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Junkdrawer

(27,993 posts)
Thu Aug 15, 2013, 12:25 PM Aug 2013

Juan Cole: Egypt’s Transition Has Failed: New Age of Military Dictatorship in Wake of Massacre

The horrible bloodshed in Egypt on Wednesday marked a turning point in the country’s modern history, locking it in to years of authoritarian paternalism and possibly violent faction fighting. The country is ruled by an intolerant junta with no respect for human life. Neither the Brotherhood nor the military made the kind of bargain and compromises necessary for a successful democratic transition. It is true that some armed Brotherhood cadres killed some 50 troops and police, and that some 20 Coptic Christian churches were attacked, some burned. But the onus for the massacre lies with the Egyptian military. Mohamed Elbaradei, who resigned as interim vice president for foreign affairs, had urged that the Brotherhood sit-ins be gradually and peacefully whittled Way at. His plan was Egypt’s only hope of reconciliation. Now it has a feud.

....

Once Muhammad Morsi was elected president in June, 2012, he made a slow-motion coup. He pushed through a Brotherhood constitution in December of 2012 in a referendum with about a 30% turnout in which it garnered only 63%– i.e. only a fifth of the country voted for it. The judges went on strike rather than oversee balloting, so the referendum did not meet international standards. When massive protests were staged he had them cleared out by the police, and on December 6, 2012, is alleged to have sent in Brotherhood paramilitary to attack leftist youth who were demonstrating. There were deaths and injuries.

Morsi then invented a legislature for himself, declaring by fiat that the ceremonial upper house was the parliament. He appointed many of its members; only 7% were elected. They passed a law changing the retirement age for judges from 70 to 60, which would have forced out a fourth of judges and allowed Morsi to start putting Brotherhood members on the bench to interpret his sectarian constitution. He was building a one party state. His economic policies hurt workers and ordinary folk. He began prosecuting youth who criticized him, his former allies against the military. 8 bloggers were indicted. Ahmad Maher of The April 6 youth group was charged with demonstrating (yes). Television channels were closed. Coptic school teachers were charged with blasphemy. Morsi ruled from his sectarian base and alienated everyone else. He over-reached.

....

But the Egyptian military bears the other part of the blame for the failed transition. Ambitious officers such as Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, Morsi’s Minister of Defense, were secretly determined to undo Morsi’s victory at the polls. They said they wanted him to compromise with his political rivals, but it seems to me they wanted more, they wanted him neutered. When the revolutionary youth and the workers and even many peasants staged the June 30 demonstrations, al-Sisi took advantage of them to stage a coup. Ominously, he then asked for public acclamation to permit him to wage a war on terror, by which he means the Brotherhood. I tweeted at the time: “Dear General al-Sisi: when activists call for demonstrations, that is activism. When generals do, that is Peronism.”

....

The military and the Brotherhood are two distinct status groups, with their own sources of wealth, which have claims on authority in Egypt. Those claims were incompatible.

http://www.juancole.com/2013/08/transition-military-dictatorship.html
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Juan Cole: Egypt’s Transition Has Failed: New Age of Military Dictatorship in Wake of Massacre (Original Post) Junkdrawer Aug 2013 OP
Add Cole to Feldman, Engel and Murphy cali Aug 2013 #1
Seems the military gave the Brotherhood enough rope.... Junkdrawer Aug 2013 #2
In Short, Sir, There Never Was Any Democracy The Magistrate Aug 2013 #3
New danger is if foreign radicals are called in to aid the Brotherhood.... Junkdrawer Aug 2013 #5
Certainly The Strike Against The Brotherhood May Fail, Sir The Magistrate Aug 2013 #7
There was a brief moment of democracy cali Aug 2013 #6
Again, Ma'am The Magistrate Aug 2013 #8
pot calling the kettle black. again cali Aug 2013 #9
Funny Story, Ma'am: We Have This Pot, Had It Almost Fifty Years The Magistrate Aug 2013 #10
Thanks - a good read and summary (nt) muriel_volestrangler Aug 2013 #4
 

cali

(114,904 posts)
1. Add Cole to Feldman, Engel and Murphy
Thu Aug 15, 2013, 12:35 PM
Aug 2013

all saying much the same thing, though they don't all come at it from the same perspective. And all are fluent in Arabic and have all lived for extended periods in the Middle East and/or Egypt, except for Feldman who lived there only for a relatively brief time though he has traveled extensively in the region.

Cole touches on something that's important: the vast wealth and business interests of those in the military.




Junkdrawer

(27,993 posts)
2. Seems the military gave the Brotherhood enough rope....
Thu Aug 15, 2013, 12:40 PM
Aug 2013

and now they want to seize the moment to break it completely.

And Morsi's calls for jihad against Syria didn't help either.

The Magistrate

(95,241 posts)
3. In Short, Sir, There Never Was Any Democracy
Thu Aug 15, 2013, 12:43 PM
Aug 2013

And we are pretty much back where things have always been: same tune, perhaps with a different tempo and pitched in a fresh key....

Junkdrawer

(27,993 posts)
5. New danger is if foreign radicals are called in to aid the Brotherhood....
Thu Aug 15, 2013, 12:48 PM
Aug 2013

I hear there's calls from Qatar to the AQ rebels in Syria.

 

cali

(114,904 posts)
6. There was a brief moment of democracy
Thu Aug 15, 2013, 12:52 PM
Aug 2013

Cole, Feldman, Murphy and Engel all view the future as even darker than those of the Mubarak decades. Engel thinks that there's a very real possibility of civil war and explains that under Mubarak access to weapons for insurgents was limited and that is not so now.

None of them think that this is right back to where things were before Mubarak was overthrown.

but hell, what would they know?

The Magistrate

(95,241 posts)
8. Again, Ma'am
Thu Aug 15, 2013, 12:57 PM
Aug 2013

Subtlety and nuance are not your strong suits. Nor, for that matter, is reduction to essentials.

The situation is what it has been; military rule. The facade is down, certainly, and at this moment there is active repression; the thing is in an acute episode of a the chronic condition. civil war is certainly possible; that is what happens when attempts top suppress a movement with some mass footing fails, and the generals could fail.

 

cali

(114,904 posts)
9. pot calling the kettle black. again
Thu Aug 15, 2013, 01:07 PM
Aug 2013

surely you don't claim to be subtle. Your comments demonstrate that you are anything but.

You return time and time again to striking out with your non-sequitur comments about how I'm not subtle or nuanced. When it comes to wholesale slaughter, you're quite right. I condemn it. You equivocate. That's fine, but I have enough subtlety to recognize that there's a time when so-called subtlety and nuance become defense of the indefensible.

The Magistrate

(95,241 posts)
10. Funny Story, Ma'am: We Have This Pot, Had It Almost Fifty Years
Thu Aug 15, 2013, 01:16 PM
Aug 2013

Still call it 'the green pot', because it was that ghastly avocado green popular back then when it was new. Use it for damned near everything, including deep frying. Asked one of my grand-kids to get me 'the green pot' not long ago, he emerged from the cupboard saying he couldn't see a green pot in there. It has indeed gone pretty completely black by now, though when I fetched it out and looked it over close, I could find a couple of tiny patches still showed traces of the original finish.

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