the relationship…”

Catherine Ashton, Foreign Policy Chief of the European Union: “It was with utmost concern that I learnt that the court in Minya in southern Egypt sentenced 529 Muslim Brotherhood supporters to death. Notwithstanding the serious nature of the crimes for which they were convicted, capital punishment can never be justified.”

Sarah Leah Whitson, Middle East Director at Human Rights Watch: “It’s shocking even amid Egypt’s deep political repression that a court has sentenced 529 people to death without giving them any meaningful opportunity to defend themselves. The Minya court failed to carry out its most fundamental duty to assess the individual guilt of each defendant, violating the most basic fair trial right. These death sentences should be immediately quashed.”

Hassiba Hadj Sahraoui, Deputy Middle East and North Africa Program Director at Amnesty International: “This is the largest single batch of simultaneous death sentences we’ve seen in recent years, not just in Egypt but anywhere in the world. Egypt’s courts are quick to punish Mohamed Morsi’s supporters but ignore gross human rights violations by the security forces. While thousands of Morsi’s supporters languish in jail, there has not been an adequate investigation into the deaths of hundreds of protesters. Just one police officer is facing a prison sentence, for the deaths of 37 detainees.”

Sahraoui was referring to the deliberate killing of 37 anti-coup protesters while in government’s custody last August. They were arrested after the Raba’a massacre and were left in handcuffs and shackles for six hours under 110 heat (43) inside a prison vehicle that could only hold twenty people. When they started to shout in protest, the prisoners were gassed by police officers and their corpses burned. After 11 officers were put on trial earlier this month for this massacre, 10 were either acquitted or received suspended sentences.

Meanwhile another mass trial against those opposing the military coup, including senior MB leaders, will open today in the same Minya court before the same presiding judge, with 683 defendants facing similar charges.

While the military coup regime flexes its muscles and shows contempt for any notion of justice or human rights, the world is looking the other way. For many governments it’s back to business as usual with authoritarian regimes. President Barack Obama is rewarding King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia with a state visit this week.

Long gone are the days when Obama declared in 2009 in Cairo that “the ability to speak your mind and have a say in how you are governed; confidence in the rule of law and the equal administration of justice; government that is transparent and doesn’t steal from the people; the freedom to live as you choose are not just American ideas, [but] they are human rights, and that is why we will support them everywhere.” Given his administration’s timid response to the gross human rights violations in Egypt and its open support for authoritarian regimes such as Saudi Arabia and the UAE, which have bankrolled Egypt’s military coup, President Obama’s words now ring hollow.

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And Blessed Are The Ones Who Care For Their Fellow Men!

Egypt sentences to death 529 supporters of Mohamed Morsi

Egypt sentences to death 529 supporters of Mohamed Morsi





Complaints of miscarriage of justice as judge takes just two
sessions to find defendants guilty of police officer's murder

Patrick Kingsley Monday 24 March

A judge in southern Egypt has taken just two court sessions to sentence
to death 529 supporters of Mohamed Morsi for the murder of a single
police officer.

Sixteen people were acquitted after lawyers said they had not been
allowed to present a proper defence before the judgment was made.
The defendants were arrested last August during a wave of unrest in
which supporters of the former president react violently to the clearance
of a pro-Morsi sit-in in Cairoduring which more than 900 people were
killed. In addition to the murder, the 529 were accused of attempting to
kill two other police officers and attacking a police station.

The death sentences are not final and appeals are likely; similar
sentences have often been commuted in Egypt. But families of the
accused and rights lawyers described the process as a miscarriage of
justice.

One man, whose father was among those sentenced to death, said:
"Nothing can describe this scandal. This is not a judicial sentence, this is
thuggery."

He added: "The session last[ed] for five minutes, [and] during those five
minutes none of the lawyers or the defendants were listened to – not
even the prosecution. The judge just came in to acquit [the 16] and
sentence to death the others."

Mohamed Zaree, head of the Cairo Institute for Human Rights Studies
(CIHRS), a prominent rights group, said: "This verdict is a disaster. To
rule in the second session of a trial – it means the judge didn't hear the
defence or look at the evidence. Even someone from the second grade
of the law faculty would never have issued this verdict – it goes against
the basic principles of criminology."

The same court will try 683 more Brotherhood supporters on Tuesday –
including the leader of the group, Mohamed Badie, and the head of its
political wing, Saad al-Katatny.

The defendants are among at least 16,000 political dissidents arrested
since the overthrow of Morsi last July, according to police figures. Some
rights groups say the real figure may be as high as 23,000, and many of
those imprisoned have been tortured by the authorities.

One of the most high-profile detainees – Alaa Abd El Fatah, a secular
activist investigated by every regime since Hosni Mubarak – was
released on bail on Sunday in a rare instance of judicial clemency.


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And Blessed Are The Ones Who Care For Their Fellow Men!

Egypt sentences 529 supporters of the ousted Islamist President Mohammed Morsi to death

Egypt sentences 529 supporters of the ousted Islamist President Mohammed Morsi to death





A judge in southern Egypt has sentenced 528 supporters of the ousted
Islamist President Mohammed Morsi to death on charges of
murdering a policeman and attacking police.

The verdicts, which are subject to appeal and are likely to be
overturned, were delivered after only two sessions in one of the
largest mass trials in the country in decades.

The defendants were arrested in August of last year during unrest in
the town of Matay in Minya province. They were charged with
murder, attempted murder and stealing government weapons in
connection with an attack on a police station.

One police officer was killed in the attack. The violence was part of
rioting around the country sparked when security forces stormed two
pro-Morsi sit-ins in Cairo, killing hundreds of people on Aug. 14.
The group is among over 1,200 supporters of Mr Morsi on trial,
including senior Brotherhood members.

All but around 150 of the defendants in the case were tried in
absentia by the court in the city of Minya, south of Cairo.
The judge acquitted 16 of the 545 defendants on the grounds that
they had not been allowed to present a proper defence before the
judgment was made.

During the first session on Saturday, defense lawyer Khaled el-Koumi
said that he and other lawyers asked the presiding judge, Said
Youssef, to postpone the case to give them time to review the
hundreds of documents in the case, but the request was declined.

When another lawyer made a request, the judge interrupted and
refused to recognize it. When the lawyers protested, Youssef shouted
that they would not dictate what he should do and ordered court
security to step in between him and the lawyers.

A security official in the courtroom said the defendants and the
lawyers disrupted the proceedings by chanting against the judge:
"God is our only refuge!" He spoke on condition of anonymity
because he was not authorized to speak to the press.

"We didn't have the chance to say a word, to look at more than
3,000 pages of investigation and to see what evidence they are
talking about," el-Koumi, who was representing 10 of the defendants,
told The Associated Press.

A senior Brotherhood figure, Ibrahim Moneir, denounced the
verdicts, warning that abuses of justice will fuel a backlash against
the military-backed government that replaced Morsi.

"Now the coup is hanging itself by these void measures," he said,
speaking to the Qatari-based Al-Jazeera Mubashir Misr TV station.
He said he believed the verdicts were timed to send a message to an
Arab League summit that begins Tuesday in Kuwait, where Egypt is
pressing other Arab governments to ban the Muslim Brotherhood as
a terrorist group.

On Tuesday, another mass trial against Morsi's supporters opens in a
Minya court with 683 suspects facing similar charges. The
defendants in that case include Brotherhood leader Mohammed
Badie, who also faces multiple other trials, and senior members of
the group from Minya province.

Egypt's military toppled Morsi in July after four days of massive
demonstrations by his opponents demanding he step down for
abusing power during his year in office. Since then, Morsi's
Brotherhood and other Islamist supporters have staged near-daily
demonstrations that usually descend into violent street
confrontations with security forces.

The military-backed government has arrested some 16,000 people in
the ensuing crackdown, including most of the Brotherhood
leadership.

At the same time, militant bombings, suicide attacks and other
assaults — mostly by an al-Qaida-inspired group — have increased,
targeting police and military forces in retaliation for the crackdown.
The authorities have blamed the Brotherhood for the violence,
branding it a terrorist organization and confiscating its assets. The
group has denied any links to the attacks and has denounced the
violence.

Imad El-Anis, an expert in Middle Eastern politics at Nottingham
Trent University, said Monday's verdicts were "far from meeting
minimum international standards for judicial processes of this kind."
But he said Egyptian authorities are unlikely to heed any
international criticism of the verdicts "and are likely to push on with
further rapid mass trials."

ENJOYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY!




And Blessed Are The Ones Who Care For Their Fellow Men!

Saturday 22 March 2014

Hail the Revolutionary Coup in Egypt…

Hail the Revolutionary Coup in Egypt…

Well Sort of…No,Not Really

by ANDY LISBON

A recent article by the IWL (International Workers League) on
developments in Egypt, entitled, Egypt: No confidence at all in the new
puppet military and imperialist administration! makes some confusing
and contradictory claims that they come to by a combination of: ignoring
the developments since 2011 in Egypt, by rewriting recent history in
Egypt, and by misapplying a theory of Permanent Revolution on
development in Egypt and throughout the Middle East. Whether that
theory has held up intact over the course of the last 80 years, during
which dozens of revolutions have occurred and been reversed without
the leadership of the working class in either phase of the ‘process,’ is
beyond the scope of this document. Nevertheless, I will try to make
sense of the mass of confusion, historical inaccuracy and theoretical
sleight-of-hand represented in the article.
What Are the Claims?

1) The military reclaiming direct control of the government through a
coup should be supported by socialists because it was a direct result of
the popular explosion that took place between June 30 and July 3rd,
2013.


“Jaded and absolutely fed up, the toiling masses rose with much greater
power than that epic feat against the dictator and toppled another
president in fewer three years..Egyptian masses are now writing a new
page in the history of their revolution, a revolution that is still continues
its course and is permanent and uninterrupted.”

2) The events that have taken place represent a weakening of the State
(another reason we should support the event even though they ended in
a coup).

“The military regime ruling in the country managed to survive the fall of
Mubarak was not destroyed even it was injured and weakened by the
activity of the masses… the fundamental thing is to understand that,
regardless the forms, the fall of Morsi, just as the fall of Mubarak was
before it, is an enormous revolutionary triumph of the Egyptian masses
who, through their activity weakened the military as well as American
imperialism that have been upholding this regime for the past 30 years.”

3) The Muslim Brotherhood’s claim that Morsi should be returned to
power because he was elected in a fair election is false, and that they
represent the forces of counter-revolution and should be put down.
“Of course, according to what we explained above, this repudiation
cannot stand for our supporting the demonstrations of the Brotherhood
trying to return to power or that their leaders – beginning with Morsi,
liable for all the repression during this year, or the Brotherhood’s mass
media are to be returned to them to be used in campaigns against what
the masses decided in the streets…. As long as the Brotherhood keeps on
calling their supporters to walk out into the street to take over the
control, that is to say, to go against the action of the vast majority of the
toiling masses and the achievement that the eviction of Morsi meant for
them; we are against defending his right of expression and
demonstration.”

4) Socialists should oppose the ensuing crackdown on the Muslims who
are demonstrating to restore the president who was democratically
elected in Egypt.

“However, the fact that we are against the demonstrations of the Muslim
Brotherhood to return to the office does not mean that we shall back any
repressive action of the Army or the police because their measures obey
the interests of their commanding officers and the is no reason for which
we can trust them. We condemn this attack for its unnecessary cruelty
and because these deaths served the only purpose of strengthening the
attempt by the Brotherhood at returning to power taking advantage of
the indignation that this fact caused in all the sectors, including those
who had evicted Morsi.”

5) Socialists should oppose a government of the military because it
represents the restoration of the most repressive sections of the State
apparatus and appears to have growing support from the forces of
imperialism, namely the United States and its key allies in the region.
“No confidence in the new government! We must face them
independently!

With Morsi defeated, the main enemy of the mass movement is the new
government established once more by the military.”

6) The “mass movement must demand from this new civilian-military
government, the one that claims to be the “guardians of the people” an
immediate, really democratic and sovereign Constituent Assembly to
pass a program for the liberation of Egypt from the imperialist bonds.”
One can be excused for being confused by this tangle of contradictory
assessments given that points (1) and (2) run completely contrary to
point (5); and that point (3) runs counter to point (4). Such a mess of
mixed messages can only produce the worst response in workers or
revolutionaries at time like this: not clarity but confusion, not action but
paralysis.

Untangling the Mess: Comparing Egypt 2011 to 2013

First off, the struggle in 2011 was an uprising that opposed the worst
aspects of austerity that led to mass unemployment and hunger,
opposed a Mubarak regime that was a dictatorship and shed workers
blood in the streets; and called for the removal of Mubarak and the
establishment of a democratic process that would allow more popular
control of the government and presumably, the beginning of the
realization of the popular demands.

The aims of the struggle at the time where partially accomplished by the
establishment of free elections (although confined within bourgeois
limits) for the first time in Egyptian history. These developments,
including the establishment of democracy in Egypt, were universally
hailed by socialists as a first step in a revolutionary process. The IWL
went so far as to call these developments an “unconscious socialist
revolution“ I will leave aside lack of familiarity with such a term ever
being used within Marxism, and that it is completely contradictory to
what Marxists actually think socialist revolution is: the conscious act of
the working class coming to power.

The fact is that the coup in 2013 has now completely reversed every one
of the partial gains accomplished by the “first phase of the revolution” in
2011, and yet we are supposed to understand this as a continuation of
the revolutionary process. In fact, we are supposed to see the forces of
the Muslim Brotherhood as the forces of counter-revolution because
they are ‘mistakenly’ going into the streets to defend ‘democracy’
because they are demanding that a democratically elected president be
restored and military rule be reversed.

The election of Morsi was close, he defeated the former regime candidate
by a slim margin (51% vs. 49%) but he did win what was largely
considered a fair election. In fact there have been many subsequent
elections since then. The people in Egypt went to the polls at least six
times: to vote for a referendum to chart the political way forward
(March 2011), to vote for the lower and upper house of parliament
(November 2011-January 2012), to elect a civilian president over two
rounds (May-June 2012), and to ratify the new constitution (December
2012). Each time the electorate voted for the choice of the Islamist
parties to the frustration of the secular and liberal opposition.
I think it is understandable that Muslim workers see themselves as
defending democracy by opposing the coup because that is exactly what
they are doing. They are not mistaken. Far from being counterrevolutionary,
within bourgeois terms, these workers see most clearly
what has happened. The democracy they fought and bled for in 2011
has been dismantled by a coup. As a matter of fact, socialists who
applauded the 2013 demonstrations uncritically and directed the
working class into the hands of the military, instead should have opposed
the removal of a bourgeois bully (but an elected one) by a military coup,
which amounts to back handed support of reaction, and instead
organized a working class defense of democracy.

This is exactly the role the Bolshevik party played in 1917 in defending a
far worse criminal in power (Kerensky) against the forces of reaction on
the march (Kornilov) that threatened to take down both Kerensky and
the organs of worker’s power, the Soviets.

But now events have passed socialists and the working class by and
reaction has once again taken power (despite socialists refusal to
acknowledge that). I do not believe socialists need to call for reimposition
of Morsi in opposing the illegitimacy of the military coup; just
as the Bolsheviks would not have called for the re-installation of
Kerensky. Socialists are for neither bourgeois road. Despite the
weakness of the Left in Egypt and internationally, the role of socialists
both inside and outside of Egypt is to argue for the independence of the
working class.

Instead, IWL draws an equal sign between Mubarak and Morsi. They
fail to acknowledge, on the one hand, that while one ruled by direct
dictatorship, the other’s rule was established by bourgeois democracy;
and on the other hand, that Mubarak’s fall was the final chapter in a
struggle against dictatorship and for the establishment of a democratic
regime, while Morsi’s fall came with the dismantling of that regime and
the re-imposition of military dictatorship. To call such a development a
continuation of a revolutionary process is a contradiction, and not the
kind resolvable through ‘dialectics,’ its just bad logic.
Who took down Morsi? The masses or the military?

IWL makes this mistake because it claims that the events, which took
down Morsi, were a simple result of the mass demonstrations that took
place in late June and early July. If only it were so simple. A quick
perusal of the bourgeois and Left press over days after the coup prove
that it was nothing of the kind.

Things broke down between Morsi and the military over a year ago

when Morsi moved swiftly to shake up the military after his inauguration
on June 30, 2012. Within six weeks, he summoned Field Marshal
Hussein Tantawi, who had served Mubarak for two decades and was
interim head of state after him, and told him to retire along with the
U.S.-trained chief of staff, General Sami Enan. Morsi then appointed a
pious Muslim, General Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, as commander of the armed
forces.

The president believed he had stamped his authority on the men in
uniform. In reality, the officer corps was willing to see two old retainers
put out to pasture, clearing a blocked promotion ladder. “They (the
Brotherhood) misread what happened. We allowed it to happen,” said
one colonel. The military still viewed with deep suspicion a head of state
that, they believed, saw Egypt as “just part of a bigger (Islamic)
Caliphate,” said the colonel.

Morsi believed the military would not act against him, especially if the
Brotherhood took care of the army’s economic interests when drafting a
new constitution. “He thought Sisi was his guy,” a
senior Western diplomat said. “He didn’t understand the power
dynamics.”

Late in 2012, when Morsi and the Brotherhood pushed for a new
constitution, they clashed with secular parties and civil society groups
angered by the Islamist tinge to the charter, ambiguous wording on
freedom of expression, and the absence of explicit guarantees of the
rights of women, Christians and non-government organizations.
After weeks of debate, fear that a judiciary packed with Mubarak-era
appointees would dissolve the constituent assembly, helped prompt
Morsi to issue a decree shielding the assembly from legal challenge and
putting the president above judicial review. It was a move born out of
the Brotherhood’s deep suspicion that the judiciary was out to undo all
its electoral gains. When Morsi rammed the new charter through, the
opposition walked out. The constitutional decree was a turning point.
Ministers were not consulted. Several of Morsi’s own staff warned that it
would set him on a confrontation course with powerful sections of civil
society.

The demonstrations against Morsi were entirely justified and expressed
the popular disillusionment with the Morsi government and their
attempt to consolidate more political power into the presidency using the
cover of “protecting the gains of the revolution.” Many mainstream
media (and even state-run media) outlets participated in protest by
suspending publication or expressing opposition to Morsi’s policies. Still,
while popular support of Morsi eroded, there were reports that many of
the demonstrations were actually led by the Mubarak supporters. It was
clear that Morsi had overplayed his hand and was facing opposition from
both the Left and the Right. The opposition was said to be led by
activist Hamdeen Sabahi and centrist leader, Mohamed ElBaradei in an
alliance with one of Mubarak’s men, Amr Moussa, the former foreign
minister under the dictatorship. The Morsi regime was clearly
weakening.

On December of 2012, a wave of protests rocked the Morsi
administration and Morsi’s Ittihadiya palace was regularly attacked with
petrol bombs, rocks and metal bolts. The police and military refused to
come out and defend Morsi at the time and the Muslim Brotherhood was
forced to organize its own defense of its party in power. Later in
January, during the second anniversary of the uprising that had
established democratic rule in Egypt, Morsi had called a curfew after
demonstrations turned violent. Reports have it that far from imposing a
curfew, members of the military refused to impose it.
“People at night were playing football with the army which was supposed
to be imposing the curfew,” said Mekky, who had become justice
minister. “So when I (as president) impose a curfew and I see neither
my citizens nor my army that are supposed to implement the curfew are
listening to me, I should know that I am not really a president.”

A Weakened State or a Stronger One

The IWL article claims that the Egyptian State has been weakened by
the coup. A state that now enjoys the active or passive support of tens of
millions of Egyptians. A state that has absorbed into itself virtually
every section of resistance in the Tamarrud (from El Baradei, to the
students and trade union leaders) as well as all the sections of the former
Mubarak regime, and excluding only the Salafists and the Muslim
Brotherhood itself. All these sectors bound under one roof supporting a
coup government, an aggressive return to the streets of the military and
brutal crackdown on Muslims and opposition forces. Compare this to a
regime in which the military refuses to act to defend it and instead plays
soccer with workers. By any measure that makes sense, politically or
organizational, the hand of the state has been massively strengthened by
the coup and socialists would be fools to not acknowledge this
development. Because this same state apparatus is being prepared and
sharpened for dealing with opposition it will face beyond the Muslim
Brotherhood in the coming weeks, months and years.

The Process of Morsi’s Removal

In truth, the groundwork for this support and strengthening of the state
did not start on June 30th 2013, but had been laid down in the preceding
months.

In the months prior to the coup, the European Union, supported by the
United States, launched a discreet diplomatic effort to try to bring the
Morsi government together with its liberal and secular opposition to
compromise on a national unity government. The aim was to trigger
fresh parliamentary elections and a loan agreement with the
International Monetary Fund (IMF) that could have unlocked stalled
economic aid and investment.

Morsi never explicitly embraced the EU initiative although he never
rejected it either. Morsi proved unable to implement the IMF’s
neoliberal agenda. Events soon put a deal out of reach.
Only a month before the army intervened to remove Morsi, two of
Egypt’s most senior power brokers met for a private dinner at the home
of liberal politician Ayman Nour on the island of Zamalek.
The two power brokers were Amr Moussa, a long-time foreign minister
under Mubarak and now a secular nationalist politician, and Khairat El-
Shater, the Brotherhood’s deputy leader and most influential strategist
and financier. Moussa suggested that to avoid confrontation, Morsi
should heed opposition demands, including a change of government.
The Tamarrud itself, far from being an independent movement of the
working class, is a student-initiated movement, which grew well beyond
their ability to direct and control as it swelled. It brought together a
variety of disparate forces whose only point of agreement (whether
coming from the Right or from the Left) was a shared a hatred and
distrust for a weakening, and isolated Morsi administration. This
included trade unions, students, liberal leaders and groups, members of
the old Mubarak regime (fulool), members of the military, and even the
Salafists. While workers participated in the movement and provided its
popular base, the political leadership of it was entirely composed of a
disparate grouping of the bourgeoisie and petite bourgeoisie.
Billionaire businessman Naguib Sawiris, who left Egypt shortly after
Morsi’s election, told Reuters he threw his full support behind the youth
movement.

“The Free Egyptians party, the party that I founded, used all its
branches across Egypt to (gather) signatures for Tamarrud,” Sawiris
said in a telephone interview from his yacht off the Greek island of
Mykonos. “Also the TV station that I own and the newspaper, Al-Masry
Al-Youm, were supporting the Tamarrud movement with their media …
It is fair to say that I encouraged all the affiliations I have to support the
movement. But there was no financing, because there was no need.”
Far from causing the fall of a regime, the demonstrations on June 30 –
July 3, despite their mass base and mass character, can best be
understood as the final act in the political undoing of the democratic
reforms won in 2011. The political and organizational groundwork for
this act by the military had been prepared months in advance, and has
been used to orchestrate a popularly supported coup that significantly
strengthens the hand of the state, of imperialism and threatens to split a
nascent workers and student movement along religious lines while
undoing or marginalizing political developments that had led a section of
workers to see the military as their enemy in 2011.

Oppose the Coup, Oppose the Crackdown

This is why socialists should oppose the military, not just in the actions it
takes today, but also in the taking of power and reject any association of
the coup as part of some revolutionary process. The acts by the military
over the last month are best understood as an act of counter-revolution
that should not just be opposed in name but in deed. For socialists, that
means rejecting the attacks, which are now taking place on Muslims or
the shutting down of radio and television stations like Al Jazeera. It is
not enough to ‘expose’ the crimes of the military or ‘condemn’ the crimes
of the military. That is the role of a reformist, liberal media. We are
revolutionaries. Socialists on the ground in Egypt should be organizing
the active defense of Muslim workers being attacked by the military, and
rejecting the ethnic divide being promoted within our class by bourgeois
dictatorship that has been restored.

In actively defending our Muslim brothers and sisters who are now
under attack by the bourgeois state, we can explain to Muslim workers
that we do not support the restoration of the Morsi government not just
because of the many betrayals and atrocities it visited on its opponents
but because the “Morsi democracy” is really a different form of the
dictatorship of the bourgeoisie. (It’s worth mentioning that the same is
true for the US regime which imprisons greater percentage of its
population than any other country, doesn’t allow felons to vote, and
condones people like Trayvon Martin and Oscar Grant being gunned
down in the street.)

We as socialists are not for that either, but we are for uniting workers
across racial, ethnic, religious and gender lines to overthrow the rule of
the bourgeoisie, whether it’s hidden behind a military dictatorship
(Mubarak, Sisi) or behind a parliamentary shell (Morsi, Obama). We
must convince Muslim workers of the atrocities that Morsi committed in
attacking our Christian brothers and sisters. Socialists can organize a
defense against the military repression while engaging Muslim workers
about the basis of that defense which challenges religious and ethnic
sectarianism and attempts to politically and organizationally unite a
single workers movement. A movement whose aim to opposing and
eventually take down the coup government for the establishment of a
workers government and the overturning of imperial and capitalist
relations in Egypt. This must be followed by the subsequent spreading of
the socialist revolution throughout the region, and the world.
Of course we cannot be blind to the enormity of the task and how feeble
our forces are in arguing such a course and how politically distant the
working class is from such a vision.

Nevertheless, this is our path. It is the path of the political independence
of the working class in relation to the machinations of the bourgeoisie;
and it is the only path that can solve the economic and social crisis in
Egypt – socialist revolution.

This stands in sharp contrast to what the IWL is arguing in their article.
The mush of opposing a coup we support or rejecting a crackdown we
simultaneously justify.

Permanent Revolution? Does Egypt Fit?

We cannot fool ourselves into thinking this path is an easy one. The fact
is, there are no socialists of any weight providing the kind of leadership
we are calling for. In part because, like the IWL, socialists in Egypt and
across the globe have been completely confused by the developments in
Egypt (and throughout Middle East during the Arab Spring), and have
tried to paint the great moments of class struggle that are taking place in
socialist colors by saying they are part of a revolutionary process that
‘may’ lead to socialist revolution because it conforms to a process of
permanent revolution laid out by Trotsky in 1929.
Nothing could be further from the truth.

Postulates 2 and 3 of Trotsky’s Permanent Revolution states:
“With regard to countries with a belated bourgeois development,
especially the colonial and semi-colonial countries, the theory of the
permanent revolution signifies that the complete and genuine solution of
their tasks of achieving democracy and national emancipation is
conceivable only through the dictatorship of the proletariat as the leader
of the subjugated nation, above all of its peasant masses.”

Furthermore:

“Without an alliance of the proletariat with the peasantry the tasks of the
democratic revolution cannot be solved, nor even seriously posed. But
the alliance of these two classes can be realized in no other way than
through an irreconcilable struggle against the influence of the nationalliberal
bourgeoisie.”

Is that what is going on in Egypt? Is that what is taking place in any of
the regimes taken down by or threatened during the Arab
Spring? Absolutely not. Class struggle? Yes. But struggle thoroughly
led by sections of the national bourgeoisie and even sections of the petite
bourgeoisie. Not a single movement in any region of the Arab Spring has
an independent working class organization or expresses independent
working class demands. How do we know this? Well, there is no call for
socialist revolution in the face of any of these developments, no
establishment of workers councils, no moments of dual power and
finally, (and unlike in Trotsky’s day) no mass Communist Party rooted
in the working class in any of these countries, not even a single
movement led by independent trade unions.

As postulate 4 of Trotsky’s permanent revolution states:
“No matter what the first episodic stages of the revolution may be in the
individual countries, the realization of the revolutionary alliance between
the proletariat and the peasantry is conceivable only under the political
leadership of the proletariat vanguard, organized in the Communist
Party.”

All this should give us some pause as we assess the political and
organizational developments taking place within a region where struggle
is immense, but the movements, because of the weakness of the radical
Left, end up being manipulated by various sections of national
bourgeoisie and are even financed by sections of international
bourgeoisie through imperialism.

The failure of the IWL and the rest of the revolutionary Left to recognize
the decisive influence of the international and national bourgeoisie, and
their insistence on characterizing events in terms of a “permanent and
uninterrupted” revolutionary process, instead of clearly assessing events
as they unfold and charting a course independent of the bourgeoisie,
leads them to the path of opportunism. This is the path that the IWL
and most other revolutionaries are currently walking.
Size (and Implantation) Matters.

The challenge we face is that the number of socialists with a base in the
working class in Egypt, in the Middle East, or throughout the world, is
tiny in relation to the crisis workers now face. A small group of socialists
in Egypt would find it impossible to enact either the course of action the
IWL and others is suggesting: “a demand from this new civilian-military
government, the one that claims to be the “guardians of the people” an
immediate, really democratic and sovereign Constituent Assembly to
pass a program for the liberation of Egypt from the imperialist bonds.”
Beyond the absurdity of demanding a coup government of dictatorship to
call a “Constituent Assembly” and the confusion such a call would have in
the heads of the few workers who are listening; the real problem is the
idealist notion that ANY of this can be realized without the presence of a
mass revolutionary party with a mass working class base. Nothing of the
sort exists, in Egypt or anywhere for that matter. Proclamations such as
these, even if they were right, (and the IWL’s are not) are scraps of
paper without a mass party to implement it and to test it in practice. The
ideas might be founded on scientific socialism but the method is idealist
and hopelessly utopian.

A small set of socialists could, however, begin assembling a core of
workers and students around them who reject the military government,
the Morsi government and ethnic divisions being sown by the coup
government. Such a group might begin to build around them a cohort of
revolutionaries prepared to put forward an independent political line in
the face of the mass of confusion sown within our class by the
movement’s bourgeois leadership. But let’s be clear, these
revolutionaries must understand that this is a building operation, and
they will have limited impact on the course of the struggle given the scale
of the forces at play and the small size of their own organization. These
more modest aims would be hard to do and the pull of opportunism is
great, but our task is to make a working class revolution, not just
produce regime change of any sort.

Class struggle in Egypt is great, but is no surprise. We are
Marxists. Class struggle results from a class divided society. The real
story we should be telling in Egypt and to workers here in the US is the
tragedy of millions mobilized and acting for a better world, several times,
over only a few years and what does it produce without mass
revolutionary leadership and revolutionaries without a mass working
class base.

Well, you see it in Egypt. A coup government of reaction.
The project for building such an organization here in the US is an
immediate task that cannot be put off for a time when struggle picks
up. It is an essential task now both for the possibility of training a cadre
of socialists how to lead class struggle, and to building a larger
revolutionary party that has a relationship to, and eventually recruits, a
growing working class vanguard which will develop in that
struggle. Without that preliminary work, the kind of work done by the
Bolsheviks over decades in Russia, we will lose. That is the lesson of
Egypt and the Arab Spring. In our opinion, we should start telling it that
way.





ENJOYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY!




And Blessed Are The Ones Who Care For Their Fellow Men!

Egypt’s ‘Democratic’ Coup

Egypt’s ‘Democratic’ Coup

The Same Old ‘Remedy’ that Has Failed For Decades

by DEEPAK TRIPATHI

Recent events in Egypt mark a new phase in the country’s turbulent
politics. President Mohamed Morsi’s overthrow by the armed forces in
early July was decisive in the immediate run, ending a brief democratic
experiment with a Muslim Brotherhood politician in power. Beyond the
immediate outcome, the military takeover has thrown Egypt’s future
into uncertainty and caused further splits in society. While the
Brotherhood insists on Morsi’s reinstatement, an unlikely prospect, the
anti-Morsi coalition of liberals, secularists and Mubarak-era elites is
determined to move on. More than promises to hold elections, the
military’s future course of action is vague at best.

The coup would have been inconceivable without millions of anti-Morsi
Egyptians pouring out into the streets of Cairo and other cities. The
protests offered the generals a justification to intervene on “behalf of the
people.” To many, Morsi was his own worst enemy. In his short
presidential tenure since winning the election by a wafer-thin majority a
year ago, Morsi had alienated large sections of Egyptian society that had
either not voted for him, or had supported him reluctantly.
Egypt’s Christian minority, about 10 percent of the 85 million population,
felt threatened by the new constitution pushed through by President
Morsi, who was viewed as too Islamist and who had amassed too much
power in the presidency. Liberal and women’s groups were deeply
unhappy. The Morsi administration was unable to tackle the worsening
economy, betraying the hopes of many Egyptians. For them, the revolution that
toppled Hosni Mubarak was far from over. So, amid renewed demonstrations against Egypt’s
elected head of state, the military removed President Morsi on “behalf of the people.”

There are problems with this narrative, however. The truth is that the Egyptian people
are bitterly divided into the Morsi camp and the opposition, which in itself is fragmented. That
Morsi and the Muslim Brotherhood still enjoy substantial support among the poorest sections,
especially in the countryside, is not in doubt. In the wake of the military coup, large
demonstrations in support of the deposed president cannot be disregarded. And then the military
crackdown against the Brotherhood leadership.

In one of the bloodiest incidents in Egypt’s recent history, more than 50
Morsi supporters were killed when soldiers shot at a crowd, said to be
praying outside the headquarters of the Republican Guards. Bloodshed
continues on a daily basis. Morsi and other senior figures of the
Brotherhood are either in custody or at large. He is under investigation
for “spying, inciting violence and ruining the economy.” The leaders’
assets have been frozen.

These events do not bode well for Egypt and the wider Middle East. The
military is back in power, and the most significant political movement,
with grassroots support, is the target of repression. Leading opponents of
the Muslim Brotherhood are collaborating with the military. This
draconian political experiment has failed decade after decade in Egypt,
and the record of military coups leading to a smooth transition to real
democracy is poor. The same educated liberal-secular middle classes
that were in opposition to Morsi’s rule will soon be opposing the military
regime. It is only a matter of time.

The two greatest risks for Egypt and the region are further radicalization
and volatility. There are credible reports that the military overthrow of
President Morsi happened under the Obama administration’s close
watch. On July 6, the New York Times published an account of the final
hours of Morsi’s presidency, written by David D. Kirkpatrick and Mayy
El Sheikh. According to their account, the United States, through an Arab
foreign minister acting as emissary, made a final offer which would avoid
a military coup: the appointment of a new prime minister and cabinet
that would take over all legislative powers and replace Morsi’s chosen
provincial governors.

For Morsi, it was a coup in all but name, and he refused. A telephone call
between President Morsi’s top adviser, Essam el-Haddad, and President
Obama’s national security adviser, Susan Rice, followed. Rice informed
him that a military takeover was to begin. The State Department had no
comment on America’s role.

Washington’s response in the aftermath, and the announcement that the
United States would go ahead with the supply of F16 aircraft to the
military, suggest that Washington’s priority is to see “controlled change”
in Egypt. In President Obama’s preferred scenario, any
change will be under the supervision of the army, with a lesser role at
best for the Muslim Brotherhood in governance in future. Washington’s
latest remedy, in its fundamentals, is no different from the past, since
President Anwar Sadat broke with the Soviet Union in the 1970s, and
subsequently joined the U.S. alliance.


ENJOYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY!




And Blessed Are The Ones Who Care For Their Fellow Men!