list.lurker Kragen wrote this piece which is all over my twitter
timeline, and I thought I'd mirror it on silk as well, as it's a good
overview of the events in Egypt so far. Additional thoughts, folks?

Udhay

http://canonical.org/~kragen/egypt-massacre-sotu.html

Why Egypt’s popular rebellion is the greatest historical event in a
decade, and
                       how Barack Obama missed the boat.

     [1]áíÓ åäÇß ÌíÔ ÃÞæí ãä ÝßÑÉ ÍÇä æÞÊåÇ

   (Above: No army is more powerful than an idea whose time has come.)

   I’m writing this on January 28th, 2011, at 11:53 AM Cairo time,
   although I’m an ocean away from Cairo. But, as someone wrote the other
   day on Twitter, yesterday, we were all Tunisian; today, we are all
   Egyptian, and tomorrow, we will all be free. So today I am writing this
   on Cairo time.

   Three days ago, I read Barack Obama’s [2]State of the Union address. He
   delivered it on the same day that the [3]#Jan25 protests began in
   Egypt. I was dismayed that he didn’t mention the protests at all,
   because they’re more important than almost everything he did mention.
   This essay is an attempt to explain why they are so important, why
   Obama ignored them, and what the possible results of that choice could
   be.

  What Egypt is like

   [4][View_from_Cairo_Tower_31march2007_small.jpg]

   For readers who don’t know much about Egypt, like most Americans,
   here’s my attempt to sum up a country of 80 million people in three
   minutes.

   Egypt is not a republic, any more than the People’s Republic of China
   is. Egypt is a brutal dictatorship, governed by the same dictator since
   1981, 29 of those years under state-of-emergency regulations. That
   dictator, Hosni Mubarak, was the vice-president of the previous
   dictator, Anwar Sadat, who in turn was the vice-president of the
   dictator before him, Gamal Abdel Nasser, who had held absolute power
   since 1956. Egypt has been under one-party rule since 1952, and
   although the ruling party has changed its name several times, it has
   never yielded its power.

   Egypt has gradually declined in influence and quality of life
   throughout Mubarak’s reign.

   Some opposition parties are now formally allowed. They currently hold
   3% of the Egyptian parliament. All influential opposition parties are
   banned, and the press is heavily censored. Mohamed ElBaradei, an
   Egyptian who won the Nobel Peace Prize for his work fighting nuclear
   proliferation, moved to Vienna so that he can find reporters willing to
   talk to him.

   Egypt is desperately poor. The majority of the country depends on the
   bread dole for survival.

   Egypt is one of the countries where the US would ship prisoners to have
   them beaten, electrocuted, and raped by the Egyptian police for years,
   as a means of interrogation. ([5]Abu Omar and [6]Ahmed Osman Saleh are
   two of the best-known cases.) Indeed, its reputation for torture was so
   well established that it was the first US ally selected for this
   “[7]extraordinary rendition” program.

   The Egyptian police are famous for their lack of controls. Last year,
   [8]Khaled Said was sitting in an internet café; a couple of policemen
   came in and demanded to see everyone’s ID, which is against Egyptian
   law. He refused, so they dragged him outside, beat him to death, and
   dumped his body in the street.

   It’s also one of the top recipients of US aid in the world, much of
   which is earmarked for the security forces — the same security forces
   who are currently beating journalists bloody and shooting protestors
   with US-made tear gas, birdshot, and now bullets.

   Much of Egypt’s military, the tenth largest in the world and the
   largest in Africa, is actually [9]paid for by the US. Egypt produces
   US-designed armaments such as the M1 Abrams tank under license. Without
   the political and financial support of the US, it is generally believed
   in Egypt that the current dictatorship would have fallen decades ago.

   As [10]Shahi Hamid said, “If the army ever decides to shoot into a
   crowd of unarmed protestors, it will be shooting with hardware provided
   by the United States.”

   However, as Steven A. Cook of CFR says, all those soldiers “are not
   there to project power, but to protect the regime.” He calls the
   Egyptian military “the ultimate instrument of political control.” In
   other words, all those weapons are bought to be used against Egyptians,
   not to protect Egypt.

   This is exactly the sort of situation that fosters non-state terrorism:
   a disempowered citizenry, kept in check by only the military might of
   an unaccountable and corrupt dictator backed by a faraway country,
   watching their future being destroyed one year at a time — all so that
   that faraway country can have a "reliable friend" to support political
   goals the nation opposes. This country profile fits both Saudi Arabia
   and Egypt, as it has for decades. And, indeed, non-state terrorism has
   been on the rise in Egypt for decades, and in 2001 an Egyptian flew a
   plane into a US building with the help of 15 Saudis and a couple of
   guys from other countries. We have not begun to see the end of this.

   [11]US elites believe that crushing the Egyptian people’s dreams of
   opportunity and justice, year after year, is a worthwhile price to pay
   for having Egypt as an ally in the region. Understandably, US elites
   are not very popular among Egyptians.

  The revolution in Tunisia

   [12][caravane_small.jpg]

   Last month, there was a [13]Tunisian revolution. It started when one
   Mohamed Bouazizi, of Sidi Bouzid, committed suicide. There’s 30%
   unemployment in Sidi Bouzid. At 26 years old, he was eking out a living
   as a fruit vendor, one of a series of marginal jobs he’d been working
   since he was ten years old — until a police officer slapped him in the
   face, spat at him, confiscated his fruit cart and electronic scales,
   and beat him.

   So he burned himself to death in protest.

   This sparked mass protests by the Tunisian people, and after a month,
   the 23-year rule of Tunisian dictator Ben Ali ended, and he fled the
   country. This was the first successful popular Arab uprising in
   history.

   Even as I write this, the new government is still reshuffling;
   yesterday, six ministers left over from Ben Ali resigned from the
   cabinet. It is possible that the new government will still not be truly
   democratic, but it seems likely that protests will continue to make the
   country ungovernable until there is at least a credible promise of
   improvement.

   The Tunisian dictatorship had been considered stable and a steadfast
   ally of the US government, to the point that it, like Egypt, accepted
   “extraordinary renditions” from the US government for torturing.

   There’s a lot of debate about what made this revolution happen now and
   not at some time during the previous 23 years. Perhaps the economic
   situation finally got bad enough; perhaps it was the Al-Jazeera
   coverage; perhaps a critical mass of Tunisians had access to Twitter
   and Facebook to organize; perhaps US embassy cables leaked via
   Wikileaks sparked new anger, or made Tunisians realize that their
   dictator’s backing from the US government was weaker than it had
   appeared.

  The uprising in Egypt

   [14][tear-gas-small.jpg]

   Whatever it was that happened in Tunisia, Egypt has been following
   suit. The story I mentioned earlier, of [15]Khaled Said, has been a
   rallying point.

   ([16]Liz Henry’s running summary of sources is good.)

   On January 25th, Police Day, almost a hundred thousand people protested
   in the streets — mostly peacefully. This was the biggest protest since
   1977, when Sadat cut off the bread dole. There were mass arrests, but
   only of a few hundred people. A policeman was killed by a thrown rock,
   and several protesters were killed. The government illegally and
   erratically blocked the web sites of Twitter, Facebook, Bambuser, the
   opposition newspaper Dostor, and other services. The Muslim
   Brotherhood, the strongest opposition party (one of the illegal ones),
   didn’t participate in the protests.

   One freelance Al Jazeera news cameraman survived being shot by the
   police with 11 rubber-coated steel bullets, which were surgically
   removed over the following days.

   There was a rumor that Gamal Mubarak, the son of the dictator, had fled
   to England with his family.

   Nour Ayman Nour, the son of Ayman Nour, the leader of the El Ghad
   party, was arrested at from a protest, but escaped.

   Hillary Clinton said that Mubarak’s government as “stable and looking
   for ways to respond” to the protestors’ demands.

   On January 26th, protests continued, and activists made plans to have
   big protests on January 28th after prayers. Police began shooting
   protestors with birdshot instead of rubber-coated bullets. Hundreds of
   detainees were being held incommunicado with no access to lawyers. (The
   interior ministry said it had detained 860 people.) Hillary Clinton
   said that Mubarak should allow protestors to demonstrate, and
   “[17]should implement reforms.” Crowds burned down government buildings
   in Suez and reported being “massacred”. Minister Rachid canceled his
   planned trip to the World Economic Forum.

   By January 27th, at least [18]three more people had died. Mohamed
   ElBaradei returned to Egypt. Crowds stormed morgues in Suez to recover
   the bodies of the dead. The stock exchange halted trading for 45
   minutes due to rapidly dropping stock prices. 140 protestors were
   charged with sedition. Ahmed Ezz, the country’s wealthiest businessman,
   was rumored to have fled the country. The Muslim Brotherhood pledged to
   participate in Friday’s protests. Crowds burned a fire station in Suez.
   Egypt canceled football games. ElBaradei published an op-ed entitled
   “[19]A Manifesto for Change in Egypt”.

   A major protest is planned for the 28th, right after early afternoon
   prayers.

   On the morning of January 28th, [20]they turned off nationwide internet
   access, BlackBerry messaging, and SMS, and there are rumors that
   satellite phones are jammed. The news media is supposedly forbidden
   from reporting. Ham radio and telephone systems are still in operation,
   including internationally.

   Mona Eltahawy, an Egyptian expatriate journalist, has warned that this
   dark curtain being drawn around Egypt is intended to conceal a
   massacre.

   The police began mass arrests of Muslim Brotherhood activists, and
   police started setting fire to cars for no apparent reason. Joe Biden
   says he wouldn’t call Mubarak a dictator.

   One ISP remains connected internationally, permitting banks, the stock
   market, and activists to reach the rest of the world.

  What is at stake in Egypt

   First, Mubarak could fall. The new government could be democratic,
   military, or Islamist. 80 million people could be liberated from
   tyranny.

   Tunisia is a tiny country with little influence. Egypt, however, is one
   of the most powerful countries in the Middle East and in Africa. It
   houses al-Azhar university; it’s the origin of many of today’s Middle
   Eastern political movements; and it has immense military strength. Its
   current government is also a key ally of the US in the region.

   If Egypt democratizes, it is very likely that other Arab autocrats will
   be overthrown by popular uprisings, too. Hundreds of millions of people
   could wrest back their futures from the hands of the greedy autocrats
   who rule them today.

   Because the people of the region have been living under US-supported
   dictatorships for so long, it is likely that any new governments will
   be less favorable toward the US (and Israel) than the current ones —
   although Egypt is probably the most severe case of this.

   It’s likely that such a transition would result in more violence in the
   short term, but less in the long term.

   And the influence of the US would be dramatically reduced.

   On the other hand, the army could massacre hundreds of thousands of
   people, finally putting to use all those US-made, US-funded guns and
   bombs. There is surely some level of violence at which the people would
   be cowed, even if there wouldn’t be anything left fighting for
   afterwards.

Obama’s choice to snub the Egyptian activists

   [21][obama_small.jpg]

   Barack Obama, in his speech, naturally spoke most about the United
   States; but he also spoke about Korea, Russia, Chile, China, India,
   Afghanistan, Iraq, Panama, Pakistan, Brazil, El Salvador, Sudan, and
   Colombia. He even said he supports the revolution in Tunisia:

     And we saw that same desire to be free in Tunisia, where the will of
     the people proved more powerful than the writ of a dictator. And
     tonight, let us be clear: The United States of America stands with
     the people of Tunisia, and supports the democratic aspirations of
     all people.

   But he didn’t say a word about Egypt.

   Of course, actually “supporting the democratic aspirations of all
   people” would mean that he supports the Egyptian protestors in their
   efforts to liberate their nation from its ruthless dictator. But
   Obama’s vice-president, [22]Joe Biden, says he doesn’t even think
   Mubarak is a dictator, and that some of the protestors’ demands are not
   “legitimate”.

   Obama is a first-class politician, maybe the best in the world. He
   wouldn’t leave out Egypt by accident.

   It seems that he’s simply continuing the policy described earlier,
   supporting the Egyptian government no matter how oppressive it is,
   because it might survive and he believes its support is essential.

   Perhaps he has calculated that any new government would likely be
   anti-US whatever he does, so he has nothing to lose by backing Mubarak.
   Or perhaps he thinks he can get away with taking no real action, and
   later claiming that he always supported the democratic aspirations of
   Egyptian people?

   In any case, his support emboldens Mubarak for the massacre he is
   planning a few hours from now. Some of the innocent Egyptian blood shed
   today will be on Barack Obama’s hands.

   It is often difficult and risky to take the side of justice,
   righteousness, freedom, and democracy. But those who side against them
   will not be remembered kindly by those who risked their lives for them.
   Obama has chosen cowardice and expediency over principles and honesty.
   And that choice undermines his stirring rhetoric much more than any
   sloppy choice of words could have.

   By Kragen Javier Sitaker, [23]@kragen on Twitter.

   Added 2011-01-28: If you want to mirror this page, including the
   images, an easy way to do it is to download this [24]compressed archive
   (4.7MB).

   [25]Creative Commons License
   This work is licensed under a [26]Creative Commons
   Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.

References

   1. http://twitter.com/zakwanhaj/status/30176266963386368
   2.
http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2011/01/25/remarks-president-state-union-address
   3. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2011_Egyptian_protests
   4. http://canonical.org/~kragen/jan25/cairo.html
   5. http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1329/is_2_33/ai_n24376223/
   6.
http://obsidianwings.blogs.com/obsidian_wings/2004/06/extraordinary_r.html
   7. http://www.commondreams.org/headlines05/0208-13.htm
   8. http://www.sandmonkey.org/2010/06/13/on-khaled-said/
   9.
http://www.janes.com/articles/Janes-Sentinel-Security-Assessment-North-Africa/Defence-budget-Egypt.html
  10.
http://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2011/01/after-tunisia-obamas-impossible-dilemma-in-egypt/70123/
  11.
http://www.cfr.org/publication/19696/political_instability_in_egypt.html
  12. http://canonical.org/~kragen/jan25/caravane.html
  13. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2010%E2%80%932011_Tunisian_uprising
  14. http://canonical.org/~kragen/jan25/tear-gas.html
  15. http://www.sandmonkey.org/2010/06/13/on-khaled-said/
  16. http://politics.dreamwidth.org/70486.html
  17.
http://english.aljazeera.net//news/middleeast/2011/01/201112617427113878.html
  18.
http://www.juancole.com/2011/01/egyptians-defy-protest-ban-plan-big-rallies-for-friday-death-toll-rises-to-6.html
  19.
http://www.thedailybeast.com/blogs-and-stories/2011-01-26/mohamed-elbaradei-the-return-of-the-challenger/
  20.
http://www.al-bab.com/blog/2011/blog1101b.htm#information_lockdown_in_egypt
  21. http://canonical.org/~kragen/jan25/obama.html
  22.
http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Backchannels/2011/0127/Joe-Biden-says-Egypt-s-Mubarak-no-dictator-he-shouldn-t-step-down
  23. http://twitter.com/kragen
  24. http://canonical.org/~kragen/jan25.tar.gz
  25. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/
  26. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/

-- 
((Udhay Shankar N)) ((udhay @ pobox.com)) ((www.digeratus.com))

Reply via email to