15 Şubat 2011 Salı

Egypt: Post Revolution Problems by *General Mirza Aslam Beg

The revolution has crossed the first mile stone, overcoming the legacy of old and new colonialism, yet there are more milestones to be crossed to reach the goal of freedom, democracy and empowerment. A grim struggle lies ahead.

Thirty two years back, on this day the eleventh of February, Iranians snatched power from Shah of Iran – a staunch ally of America and consolidated the revolution under the leadership of Imam Khomeini. On this day, the eleventh of February, the Egyptians, after eighteen days of siege, brought Mubarak down – a staunch American ally, yet power remains transferred into the hands of the military and Mubarak prefers to stay on the Egyptian soil at the Red Sea resort of Sharmal Sheikh. How power will be transferred to the people, is the real issue, which can be analysed in the light of the conspiracies which were hatched to destroy the Iranian revolution.

The pro-American political forces, such as the Fidaeen-e-Khalq and others, were the main instruments in the hands of the conspirators, who eliminated over seventy top revolutionary leaders of Iran in one act of terror bombing. Efforts were made to create divisions in the ranks and file of the revolutionaries. Ultimately the Americans forced Saddam Hussain to invade Iran, hoping that “the revolution would be destroyed and both Iran and Iraq would kill each other.” But on the contrary, the invasion helped Iran consolidate the revolution.

With power handed over to the military and Mubarak allowed to stay in the country, there is a greater risk of confrontation with the masses, demanding full transfer of power. Thus, “Behind this unified hierarchical façade contradictory influences are at work, posing serious threats to national security.” And no doubt, people are talking about the Foreign Agenda “of dismantling the nation into sectarian components led towards infighting and tightening the siege and imposition of a peaceful solution with Israel.” The military have deep vested interests, as they had remained hand and glove with Mubarak, to build vast businesses, linked with big businesses in United States and Egypt. It would be extremely difficult for the military to hand over such privileges and power for the sake of the revolution. And they also know that the revolutionaries, as they gain full power and authority, would make the armed forces, including Mubarak, accountable for their past misdeeds. The Americans, therefore also would prefer the military to retain/share power to protect their interests and the interests of those who made hay during Mubarak’s regime. Such conflict of interests therefore would lead to deeper conspiracy, to block the process of transfer of power. Therefore, the very first step, military has taken is, abrogation of the constitution; dissolution of the assembly and the promise for holding of elections in September 2011. These are hollow promises and delaying tactics, similar to General Zia’s promise of elections in ninety days. The Egyptians won’t take it, and the protests will continue, to press for their demands.

The revolution has not been able to throw up any towering personality like Imam Khomeini of Iran, who could lead and maintain unity of the movement. Moreover, the revolutionaries, under Muslim Brotherhood, hold powerful elements with diverse views and vision of life. There is a strong element of Jehadis and militants who had been confronting Mubarak for the last three decades, under the leaders with regional status only. Side by side, there are a considerable number of youth amongst them, holding liberal and moderate views on life and belong to the new cyber generation, nationalist in outlook, having respect for democracy and freedom. Despite these differences of views, they stood as one, under the banner of Muslim Brotherhood and won the first battle of freedom. What is going to follow now is a struggle for power, which will provide enough space to the conspirators to accentuate the differences between the militants and the moderates. And if they succeed, it would help the military to retain power to safeguard their interests and the interests of others, they have been associated with, for the last five decades. The success of the revolution therefore, depends on their ability to force the armed forces for early transfer of power and subordination to the civil authority. Saddam helped Iran consolidate the revolution, but there is no Saddam around to help Egypt consolidate the revolution.
The Americans and their allies are allergic to Islamists coming to power. Hammas won the fair and free elections in Palestine, but was not allowed to form the government and the Israelis now are facing the consequences. Similarly, the Mujahideen in Afghanistan, who fought the war to expel the Soviets, were not allowed to form the government and were pushed into a contrived civil war. And now, as they emerge as the winner, efforts are afoot, to deny them due share in power. This obsession, in fact has been the cause of Americans defeat in Afghanistan. They have lost the war in Afghanistan but find it difficult to rationalize the defeat, without hurting their ego and pride of a super power.

If the Americans want democracy and rule of law in Egypt, they must pay heed to the demands of the revolutionaries: release political prisoners; lift emergency; abolish state security apparatus and start negotiations for transfer of power. These are fair demands, to help Brotherhood to form the government, with Armed Forces accepting a subordinating role as the military in Pakistan has accepted its role and is no more willing to play the American game.

Intrigues and manipulations would damage the cause of revolution and the emerging process of democracy and rule of law. Let the people of Egypt determine the course of freedom and democracy, in the manner, the people of Pakistan, having found democracy and are now fighting corruption and bad governance. This is our struggle for democracy.  Struggle brings the best in the nation, in the worst of times and that is the struggle which lies ahead for the people of Egypt.

14 Şubat 2011 Pazartesi

Military Rule in Egypt by *Brig. Asif Haroon Raja


In Egypt, Till very recent President Hosni Mubarak was flying high and leading an exhilarating life with no worries. Having ruled with full authority for 30 years and having amassed a fortune of over $40 billion and owning posh mansions in several western countries and counting himself among the richest men of the world, he was now looking forward to the coming elections in September 2011 in which he was all set to get his son Gamal elected and succeed him so that he could lead a quiet and comfortable retired life. There was no external threat to Egypt and internally no political party posed any challenge. Egypt enjoyed best of relations with the US, western world and Israel and after the death of Sadam Hussein and liquidation of Baathist Party, the Arab world by and large had reconciled with Egypt’s pro-US and pro-Israeli policies. Saudi Arabia and other Arab monarchies favored tough stance of Hosni against religious extremists since such elements posed a threat to their monarchies as well. Under such benign environments, none among the ruling regime in Cairo could contemplate an uprising of such a magnitude as has occurred.    

Egypt remained under British backed monarchy from 1936 till mid 1952. Col Gamal Abdel Nasser led free officers’ coup in July 1952 against moribund and corrupt rule of fun loving King Farouq and established Revolutionary Command Council. After one year he renamed Egypt as a Republic and installed Naguib as president and himself as prime minister but a little later took over as president and formulated a new constitution. He emerged as a strong and poplar nationalist leader of Egypt in particular and Arab world in general because of his pan-Arab ideas. Merger of Syria with Egypt was part of the scheme. He subsumed Egyptian nationalism and pan-Islamism into an overall Pan-Arabism orientation. His popularity got a fillip after he nationalized Suez Canal which antagonized Britain and France. It led to invasion of Sinai in November 1956 by Israeli forces in which British-French troops also took part. Egypt managed to carry the day when British and French forces had to withdraw under international pressure.

After the war, Nasser aligned Egypt with Soviet Union. His difficulties in acquiring US weaponry were instrumental in deciding to seek Soviet arms for Egyptian armed forces. In 1962 Nasser supplemented Pan-Arabism with a secular socialist component. He resigned after the 1967 debacle but took back his resignation on popular demand of Egyptians. His death in 1970 was widely mourned by the people of Egypt. He is still remembered with fondness since Egypt has not seen another charismatic leader of his caliber. Nasserites are still active in Egypt.

Nasser was succeeded by his Vice President Air Marshal Anwar al-Sadat who soon after taking over started to gravitate towards Washington. In all probability he had already been cultivated by the Americans. He ordered expulsion of Russian military advisers and technicians in July 1972 to reduce Russian influence. In 1976 he abrogated Egypt-Soviet Treaty of friendship & Cooperation.

It was during his rule that Egyptian forces broke the myth of invincibility of Bar-Lev Line built by Israelis all along the Suez Canal in Sinai soon after six-day 1967 Arab-Israeli war in which Arab armies were routed and enabled Israel to capture whole of Sinai including Gaza, Golan Heights and West Bank from Egypt, Syria and Jordan respectively.

The Bar-Lev Line was successfully breached on 6 October 1973 and several bridgeheads established across the Suez Canal which could not be eliminated by Israeli forces. This success was partially offset by Aerial Sharon’s pincer which exploited the gap between 2nd and 3rd Egyptian Armies in ‘Bitter Lakes’ area near Ismailia city and after crossing the Suez Canal, the pincer moved southwards but was contained and a stalemate occurred. It was in that critical timeframe that the Yom Kippur war ended as a consequence to US brokered ceasefire. Egypt’s 2nd Army’s 8-10 km deep bridgehead east of Suez Canal and Sharon’s toehold west of canal were of no threat to either side. For the Egyptians, it was an astounding victory and a vindication of their humiliating defeat in 1967 encounter. It redeemed the lost dignity and honor of the Army.

Henry Kissinger used all his diplomatic skills to keep the tenuous ceasefire intact and to remove antagonism between two arch rivals. His almost four-year efforts bore fruits and resulted in both sides agreeing to come to terms. Sadat on the advice of Washington undertook a historical visit to Tel Aviv in November 1977. Since he was the first Arab leader to visit Israel, he was eulogized by the Jewish and western press but widely censored by the Arab world. Camp David agreement was signed by Jimmy Carter, Sadat and Menachem Begin in September 1978 and Egypt-Israeli peace agreement inked on 26 March 1979.

Surprisingly, Sadat showed little interest in occupied lands of Syria and Jordan and his commitment to Palestinian cause was perfunctory. His sole interest during the negotiations was to recover Sinai. Had he succeeded in getting Golan Heights, West Bank, Gaza and East Jerusalem vacated from Israeli control and a road map for settlement of Palestinian dispute, it would have further enhanced his prestige and Egypt’s standing in Arab world.       

Egypt’s 1973 victory was turned into a political defeat when Egypt was removed from the camp of resisting states to Israeli occupation of Arab lands to the camp of appeasement. This shift in balance of power in the region and vacuum created by absence of Egypt, allowed Israel to eliminate resistance one by one starting with Lebanon, Iraq, Palestine and Lebanon again and Iraq again and now current rhetoric indicate that Iran and Syria are next.

Egypt lost respect of the Arab countries that had regarded Egypt as an intellectual and cultural leader. This change in perceptions encouraged Iraq under ambitious leader Saddam to claim leadership role of Arab world and led to serious differences between Egypt and Iraq. Taking advantage of the Egypt-Iraq cold war and Iraqi forces involvement in war with Iran, Israeli air force destroyed Iraq’s nuclear reactor at Osirek in June 1981.

Egypt’s change of heart encouraged several Arab states to restore diplomatic relations with Tel Aviv. Arab League became a dead horse since Egypt torpedoed any reprisal action like economic war or cutting off diplomatic ties with Israel or raising the issue of settlements in occupied lands in the UN. Arab countries paying only lip service to the Palestinian dispute added to the disillusionment and woes of Palestinians. 
  
Within Egypt, Sadat’s ties with USA and Israel saw intensification of opposition to his domestic and foreign policies. He was viewed as a betrayer of Arab cause. His economic liberalization and encouragement of private sector benefited the upper and upper middle class seculars, but weakening of public sector had a crippling effect on lower and middle classes. It widened the gulf between the rich and the poor and also fueled corruption among the bureaucrats. The deprived class languished under escalating prices of food items.

Muslim-Coptic sectarian clashes in June 1981 and their persecution by the state antagonized the two communities. Arrest of 1500 political opponents in September was roundly criticized at home and abroad. Consequent to welling up of hatred against Sadat, he was killed by grenade tossing and gun firing Lt Khalid al Islamboli and three soldiers on 6 October 1981 when he was reviewing the annual military parade in Cairo. 28 senior officers including air vice marshal Hosni Mubarak sitting on the dais received injuries. A state of emergency was declared which has not been lifted to this day.  

His successor Hosni Mubarak who had served as air force chief and his Vice President for six years brought no change in his predecessor’s policies. He pursued US policies faithfully and stuck to peace treaty with Israel which helped him in remaining in good books of both. He continued with the witch hunt of the Islamists. Worst kind of human rights abuses were committed against activists of religious parties forcing many to flee. He also colluded with Israel when latter’s forces invaded Gaza in December-January 2009 and helped Israel in affecting an economic blockade against Gazans by blocking Rafah crossing in Sinai.

Already outraged by Hosni’s pro-American and pro-Israeli policies and suffering under the weight of his oppressive policies, common people in Egypt were primed for explosion. The spark was provided by events in Tunisia where the people succeeded in ousting the dictator on 14 January. Its ripple effects were felt in Egypt, Algeria, Jordan, Yemen and Morocco as well.

In Egypt, the people came on the streets of Cairo, Alexandria, Ismailia and Suez in large numbers on 25 January and thereon made it into a daily routine. 350,000 strong Central Security Force (CSF) and National Police after vainly battling with the protestors gave up and breathed a sigh of relief when Hosni ordered the Army to take over and impose curfew on 28 January. Taking advantage of the turmoil and police helplessness, 13000 prisoners made their escape good.

470,000 strong Army, with equal number of reservists under Lt Gen Sami Hafez Annan, which had struck roots in national affairs in 1952 and is popular among the masses took over security duties in Cairo and Alexandria but put up a neutral and friendly face much to the chagrin of beleaguered Hosni. Latter refused to vacate his seat saying that he would stay in power till next presidential election scheduled in September to prevent chaos.

He however appointed ailing Intelligence Chief Lt Gen Omar Suleiman as his Vice President, dissolved the cabinet and formed a fresh cabinet under new Prime Minister Air Marshal Ahmad Shafiq who was performing as minister of civil aviation. The aging president promised that neither he nor his son would participate in next elections and also grudgingly agreed to carryout constitutional and political reforms. He also vacated his post of chairman National Democratic Party.

These measures however failed to placate the people and they stuck to their demand of immediate ouster of Hosni. The people hate the rulers, CSF and the police under the interior ministry but are friendly towards the Army. The protesters constantly wooed the soldiers to their side. About 300 people died and hundreds injured but protests continued despite curfew. They were fed up of insensitivity of their rulers, rampant corruption, large scale unemployment and political oppression whenever they asked for reforms.

Although the emotions of Egyptians were very high and their resolve to make the ‘Nile Revolution’ a success was strong, but they are without a leader. Muhammad ElBaradei doesn’t fit the bill since he is Mr. nobody in Egypt’s politics and is seen as America’s man purposely sent to deceive the people. The CNN and BBC commentators exposed their inner desire by opining that he could be a good replacement of Hosni. Another aspirant Amr Mussa heading Arab League is also not an ideal choice. Muslim Brotherhood kept a low profile because it didn’t want the uprising to be dubbed as an Islamic revolution. Although it has 88 seats in the legislature, it doesn’t have a charismatic leader to turn the tide in its favor.  

The uprising triggered by the youth on 25th January took a dangerous turn on 04th February when one million people assembled at Tahrir Square (Independence Square) in Central Cairo and refused to vacate the premises till ouster of the despot. When the Army refused to fire on the crowds, intelligence goons, ruffians and Salafi movement members tried to break up the assembly by using brute force but failed. Hosni became a sitting duck after the US and the west started to withdraw their support to him and the Army adopted an affable posture. The brewing storm climaxed on 11th when the people besieged the presidential palace and left embattled Hosni with no choice but to resign and flee to his palace in Sharm el Sheikh. Like Ayub Khan, instead of handing over the reigns to the Speaker, he preferred to hand over the reigns to Supreme Council of Armed Forces.   

The power has slipped into the hands of Vice President Lt Gen Omar, Defence Minister Field Marshal M. Hussein Tantawi and Army Chief Lt Gen Annan. With no external threat, the Army has got too addicted to benefits of peace with Israel and is enjoying the fruits of US largesse for long. It is heavily involved in businesses, road building, construction works and running bakeries and laundries. Aging senior officers are holding key appointments in civil organizations and in government departments. Over 37 years of peace has dulled the warrior spirit among the officer cadre. Status quo is the most desirable option for the senior leadership of the Army.

The US, Israel, Saudi Arabia and other Arab monarchies prefer status quo with some cosmetic reforms but the people do not want change of faces but a real change. They hate Muslim Brotherhood and Islamic laws and desire continuation of the present system under new faces. It is said that the Army while putting up a friendly face is keeping its options open. The constitution has been suspended and parliament dissolved on 13th, but the Army Command has so far not given any timeframe for polls and has made it clear that till completion of transition to democracy it will remain committed to international treaties including Camp David accord. Tahrir Square has still not been completely vacated by protesters and die hard among them say they will not depart till lifting of state of emergency, release of political prisoners, fair elections and swift handover of power to the civilians. Army’s role is considered critical for the future of Egypt. The wind of change has started to blow in North Africa, but it will take some more time for a real change. 

*Asif Haroon Raja,The writer is a defence analyst and Member Board of advisors, he has been Defence Attache to Egypt and Sudan, Directing Staff, Command and Staff College Quetta.

12 Şubat 2011 Cumartesi

The Uprising in Egypt by *General Mirza Aslam Beg

It is not difficult to know what would be the ultimate out-come of the conflict in Egypt as it depends on the dialectics of the two opposing will and the stronger has already won. One represents the decades old dictorial rule of Hosni Mubarak, supported by the military and industrial group of United States of America, helping to grow a bloated Egyptian military business (Milbus), ‘big civil business mafia’, and Hosni Mubarak amassing US$ 75 billion, as the richest man in the world. The second, represents the broad masses of Egypt, led by Muslim Brotherhood, out-lawed and ruthlessly suppressed by the military dictators for over five decades. The uprising now has entered into the third week, demolishing Mobarak’s power and prestige, brick-by-brick, forcing the change, which has become inevitable.

The Uprising

It is led by Muslim Brotherhood founded by Hassan-al-Banna in 1920. By 1930 it launched the movement as a legalist non-violent anti-colonialist resistance against the Zionist expansionism. The objective was to establish a democratic Islamic state, based on broad-based educational and socio-economic reforms. Hassan-al-Banna was assassinated by the British in 1949, and Syed Qutub took over. He was hanged by Nasser in 1966, which led to the creation of the ‘Jehadi Wing’ and growth of militancy in the movement. Aiman-al-Zawahri, now as a leader of Muslim Brotherhood, remains a marginal figure because of his opposition to Muslim Brotherhood’s “policy of liberalism and peaceful participation in Egyptian politics.”

The main-stay of the popular movement is ‘Muslim Brotherhood,’ which provides the leadership and the organizational structure, sustaining the uprising and its growth, as more and more people are joining the movement, with its multi-faced identity. It has a ‘Jehadi’ wing as well as a ‘Militant wing’ and a large segment of youth, who value the western traditions of democratic freedom, human rights, secularism and nationalism, deeply rooted into their psyche. Yet there is no conflict within the movement led by Muslim Brotherhood, which considers itself a centrist religious mainstream political movement, consolidated by decades of confrontation and persecution. For definite, they do not want an Iranian model in Egypt.

Mubarak-Military-American Nexus

Since 1952, Egypt has been ruled by the military and with Hosni Mubarak coming to power, the Americans formed the Nexus, with the military, which enjoys huge defense budget, and a ‘Milbus Empire’ consisting of valuable properties, big businesses, defense industries and huge national development projects. It has strong links with the political leadership in Cairo and Washington and with the defense industries cartel, retired and serving bureaucrats, serving with multi-national business tycoons and the Jewish lobby. No wonder Washington has posted to Cairo, Frank Wisner as their special envoy, for “damage control sub-contracting crisis management and providing strategic global advice, concerning business.” He is a special choice of Obama and Hillary Clinton to bail-out Mubarak and protect the interests of the Nexus. He has blocked all moves for reconciliation with the movement, promising to protect Hosni Mubarak and his huge stock of wealth, property and assets, by prolonging the confrontation, trying to wear-out the patience and stamina of the movement, which unfortunately is gaining strength with each passing day. Mubarak, an Air Force officer himself, his Vice-President, the Chief of the Defence Staff, about 50% military legislators in the House of Representatives and the military governors, together, provide the last hope to the citadel of Mubarak’s power, built over the decades.

Possibilities

The movement led by Muslim Brotherhood is most likely to hold-out and win. Mubarak-Military-Washington nexus will yield, to their demands, through a negotiated settlement. The first round of talks has failed. The process is to be restarted to find a way-out, before the situation gets out of control. Ultimately, it is the military, maintaining a neutral stance, will come forward, to intervene and find a negotiated settlement. Following issues are critical:
  • Dictatorship and the dominant role of the military has been rejected. The military therefore has to accept a subordinating role to the future democratic set-up.
  • The movement draws ‘diverse vision’ together and would desire to be a full partner in the process of change – a democratic state in the ‘Turkish style’ despite, “behind the unified, hierarchal façade, contradictory influences being at work”
  • The negotiations should focus on the formation of a national government first, made responsible to frame a constitution, formulate the election modalities and hold elections within a specified time frame.
  • The change should not be taken as a set-back to the ongoing process of Arab-Israel rapprochement. In fact a more realistic and popular approach would be possible now.
  • It is essential to ensure Israel’s security concerns, checks on nuclear proliferation and militancy.
  • A balanced US-Egypt relationship must emerge, to ensure flow of aid and assistance, as central to the negotiated settlement and for the sake of peace in the region.
  • The fall of Mubarak must herald a new era of freedom and democracy, to guarantee peace within the country and the region as a whole.
  • The hoax of Islamic extremism, should not blur the vision for the greater cause of the people of Egypt.
Conclusion
This is a revolution in the real sense, which has galvanized the Egyptian nation, demanding freedom from decades of oppressive rules of the despotic rulers. There is no turning back for them. The government has lost the contest, though temporarily shielded by the military which has shrewdly maintained its neutrality and retains the ability to mediate.

The military should mediate, not to protect its own Milbus, not to protect Hosni Mubarak’s 75 billion dollar fortune, and not to become a part of the American Game to consolidate its hold and influence over Egypt, but to establish the supremacy of the democratic will of the people of Egypt. Change is inevitable and it must come at the behest of the military, to achieve balance between various elements of national power, safeguarding vital national security interests, as is the case in Pakistan now, enabling it to overcome successive waves of crises.

P.S.As I write these lines, the military under General Tantawi, is reported to have taken over the control of the country, not in a coup, but through consensus reached with Mubarak and the Americans. The Brotherhood leadership has not been consulted, which creates doubts about the intentions of the military. Hence the masses will remain on the streets, till the military accepts a subordinating role in the future democratic set-up, and Mubarak leaves the country.

*General Mirza Aslam Beg is former Chief Of Army Staff, Pakistan. After his retirement, he formed a Think Tank

10 Şubat 2011 Perşembe

US Media & Egypt Coverage: Dodging the Real Issues & Fudging the Real Culprits by *Sibel Edmonds

ProtestWith all eyes and attention on Egypt, the unsavory ‘US Foreign Policy’ has become the topic of choice among the intelligentsia, journalists, and the overly populated US analyst colony. There are scores of analyses out there; thousands of articles, millions of blog threads and unending ‘update’ headlines on TV screens. Yet, at least in ‘popular’ outlets, reality appears to be the missing link. Don’t worry, I am not about to hit you with a long-winded article on Egypt. If you are masochistic enough to actually want my take (pages and pages of  history/analyses) you can revisit a few of our pieces on the topic of nefarious US foreign policy practices here, here and here; timeless and equally applicable to what we are witnessing with Egypt, Jordan and Tunisia today. Instead, I want to share with you a few select points and coverage that got my attention:

Let’s start with the tongue and cheek protest sign in the above picture: “USA Why You Support Dectatour” Of course, these demonstrators, in fact almost the entire population in that part of the world, know the answer to this rhetorical question. I think they are trying to get Americans to ask this question and seek ‘real’ answers, no matter how unsavory, nauseating, awful…You see, this is what the US media is selling the majority as to why we support and maintain (pay for, defend…you name it) corrupt ruthless dictators:
Alliance with new governments to protect U.S. interests: security for Israel, sustainability of world energy supply and the fight against al-Qaeda and other terrorist groups.
That’s right: the above, instead of: dictators who will purchase our arms from our mega corporations, serve Israel’s interests, give us cheap oil, and become our official or semi-official base (aka: colony), and that at any price (that is, the price to the population and human rights there). Think Saudi Arabia, think Turkmenistan, Think Uzbekistan…Think about all the dictator allies we support, maintain and sustain. While we are at the topic of ‘sustaining,’ let me illustrate what I mean:
The same article source above, Bloomberg, lightly mentions the following:
Egypt is the fourth-largest recipient of U.S. aid, after Afghanistan, Pakistan and Israel, according to the State Department’s 2011 budget, receiving more than $1.5 billion a year.
Another semi alternative publication (alternative in name only) goes only half a step further and actually adds it up, the US taxpayers’ dollars that is:
American support for the Egyptian government — to the tune of $60 billion in aid over the last 30 years — garnered virtually no regular attention before the protests began.
But here is one article, written by a true alternative journalist (an independent one), where American taxpayer dollars spent on this Dictatorship ally for the last 30 years come together, and actually add up nicely:
According to a mix of United States, Syrian and Algerian sources his personal fortune amounts to no less than US$40 billion – stolen from the public treasury in the form of “commissions”, on weapons sales, for instance. The Pharaoh controls loads of real estate, especially in the US; accounts in US, German, British and Swiss banks; and has “links” with corporations such as MacDonald’s, Vodafone, Hyundai and Hermes. Suzanne, the British-Irish Pharaoh’s wife, is worth at least $5 billion. And son Gamal – the one that may have fled to London, now stripped of his role as dynastic heir – also boasts a personal fortune of $17 billion.
Mubarak’s fortune, including his wife’s and son’s, is estimated to be …$40 Billion + $5 Billion + $17 Billion= $62 Billion. We Americans have been paying this man for 30 years, for a total of $60 Billion. Was it for infrastructure, job creation…you know, all those vital ingredients? Or was it to create another king, a dictator, or as Escobar puts it, a Pharaoh with a $Billions fortune? 
Here is more by another true alternative reporter:
Now, if through some incredible circumstance Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak decides to flee the country, à la Ben Ali, there’s a good chance his first-class flight would come courtesy of the American taxpayer.
Pentagon contracts show that the US government has spent at least $111,160,328 to purchase and maintain Mubarak’s fleet of nine Gulfstream business jets. (For those keeping score, Gulfstream is a subsidiary of General Dynamics.)
And this:
Hounshell also noticed a report that Egyptian First Lady Suzanne Mubarak once “commandeered a bus that had been bought with money from the United States Agency for International Development and that had been meant to carry children to school.”
           
But wait a minute; let’s not forget another involved party these tax dollars happen to benefit. You know who I’m talking about, right? This is where our government takes our dollars, gives it to dictator allies, and then asks them to turn around, give that money (minus the personal share for personal wealth) to our military industrial complex corporations. Then, we have those CEO’s with $$$$$$$ salaries, and $$$$$$$ to the lobbyists and $$$$$$ to our elected representatives, who then in turn, sanction giving more money, aid, tax payers’ dollars, to these dictators; and the cycle repeats, repeats, repeats…well, it’s been repeating nonstop for more than half a century.

As for this great ally for ‘regional security’ my favorite site has the following on a recent Robert Gates-Egypt Defence Minister meeting involving the so-called partnership for ‘regional security’:
When the two military leaders met in May 2009 to discuss “a wide range of security issues,” Egyptian Defence Minister Hussein Tantawi presented US Defense Secretary Robert Gates with a set of gifts. They included a shotgun (with five bullets), a decorative rug and a gilded photo album.
With a confidence that, in retrospect, seems dubious, Gates said “he looks forward to expanding the two countries’ military-to-military relationships in ways that promote regional stability.”
Five months after that meeting, the Pentagon announced it would sell a new batch of two dozen F-16 fighter aircraft to Egypt—a $3.2 billion deal that is among the most recent of a long string of arms deliveries from America to its North African ally. These F-16s, according to the Pentagon announcement (pdf) would support “Egypt’s legitimate need for its own self-defense.”
Today the Egyptian Air Force buzzed a crowd of demonstrators in Cairo with fighter jets much like those supplied, over a period of decades, by the US. It was a tactical decision that bore little relation to “legitimate” national “self-defense,” although it can be construed as a desperate attempt to defend Hosni Mubarak’s three-decade hold on the presidency.
           
Rest assured the American mainstream media won’t delve into these ‘real’ issues, because that would get into the real disease, our hypocrisy-ridden sick imperialistic foreign policy, where American taxpayers and the people of these nations are among the victims-losers, and a handful of corporations have been reaping the benefits. The media’s neocons have been twisting and intentionally misinterpreting the recent developments in Egypt. Please don’t think of only the Neocons of the Right, because the neocons of the left have been equally if not more involved in this deception game, and here is a recent example provided by Antiwar.Com, with excellent questions directed at the Israel lobby’s outspoken Maddow:

6 Şubat 2011 Pazar

BLACK LAW OF IMMUNITY by *Tanvir Ahmed Siddiqui

We as a nation are living through unspeakable tragedies and exploitations though as a nation we are now immune to all kinds of tragedies. Immunity is the latest form of exploitation that is being applied on us. We were yet not over with joys of PRESEDENTIAL IMMUNITY that is being applied on us as a License to Corruption. Now a latest shot of immunity is DIPLOMATIC IMMUNITY as a License to Kill. This immunization syndrome is another fruit of that tree of civil rights and liberties in modern world.

KINGS CAN DO NO WRONG: “Magna Carta also known as Magna Charta is part of the un-codified but time to time modified constitution of England since 1215 & 1297. This Charta at face is considered in the modern world as a great charter to protect and guarantee civil rights and liberties and limits to the powers of King. But its continued abuse since colonial rules actually protected liberties and offered immunities to Royals, Barons, Bishops, Abbots and Nobles to ensure their r external and internal affects and influences. To my understanding Diplomatic Immunity as a black law is an offshoot of same mindset and abuse of Magna Carta mainly to strengthen colonial rule not only in sub-continent but also in other domains of British Raj.
As per Wickipedia encyclopedia:Diplomatic Immunity is a form of Legal Immunity and policy which ensures that diplomats are given safe passage and considered not susceptible to lawsuit or prosecution under the laws of host country’s land. Diplomatic immunity as an institution developed to allow for the maintenance and sustenance of Govt relations during periods of difficulties even during armed conflicts. The British parliament first guaranteed immunity to foreign ambassadors in 1709, after Count Andrey Matveyev a Russian resident in London, had been subject by British bailiffs to verbal and physical abuse. Various events in ancient times clearly indicate in the history that European Monarchs at the time did not consider foreign ambassadors to be immune from punishments.  

In reality, most diplomats are representatives of nations with tradition of professional civil service are expected to obey regulations governing their personal behavior and must remain ready to suffer strict internal consequences / disciplinary action if they flout local laws. Professional diplomacy considered as compromised if they or even their family member disobey the local authorities or cause serious embarrassment. Such cases are at any rate, considered unethical and as violation of the spirit of Vienna convention. As per spirit of Vienna convention “It is possible for the official’s home country to waive immunity. This tends to happen only when the individual has committed a serious crime unconnected with his / her diplomatic role. But many countries ( so called most civilized and  being  trumped as champions and saviors of civil liberties and human rights in modern world )  however refuse to wave immunity as a matter of course”  as now being done in case of Reymond Davis.   These countries mostly do so by taking the advantage of the cases of overlap between the rules of “Functional Immunity” and “Personal Immunity” as per customary international law and treaty.

Not being an expert on international laws but still as a layman and an ordinary citizen of Pakistan for my understanding I would like to draw attention of my readers and would like to refer in brief with the Doctrine of International law of Immunity from prosecution for criminal offences. Immunities are of two types: Functional Immunity is granted to people who perform certain functions as act of state. This type of immunity is based on respect for sovereign equality and state dignity. The offices usually recognized as attracting Functional immunity are Head of States or Heads of Govts., senior cabinet members, Foreign Ministers and Minister of Defense.

Second is Personal Immunity: Which is enjoyed by  diplomatic agents and their families because of the office they hold rather than in relation to the act they have committed. When a person enjoying a personal immunity commits a criminal act , the personal immunity as usual, is removed. Personal immunities cease with the cessation of the post.
Ref: http//en.wikipedia.org/Immunity_from_prosecution_(international law)

My understanding is that perhaps in case of Raymond Davis, his country of origin is once again trying to take advantage of the cases of overlap in between Functional Immunity and Personal Immunity.  The beginning of Modern Immunity as parallel to modern diplomacy since 1709 was actually to guarantee diplomatic immunity from prosecution to foreign missions that actually indulged in violations and abuse of local laws not in order but  in disorder to intact the Colonial Rule of British Raj. In this age of modern diplomacy, diplomatic immunity continues to provide a means to safe guard hidden intents and vested interests of stronger states into the weaker states. In view of massive arousals and riots like in Tunisia,  Egypt, Algeria and so on  against prolonged exploitation of public rights  the civilized world therefore must review the possible impacts of irresponsible diplomacy.

Especially under perspectives of major accidents of wars so far occurred in the world the diplomacy must be tamed to the level of respects of sovereignties. In the late 19th and early 20th Centuries, morality was not regarded as an important element in international relations. The history of Diplomacy reveals that personal attitudes and behaviors and conduct of diplomats and their agents covered under all kinds of immunities   infect aggravated the causes and effects of world wars.

Massive killings of wars brought much more critical attitudes towards their leaders:
  • How and why had diplomats and diplomacy brought Europe and the world to this horror?
  • Were the traditions and personnel of diplomacy a factor in prolonging the war?
  • The diplomats were almost exclusively upper class and there was a growing feeling that there was not enough democratic control. The war revealed that the consequences of diplomacy were borne by all of society and were too serious to be left to small elite.
However, there began to be a growing movement and sentiment to alter the conduct of diplomacy and international relations.
Ref: Wallace G. Mills Hist. 203 12 Morality and Diplomacy.

This attitude and mindset is continued under prevailed Dichotomy of  ‘Might is Right’.  The violation and abuse of this Law of Immunity by diplomats especially of stronger countries particularly into socially, politically and economically weaker states includes not only espionage but all kinds of other crimes including rapes, murder, child custody, material theft, employer abuse and discrimination  in cases of employing local staff and labor. It is therefore the policy of the foreign service of United States neither to confirm nor to deny the existence of espionage and intelligence personnel in US embassies.

How the Government of  Pakistan, this time handle with the situation of Raymond Davis, will set the tone for the future of this black Law of protection of violence and exploitation of stronger states into weaker states. But greater possibility is that “Dichotomy of Might is Right “would prevail.

*Tanvir Ahmed Siddiqui is a freelance writer

4 Şubat 2011 Cuma

Neocons’ Tepid Reaction to the Egyptian Democratic Revolution by *Stephen J. Sniegoski

The  uprisings currently taking place against the autocratic regimes in the Middle East would seem to be in line with the neoconservatives’ advocacy of  radical democratic change in the region.  But there is one significant difference.  The neocons had sought to use democratic revolutions to overthrow the enemies of Israel, even applying it, much less successfully, to countries such as Saudi Arabia, which were client states of the United States; but now democratic revolution is engulfing the Mubarak regime in Egypt, which maintained friendly relations with Israel.  As Israeli writer Aluf Benn points out in Ha’aretz, “[t]he fading power of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak's government leaves Israel in a state of strategic distress. Without Mubarak, Israel is left with almost no friends in the Middle East.”  [“Without Egypt, Israel will be left with no friends in Mideast,” January 29, 2010,   ]  In a situation where Israeli interests would be harmed by democratic revolution,  the neocons’ ardor for this development  has  cooled dramatically.

Daniel Luban on Lobelog points out that in the first days of the Egyptian revolution the neocons were  largely silent on this development and those who commented tended  to express some skepticism as to its likelihood to bring about positive results.   He quotes The  Weekly Standard’s Lee Smith cautioning U.S. activists not to become too fond of the Egyptian demonstrators:  “It is not always a good thing when people go to the streets; indeed the history of revolutionary action shows that people go to the streets to shed blood more often than they do to demand democratic reforms.”  Luban predicts that “[i]f the protests are ultimately unsuccessful, the neocons will attack Obama for letting the protesters twist in the wind; if the protests are ultimately successful, they will claim the events in Egypt as vindication for the Bush democracy promotion agenda.” [ “More Silence from America’s ‘Democracy Promoters’,”  January 27, 2011,]

While my own brief research confirms Luban’s point that the neocons have not championed radical  democratic transformation in the current situation, I also found  a number of commonalities and differences among the views of the neocons who voiced their opinions as the events in Egypt have become a featured topic in  the mainstream media.    In line with what Luban has written, I also did not find any neoconservatives who have explicitly abandoned their professed faith in their democratic agenda.  For example, they maintain that the revolts validate their democratic prescription for American Middle East policy during the past decades—that had the U.S. actually fostered democracy in the region, the current revolutionary turmoil would not have ensued.  

The neocons differ among themselves, however, in their assessment of the current situation and in their prescriptions for U.S. actions.  Where they express skepticism of the positive nature of the ongoing revolution, they try to demonstrate how this does not conflict with their fundamental faith in democracy.  In short, they profess to identify with the democratic aspirations of the Egyptian demonstrators but question whether democracy will result from their actions.  It should be emphasized that it is essential for the neocons to praise the democratic aim of the uprising since they could not  do otherwise if they intend to maintain their image as  champions of democracy at a time when most of the world wholeheartedly identifies with the Egyptian pro-democratic protestors.  Moreover, since most observers agree that the Mubarak regime cannot survive,  it is strategically necessary for the neocons  to jump on the bandwagon and encourage the U.S. government to guide the revolution in directions beneficial to American–and, of course, Israeli—interests, under the guise of preventing it from leading to an alleged greater tyranny of the radical Islamists. 

The neocon whose views seem to have changed the least is long-time neocon operative Elliott Abrams, the son-in-law of neocon godfather Norman Podhoretz and Midge Decter.  In assessing the current situation, Abrams heaped blame on America’s traditional Middle East foreign policy that had ignored the domestic policies of autocratic regimes in its focus on U.S. geostrategic interest and regional stability. [“Egypt protests show George W. Bush was right about freedom in the Arab world,” Washington Post, January 28, 2011,   ]
Abrams writes that Egyptian President Mubarak, along with Tunisia’s recently deposed leader, Ben Ali, had “proffered the same line to Washington: It's us or the Islamists.” He contends that “[r]uling under an endless emergency law, he [Mubarak] has crushed the moderate opposition while the Islamist Muslim Brotherhood has thrived underground and in the mosques.”  Mubarak’s tyrannical policies, in effect, made the Islamist Brotherhood his major opposition, which then enabled him to justify “the lack of democracy by saying a free election would bring the Islamists to power.”  Abrams acknowledges that while radical Islamists might win free elections, “the regimes that make moderate politics impossible make extremism far more likely.  Rule by emergency decree long enough, and you end up creating a genuine emergency.  And Egypt has one now.”

Abrams asserts that George W. Bush’s democracy agenda (inspired, of course, by the neocons) had it completely right about the Middle East, quoting from a Bush 2003 speech which read:  “Sixty years of Western nations excusing and accommodating the lack of freedom in the Middle East did nothing to make us safe – because in the long run, stability cannot be purchased at the expense of liberty.  As long as the Middle East remains a place where freedom does not flourish, it will remain a place of stagnation, resentment and violence ready for export."

Abrams points out that there was considerable resistance to the “democracy” agenda as unrealistic from within the Bush administration and that the Obama administration abandoned it.  He stresses that it has now become essential for Obama to emulate Bush:  “Now is the time to say that the peoples of the Middle East are not ‘beyond the reach of liberty’ and that we will assist any peaceful effort to achieve it – and oppose and condemn efforts to suppress it.”

Bill Kristol, the editor of The Weekly Standard,  and perhaps the most prominent neoconservative active today, expresses somewhat belated  support for  the revolutionary cause in Egypt but wants  to make sure that the United States will guide  it in the proper direction. “Mubarak,” he contends, “is now part of the problem, not part of the solution.  His attempt to hang on to power is now an obstacle to stability in Egypt, to say nothing of considerations of freedom for the Egyptian people and the long-term interests of the United States. Surely, I would say, it’s time for the U.S. government to take an active role (much but not all of it behind the scenes), working with the army and civil and political organizations to bring about a South Korea/Philippines/Chile-like transition in Egypt, from an American-supported dictatorship to an American-supported and popularly legitimate liberal democracy.” [“Working Group on Egypt Calls for Suspension of U.S. Aid,” July 29, 2011,]

Writing in his blog “Neocon Corner,” Joshua Muravchik, a long-time neocon stalwart of a more leftist, social democratic, persuasion, views the crisis in Egypt as having great potential ramifications.  “The uprising in the streets of Egypt could remake our world,” Muravchik contends. “Turmoil is contagious. . . . If the flames are not smothered fast in Egypt, which is still the most influential country of the Arab world, the conflagration will spread across the region.”

Muravchik posits three possible outcomes.  The first, which he describes as “less than momentous,” would see Egypt becoming “more of a military dictatorship and less of a party-ruled state.  And it might muddle along that way, as it has already for generations.  The consequences would be sad for Egyptians, not so major for the rest of the world.” [“What Egypt Portends: Three Scenarios,” January 28, 2011, ]

Muravchik next offers a “hopeful scenario” that would involve “an agreement between the regime and leading opponents on some kind of redistribution of power which could be meaningful only through honest elections.  This would create a model that would be hard for the region’s other autocrats to withstand.  A wave of democratization would spread over the Middle East like the one that hit Eastern and Central Europe in 1989.”

Finally, Muravchik sets forth the “frightening scenario” in which “the army crumbles . . . the revolution triumphs, and that the only organized force capable of picking up power from the streets . . . is the Muslim Brotherhood.”

The “best bet” for Egypt, Muravchik contends, is to have a fair election this year, and he emphasizes that it is essential for the U.S. “to throw its weight into the demand” that this be done.  “If Obama makes such a call, many Egyptian voices will echo it,” Muravchik opines. “The current chaos could make things much better for Egypt and the region — or much worse. The time for Obama to find his silver tongue is now.”

David Frum, who crafted George W. Bush’s notorious “Axis-of-Evil” speech, provides more qualified support for the political upheaval  in Egypt. Like Abrams, he agrees that dictatorships are ultimately fragile and that the U.S. should have actively pushed for democracy there long ago.  “This week’s protests remind us that dictatorships do not deliver stability,” Frum asserts.  “Dictatorships do not make reliable allies over the long term. Egypt’s friends should be planning — should have planned long ago — for a transition to a more representative form of government.”  But Frum does not see the fall of the Mubarak regime as certain.  And instead of supporting immediate revolutionary change, as sought by the street demonstrators, he argues for a slow transition to democracy, which “means gradually bringing more and more of the population into politics.” [“David Frum: Egypt’s small steps towards true democracy,” January 29, 2011.

When directed against what essentially were the enemies of Israel (a category in which he included Saudi Arabia), Michael Ledeen championed radical democratic revolution, expressing such extreme views as:  “Creative destruction is our middle name.  . . . It is time once again to export the democratic revolution, ”and  “One can only hope that we turn the region into a cauldron, and faster, please. If ever there were a region that richly deserved being cauldronized, it is the Middle East today.” (The Transparent Cabal, p. 209).  But now confronted with an actual revolutionary upheaval, the ultra-radical  Ledeen has metamorphosed into veritable paragon of caution, maintaining that “[i]n 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.”  Allegedly quoting his grandmother, Ledeen observes: “Things are never so bad they can’t get worse.” [ “Egypt: Revolution? By Whom? For What?,” January 28, 2011, ]

Ledeen puts forth considerable effort to show how his current cautious stance does not conflict with his overall support for democracy.  “We are supposed to be the revolutionaries, and we must support democratic revolution against tyranny,” he solemnly avers.  “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.”

Ledeen agrees with the other neocons that the traditional U.S. Middle East policy of all-out support for authoritarian leaders was bound to fail.  “We should have been pressuring the friendly tyrants in the Middle East to liberalize their polities lo these many years,” he opines.  “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 . . . But we didn’t.”

Ledeen, however, sees a silver lining in the current crisis since, he maintains, it offers the ideal opportunity for the U.S. to come out in support of the Green Movement revolutionaries in Iran, stating that “if we’re going to praise the Tunisian and Egyptian freedom fighters, all the more reason to hail the true martyrs in Iran.”  He emphasizes that it is necessary to “support democratic revolution.  But not false revolutionaries.”  And of course, he actually means that a “democratic revolution” is one that advances the interests of Israel, while “false revolutionaries” are those who act against Israeli interests.  

John Bolton, a long-time member of the neoconservative nexus, who currently is making noises about running for the Republican presidential nomination, did not even pay lip service to democracy in his negative portrayal of the political upheaval in Egypt. It should be said that this complete slighting of democracy makes Bolton something of an outlier among the neocons.  Instead, he focuses solely on the Muslim Brotherhood bogeyman.  He went so far as to say that he did not “think we have evidence yet that these demonstrations are necessarily about democracy.  You know the old saying, ‘one person, one vote, one time.’  The Muslim Brotherhood doesn't care about democracy, if they get into power you're not going to have free and fair elections either.”  To Bolton, the issue was one revolving fundamentally around American geostrategic interests. “Let's be clear what the stakes are for the United States,” Bolton asserts.  “We have an authoritarian regime in power that has been our ally.”  He believes, and seems to hope, that the Egyptian army, which he describes as the real power in the country, could take actions to suppress this revolutionary development. .[Bolton, AMB. JOHN BOLTON: Is Democracy Coming to Egypt at Last?]

From the neocons’ less-than-enthusiastic reaction to the ongoing democratic revolutionary wave in the Middle East, it is apparent that they are far from being democratic ideologues, as has often been claimed.  And this has been apparent for some time.  In The Transparent Cabal, I cite many instances where the neocons take positions that are contrary to supporting democracy–their opposition to democratic rights for Palestinians being the most egregious, but far from the only example.  In fact, I point out that the “Neoconservatives have not always even claimed to be exponents of democracy as a policy goal; in fact, it was the rejection of pushing democracy as a foreign policy goal that loomed large in their early years. During the Cold War, the neoconservatives emphasized that it was essential to support dictatorships, if they were pro-United States, as part of the overall war on Soviet Communism.  They were especially critical of President Jimmy Carter’s emphasis on human rights in foreign policy, which they held had served to undermine anti-Communist pro-American dictatorships, such as the Shah’s Iran and Somoza’s Nicaragua, and facilitated their transformation into anti-American dictatorships that might align with the Soviet Union.” [The Transparent Cabal, pp. 227-228]  In short, instead of being ideologues of democracy, the neocons largely use “democracy” as a rhetorical weapon to advance their own particular agenda, which currently involves advancing the interests of the state of Israel, which they claim to be identical to the interests of the United States.

Thus it would be expected that the interests of Israel would loom large in their assessment of the current political upheaval in Egypt.  The neoconservatives thus express their support for democracy in general  in Egypt, but then raise the specter of a Muslim Brotherhood takeover of Egypt, and the concomitant emergence of an undemocratic theocratic state, if a free democratic election should actually take place.  But why should the Muslim Brotherhood, which is the oldest and largest Islamic political organization,  be prohibited from participating  in the politics of Egypt?  This trans-national organization renounces the use of force and expresses its commitment to democracy—a commitment which it has demonstrated in practice.  The Brotherhood’s announced support for Nobel laureate Mohamed ElBaradei to negotiate with the Mubarak regime would seem to dispel any anti-democratic intent.  Moreover, political parties comprised of its members take part in other democratic governments, including that of Iraq, where the Islamic Party represents the religious Arab Sunni population.  And the activist secular leaders of the revolution for democracy in Egypt (who would have the most to lose) do not express any grave fear that the Muslim Brotherhood would subvert a nascent Egyptian democracy.  [“What's So Scary About Egypt's Islamists?,” Time, November 29, 2010, ]

It is quite apparent that Muslim Brotherhood  is considered dangerous because it has long been hostile to Israel, and its impact on Egyptian policy would likely be to move the country away from its current friendly relationship with Israel.  The Brotherhood's prescription for the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is to support  the  Palestinian armed resistance, especially that of Hamas.  Although this certainly goes  against the goals of Israeli and American foreign policy, it is no more a violation of democracy than the militant foreign policy positions expressed by various Israeli, or for that matter, U.S. politicians.  For a true believer in democracy, Egyptian foreign policy should be something for the Egyptian people to determine, not the United States or Israel.  

As I bring out in The Transparent Cabal,  the fundamental goal of the neocons, as with the Israeli Right, is the destabilization and fragmentation of the Israel’s enemies, for which the rhetoric of democracy provides an ideal façade.  Since Mubarak’s Egypt has maintained relatively friendly relations with Israel, it has not been targeted for destabilization and fragmentation.  Instead the neocons have targeted  Saddam’s Iraq and the Islamic Republic of Iran, which are enemies of the U.S. (in part, at least, due to the efforts of the Israel lobby), as well as of Israel.  And, as described in The Transparent Cabal, the neocons have developed less-publicized plans to destabilize Saudi Arabia, a crucial friend of the U.S. but in various ways hostile to Israel.  

It should be emphasized, however, that the neocon position toward Egypt could definitely change in the future, when it too could become a target for democratic destabilization.  This view actually was mentioned in a controversial presentation in July 2002 by  Laurent Murawiec, a senior fellow at the neoconservative Hudson Institute, before the Defense Policy Board (the advisory panel for the U.S. Department of Defense),  at the behest of the board chairman, neocon guru Richard Perle.  At a time, when the Bush administration was gearing up to make war on Iraq, Murawiec’s  target for U.S. military intervention was ironically  Saudi Arabia, which he described as the principal supporter of anti-American terrorism – “the kernel of evil, the prime mover, the most dangerous opponent.”  Murawiec concluded his briefing with a summary of what he called a “Grand Strategy for the Middle East,” in which he stated that “Iraq is the tactical pivot. Saudi Arabia the strategic pivot. Egypt the prize.”  In short, neocons are willing to consider destabilizing Egypt sometime in the future.  Should a regime that is hostile to Israel emerge from the current turmoil, a plan to destabilize the country could move to the forefront. [The Transparent Cabal, pp. 203-204]

* Stephen J. Sniegoski Stephen J. Sniegoski is the author of The Transparent Cabal and a contributor to The Passionate Attachment.

1 Şubat 2011 Salı

Ortadoğu’da Medya Devrimi *Muttalip Tütüncü

Tunus’ta başlayan olaylarla birlikte Ortadoğu oldukça sıcak bir dönem yaşıyor. Hatta bölgenin tarihine bakarsanız ilk defa ‘savaş olmaksızın’ bu sıcaklığı yakaladığı söylenebilir. Tunus’ta patlak veren olayların kaynağının en temelde, halkta başgösteren derin ekonomik huzursuzluk olduğu biliniyor. Nitekim bugünlerde Tunus’taki devrimin idolü/sembolü haline gelen Muhammed Buazizi’nin kendini yakması bu huzursuzluğu somutlaştıran zirve nokta oldu. Şu sıralar zihinleri en çok meşgul eden soru şüphesiz, “bölgede ne oldu da bu noktaya gelindi?” sorusu. Ancak en temelde iki ihtimal var: Birinci ihtimal, küresel güçler bölgede yerleşen diktatör yönetimlerin miadını doldurduğunu ve yeni döneme yeni rejimlerle girmenin, bölgedeki çıkarlarının bekaası açısından daha doğru olacağını düşündükleri için bu rejimleri bir şekilde yenileri ile değiştirme operasyonu yürütüyorlar. İkinci ihtimal ise, Tunus’ta yaşananlar gerçek bir halk devrimi ve Tunus gibi dünya gündeminden uzak, görece refah seviyesi yüksek bir Arap ülkesinde böyle bir devrimin gerçekleşmesi kimsenin beklemediği bir durum.

Yani farkında olmadan en alttaki taşlardan biri çekildi ve çöküş kaçınılmaz. Bu ihtimaller üzerine pekçok yorum yapmak elbette mümkün. Tunus’taki olayların seyri şimdilik birinci ihtimalin zayıf olduğu kanaatini uyandırıyor. (Bunun yanında çok pasif ve teslimiyetçi bir yaklaşım olduğu için, bu bir temenni olarak da rahatlıkla görülebilir.) İkinci ihtimali veri kabul ettiğimizde ise “ekonomik huzursuzluk” seçeneği, olan biteni bütünüyle açıklamaktan uzak görünüyor; zira bazı temel sorular ortaya çıkıyor. Ortadoğu’da ilk defa büyük kitle gösterileri yapılmıyor. Bundan önce de pekçok defa ekonomik-siyasî kaygı ve sıkıntıların neden olduğu benzer ayaklanmalar oldu. Ancak bu ayaklanmalar her defasında büyümeden bastırıldı. Bu defa neden bastırılamadı? İşte tam bu noktada, başta Tunus olmak üzere bölgede yaşananlara medya açısından bakmak faydalı görünüyor.

Arap Halkların El-Cezire Tecrübesi

Şu sıralar yaygın olan eğilimin aksine, Tunus’ta yaşanan devrimi sırf bir “Twitter devrimi” yahut “sosyal ağlar” devrimi olarak görmek meseleyi basitleştirmek olur. Son birkaç haftadır yaşanan sıcak süreçte en büyük rolün haklı olarak sosyal ağlara ait olduğu iddia edilebilir. Ancak olan biteni hakkıyla anlamak için şu an gelinen noktaya kadar yaşanan süreçleri ve özellikle Arap medya dünyasının, yaklaşık son 20 yılda yaşadığı değişimi iyi anlamak gerekiyor. Bu değişimin en büyük ve en etkili ayağını şüphesiz el-Cezire televizyonu ve “yeni medya” teşkil ediyor. Spotbeam Communications’ın Ortadoğu haberciliği üzerine 2002’de yayımladığı bir rapora göre el-Cezire, Arap dünyasındaki yayıncılığın modernleşmesinde merkezî bir role sahip. Ancak dikkati çeken, sadece bu modernleşmede itici güç oluşu değil; etkisine paralel olarak kanalın, bölgenin kamuoyu görüşlerini ve Arap siyasetini değiştirme yeteneği de giderek büyüyor.

Nitekim el-Cezire’yi bölgede bu derece etkili kılan şey, sadece Bin Ladin’in mesajlarını, esir düşen Amerikan askerlerini veya Irak’ta yaşanan yıkımı açıkça gösterebilmesi değil; bunun yanında bu görece ortak ve uluslararası sorunların dışına çıkarak ilk defa çürümüş Arap rejimlerindeki istismarı gözler önüne sermesi ve Arap halklarında oluşan tepkiyi de açıklıkla ekrana taşıyabilmesidir. Neticede bunun yüzünden el-Cezire, Arap dünyasında diplomatik krizlere yol açmıştır.

Kısaca söylersek, Arap dünyasında ilk defa bir kanal, yönetimin sesi olmaktan uzak kalmış ve insanlarda ‘Arap izleyiciyi ciddiye aldığı’ ve onların bilgi edinme hakkına saygı duyduğu imajını uyandırmayı başarmıştır. Bu cüretkâr tavrın en büyük destekçisi de gelişen teknik alt yapı; yani doksanlı yıllarla birlikte süratle gelişmeye başlayan uydu yayıncılığıdır. Televizyon yayıncılığında coğrafî sınırları ortadan kaldıran uydu yayıncılığı, düşük maliyeti ve kolay erişimi sayesinde hemen her gelir düzeyinde rahatlıkla kendine yer buldu. Bu durum televizyona uygulanan sansürü fiilen geçersiz kıldı.

El-Cezire bu imkanı, yayın politikası ile birleştirdiği ölçüde Arap dünyasının yıldızı ve en etkili medya gücü haline geldi. Hatta burada Arap dünyasını sadece coğrafya ile sınırlamak da yanlış olur. Avrupa ve Amerika’da yaşayan Araplar ve Arap kökenli vatandaşlar için de bir numaralı bilgi kaynağı haline geldi. Bunun yanında 24 saatlik haber yayıncılığı ve özellikle 2. Körfez Savaşı’ndaki kapsamlı haberciliği sayesinde kendini bilgi kaynağı olarak kabul ettiren CNN’in Afganistan savaşında boş bıraktığı yeri, el-Cezire ustaca doldurdu ve böylece –beğenilse de beğenilmese de- kendini ana bilgi kaynalarından biri olarak kabul ettirmeyi başardı. Irak Savaşı’ndaki performası ile birlikte egemen Batı medyası karşısında ciddi bir alternatif haline geldi. Arab Satellite Television and Politics in the Middle East adlı kitabın yazarı Doç. Dr. Muhammed Zayani’ye göre bu, enformasyon akışının tersine çevrilmesiydi. Bu sayede enformasyonun Kuzey’den Güney’e ve Batı’dan Doğu’ya akışındaki tekel artık kırılmıştı.

Bu tekelin son bulması, büyük oranda el-Cezire’nin kendi dilini ve üslubunu hızla kabul ettirmesini sağladı. Yayıncılığında ele aldığı konular ve kullandığı dil, sanıldığı gibi bir Araplık bilincinden öte, bir tür “direniş” yahut “başkaldırı kültürünün” oluşmasına ve aslında bu “direniş kültürünün kitleselleşmesine” neden olmuş görünüyor. Arap ülkelerinde yapılan en güvenilir araştırmalardan biri olarak kabul edilen, Maryland Üniversitesi ile Zogby International’ın ortaklaşa yaptığı ve geçtiğimiz haftalarda sonuçları açıklanan “liderler anketi” bu açıdan bakıldığında ilginç sonuçlar içeriyor.

Bilindiği gibi ankete göre, Arap ülkelerinde en popüler isim açık ara Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, onu takip eden Mahmud Ahmedinejad ve üçüncü isim de Hizbullah lideri Hasan Nasrallah. Medya ve uzmanlara göre Erdoğan, Müslüman ve demokratik yönetimin Araplarca model olarak kabul edilmesini ve Davos çıkışını; Ahmedinejad, Batı’ya karşı direnişi; Nasrallah da İsrail’e karşı başkaldırıyı temsil ediyor. Bu liderler içerisinde yalnızca Nasrallah’ın Arap olması ve onun da üçüncü olması, durumun sıradan bir Araplık bilincinin çok ötesinde bir nitelik taşıdığının en büyük kanıtı. O yüzden oluşan bu özel dil ve kültürün bölgede yaşananlara olan etkisinin dikkate alınması gerekiyor.

Çarpan Etkisi: Sosyal Ağlar

Hemen bütün Arap rejimlerinde eskiden beri halk ve yönetim arasında bir ayrışma ve soğuk çatışma var. Son dönemde ise bu, giderek yayılan bir sıcak çatışmaya dönüşüyor. Arap ülkelerini ziyaret ettiğinizde hemen her Arap önce kendi yönetiminden sonra da diğer Arap rejimlerinden şikayete başlıyor ve onları “kukla rejim” olmakla suçluyor. Durum en zengininden en fakirine kadar bütün Arap ülkelerinde aynı olmakla beraber, bu konuda oluşan bilincin hangi seviyede olduğu, dolayısı ile herhangi bir “kalkışma”da başarıya ulaşma imkan ve ihtimalinin ne olduğu konusunda kafalarda net bir fikir oluşması mümkün olamıyordu. Yani ne kadar sorunların farkında olurlarsa olsunlar, bunların üstesinden gelmek adına girişelecek herhangi bir eylemde “yalnızdılar” ve bu da onları doğrudan rejimin kaçınılmaz biçimde sert ve acımasız yüzü karşısında yalnızlaştırıyor ve çaresizleştiriyordu. el-Cezire’nin kısa sürede bölgenin “main stream” yayın organı haline gelmesi ile birlikte Arap halkların bu “yapay yalnızlıkları” büyük ölçüde kırılmış ve bu psikolojik engel aşılmış oldu.

Böylece Arap halklar sadece rejimlerinin kirli yanlarını açıkça görme imkanı bulmadılar, oluşan “interaktif bilgi kanalları” ile aslında bu durumdan rahatsızlık duyan devasa bir kitlenin varlığından da haberdar oldular. Bu algının kırılmasının, şu an Tunus ve tüm bölgede yaşanan olaylarda başat faktörlerden biri olduğu gözden kaçmamalı. “Ayaklanma neden 10 yıl önce değil de şimdi oldu?” sorusunun cevabı tam da burada bulunuyor. Daha önce de belirttiğim gibi bölgede ilk defa kitlesel gösteriler olmuyor. Ancak ilk defa bu kadar büyük kalabalıklar “protesto etme”nin ötesine geçerek, bu kadar büyük bir kararlılıkla “rejim değişikliği” talep edebiliyorlar. Foreign  Policy yazarı Marc Lynch’e göre bunun nedeni, medyanın işsizlik ve pahalılık üzerine yaşanan gerilimlere son aylarda ağırlık vermesi ki el-Cezire burada yaptığı çarpıcı yayıncılıkla bölgede hayatî bir rol oynadı. Bu da gösteriyor ki bölge halkında ortak bir bilinç oluşması için gerekli eşik değere ulaşıldı.

Twitter ve Facebook gibi sosyal ağlar ise el-Cezire’nin oluşturduğu bu etkinin organize edilmesinde etkin bir biçimde kullanılarak, mevcut durum içerisinde bir çarpan etkisi oluşturdular. Göstericilerin bizzat kendileri sosyal ağlar vasıtasıyla, siber alemde organize olduklarını her fırsatta dile getiriyorlar. Bu anlamda sosyal ağların yaşanan olaylardaki önemi elbette küçümsenemez. Ancak başta da söylediğim gibi, başta Tunus olmak üzere Ortadoğu’da patlak veren halk isyanlarını “twitter devrimi” gibi göstermek eksik bir yaklaşım olur. Nitekim bu sosyal ağlar vasıtasıyla paylaşılan yüksek çözünürlüklü malzemenin ana kaynağı da el-Cezire yayınları oldu. Tunus’ta olanlar ve artık Mısır’a da sıçramış olan olaylar, tek başına ne el-Cezire ne de sosyal ağların işidir; bu Ortadoğu’da el-Cezire’nin ezber bozan ve interaktif yayıncılığı vasıtasıyla oluşturduğu bilinç dolayımlı “başkaldırı” ile sosyal ağların koordinasyon ve haberleşme hızının ortaklaşa hazırladığı bir “yeni medya” devrimidir.

Tunus’ta yaşanan devrimin ilk günlerinden itibaren, “devrim”in diğer Ortadoğu ülkelerine sıçrayıp sıçramayacağı tartışma konusu oldu. Hareket, Tunus gibi bir “etkisiz eleman”da görüldüğü için bu tartışma yapılabildi; zira eğer hareket, tarihsel olarak bölgede merkez ülke olan Mısır’da başlamış olsaydı bunu tartışmaya gerek bile kalmayacaktı; o vakit devrim hareketlerinin ve rejim değişikliklerinin tüm bölgeyi sarması büyük ihtimalle kaçınılmaz olacaktı. Lakin bu durum İsrail’in bölgedeki konumuna ve dolayısıyla Amerika’nın statü ve tavrına zarar vereceğinden elbette işler Tunus’taki kadar kolay olmayacak, hatta belki bir dış müdahale gündeme gelecekti. Tunus’tan sonra şimdi de Mısırlılar ayaklandılar. Mısır’da işler daha da büyürse Batı bir şekilde ama muhakkak müdahale edecektir.

Nitekim Obama, ilk olarak yapılacak reformlar karşılığında halkla hükümetin arasında arabuluculuk yapmayı teklif etti. Bunu şimdilik “yumuşak” bir müdahale olarak okumak mümkün. Şimon Peres de son yaptığı açıklamalarda Hüsnü Mübarek’in “Ortadoğu barışına” hizmet ettiğini ve kendisine isyan değil, teşekkür edilmesi gerektiğini söyledi. Çünkü İsrail de bölgedeki Arap dostunu kaybetmenin eşiğine gelmiş durumda. Böyle bir durumda bölgede neredeyse tamamen yalnız kalacağı gibi, Mısır olmaksızın Gazze politikası da muhtemelen son bulacak. El-Cezire’nin yayınladığı Filistin belgeleri ile ağır bir darbe alan el-Fetih karşısında yükselmesi muhtemel HAMAS’ın, İsrail’in Gazze politikasının da çökmesi ile yükselişinin hangi noktaya ulaşacağını ise şimdilik kestirmek zor. Bütün bunlar dikkate alındığında, Mısır’da kesinlik kazanacak bir devrimin, Ortadoğu’daki tüm rejimleri ve Batı’yı rahatsız edeceği ortada.

Bu açıdan hareketin ilk olarak Tunus’ta patlak vermesi, küresel anlamda bir şaşkınlık yaratmasının yanında, Arap rejimlerini de biraz rahatlatmıştı. Mısır Dışişleri Bakanı Ebu’l-Geyt, Tunus’taki karışıklığın Mısır’a sıçrayabileceği yorumlarına hiddetle karşı çıkarak bunları “saçmalık” olarak nitelemişti. Ebu’l-Geyt bunu “saçmalık” olarak değerlendirdi, çünkü büyük ihtimalle Mısır rejimi de başlangıçta durumu bir sosyal ağ ya da daha meşhur ifadesiyle bir “twitter” hadisesi olarak görüyordu ve yasaklayınca bu “saçmalık” da ortadan kalkacaktı. Nitekim yasak haberleri gecikmedi. Önce sosyal ağlara erişim engellendi; ardından da el-Cezire bürosunun kapatılması ve akreditasyonunun iptali geldi; el-Cezire ise ses dosyası olarak da olsa bölgeden haber geçmeye devam ediyor. Gelinen noktada Mısır’ın, en büyük şehirlerinde şiddetli rejim karşıtı gösteriler var ve bu daha başlangıç. Eğer Tunus’taki devrim, diktatörlük olmayan, halkça kabul gören, makul ve görece adil bir rejim husule getirebilirse, asıl işte o zaman zihinlere başkaldırının işlendiği Ortadoğu’da gerçek bir devrim dalgası görülebilecektir. Lakin Mısır’daki gidişata bakılırsa Tunus’taki rejimin inşasını beklemek zorunda kalmayabiliriz de.


*Muttalip Tütüncü, Ortadoğu Araştırmacısı
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