Pajamas Media
 
 
 
Egypt: Revolution? By Whom? For What?
January 28, 2011 - by _Michael Ledeen_ 
(http://pajamasmedia.com/blog/author/michaelledeen/)  



 
As I’ve remarked in the past–but you can’t say the truth too often, right? 
—  nobody knows what a revolution looks like.  And in fact that last clause 
 may be very misleading, because there is no one thing that a revolution 
looks  like.  Some revolutions happen very quietly, like the Information  
Revolution.  On the other hand, some very revolutionary-looking events,  like 
lots of people in the streets calling for the downfall of a government or a  
regime, are just street theater.  Ask the “revolutionaries” who filled the  
streets of Paris calling for the end of de Gaulle.  Or the crowd that  
levitated the Pentagon. 
You can’t judge a revolution by its theatrics.  Something real has to  
happen, something beyond marching, chanting slogans, and making demands.   
Revolutions end systems of rule and replace them with new ones.  Is that  
happening now in the Middle East?  I think that the Green Movement in Iran  is 
revolutionary, and that, if successful, it would end the Islamic Republic and  
replace it with a secular political system that separates mosque and  state.  
I think that the efforts by Hezbollah to take over Lebanon also  constitute 
an attempt at revolutionary change, because it would turn the secular  
Lebanese system into an Islamic Republic.  It can go both ways. 
All of which is a long way of saying that there’s a lot of tumult in the  
Middle East (and not only the Middle East;  there were big demonstrations a  
few hours ago in Albania), a great perturbation in the Force, as Obiwan 
would  say.  Lots of fighting.  Lots of factions.  In Egypt, which is by  far 
the most important of the Arab countries affected by the tumult, there are  
genuine democrats and also members of organizations (from the Muslim 
Brotherhood  to Islamic Jihad, Hamas, et al.) who would transform Egypt from an 
authoritarian  to a totalitarian regime. 
Remember my Grandma Mashe:  “Things are never so bad they can’t get  worse.
” 
So how are we to look at it all? 
The basic point is that most everything and everywhere is up for grabs.   
>From Yemen to Iran to Lebanon and Somalia,  from Egypt and Jordan to Syria  
and Tunisia, we’ve got tumult.  There are lots of different forces in play,  
and in many cases there is no way to know who will make what decisions, let  
alone what decisions they will make.  Orders will be given, some of them  
will be obeyed while others will be ignored. 
Welcome to the real world. 
Let’s take the most important Arab country, Egypt.   The key  institution 
is the army, which does not want an Islamic regime, but also does  not want 
Mubarak fils.  I suspect that if they agree to save the current  regime 
(likely), they will want to inherit it.  They remember that the  shah’s 
generals 
made a deal with the forces of Khomeini’s revolution in 1979,  and were 
decimated.  But even if they prevail and put an end to the tumult,  how long 
would that “order” last?  That may depend on other things in other  lands. 
The key to many of these tumults — certainly not all, for example, Tunisia —
  is Iran.  The mullahs have been pounding their chests and claiming to 
have  inspired the insurrections.  Everywhere.  This is nonsense and they  know 
it.  Few Jordanians or Egyptians want to live in the Arab version of  the 
Islamic Republic of Iran.  Indeed, you can be sure that the mullahs are  
frightened by a lot of this.  They know that the Iranian insurrection of  
2009-2010 was the real inspiration for many of the demonstrators, and they know 
 
that the Iranian people know that, as they also know that Iranians are saying 
to  themselves that “if the Arabs can overthrow their regimes, surely we 
(superior  Persians) can do the same.”  That is why the thugs were out in 
force in  Iran’s big cities the last couple of days. 
It follows that the Iranians will — probably have already — mobilize their 
 terror army against Mubarak, as against the Jordanian monarchy, and for 
the  tyrants in Khartoum.  They are good at manipulating Arabs (when’s the 
last  time you saw a Persian suicide terrorist?  They’re all Arabs manipulated 
by  the Persians) and the Iranians’ religious proxies and self-starting 
fellow  travelers and useful idiots in Sunniland will be calling for mass  
martyrdom.  Nobody knows how this will play out.  Not even the  mullahs.  
Everyone
’s in a big hurry, and lots of mistakes will be made. 
And what about us?  We are supposed to be the revolutionaries, and we  must 
support democratic revolution against tyranny.  But we must not  support 
phony democrats, and for the president to say “Egypt’s destiny will be  
determined by the Egyptian people,” or “everyone wants to be free” is silly and 
 
dangerous.  Egypt’s destiny will be determined by a fight among Egyptian  
people, some of whom wish to be free and others who wish to install a tyranny 
 worse than Mubarak’s.  That’s the opposite of freedom.  Think about  the 
free elections in Gaza that brought the Hamas killers to power.  For  that 
matter, think about Khomeini, viewed at the time as a progressive democrat  
by many of the leading intellectual and political lights of the West, from  
Foucault to Andrew Young. 
We should have been pressuring the friendly tyrants in the Middle East to  
liberalize their polities lo these many years.  We should have done it in  
the shah’s Iran, and in Mubarak’s Egypt, and in Ben Ali’s Tunisia.  It is  
possible to move peacefully from dictatorship to democracy (think Taiwan.   
Think Chile.  Think South Africa).  But we didn’t, in part because of  the 
racist stereotype that goes under the label “the Arab street,” according to  
which the Arab masses are motivated above all by an unrelenting rage at 
Israel  for its oppression of the beloved Palestinians.  That myth went along 
with  another:  the belief that the culture of the Arab world (sometimes 
expanded  to “the culture of the Muslim world”) was totally resistant to 
democracy.   The tumult has nothing to do with Palestine/Israel and even a 
blind 
bat can see  hundreds of thousands of Arabs fighting for democracy, as have 
their fellow  Muslims in Iran. 
We shoulda, coulda done better all along.  But here we are.  It’s  quite 
clear that Obama is totally bamboozled.  He has no culture to deal  with this 
situation, nor does Hillary.  I wonder about Panetta.  Does  the 
intelligence community have people who know in detail who is who in the  
tumults?  
Historically we haven’t been great at this — the intelligence  failures at the 
time of the Iranian revolution could fill a fat volume, with  another needed 
to chronicle the failures during the following 31 years — but  we’ve got a 
lot of Arabists and we may be lucky enough to have a few very good  ones. 
If we do, and if Panetta and General Clapper know who they are, then we can 
 try to pick and choose, supporting real democrats and thwarting the likes 
of al  Baradei, the love child of both the Muslim Brotherhood and the Tehran 
 crowd.  Surely we know who he is.  We should broadcast it. 
We have to play this game.  Let’s hope there’s someone who can grab the  
president’s ears and explain the rules and the players.  But the winning  
gambit — finally support democratic revolution in Iran — isn’t even being  
discussed.  Paradoxically, this is a very good moment to endorse the Green  
Movement.  I mean, if we’re going to praise the Tunisian and Egyptian  freedom 
fighters, all the more reason to hail the true martyrs in Iran,  currently 
being slaughtered in the country’s prisons at the blood-curdling rate  of 
three per day.  And that’s only the officially acknowledged  executions. 
So, having failed to do what we should have done for the past many decades, 
 we should stick to what got us here:  support democratic revolution.   But 
not false revolutionaries.  Remember Grandma. 
And this is not a time for dawdling.  Faster,  Please!

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

Reply via email to