Egypt’s Transition Has Failed: New Age of Military Dictatorship in Wake of
Massacre<http://www.juancole.com/2013/08/transition-military-dictatorship.html>

Posted on 08/15/2013 by Juan Cole

The horrible bloodshed in Egypt on Wednesday marked a turning point in the
country’s modern history, locking it in to years of authoritarian
paternalism and possibly violent faction fighting. The country is ruled by
an intolerant junta with no respect for human life. Neither the Brotherhood
nor the military made the kind of bargain and compromises necessary for a
successful democratic transition. It is true that some armed Brotherhood
cadres killed some 50 troops and police, and that some 20 Coptic Christian
churches were attacked, some burned. But the onus for the massacre lies
with the Egyptian military. Mohamed Elbaradei, who resigned as interim vice
president for foreign affairs, had urged that the Brotherhood sit-ins be
gradually and peacefully whittled Way at. His plan was Egypt’s only hope of
reconciliation. Now it has a feud.

Egypt began a possible transition to parliamentary democracy in February of
2011 after the fall of Hosni Mubarak. Although the military had made a
coup, the aged Field Marshall Hussein Tantawi was not interested in ruling
himself and sought a civilian transitional government that the military
could live with. He wanted guarantees that the new government would not
interfere with the military’s own commercial enterprises and attempted to
assert a veto over the new constitution lest it veer toward Muslim
fundamentalism.

The major political forces said they were committed to free, fair and
transparent parliamentary elections. The Muslim Brotherhood, the best
organized political group, pledged not to run candidates in all
constituencies so as to show they weren’t greedy for power, and said they
would not run anyone for president lest they give the impression they were
seeking control of all three branches of government. The Brotherhood said
it wanted a consensual constitution.

Behind the scenes, generals like Omar Suleiman (d. 2012) were furious about
the constraints being lifted from the Brotherhood, convinced that they had
a secret armed militia and that they were angling to make a coup over time.
His views turn out to be more widespread than was evident on the surface.

In 2011-2012, the revolutionary youth, the liberals and the Brotherhood
made common cause to return the military to their barracks.

*But then the Brotherhood broke all of its promises and threw a fright into
everyone– youth, women, Coptic Christians, Liberals, leftists, workers, and
the remnants of the old regime. The Brotherhood cheated in the
parliamentary elections, running candidates for seats set aside for
independents. Then they tried to pack the constitution-writing body with
their parliamentarians, breaking another promise. They reneged on the
pledge to have a consensual constitution.*

*Once Muhammad Morsi was elected president in June, 2012, he made a
slow-motion coup.
<http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/how_egypts_michele_bachmann_became_president_and_plunged_the_country_into_c/>He
pushed through a Brotherhood constitution in December of 2012 in a
referendum with about a 30% turnout in which it garnered only 63%– i.e.
only a fifth of the country voted for it. The judges went on strike rather
than oversee balloting, so the referendum did not meet international
standards. When massive protests were staged he had them cleared out by the
police, and on December 6, 2012, is alleged to have sent in Brotherhood
paramilitary to attack leftist youth who were demonstrating. There were
deaths and injuries.*

*Morsi then invented a legislature for himself, declaring by fiat that the
ceremonial upper house was the parliament. He appointed many of its
members; only 7% were elected. They passed a law changing the retirement
age for judges from 70 to 60, which would have forced out a fourth of
judges and allowed Morsi to start putting Brotherhood members on the bench
to interpret his sectarian constitution. He was building a one party state.
His economic policies hurt workers and ordinary folk. He began prosecuting
youth who criticized him, his former allies against the military. 8
bloggers were indicted. Ahmad Maher of The April 6 youth group was charged
with demonstrating (yes). Television channels were closed. Coptic school
teachers were charged with blasphemy. Morsi ruled from his sectarian base
and alienated everyone else. He over-reached.*

*In my view Morsi and the Brotherhood leadership bear a good deal of the
blame for derailing the transition, since a democratic transition is a pact
among various political forces, and he broke the pact. If Morsi was what
democracy looked like, many Egyptians did not want it. Gallup polls trace
this disillusionment.*

But the Egyptian military bears the other part of the blame for the failed
transition. Ambitious officers such as Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, Morsi’s
Minister of Defense, were secretly determined to undo Morsi’s victory at
the polls. They said they wanted him to compromise with his political
rivals, but it seems to me they wanted more, they wanted him neutered. When
the revolutionary youth and the workers and even many peasants staged the
June 30 demonstrations, al-Sisi took advantage of them to stage a coup.
Ominously, he then asked for public acclamation to permit him to wage a war
on terror, by which he means the Brotherhood. I tweeted at the time: “Dear
General al-Sisi: when activists call for demonstrations, that is activism.
When generals do, that is Peronism.”

Although al-Sisi said he recognized an interim civilian president, supreme
court chief justice Adly Mansour, and although a civilian prime minister
and cabinet was put in place to oversee a transition to new elections,
al-Sisi is in charge. It is a junta, bent on uprooting the Muslim
Brotherhood. Without buy-in from the Brotherhood, there can be no
democratic transition in Egypt. And after Black Wednesday, there is
unlikely to be such buy-in, perhaps for a very long time. Wednesday’s
massacre may have been intended to forestall Brotherhood participation in
civil politics.<http://arabist.net/blog/2013/8/14/it-only-gets-worse-from-here>
Perhaps
the generals even hope the Brotherhood will turn to terrorism, providing a
pretext for their destruction.

The military and the Brotherhood are two distinct status groups, with their
own sources of wealth, which have claims on authority in Egypt. Those
claims were incompatible.


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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