http://www.aawsat.net/2013/04/article55297718

ritten by : Tariq Alhomayed 
on : Wednesday, 3 Apr, 2013 
0
The Gulf Needs to Contain the Muslim Brotherhood 
As soon as the first direct commercial flight between Egypt and Iran in 34 
years took off, there was renewed talk about how the Gulf States need to 
contain Egypt. What this meant was offering the Brotherhood financial aid to 
overcome their major dilemmas. Such rhetoric does not indicate political 
rationality; rather, it involves blatant hypocrisy.

Until recently, the Gulf states were often accused of supporting the Mubarak 
regime. Despite popular indignation against the former Egyptian ruler, such 
rhetoric continued to prevail until the eruption of the January 25 revolution. 
This same rhetoric was also adopted by the US administration, as demonstrated 
through press leaks. Today, Brotherhood supporters request that the Gulf states 
should financially support the Egyptian Brotherhood, under the pretext that 
declining to do so would push the Brotherhood into the arms of Iran. This in 
spite of the fact that the Brotherhood is repressing and marginalizing a 
considerable portion of Egyptian society, instead of resorting to pragmatic 
political solutions that could unify the different classes and factions in 
Cairo. The best description I heard of what is happening in Egypt came from an 
Arab prime minister, who said, “President Mursi is acting as if he came to 
power through a coup d’état, not through the polls.” There is sufficient 
evidence of this, given that Egypt’s democratic apparatuses are harassing the 
TV satirist Dr. Bassem Yousef over allegedly insulting the president.

Given that only a few days ago the Free Syrian Army targeted an Iranian 
aircraft transporting weapons to the forces of Bashar Al-Assad in order to kill 
Syrians, Muslim Brotherhood adherents should be condemning commercial flights 
between Egypt and Iran. Instead, its adherents are holding the Gulf states 
responsible for Egypt’s Brotherhood being in the arms of Iran’s mullahs. In 
fact, this is mere political hypocrisy. Admirers of Egypt should insist that 
the Muslim Brotherhood takes responsibility for what is happening in Egypt, 
instead of seeking to intimidate and exploit the Gulf states by threatening to 
transform Egypt into a Shi’ite or Safawi land.

The story of containment through support is not new. It was previously tested 
several times by the Gulf states in the region, and all attempts were a 
complete failure—whether in the name of Arabism or Islam. The attempts at 
financial and political containment were complete failures, whether by Saddam 
Hussein, Bashar Al-Assad, Bashir in Sudan, Saleh in Yemen, Yasser Arafat, and 
then Hamas, the Taliban, or Islamist groups including the Muslim Brotherhood. 
This was made particularly clear with the liberation of Kuwait following its 
occupation by Iraq. Similarly, the experience of containing and backing false 
resistance, especially Hezbollah in Lebanon, which even sought assistance from 
Turkey, was also a complete failure. So why should the Gulf states today repeat 
a policy that has proven to be an abject failure again and again and in 
different guises?

Today, Egypt’s admirers—if they are truthful—should blame the Brotherhood’s 
failed policies, which have put Cairo in a position whereby it is now begging 
for international aid. Instead of criticizing the Gulf states, they should turn 
their attention to the exclusionary policies that the Brotherhood is carrying 
out against a broad category of the Egyptian people; they must also criticize 
Egypt for being in the arms of Iran even as it champions the crimes Assad is 
committing against the Syrian people.


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