Egypt’s Revolution Betrayed: Fuel For Al-Qaeda Fires – OpEd by Eric Walberg
Eurasia -
July 5, 2013
During the past few months, dozens of Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood (MB)
members have been murdered and their offices sacked and burned. The
police openly refuse to protect them. Rather than ordering the
opposition to drop their demand that Egypt’s first democratically
elected president, Mohammed Morsi, resign, and negotiate reasonably with
his government, the army gave him a Hobson’s Choice: resign or be
ousted. As General Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi announced the army’s coup
Wednesday, President Mohammed Morsi released a video on the president’s
website denouncing the ouster. “I am the elected president of Egypt. The
revolution is being stolen from us.” Minutes later, the website was
shut down, the video disappeared, and the president and 300 MB leaders
were put under arrest, including the Brotherhood’s Supreme Guide
Mohammed Badie, a step that not even Mubarak dared to take.
The house cleaning is now in full swing. The Brotherhood’s satellite
television network was removed from the air along with two other popular
Islamist channels. Their hosts and many coworkers there and at
Al-Jazeera considered too pro-Morsi were slapped in jail. State
television resumed denouncing the Brotherhood as it once did under
Mubarak. Writes Mohamad Elmasry of the American University in Cairo,
“Mubarak-era media owners and key members of Egypt’s liberal and secular
opposition have teamed up to create arguably one of the most effective
propaganda campaigns in recent political history, to demonize Morsi and
the Muslim Brotherhood.”
The new ‘president’, Supreme Constitutional Court Chairman Adly
Mansour, installed by the military, hailed the protests as “an
expression of the nation’s conscience and an embodiment of its hopes and
ambitions”. Mansour swore to protect the republic and constitution,
though what republic and what constitution are not clear. The notorious
Abdel-Meguid Mahmoud, the Mubarak-era top prosecutor who presided over
shame trials of corrupt Mubarak-era officials and whom Morsi removed,
was reinstated to his post and immediately announced investigations
against Brotherhood officials. The revolution is dead. Long live the
revolution.
The Islamic awakening
This counterrevolutionary euphoria is floating on deep waters, which are impossible to quell or drain. Even western analysts such as Geneive Abdo admitted in the waning years of Mubarak’s western-backed, secular dictatorship that “historical, social and economic conditions had laid the groundwork for society’s return to religion.” This culminated in the 2011 uprisings, soft-pedaled by western media as the ‘Arab Spring’, but which is in fact overwhelmingly inspired by Islam, and harks directly to Iran’s 1979 revolution, Algeria’s 1990 revolution, and the Palestinian Intifadas (1987, 2000), where liberals and secularists played no part.
In 1979, on the cusp of the Iranian revolution, a young Egyptian
MBer, Essam el-Erian (now Freedom and Justice Party vice-chairman and
MP) said, “Young people believe Islam is the solution to the ills in
society after the failure of western democracy, socialism and communism
to address the political and socio-economic difficulties.” Three decades
later, the Muslim Brotherhood is riding a wave of youthful idealism and
reaping the rewards of its 84 years of experience both in organization
and as the persecuted shadow of Egypt’s march towards modernity, though,
as the coup confirmed, it is faced by powerful enemies who reject the
new ‘map’ being proposed for society.
Hopes that Egypt would consolidate a new form of Islamic democracy
have for the moment been crushed. So far, the only Islamic revolution to
succeed is the Iranian one, still going strong, though suffering from
western intrigue, including the war with Iraq, economic crisis,
subversion and sanctions. Other Islamic revolutions—in Algeria and
Afghanistan—were aborted under western pressure. Turkey’s transformation
beginning in 2001 with the sweep by Islamists at the polls, but like
Egypt’s Islamist triumph, has been deeply compromised by a powerful
secular military and close integration with empire.
The overthrow of Ben Ali in Tunisia and Mubarak in Egypt in 2011
recap both Turkey and Iran’s history in the twentieth century—from
secular pro-western dictatorship to an independent democracy inspired by
Islam. But Egypt is also charting a new course—at least it was, until
the July 2013 military coup—re-Islamization of society from below.
Sparked by westernized urbanized youth, the 2011 uprising against an
oppressive dictator quickly mobilized the overwhelming majority of
Egyptians, but as it became clear that the post-revolutionary government
would be Islamic, the secular opposition and the Mubarakites teamed up
against the government and appealed to the powerful army for support.
They were not disappointed.
Replay of Algeria
The military coup in Egypt is a replay of Turkey’s many coups from the 1960s to 1980s against democratically elected Islamists. More ominously, it recalls the 1991 coup in Algeria that brought to an end the first democratic elections in its history, and ushered in a vicious civil war, which left the country devastated and continues to haunt Algerians over two decades later.
A million Algerians had died in the liberation struggle against the
French after WWII—Algeria’s first civil war, the opposition dominated by
secular socialists and nationalists. To prevent an Islamist revolution
then, the beleaguered French authorities had closed down all reformist
religious organizations, effectively handing the (French-educated)
secular independence movement the reins of power.
After the revolution, “the Algerian state appeared astonishingly
similar to the Pahlavi state, strongly secular … omnipresent in social,
cultural, economic spheres, conducting agrarian reform that antagonized
Islamic groups,” according to M Moaddel. Just as Iran’s shah tried to
chart a secularist capitalist course in the 1960s, Egypt’s Nasser tried
to chart a secularist socialist course, imitated by Algeria’s Ben Bella,
though the results were in all three cases disappointing and meant
suppressing the Islamist opposition.
At the same time, the Islamists were manipulated by western
strategists to keep these neocolonial government in line, a strategy
that went into high gear with the ‘jihad’ against the Soviet Union in
1979 in Afghanistan, where Algerians, Egyptians, and Islamists from
across the world were organized and financed by the US, unleashing a new
terrorist dynamic with US-Saudi-supported al-Qaeda at the helm.
After riots in 1988 in Algeria, and with a new constitution allowing
political parties other than the ruling FLN, the hastily-formed Islamic
Salvation Front (FIS) won more than 50% in municipal elections in June
1990 and was poised to take power. The national elections were cancelled
and Algeria’s second civil war began.
The army moved in and began a campaign of terror, slaughtering
Islamists, provoking retaliation, and even organizing faux Islamist
death squads. Some of the most notorious Islamic Armed Groups (IAGs)
were in fact creations of the Algerian secret services, as even the
French backers of the military were forced to admit. “On the domestic
front, their purpose was to commit atrocities in the name of Islam that
would discredit the FIS. On the international front, the aim was to
convince the West that Islamism needed to be ‘eradicated’”, according to
Fouzi Slisli. Between 1992–2002, an estimated 200,000 Algerians died.
Today’s secular Egyptians supporting the overthrow of their
hard-fought-for legitimate elections should remember Algeria—and
shudder.
Algeria updated
The Islamists in Algeria are still being held in check, but Algeria’s trauma is far from over. Al-Qaeda in the Maghreb continues to carry out kidnappings and bombings. With the impending death of President Abdelaziz Bouteflika, the pressure—as in Egypt today—will be to hold credible elections, where, in both cases, the Islamists will again be the winners.
But it may not be so easy to engineer a replay of the horrors of the
Algerian civil war in either Algeria or Egypt today. In any case,
predictions of the collapse of the MB come up against the reality of
Egypt, where there is little hope of rekindling a Mubarak-style
accommodation with the empire. If anything, the coup has rather
confirmed to Islamists the insidiousness of trying to make deals with
the empire. The only way forward for Egypt today is to cut off the
Gorgon’s head, as Iran did when the Islamic awakening was getting under
way three decades ago.
Genuine terrorist threats remain in Egypt and will no doubt increase
as a result of the coup. Al-Qaeda’s post-Bin Laden leader, (Egyptian)
Ayman Zawahiri, has always been focused on combating local regimes and
Arab rulers, these days, Assad in Syria. European jihadists come to
Cairo to study Islam or Arabic in Nasr City, but then head for al-Qaeda
training camps in Egypt, the Sinai or Libya. If the MB is forced
underground again, it is inevitable that this terrorism will increase,
as frustrated Islamists are forced to defend themselves and to resist
the reimposition of the western model, with al-Qaeda-types hovering in
the background.
The MB was unable to make a dysfunctional neoliberal economy work,
given the sabotage of the secularists and Mubarakites. In the short
chaotic year that ended with the coup, the MB tried. They used their own
grassroots network to mobilize tens of thousands to help distribute
subsidized bread to the very poor, addressing the most pressing problem
for most Egyptians. They mobilized brigades to clean up mountains of
rubbish. Their attempts were met with only ridicule, their offices
trashed and burned, and their activists killed.
Harnessing Egypt’s spiritual legacy and its manpower requires
disengaging from the US-dominated world order, transforming Egypt into a
more modest, less gaudy, less western society. Perhaps this will fail
in the short run, faced with the accumulated imperial rubbish of the
past, both physical and spiritual. That is certainly the intention of
the imperialists and their acolytes in Egypt and throughout the Arab
world.
It is a shame—no, a crime—when nice anti-imperialists like Nasserist
Hamdeen Sobahi or Mohamed ElBaradei dismiss the votes of the masses as
ill-informed, call for a coup, and blacken the only genuine
anti-imperialist opposition. Their Islamophobia is visceral. They are
now eagerly awaiting appointments in the junta’s government (as if the
junta will condone anything that wreaks of socialism or
anti-imperialism), and the Islamists are back in jail. The situation now
is worse than under Mubarak, and promises to become even grimmer.
A version of this article appeared at http://www.presstv.com/detail/2013/07/05/312354/egypts-revolution-has-been-betrayed/