Egypt After the Coup…

 

Is Obama Backing ElBaradei?

by FRANKLIN LAMB

Beirut


Beirut -- According to well-connected Washington sources, including a 

Congressional staffer whose job description includes following political 

events in Egypt, once it became evident that Egyptian President Mohamed
Morsi might well be ousted by Egypt’s Supreme Council of the Armed Forces
(SCAF), it did not take Mohamed Mustafa ElBaradei, the Sharia legal scholar,
Nobel Peace Prize Laureate, and for 12 years (1997-2009) the Director
General of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) very long to
contact the Washington, DC law firm of Patton Boggs. 

That was this past Tuesday. The very next day, ElBaradei’s representatives 

reportedly also made contact with the Conference of Presidents of Major 
American Jewish Organizations which claims to represent the 52 largest 

American Jewish groups. ElBaradei, perhaps the current front-runner to 
replace his long-time nemesis, Mohamed Morsi, moved fast to organize some
key allies in Cairo and Washington to pick-up where his earlier failed
Presidential campaign left off in January 2011. 


Patton Boggs, the K Street, NW Washington DC law firm, which last year had
550 lawyers and 120 lobbyists and is arguably the firm closest to the White
House and most likely to secure for its clients what they want from the
approximately 5000 key decision makers in the US Capitol. The other nearly
11,800 federally registered lobbyists in Washington (there were only 300 as
recently as when Lyndon Johnson was US President) lag far behind Patton
Boggs in terms of political influence.

Patton Boggs new client wants the Pentagon and the White House to 
squeeze Egypt’s Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF) who deposed
President Morsi and arrange for himself to be appointed the interim
President of Egypt pending early elections. 

What ElBaradei’s representatives are reportedly offering the White House in
exchange for Obama’s discrete assistance, is that the 1979 Camp David 

Accord, including all its elements, will be observed. In addition, Egypt
under ElBaradei can be expected to toughen its stance on Iran’s nuclear
program including publicly adjusting some of his pre-2012 comments on Iran
that the White House and Israel criticized as being “soft on the Islamic
Republic.” 

Also being promised by ElBaradei’s agents is that security cooperation 
between Egypt and Israel will grow stronger. ElBaradei’s objective is to
secure  Barack Obama’s personal support during his jockeying for the
expected  forthcoming Egyptian presidential election.

Once again the Obama administration was caught by surprise as the “Arab 
spring,” still in its infancy, increasingly portends ill for
Western-installed 
potentates in all the Sykes-Picot artificially created “countries.”
According to 
Congressional insiders, Obama reportedly has some doubts. Those following
events in Egypt will likely recall his praise of Morsi after the two former
University Professors had a chance to sit together and get to know one
another. “I like this man,” Obama reportedly told some staff members, “he
thinks like me.” 


When Morsi was deposed, Obama lamented: "We are deeply concerned 
by the decision of the Egyptian armed forces to remove President Morsi and
suspend the Egyptian constitution. I now call on the Egyptian military to
move quickly and responsibly to return full authority back to a
democratically elected civilian government as soon as possible through an
inclusive and  transparent process, and to avoid any arbitrary arrests of
President Morsi and his supporters."

Meanwhile, the SCAF, at the urging of ElBaradei’s team, is paying sweet lip 

service regarding Obama’s expressed concerns. Shortly before the words 

were uttered by Minister of defense, Brig. Gen. Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, the
State 

Department received a copy of the speech with the first paragraph 

highlighted to assuage Obama: “The armed forces will not interfere in the 

realm of politics or governance and will not overstep the role that it is 
assigned in a democracy, which stems from the desire of the people.” Those
words sound good also in Foggy Bottom.

Patton Boggs talking points to the Congress and Obama Administration are
that President Morsi had more than a year to show progress to the Egyptian
people, with both institutional political legitimacy derived from their
election victories, and that he enjoyed strong popular support when he
assumed full power from the armed forces in June 2012 but that he failed
badly and the new government -- hopefully led by ElBaradei -- will now act
more efficiently to move the country towards credible and legitimate
institutions of governance.

ElBaradei’s campaign, as reported in the July 4th edition of the New York 
Times also worked hard to convince the White House of what he called the 

necessity of forcibly ousting President Morsi, presenting several arguments 
that included documentation that Morsi had bungled the country’s transition
to an inclusive democracy and wasted a year without following thru on any of
his pledges. 


Some Congressional analysts believe that one of Morsi's biggest mistakes 
resulted from a deliberate policy of accommodation and not, as is commonly
believed, confrontation. He allowed the military to retain its corporate
autonomy and remain beyond civilian control. Furthermore, he included in 
his cabinet a large number of non-Muslim Brotherhood figures who 
abandoned him within months when the going got tough, thus presenting to the
public an image that the government was on the verge of collapse. 

Some have suggested that Morsi should have brought the military to heel 
soon after he assumed power and was at the height of his popularity, just as
the military was at its lowest point in public perception. Monday morning
quarterbacking is now rampant to explain Morsi’s failures. 



What the Muslim Brotherhood and Mohammad Morsi’s supporters do in the 
coming days at Tahir Square and across Egypt will likely determine the route
and the ultimate success of ElBaradei growing juggernaut.

Meanwhile, as of today, it appears that President Barack Obama may well 

help usher Mohammad ElBaredei into Egypt’s Presidential Palace. If the 

Obama administration has success there will be joy in Tel Aviv, and at
Patton Boggs' victory party, where a good number of the invited guests will
almost certainly be carefully vetted by AIPAC.

 

Franklin Lamb is doing research in Lebanon and Syria and is reachable at 
[email protected]

 

 

           Thé Mulindwas Communication Group
"With Yoweri Museveni and Dr. Kiiza Besigye Uganda is in anarchy"
           Kuungana Mulindwa Mawasiliano Kikundi
"Pamoja na Yoweri Museveni na Dk. Kiiza Besigye Uganda ni katika machafuko"

 

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