http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/MID-01-130213.html


Egygpt, Syria - it's just the end of them
By Spengler 

The unthinkable is happening in the Arab world, and it's not as awful as 
advertised, unless you have the misfortune to live there. Two years and 60,000 
casualties into Syria's civil war, the foreign ministries of the West have 
nothing to show for their peacemaking efforts except a wad of airline and hotel 
receipts. 

Egypt is proceeding with grim inevitability towards financial exhaustion, and 
the government has just announced a three-pita-per-day bread ration. Libya has 
disintegrated, and Tunisia, the poster-child for moderate Islamism, looks ugly 
after the murder earlier this month of opposition leader Chokri Belaid. Yet the 
global consequences are negligible. 

Excluding the Gulf States, the combined gross domestic product of the major 
Arab countries is a bit over US$600 billion, about the same as Switzerland's.

   

The disintegration of the Arab world is a great human tragedy but a minor 
economic nuisance. 

Two years after I warned that the so-called Arab Spring arose from economic 
failure and portended future disasters, a warning I reiterated in 15 subsequent 
essays for this publication, it has come to the attention of the foreign policy 
community that Egypt's economy is in a tailspin. 

At the Council on Foreign relations blog, Elliot Abrams and Steven Cook 
recently warned about the country's economic freefall. Dr Cook accused me of 
"wanting Egypt to fail", blaming the messenger for the ill-tidings. That is a 
paltering misrepresentation; I do not want Egypt to fail (although I am 
gratified to see Steven Cook fail). Similar commentaries came from Felix Imonti 
at the National Interest February 7, and Marc Lynch at Foreign Policy on 
January 31. 

Yet the tone of these dire warnings is more elegiac than exhortative. The 
foreign policy community appears numb, like the Titanic passengers listening to 
the band play Abide With Me in the ship's final moments. At the May 2011 Group 
of Eight summit meeting in Deauville in France, Western leaders spoke of a $20 
billion aid package for Egypt and Tunisia, and then French president Nicholas 
Sarkozy told the press that the amount might double. 

As Egypt's foreign exchange reserves run out and subsidized bread becomes 
scarce in the streets, though, the foreign policy punditeska is offering no 
emergency programs, no calls for international conferences. Instead of 
Sarkozy's $20 or $40 billion, the International Monetary Fund is dickering with 
Egypt's President Mohamed Morsi for a mere $4.8 billion - barely two months' 
financing requirements for Egypt - and demanding in return drastic cuts in the 
subsidies that keep body and soul together for the poorer half of the 
population. 

Egypt's Islamist government has nothing to offer its people but hunger - not 
belt-tightening, but malnutrition. The country's Minister of Supply, Bassem 
Auda, told a press conference February 10 that the bread subsidy would be cut 
to three pita loaves per capita (perhaps 400 calories), the Egypt Daily News 
reported. Half of the $3 billion annual bread subsidy is wasted on the black 
market, Auda said. The trouble is that millions of Egyptians subsist on the 
half that isn't wasted. The newspaper interviewed some ordinary Egyptians after 
Auda's announcement: 
  "Three loaves per person is not enough," a middle-aged woman who preferred to 
remain anonymous said. "I can be content with three loaves; I have diabetes, 
yet my children each eat at least five loaves per day." Managing a family which 
consists of seven members, the woman said she pays 150 piastres [22 US cents] 
per day, the worth of 30 loaves of bread. "A co-worker in the hospital I work 
in eats around 10 loaves per day," the woman said. 

  "Three loaves of bread would've been enough back in the day when the loaf was 
large and well-baked," said Ahmed Al-Gazzar, a middle-aged street vendor. "Now 
what they sell us isn't bread; it's more like biscuits. I eat over six loaves 
per day and remain hungry." Al-Gazzar said that his two children eat around 
eight loaves of bread per day. "The stomach is never thankful," Al-Gazzar said, 
citing a popular expression. "If they determine bread rations, people will go 
mad! They want to share even our food? Are we animals so that they determine 
our food rations?"
Most alarming is the emergence of a black market in Egyptian pounds, with a 
street rate February 10 of 6.95 pounds to the US dollar, against an official 
rate of 6.72. Reuters reported February 10, "A run on Egypt's pound has left 
foreign currency in short supply and driven some dealers into the streets in 
search of people with US dollars to sell, spawning a new black market." 
Currency deflation (by nearly 15% since the beginning of this year) will 
translate quickly into higher prices for imported goods, including half of the 
country's food supply. 

The punditeska has duly taken note of Egypt's unfolding economic disaster, but 
has proposed nothing. Morsi visited Germany in late January and came away 
empty-handed. Germany's government deplored the Egyptian president's 
characterization of Jews as "the descendants of apes and pigs". The Germans 
know just what that means and cannot ignore it. United States President Barack 
Obama has asked congress to renew Egypt's $1.8 billion in annual aid, but 
two-thirds of that is military assistance. After a 2010 video of Morsi's 
Jew-hating rant surfaced, the US Congress is less willing than ever to fund 
Egypt. 

Even if the White House wanted more aid, it could not get it. With the fiscal 
crises that nearly took down the European Community last year and that remain 
the subject of bitter wrangling in the United States, no-one wants to hear 
about multi-billion-dollar donations to Egypt. 

We have gone from "Shock and Awe" to "aw, shucks", in the bon mot of blogger 
Ruth King. What the foreign policy community considered unthinkable - state 
failure in Egypt and Syria - is proceeding unimpeded by any helpful 
suggestions, let alone action, from the world community. The only leader to 
offer aid to Egypt recently was Iranian President Mahmud Ahmadinejad, who 
visited Cairo on February 5 and promised a "big credit line" on condition that 
Sunni Egypt ally with Shi'ite Iran against the West. The man has a sense of 
humor. Ahmadinejad's visit, moreover, underscores the reluctance of the Sunni 
Gulf monarchies to aid a Muslim Brotherhood regime that they consider a danger 
to their own longevity. 

There will be consequences, but they will be inconvenient rather than 
intractable. Greece and Italy might be flooded with economic refugees. Egypt 
might try to annex Libyan oil. Sophisticated Egyptian arms might find their way 
to Gaza. Syria's chemical arsenal might get into the wrong hands (although the 
United States, Israel and Russia seem able to collaborate on containing this 
particular threat). 

What about Iran?
Sometime this year, I believe, either the United States or Israel will attack 
Iran's nuclear weapons program, and the ripple effects in the region will be 
minor. After Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khameini rejected the American 
offer of direct talks on the country's nuclear ambitions, a successful Israeli 
strike (let alone a more devastating American attack) would humiliate the 
Tehran regime. Nothing fails in the Middle East like failure, and Iran's 
capacity to retaliate will be far weaker than feared. 

There is nothing the Obama administration would like less than a military 
solution to the Iranian nuclear problem. After Khameini's confrontational 
statement, though, it is harder for the White House to stop the Israelis from 
acting (unless, of course, the US acts first). The White House and all its 
appointees, including incoming Secretary of State John Kerry, never have 
deviated from a policy of prevention as opposed to containment. The world 
community as represented by the International Atomic Energy Agency notes as a 
matter of record Iran's plans to speed up uranium enrichment. 

Iran's ability to retaliate against a raid on its nuclear capacity, though, is 
limited. Hezbollah will fire some rockets at northern Israel but will refrain 
from an all-out assault because it knows that this time the Israelis would do 
their utmost to annihilate the Iranian-allied militia. Iran might close the 
Straits of Hormuz by mining the entrance, but that would draw the United States 
into the conflict. The Pentagon's contingency plans for neutralizing an Iranian 
nuclear threat go far beyond air strikes against Iranian enrichment facilities, 
and include the destruction of Revolutionary Guard bases and oil refineries. 

Iranian cat's paws would commit a few terrorist atrocities, to be sure. But the 
Tehran government is well aware of Machiavelli's advice that if you set out to 
harm your enemy, make sure to harm him so severely that he cannot avenge 
himself. There is nothing Tehran can do to inflict serious harm on the West, 
but a great deal that the West can do to inflict catastrophic harm on Iran. In 
the worst case, other oil producers could replace most of its oil output in a 
short period of time. Were Iran to be shut out of the world market, the price 
of oil would jump to the detriment of the world economy, but Iran itself would 
starve. 

Oil prices would jump if either Israel or the US attacked any Iranian target, 
but the long-term effect on energy prices is likely to be small. 

Western governments should be drawing up plans for emergency humanitarian aid 
for Egypt and Syria, anticipating the flight of economic refugees to Europe. It 
seems odd for the United States to supply Egypt with updated F-16's, which only 
have trophy value for its military; Egypt cannot hope to win a war against 
Israel, and it doesn't (or shouldn't) have to fight its neighbors Libya and 
Sudan. Wheat would be a more appropriate American contribution. If the West 
cannot forestall state failure in Egypt, it should at least help to ameliorate 
the worst humanitarian consequences. 

Whatever the West decides to do, however, the Arab world will decline in 
importance in world affairs. The foreign policy establishment's disappointment 
at the failure of the Arab Spring has made it possible to question the 
long-term viability of the Muslim world. Washington Post columnist David 
Ignatius, for example, reported on February 11 on the American Enterprise 
Institute's Nicholas Eberstadt work on Muslim fertility, a year after Eberstadt 
published a widely-noted paper. Ignatius wrote: 
  The Arab world may be experiencing a youth bulge now, fueling popular 
uprisings in Tunisia, Egypt and elsewhere. But as Eberstadt notes, what's ahead 
over the next generation will probably be declines in the number of working-age 
adults and rapidly aging populations. The Arab countries are now struggling 
with what Eberstadt calls their "youthquake." But the coming dilemma, he notes, 
is "how these societies will meet the needs of their graying populations on 
relatively low income levels."
Of course, the fertility collapse in the Muslim world has been there for a 
decade and available to any casual browser of the United Nations population 
database. Phillip Longman noted in his 2004 book The Empty Cradle that Muslim 
fertility was falling faster than any other part of the world population. In 
September 2005 I argued in this space that the Muslim world was heading towards 
a demographic catastrophe: 
  By 2050, elderly dependents will comprise nearly a third of the population of 
some Muslim nations, notably Iran - converging on America's dependency ratio at 
mid-century. But it is one thing to face such a problem with America's per 
capita gross domestic product (GDP) of $40,000, and quite another to face it 
with Iran's per capita GDP of $7,000 - especially given that Iran will stop 
exporting oil before the population crisis hits. The industrial nations face 
the prospective failure of their pension systems. But what will happen to 
countries that have no pension system, where traditional society assumes the 
care of the aged and infirm? In these cases it is traditional society that will 
break down, horribly and irretrievably so. (See Demographics and Iran's 
imperial design, Asia Times Online, September 13, 2005.)
The path to ruin in Muslim countries takes different forms: Semper idem, sed 
non eodem modo (always the same, but never in the same way), as Heinrich 
Schenker liked to say. The Muslim world is divided between backward and 
extensively illiterate countries like Egypt who cannot feed their children, and 
literate countries like Iran and Turkey where there are few children to feed. 
Cultures that do not wish to exist cannot be dissuaded from destroying 
themselves. The best thing one can do for doomed cultures is not to belong to 
them. 

Spengler is channeled by David P Goldman. His book How Civilizations Die (and 
why Islam is Dying, Too) was published by Regnery Press in September 2011. A 
volume of his essays on culture, religion and economics, It's Not the End of 
the World - It's Just the End of You, also appeared last fall, from Van Praag 
Press. 

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