http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/publications/id.9604/pub_detail.asp

 

May 26, 2011


U.S. Aid to Arab Spring Must Go to Democracy Groups Not to Islamists


 <http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/authors/id.41/author_detail.asp> Dr.
Walid Phares

http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/imgLib/20110211_TahrirMB.jpg

 

President Obama's grand plan to provide U.S. financial aid to emerging
democracies in the Middle East, Egypt and Tunisia now, and possibly later a
post-Saleh Yemen and post-Assad Syria, may be commendable but could bring
catastrophic results. 

If the billions in foreign debt-to-be-forgiven or granted in cash to be
invested will be used by democratic governments in the region to move their
societies away from fundamentalism, radicalism and inequality toward
secular, liberal democracy, then the financial support is commensurate with
American ideals, the will of the American people and their elected leaders. 

If the aid will be used to fund programs instituted by the Islamists and
their movements, old and new, then the Obama administration's new Middle
East initiative will cause greater injustice for the peoples of the region,
and eventually produce greater conflicts for future American generations.

President Obama's speech and comments by his advisers attempted to liken the
alleged "historic" aid package for the countries arising out of the Middle
East revolts, to the Marshall Plan which helped many European countries cope
with post-World War II economic stresses. 

The major difference then and now between Europe and the Middle East is that
European societies had already experienced and were returning to democracy
after a few years of fascism and most of the Arab world has no experience
with liberal democracy and those societies that have arisen against
authoritarianism are still threatened by jihadi fascism. 

A "Marshall Plan" for the Arab world should come after the defeat of that
region's version of fascism, not before. The aid should reward societies for
defeating the Salafist and Khomeinist ideologies, not fund their ascendance.

It was secular youth and minorities in Egypt who triggered the popular
uprising. The Muslim Brotherhood, a movement dedicated to a theocratic
regime and the elimination of liberal democracy, quickly - and with
Washington's stealthy backing - seized the revolution's microphone,
positioned itself at the center of the uprising, and branded itself as the
"soul" and "future" of the movement, even though the Muslim Brotherhood did
not make up more than 15 percent of the mass of demonstrators in Tahrir
Square. 

Well organized and funded, the Ikhwan, will insert themselves into the
electoral process as part of the youth majority. The Christian minority is
disorganized and politically marginalized. 

By any analysis, short of massive support for democratic forces in Egypt,
the Muslim Brotherhood will acquire significant influence in the next
parliamentary election and thus the lion's share of posts in the ensuing
Cabinet. This would mean that Mr. Obama has sent billions in economic aid to
a government controlled or significantly influenced by Islamists who have
not abandoned, but remain loyal to jihadi ideology.

The administration's intellectuals have been arguing that the Muslim
Brotherhood are undergoing transformation and becoming reformers. If the
Ikhwan were to reform ideologically, those most targeted by their Islamist
agenda - secularists, women, liberals, youth and Copts - would be the first
to know it. The news coming from those interests in Egypt does not endorse
this claim.

In Washington, academics and advisers have convinced the Obama
administration that a post-Gadhafi Libya, a post-Saleh Yemen, and
eventually, a post-Assad Syria will make the Islamists the new U.S. partners
in the region. Thus, Mr. Obama's speech on future U.S. Middle East policy
reflects an adaptation to these anticipated changes. The U.S. will recognize
the Islamists and try to ingratiate them with a "Marshal Plan" to solidify
their rule even if they only pay lip service to "representative democracy."

The Islamists' voices are not the only ones seeking to be heard in the
region. Other voices are speaking out against the alliance between the
greatest democracy in history and the Islamists. 

Liberal voices of the Egyptian, Tunisian, and Syrian uprisings have been
signaling an urgent SOS to the free world over the Arabic airwaves: "Do not
abandon us for a pragmatic alliance with the Islamists." 

An Egyptian youth made a very concerning comment on Al-Hurra television this
week, revealing that the Obama administration has cut off all funding in
support of liberal and democratic NGOs in the region: "How come the
Islamists will be gratified with a huge Marshall Plan while those who want
to build a true democratic Middle East are ignored? Is the Obama
administration replacing old authoritarians with new ones, and with U.S.
taxpayer dollars?"

 

 

The book that predicted the Revolutions.

 

 <http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/> FamilySecurityMatters.org
Contributing Editor Dr Walid Phares is the author of
<http://www.amazon.com/Confrontation-Winning-against-Future-Jihad/dp/0230611
303> The Confrontation: Winning the War Against Future Jihad

and The
<http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1439178372?ie=UTF8&tag=familysecur08-20&li
nkCode=as2&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=1439178372> ">The Coming
Revolution: Struggle for Freedom in the Middle East. He isa Professor of
Global Strategies in Washington DC. He advises members of the US Congress
and the European Parliament.

 



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