Typically barbaric, backwards Muslims.

 

B

 

THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

.  MIDDLE EAST NEWS 

.  AUGUST 10, 2011 


Egypt's Rulers Stoke Xenophobia 


*       By
<http://online.wsj.com/search/term.html?KEYWORDS=YAROSLAV+TROFIMOV&bylinesea
rch=true> YAROSLAV TROFIMOV 

CAIRO-In the final days of President Hosni Mubarak's regime, Egypt's state
media whipped up a xenophobic frenzy not seen here since the 1950s, blaming
the revolution on alien plots and inciting vigilante mobs to assault and
detain scores of foreigners.

After a lull, Egypt's new military rulers are increasingly using the same
tactic: portraying pro-democracy activists as spies and saboteurs, blaming
the country's economic crisis and sectarian strife on foreign infiltrators,
and blasting the U.S. for funding agents of change.

As a result, connections with the U.S. and other Western countries have
turned toxic just as the largest Arab country is struggling with a rocky
transition to democracy.

Dozens of Westerners, including tourists, reporters and Cairo residents,
have been rounded up on the streets and delivered to police stations and
military checkpoints by mobs of volunteer spy catchers in recent weeks.
Almost all were quickly freed, with the exception of Ilan Grapel, an
Israeli-American law student who has been incarcerated since June on
suspicion of being a Mossad agent dispatched to Cairo to sow unrest.

State-run October magazine on its July 31 cover depicted U.S. envoy Anne
Patterson stoking unrest and called her 'Ambassador From Hell.'

The military-inspired xenophobia campaign has been amplified by resurgent
Islamists, who are traditionally hostile to any infidel influence in the
country, and jingoistic reports in parts of the Egyptian media.

"Any relation with the foreigners is dangerous now," says Hafez Abu Saada,
chairman of the Egyptian Organization for Human Rights. "First they've
started spreading incitement against foreigners, making people fear them.
Now, the conspiracy theories have moved onto anyone in Egypt working with
international organizations. This is a strategy to control civil society."

Though the country receives $1.3 billion in military aid from the U.S. every
year, Egypt's ruling generals were particularly incensed by the Senate
confirmation testimony of the new American ambassador to Cairo, Anne
Patterson. She told lawmakers in June that the U.S. had already distributed
some $40 million to fund Egypt's democratic transition and civil society.

Egyptian generals have repeatedly condemned as traitors nongovernment
organizations that accept American money, and Cairo prosecutors have started
an inquiry into these NGOs.

Greeting Ms. Patterson the week of her arrival in Cairo, the July 31 issue
of the state-run news magazine October featured on its cover a depiction of
the ambassador using blazing U.S. cash to ignite a bundle of dynamite
wrapped in an American flag and planted in Tahrir Square, the revolution's
ground zero.


Egypt's Ruling Generals in Their Own Words:


"The Armed Forces call upon the respectable patriots among the people to
refuse foreign funding, and to ask themselves about the objectives of this
funding." 
--Maj. Gen. Mamdouh Shaheen, assistant minister of defense for legal
affairs. July 2011. 

"The Supreme Council of the Armed Forces calls upon all the different
sections of the population to be vigilant and not to be led astray by a
suspicious plot that seeks to destabilize Egypt." 
--SCAF Communique No. 69, July 2011. 

"We see four foreigners arrested for attempting to take pictures in the area
of the Suez canal, and then the gas pipeline is bombed for the fourth
time.... Across the country, in Alexandria, you also find two foreigners
taking pictures. And then you come to Cairo and find a foreigner standing on
the Sixth of October bridge and taking photos of the central military
zone... When you put all these incidents together, it seems designed to
implicate the army or to prompt foreign powers to say: 'The canal is an
international waterway and it is our responsibility to protect it.' " 
--Maj. Gen. Hassan al Roweiny, commander of the central military zone that
includes Cairo, in a July TV appearance. 

The title: "Ambassador From Hell Is Setting Tahrir on Fire."

The acrimony over U.S. pro-democracy funding prompted Washington to recall
the U.S. Agency for International Development chief of mission in Cairo,
James Bever, who is leaving this month after only 10 months on the job, a
U.S. official said.

The continued detention of Mr. Grapel has further aggravated U.S.-Egyptian
relations and has been repeatedly raised in meetings with senior Egyptian
generals, the U.S. official added. Mr. Grapel and the Israeli government
have denied the spying allegations.

In another irritant, the Egyptian military recently said it won't allow
Western observers during the parliamentary elections scheduled for November,
saying such a presence would violate Egyptian sovereignty.

"In the Egyptian psyche, the West represents occupation, imperialism and
colonialism," explains retired Maj. Gen. Ahmed Wahdan, the former chief of
operations of the Egyptian army.

Even the more liberal parties vying for power are joining the anti-Western
chorus. "America does not want for Egypt to become the largest democratic
country in the region," says Al-Sayed al-Badawy, chairman of the secular and
liberal Wafd party. "The aim of American funding for Egyptian NGOs is to
create chaos and to overthrow Egyptian values and traditions."

The new mood is also affecting the country's economic policies just as Egypt
is struggling with the postrevolutionary drop in tourism and foreign
investment. In June, Egypt's then finance minister, Samir Radwan, negotiated
a $5.2 billion standby loan from the International Monetary Fund and the
World Bank. He describes the loan as favorable, with "no conditionality
whatsoever" and a maximum interest rate of 2.5%-compared with 4.5% demanded
by Qatar.

Yet, news of the plan sparked a nationalist outcry in the media and among
political parties. "People were still thinking about the old IMF, the new
type of colonialism, and all that hot air," laments Mr. Radwan. By the end
of June, the military council vetoed the IMF agreement as contrary to
Egypt's national interests.

Mr. Radwan has since lost his job in a cabinet reshuffle that also abolished
the investment ministry and put an end to the country's privatization
program.

Foreign involvement in the system of crony capitalism under Mr. Mubarak was
seen by many Egyptians as unfair, and the country's new rulers must take
this into account, explains the new finance minister, Hazem El-Beblawi.
"Deep in our hearts we are very clear that no country can live alone," Mr.
El-Beblawi says. But, he adds, "the immediate popular feeling is resentment,
and sometimes you have to listen to the feelings of the people."

Write to Yaroslav Trofimov at  <mailto:yaroslav.trofi...@wsj.com>
yaroslav.trofi...@wsj.com 

Copyright 2011 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved

This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. Distribution and
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