Friends,

 

The following article is rather shocking for those who had faith that the 
rebels in Egypt really wanted freedom and democracy. However, Barry Rubin 
explains very clearly why the future government of Egypt will be either a 
radical Islamist government or run by the Muslim Brotherhood – either way, 
Sharia law will rule. I am not sure that this is what the rebels had in mind, 
however, based on the photos I sent a few days ago with the description by 
Phyllis Chesler, it makes sense that the Egyptian masses, except maybe the 
Christian Copts, favoured this type of government all along. 

 

The Media Action Group



 <http://rubinreports.blogspot.com/> RubinReports 

        
  _____  


 
<http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Rubinreports/~3/f4RQsLYyYIg/egypt-now-muslim-brotherhood-might.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email>
 By The End of This Year Egypt Might Be Run By a Radical Islamist Regime 

Posted: 14 May 2011 03:23 PM PDT

This article--in an earlier version--was my Jerusalem Post column. I own the 
rights so only link to this site if forwarding or reprinting.

By Barry Rubin

I'm not saying this lightly. For the first time, there is serious evidence not 
only for an Islamist-controlled parliament but even potentially for an Islamist 
president! It's iran all over again except in 1979 Carter didn't publicly 
demand the shah's overthrow and say he had no problem with Khomeini taking 
over. In fact, that's what Obama did in Egypt.

First the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood said it wouldn't run a candidate for 
president and would only contest one-third of the parliamentary seats.

Next, it said it wouldn’t run a presidential candidate and contest just 50 
percent of the parliamentary seats. Even that is misleading since it could 
arrange with other Islamist parties not to compete against each other, thus 
potentially adding 5 to 10 percent more Islamists, that is a majority, to 
parliament..

Now, the Muslim Brotherhood says it will run a presidential candidate who might 
even conceivably win the election. Oh, but he will run as an independent. So 
that doesn’t count?

One reason for this change on the presidential election is that earlier on the 
Brotherhood was backing Muhammad ElBaradei. But since the two broke up over the 
referendum regarding the election timing and rules--ElBaradei thought the 
changes were too favorable to the Brotherhood so they dropped him--they had no 
one to support. By the way, the Brotherhood won that referendum by a landslide.

Ah, but it's okay because, according to Reuters, Abdel Moneim Abul Futuh, the 
Brotherhood’s candidate for president is a leading "reformist member" of the 
Brotherhood's Shura Council, its highest governing body. Right! He wants to 
reform Egypt into being an Islamist state.

An al-Ahram poll (it's still early, of course, to know how people will vote) 
shows Amr Moussa and Abul Futuh are tied at 20 percent with ElBaradei at 12 
percent.

Note that since a presidential election would come after a strong Brotherhood 
showing in the parliamentary election, a lot of voters would be likely to want 
to join what seems to be the winning side. Also note that the Brotherhood 
candidate will have a strong organization behind him while Moussa won’t even 
have a party at all and ElBaradei’s forces should be pretty weak and 
concentrated largely in Cairo. 

Then add into the mix that Abul Futuh will also be supported by non-Brotherhood 
Islamists while ElBaradei is running against three other “moderate democratic” 
types in competition for that sector of the votes.

The bottom line is that for the first time this week a Brotherhood takeover of 
Egypt in 2011 is really possible. Let me underline that point: before one could 
conceive that this might happen. Now there is hard evidence and real reason to 
believe that it might actually take place.

Up until now, I had thought that Amr Moussa might be Egypt’s next president 
with a strong Islamist presence in parliament but not a majority or 
near-majority. But now Moussa himself predicts that the Brotherhood will have, 
along with its allies, a majority. And even more recently it is possible that a 
Brotherhood leader will be elected president.

So here are our alternatives: 

Best-case scenario: A radical nationalist president, Moussa, and a strong 
Islamist contingent in parliament that will also have a big influence in 
writing the new Constitution. Moussa is anti-Israel and anti-American but might 
be restrained by his pragmatic streak. On the other hand, the need to play 
demagogue—he won’t have any money to subsidize food more and provide additional 
jobs—and to keep the Islamists happy or even outbid them—pushes him toward 
adventurism.

Worst-case scenario: A Brotherhood president and parliament transforming Egypt 
into an Islamist state, backing Hamas fully, subverting U.S. influence and 
other Arab states, and potentially playing jihad in a full-scale war with 
Israel.

Remember that President Barack Obama said that having the Brotherhood in 
government is okay with him. So I guess he'll just watch the result of his 
handiwork and cheer on the results of the process he helped set in motion.

A taste of the future was provided by the massive anti-Israel demonstrations in 
Cairo today. 

Supposedly the rally was to protest sectarian violence within Egypt but it 
turned into one favoring more sectarian violence next door. 

The Brotherhood has now escalated its demands to breaking diplomatic relations 
with Israel and expelling the Israeli ambassador. Remember all of those 
articles and statements about how the revolution was good for Israel if only 
those silly Israelis woke up and understand reality as well as people in 
Washington DC and the Upper West Side of Manhattan?

Oh, and guess how the demonstration was largely organized. Ready? On Facebook! 
Hahaha. Those youthful hip twittering moderate young people!

We can also look forward to similar demonstrations in Palestine’s capital, 
after independence takes place, demanding an abrogation of the Israel-Palestine 
peace treaty and the end to Israeli occupation of…Israel.

After people finally figured out in April-May what they should have known in 
January-February about Egypt, might be better to learn the lesson now rather 
than to repeat the same mistakes infinitely? 

PS: Love the AP's "evenhanded" explanation of the Right to Return issue:

"The Palestinians have long maintained that the refugees have a moral and legal 
right to return to what was once Palestine—including land which is now Israel. 
But Israel has argued that granting the right of return would compromise the 
country's identity as the world's only Jewish state."

Yes, all those riots and massive terrorism leading to bloody civil war, with 
all the neighbors joining in, followed by the genocidal murder of millions of 
Jews and the transformation of Israel into an Arab and possibly (probably?) 
Islamist state that would ally with Iran, work to overturn all the region's 
non-radical regimes, trigger additional wars and massive suffering, and destroy 
U.S. influence in the Middle East would definitely be an inconvenience.

Ah, but it's okay because, according to Reuters, Abdel Moneim Abul Futuh, is a 
leading "reformist member" of the Brotherhood's Shura Council. Right! He wants 
to reform Egypt into being an Islamist state.

An al-Ahram poll (it's still early) shows Amr Moussa and Abul Futuh are tied at 
20 percent with ElBaradei at 12 percent..

  
<https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/359330079121990828-1887142864299474584?l=rubinreports.blogspot.com>
 

 

        
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