In a scene reminiscent of Assad’s
Syrian brutal repression of his people, Egypt’s security forces open fire,
gunned down, killed and wounded many
Muslim Brotherhood supporters as they were praying Subh – dawn prayers. Once again, the military is betraying the
revolution.
THE COUP
Egypt’s military has once again further empowered the
forces of the "deep state" -
the makhzen, the remnants,
Mubarak’s holdovers the filul - those groups of politicians,
generals and business owners that were allied to the regime of Hosni Mubarak,
and who have continued to command influence among the poor and ignorant. These well-financed groups played an important
part in persistently inciting against President Morsi over the past year, and the
mass anti-Morsi demonstrations. These forces are coming back with vengeance,
after the revolution and after Islamist-led administration tried to strip them
of their power, interests and influence.
The military has in achieving the
coup defined itself as the protector of Egypt’s “deepest state”, the
political and economic elite that surrounds, is managed by and serves it.
Egypt’s general as always claims
that the military does not want to play a political role or to rule Egypt but the
military said that last time too, and yet continued to rule quite brutally for
more than another year until President Morsi managed to send them to their
barracks.
The military in control means that US influence is great because the Egyptian military is wholly
dependent on the US for economic funding and support. The Egyptian military
receives $1.3bn in US tax dollars every year in full and on time.
THE TAMARRUD
The opposition now believe if
they mobilize a discontented majority mass , and if the military elites supports
them, they can overthrow any elected
leadership, throw the elected leaders in prison, and reset an entire political
process.
The January 25 revolution
repudiated the Mubarak regime, while the June 30 revolution has handed back the
reins of power to an anti-Muslim Brotherhood coalition of Mubarak remnants and secular
elites supported by most Copts.
To overthrow an elected president
and government by assessment based on Morsi’s competence is so questionable because the secular opposition, including the
Mubarak residue and the Coptic minority, were ever unwilling to live in an
Egypt that was governed by Islamists. The old Mubarak sectors of the government
that remained in place, including the judiciary, the police, and the interior
ministry, threw every possible roadblock in the path of Morsi’s governing
policies.
Motivations of those who demonstrated against continued Muslim
Brotherhood rule had to be diverse. Anxieties at the economic state of the
country, or that the Muslim Brotherhood was simply incompetent in government.
Others were fearful of ikhwanat al-daula (Ikhwanisation of the
state) would lead to Islamist
domination. Many Christians felt citizenship was at stake. Others for freedom
of expression in the face of the Muslim
Brotherhood. Meanwhile the security state’s semi-clandestine campaign bolstered
the Tamarrud movement. The military or previously called SCAF strategy comes at a terrible price in lives lost during
the inevitable strife that follows.
Coup leaders conveniently ignore
the fact that Egypt has suffered from a general lawlessness that began once the
uprising against Hosni Mubarak ended, and well before Morsi's term began. Morsi
government did not have complete control over corrupt, Mubarak-era security
forces - many of whom have been openly and secretly protesting against Morsi.
Egypt's opposition are
responsible for much of the organized violence witnessed recently. The
presidential palace was repeatedly firebombed last December, and other
government buildings, 30 Muslim Brotherhood offices, and four Muslim
Brotherhood buses have been attacked and burnt. The victims have always been
Brotherhood supporters.
Coup leaders lament the state of
the Egyptian economy, placing the blame squarely on Morsi. But the Morsi administration has had to endure
constant instability, which has discouraged investment and tourism. The first
calls for a "revolution" to topple Morsi began last August, just
weeks after he was elected, and the opposition have proclaimed their very intention
outrightly then to bring Morsi down by whatever means.
The coup leaders are determined to again eradicate or drive the Muslim
Brotherhood underground. They would dispose
the Freedom and Justice party stalwarts with the starkest of alternatives,
insurgency or surrender. The new temporary leadership is moving toward extreme polarization
and the political suppression of the Islamically oriented. None of them wants to acknowledge Morsi’s
posture in rejecting the military takeover, urging nonviolent resistance and Morsi’s
action within the law.
The Tamarrud rebels are championing
Mubarak and his regime’s core legacy – “anything but the Brotherhood”, yasqut
yasqut hukm al-murshid - a call to overthrow the Muslim Brotherhood's
Supreme Guide. Mubarak must now be a cheerier for “his children” has
come out in the open. For all of their apparent
and vociferous hatred of Mubarak and his
regime, the Tamarrud rebels have shown to be the faithful followers of his core
legacy – anything but the Brotherhood.
The Tamarrud protesters abandoned
two key democratic principles- respect for the ballot box and the non-intervention
of the military in politics. If the Tamarrud movement really had 22 million supporters, then that
should have been translated into votes in parliamentary elections scheduled by
President Morsi for later this year, to bring Morsi down.
This is not a victory for freedom
but for the old regime, the filul, or
the makhzen, the Egyptian “deep-state”-
a bureaucratic, military, and business elite, that never really went away. Liberal
secularists in Egypt have decided that the offer from the “deep state” is
preferable to a full democracy, which denies a
level playing field for the Muslim Brotherhood.
It envisages a “democracy” for
everyone except Islamists although Egypt has a large community of Muslim
believers. It is a ridiculous denial of the Brotherhood in Egyptian society and narrative, which is a hugely
popular and socially-embedded movement. President Morsi and the Brotherhood,
after undergoing long and harsh persecution and its own internal debates
endorsed the democratic electoral process. Surely, to be a Muslim democrat is
not to be hopelessly naive.
The world may like to but can
never forget Algeria 1991-92 and the Palestinian elections of 2006. The stinging
perception is that Islamists winning the ballot box keep being toppled undemocratically.
This time, the sitting president
was not a US-backed military dictator kept in power by US funding and political
support. This time, the deposed president Morsi was Egypt’s first democratically and
popularly elected president in several generations.
THE COUP PLAYERS
The transitional leadership is symbolically
shown by figures like the Coptic Pope
and the Sheikh al-Azhar who were stalwarts of the old regime. The interim
President, Adly Mansour was the first Mubarak
appointee to the Supreme Constitutional Court. Every judge in that court was appointed
by the Mubarak regime. Adly Mansour remains a hold-over from the Mubarak
dictatorship and can never be a representative of the revolution.
As for El Baradei, and senior
Tamarrud leaders, they rode “democracy” on the back of army tanks. El Baradei
himself is one of the failed candidates for the presidency. It is glaringly ironic to see Mohamed El Baradei
reject popular elections claiming it was conducted under military rule, only to
accept a direct appointment by none other than the military themselves. The
appointment of El Baradei is said to appease the US and everyone knows that he served
them well, allowing for the invasion of Iraq when he was in the IAEA. El Baradei
has so little support that he needed the army to put him in office
El-Baradei should have been the
first to call for Morsi’s release. But neither El-Baradei nor Sabbahi will be or
can be iconic leaders. So they support the anti-Ikhwan purge because detained Islamist leaders seem to
have no inviolable rights and Islamist politicians are destined to be imprisoned.
The opposition compact was simply
to bring down the Morsi government with no clear leader, no agreed and no clear
platform. Its diverse and ideologically contradictory makeup is disturbing. Participants
include Mubarak holdovers from the military and judiciary to police, security,
bureaucracy, former losing presidential candidates like Amr Musa; Egypt's
illiberal secularists; disaffected April Spring youth; religious leaders, Grand
Sheikh of al-Azhar and himself a former member of the Mubarak-led National
Democratic Party as well the heads of the Salafist Nour Party and the Coptic church.
It is indeed a strange bed to
have the Copts, the extreme secularists and the salafists sleeping together.
THE IKHWAN
The Brotherhood, for decades
living in siege and faced with repression, learned to survive and prove the only
significant opposition during the Mubarak years. The Brotherhood had deliberated, debated heatedly, dithered and hesitated on whether to take the leading role in the post revolutionary order. It was late
in the stage that it took on a highly political risk and went ahead to contest all
the elections. The Brotherhood through the Freedom and Justice Party and its
candidate Dr Morsi won all 14 rounds of voting at legislative, presidential elections and constitutional
referendums proving itself worthy of winning the ballot box.
The Morsi government attempted at
governance, in building a representative coalition in the very complex
political and economic climate post January 25. The risk and gamble of
transitioning in a post revolutionary Egypt were tremendous where so many “deep
state” institutions and agencies remained part of the Mubarak legacy. Despite various accomplishments, the Morsi
government and the Brotherhood were unable to move quickly and effectively to
garner sufficient popular support which enabled extreme anti-Brotherhood factions,
bent on bringing it down, to mobilize diverse sectors of society littered with suspicion
and grievances.
The Ikhwan has to stay the
course, remain steadfast and persevere despite all the severe repressions and provocations
for they have to respect the fact that they were the choice of the people of
Egypt to lead them and to retrieve a
stolen revolution.
(gathered from various news reports)
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