http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/egypt-yemen-challenge-some-us-ideas/2012/09/29/2bb61282-098d-11e2-858a-5311df86ab04_story.html?wpisrc=nl_headlines

Egypt, Yemen challenge some U.S. ideas
 
Mohamed Al-Sayaghi/Reuters - A boy covers his face with a strip of cloth 
reading "Only the Messenger of Allah" during a protest against the U.S. outside 
the home of Yemeni President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi in Sanaa. The demonstration 
was against an anti-Islamic video.


By Anne Gearan, Sunday, September 30, 2:33 AM 
When President Obama tried to simultaneously disavow the anti-Muslim YouTube 
video that sparked widespread anti-American protests and defend freedom of 
speech at the United Nations last week, he ran headlong into the new governing 
principles of old allies like Egypt and Yemen.

The presidents of Egypt and Yemen denounced the protesters’ violence in 
speeches to the U.N. General Assembly. But they were equally fervent in 
defending the religious outrage behind them and challenging Obama’s fulsome 
view of free speech.



 

Anti-U.S. protests across the globe: The protests that started outside the U.S. 
Embassy in Cairo have spread as far as India.



Juggling complicated coalitions and competing factions at home, both Muslim 
leaders made it clear that their brands of popularly chosen government do not 
look like the United States or share all of its values.

“We expect from others, as they expect from us, that they respect our cultural 
specifics and religious references and not seek to impose concepts or cultures 
that are unacceptable to us,” Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi told the U.N. 
gathering Wednesday.

Morsi, on the job three months, told the U.N. that the protests outside the 
U.S. Embassy in Cairo reflected the legitimate, and decidedly Islamic, voice of 
Egyptian popular will. And he effectively told Obama he would have to get used 
to new rules.

“Insults against the prophet of Islam, Muhammad, are not acceptable,” said 
Morsi, whose political roots lie in the Muslim Brotherhood. “We will not allow 
anyone to do this by word or by deed.” 

In an interview with The Washington Post on Saturday, Yemeni President Abed 
Rabbo Mansour Hadi sounded a similar note, saying freedom of speech does not 
constitute freedom to defame religious beliefs. “It should not be understood 
that freedom of expression is freedom of attacking others’ faith,” he said.

The cultural confrontation comes early in the U.S. relationship with a changed 
Middle East. Although billions of dollars in U.S. aid are still committed to 
Egypt, Libya and the other countries in the region, U.S. officials acknowledge 
that the money gives them less leverage than it once did.

The head of the House subcommittee that oversees foreign aid said Friday she 
was blocking $450 million in emergency U.S. assistance to Egypt sought by the 
administration. The decision by the subcommittee head, Rep. Kay Granger 
(R-Tex.), to halt the funds adds to the delay in normalizing aid after 
protesters attacked the U.S. Embassy in Cairo earlier this month.

At the United Nations, Obama said freedom of speech is a bedrock American 
principle. The video was repugnant, he said, but the reaction to it wholly 
unjustified.

“There are no words that excuse the killing of innocents,” Obama said. “There’s 
no video that justifies an attack on an embassy.”

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton picked up that theme Friday with 
remarks to nations pledged to support the popularly elected governments born of 
the Arab Spring.

“None of us can insulate ourselves from insult,” she said on the sidelines of 
the U.N. meeting. “In the time since I began speaking just minutes ago, more 
than 300 hours of video has been uploaded to YouTube. Some of it, no doubt, is 
vile. Some of it, no doubt, is offensive to my religion or yours. But we must 
not give these views power they do not deserve.”

In his remarks to the General Assembly, Yemen’s president turned the U.S. 
argument inside out with a demand for strict curbs on speech that insults 
religion. 

“There should be limits for the freedom of expression,” Hadi said, “especially 
if such freedom blasphemes the beliefs of nations and defames their figures.” 

The newly elected Tunisian president, Moncef Marzouki, vowed to crack down on 
Islamist extremists after they encouraged crowds to attack the U.S. Embassy in 
the capital, Tunis. Libyan President Mohamed Yusuf al-Magariaf promised similar 
steps against extremists in his country, where an attack on the U.S. mission in 
Benghazi led to the death of U.S. Ambassador J. Christopher Stevens and three 
other Americans.

But it was Morsi who best symbolized how things have changed.

Morsi is a former leader of the Muslim Brotherhood, a religious and political 
movement banned by former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, the longtime U.S. 
ally ousted last year as the biggest prize of anti-government protests in 
several Mideast nations.

U.S. relations with the former secular dictatorships were based on a hard-nosed 
preference for security and stability in a volatile region. 

Obama abandoned decades of U.S. policy when he yanked U.S. support for Mubarak, 
and his administration moved quickly to support democratic movements in several 
Mideast nations. 

But the U.S. emphasis on personal liberty and tolerance rings hollow to many 
Egyptians and others, who recall the former willingness of U.S. leaders to look 
the other way when grievous human rights abuses occurred.

Egypt’s secular pro-democratic opposition, with long ties to the United States, 
largely crumbled after the revolution. The well-organized Muslim Brotherhood, 
with practically no ties to a U.S. government, proved more sure-footed.


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