Amateur Hour at the White House

Posted By Stephen Brown On February 10, 2011 

As strikes in Egypt have spread
<http://www.nytimes.com/2011/02/10/world/middleeast/10egypt.html?pagewanted=
2&hp> , violence has increased and demonstrators have widened their area of
protest in Cairo right up to the parliament building
<http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704858404576133630107794342.h
tml?mod=WSJ_World_MIDDLENews> , the White House responded to Egypt's
continuing problems by pressuring the Egyptian government to cancel the
country's 30-year-old emergency law - in the middle of a national emergency.

Continuing the White House's almost constant interference in Egypt's
internal affairs, Vice President Joe Biden telephoned
<http://www.nytimes.com/2011/02/10/world/middleeast/10egypt.html?pagewanted=
2&hp>  his Egyptian counterpart, Omar Suleiman, on Tuesday and asked him to
lift the emergency law, one of the most important tools the Egyptian
government possesses to prevent the country's slide into chaos and a
subsequent Muslim Brotherhood takeover.

"The government has not taken the necessary steps that the people of Egypt
need to see. That's why more and more people come out to register their
grievances," said White House spokesman Robert Gibbs as justification for
Biden's request, although negotiations between the government and opposition
have just begun.

The Biden phone call occurred after a week of foreign policy stumbling,
which saw a scrambling White House, surprised by the disturbances in Tunisia
and Egypt, waffle in its position regarding Egypt's political situation.
When the disturbances first broke out in the most important and populous
state in the Arab world, the White House at first backed the Egyptian
government, believing it could control the situation. Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton even called the Egyptian regime
<http://af.reuters.com/article/topNews/idAFJOE70O0KF20110125> "stable."

But on Monday last week, US envoy Frank Wiesner asked Egyptian President
Hosni Mubarak to resign, which Mubarak refused to do, since he rightly
believed his resignation would lead to chaos. Then, on Tuesday, in another
misstep; Obama personally phoned
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2011/02/01/AR201102010
6860.html>  Mubarak and essentially told his Egyptian counterpart it was
time to step aside. Mubarak once more declined to oblige, having just said
in a speech to the nation he would step down in September. Mubarak's
refusal, however, prompted strong words the following day from Gibbs, who
said: "Not September. Now means now."

On the weekend, the White House, however, backtracked on its policy
regarding Mubarak's immediate removal. Clinton told journalists removing
Mubarak too hastily would threaten the transition to democracy, while
Wiesner, who had just asked Mubarak a few days earlier to step down, said at
a conference in Munich: "President Mubarak's role remains extremely critical
in the days ahead."

Shlomo Averni, a former Israeli diplomat, sums up the impression the Obama
administration's diplomatic confusion has made in a column he wrote that was
excerpted in  <http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/MB10Ak02.html> Asia
Times: 

Many in Israel have been shocked and dismayed by the inconsistency,
bordering on amateurism, of the US response to events in Egypt. First the
president, then Hillary Clinton, secretary of state, then again the
president's special envoy (Frank Wiesner) to Hosni Mubarak, have oscillated
between distancing themselves from one of America's staunchest allies and
calling for him to step down, further calls for him to do it as soon as
possible and then, taking a U-turn, endorsing an "orderly transition" headed
by Omar Suleiman, his intelligence chief.

The Biden phone call represents another zag in the White House's constantly
shifting policy position. It indicates the administration has returned to
its position of a quick transition, which probably also involves Mubarak's
leaving, or at least his removal from the levers of power, since he is the
one most closely identified with this law. But besides the additional
turmoil the law's removal would bring to the already boiling Egyptian
streets by lessening the security forces' authority, it is astonishing the
White house has not taken into consideration the other negative effects its
lifting would have.

If Biden's suggestion were heeded, the most dangerous consequence would
involve the hundreds of religious extremists that were locked up in Egyptian
prisons under the emergency law. Its cancellation would mean they would
probably have to be released, which would only add gas to the Egyptian fire,
possibly even ignite a terrorism campaign.

Al Qadea recognises the great, destabilising influence these prisoners would
have on Egypt's already volatile situation and places a high value in
getting them out of jail. Al Qaeda's Iraqi affiliate has expressed this
priority by calling for attacks on Egyptian prisons
<http://af.reuters.com/article/topNews/idAFJOE71808S20110209>  to release
their comrades. Egyptian prisons have already been stormed and, after heavy
gun battles, dozens of religious extremists escaped. Al Qadea's Iraqi branch
has also called for the Egyptian protesters to wage jihad
<http://www.dawn.com/2011/02/09/al-qaeda-in-iraq-calls-egypt-protesters-to-w
age-jihad.html> , the first such call by the terrorist organization.

Just as dangerous, the lifting of the emergency law would see a curtailment
of the powers of the intelligence agencies that were responsible for putting
the religious extremists in prison in the first place. Since these
intelligence agencies are the Islamists' true enemies in Egypt, the
extremists would like nothing better than to see them weakened, so they can
go about their sinister work of taking over the country. If Egypt is to
experience a peaceful transition to a post-Mubarak government, it is
essential that these intelligence agencies remain in place with their
current powers intact.

To its credit, the Egyptian government did not acquiesce to Biden's request
to cancel the emergency law. Unlike the White House, it is familiar with
Egyptian society and culture and is well aware of the danger this action
would involve. Such a retreat would represent weakness to the regime's
opponents and lead to many other demands, which would precipitate a descent
into chaos. One does not have to look any further than Pakistan and Somalia
to realise Islamists thrive in chaotic societies. Egypt would be no
different. The Muslim Brotherhood is waiting in the wings to take over. And
it is not the non-violent, democracy-respecting, purely religious
organization leftist and liberal media outlets are portraying it to be.

Biden's misplaced phone call not only reveals the extent the Obama
administration has turned its back on Egypt's government, but it is showing
the world it does not pay to be a long-time ally of America. In the
<http://www.nytimes.com/2011/02/09/world/middleeast/09diplomacy.html> New
York Times, John Kerry, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee,
is quoted as saying the Egyptian crisis has caused America's other allies to
question "what sort of longevity there is to the notion of alliances." Since
coming into office in 2009, Obama has treated Israel shabbily and betrayed
America's allies in Eastern Europe in favour of Russia over the installation
of an anti-nuclear deterrent. And in an unprecedented act of betrayal, it
has recently been learned
<http://www.jewishworldreview.com/cols/sowell020811.php3?printer_friendly> ,
Obama told the Russians the size of the British nuclear arsenal in exchange
for their signature on the START treaty.

Interestingly, besides Israel, a
<http://www.nytimes.com/2011/02/09/world/middleeast/09diplomacy.html> New
York Times story reveals it is America's other Arab allies in the Middle
East, Saudi Arabia, Jordan and the United Arab Emirates, who, also fearing
instability, are asking Obama to go slow during the transition period in
Egypt and "not to cut loose .Hosni Mubarak, too hastily, or throw its weight
behind the democracy movement in a way that could further destabilize the
region." The Times story says "few voices have been as urgent, insistent or
persuasive" as these. Since stability in Egypt is essential to regional
peace, one can only hope the White House will listen to these voices from
the Muslim world, since it appears to be deaf to all others.

  _____  

Article printed from FrontPage Magazine: http://frontpagemag.com

URL to article:
http://frontpagemag.com/2011/02/10/amateur-hour-at-the-white-house/

 



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