[The President has lots of discretion in foreign policy and his Republican
opposition shows little interest in the subject anyway. In the Middle East
that creates a vacuum - and a green light for the bad guys to fill it. df]

 

 

 <http://www.steynonline.com/content/view/3716/28> THE SUPERPOWER AS
SPECTATOR

 

"...the hopeychangey "democracy movement" provides the most useful cover
[for the Brotherhood] in generations."

            

Mark Steyn on the World

 

11 FEBRUARY 2011

 

If you missed my TV and radio appearances this week, here's a recap of my
thoughts on Egypt:

 

This is not a happy ending but the beginning of something potentially very
dark. The end of the Mubarak regime is the biggest shift in the region in 60
years, since Nasser overthrew King Farouk's dissolute monarchy and
diminished London's influence in Cairo. We are witnessing the unraveling of
the American Middle East - that's to say, of the regimes supported by
Washington in the waning of British and French imperial power after the
Second World War. The American Middle East was an unlovely place, and
perhaps the most obviously repellent illustration of the limitations of "He
may be an SOB but he's our SOB" thinking. It's "our" SOBs who are in
trouble: After the fall of Mubarak, what remains to hold up the Hashemites
in Amman? Jordan's Muslim Brotherhood is more radical than Egypt's, the
regime is less ruthless, King Abdullah's Arabic is worse than his English,
and pretty westernized Queen Rania, who seems so cute when CNN interviewers
are fawning all over her, is openly despised outside the palace gates.

 

Iran is nuclearizing, Turkey is Islamizing, Egypt is ...what exactly? Well,
we'll find out. But, given that only the army and/or the Muslim Brotherhood
are sufficiently organized to govern the nation, the notion that we're
witnessing the youthful buds of any meaningful democracy is deluded. So
who'll come out on top? The generals or the Brothers? Given that the
Brotherhood got played for suckers by the army in the revolution of '52, I
doubt they'll be so foolish as to make the same mistake again - and the
hopeychangey "democracy movement" provides the most useful cover in
generations. Meanwhile, James Clapper, the worthless buffoon who serves as
the hyperpower's Director of "Intelligence", goes before Congress to tell
the world that the Muslim Brotherhood is a "secular" organization. Americans
ought to take to the streets to demand Clapper vacate whatever presidential
palace in DC he's holed up in.

 

Amidst all this flowering of democracy, you'll notice that it's only the
pro-American dictatorships on the ropes: In Libya and Syria, Gaddafy and
Assad sleep soundly in their beds. On the other hand, if you were either of
the two King Abdullahs, in Jordan or Saudi Arabia, and you looked at the
Obama Administration's very public abandonment of their Cairo strongman,
what would you conclude about the value of being an American ally? For the
last three weeks, the superpower has sent the consistent message to the
world that (as Bernard Lewis feared some years ago) America is harmless as
an enemy and treacherous as a friend.

 

###

 

 

 



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



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