Israel’s Reviled Strategic Wisdom. By Caroline B. Glick.
Israel’s reviled strategic wisdom. By Caroline B. Glick. Jerusalem Post, July 4, 2013. Also at Caroline Glick.com.
Glick:
On
Wednesday, Egypt had its second revolution in as many years. And there is no
telling how many more revolutions it will have in the coming months, or years.
This is the case not only in Egypt, but throughout the Islamic world.
The
American foreign policy establishment’s rush to romanticize as the Arab Spring
the political instability that engulfed the Arab world following the
self-immolation of a Tunisian peddler in December 2010 was perhaps the greatest
demonstration ever given of the members of that establishment’s utter
cluelessness about the nature of Arab politics and society. Their enthusiastic
embrace of protesters who have now brought down President Mohamed Morsi and his
Muslim Brotherhood regime indicates that it takes more than a complete repudiation
of their core assumptions to convince them to abandon them.
US
reporters and commentators today portray this week’s protests as the
restoration of the Egyptian revolution. That revolution, they remain convinced,
was poised to replace long-time Egyptian leader and US-ally Hosni Mubarak with
a liberal democratic government led by people who used Facebook and Twitter.
Subsequently,
we were told, that revolution was hijacked by the Muslim Brotherhood. But now
that Morsi and his government have been overthrown, the Facebook revolution is
back on track.
And
again, they are wrong.
As was
the case in 2011, the voices of liberal democracy in Egypt are so few and far
between that they have no chance whatsoever of gaining power, today or for the
foreseeable future. At this point it is hard to know what the balance of power
is between the Islamists who won 74 percent of the vote in the 2011
parliamentary elections and their opponents. But it is clear that their
opponents are not liberal democrats. They are a mix of neo-Nasserist fascists,
communists and other not particularly palatable groups.
None of
them share Western conceptions of freedom and limited government. None of them
are particularly pro-American. None of them like Jews. And none of them support
maintaining Egypt’s cold peace with Israel.
Egypt’s
greatest modern leader was Gamal Abdel Nasser. By many accounts the most common
political view of the anti-Muslim Brotherhood protesters is neo-Nasserist
fascism.
Nasser
was an enemy of the West. He led Egypt into the Soviet camp in the 1950s. As
the co-founder of the Non-Aligned Movement, he also led much of the Third World
into the Soviet camp. Nasser did no less damage to the US in his time than
al-Qaida and its allies have done in recent years.
Certainly,
from Israel’s perspective, Nasser was no better than Hamas or al-Qaida or their
parent Muslim Brotherhood movement. Like the Islamic fanatics, Nasser sought
the destruction of Israel and the annihilation of the Jews.
Whether
the fascists will take charge or not is impossible to know. So, too, the role
of the Egyptian military in the future of Egypt is unknowable. The same
military that overthrew Morsi on Wednesday stood by as he earlier sought to
strip its powers, sacked its leaders and took steps to transform it into a
subsidiary of the Muslim Brotherhood.
There
are only three things that are knowable about the future of Egypt. First it
will be poor. Egypt is a failed state. It cannot feed its people. It has failed
to educate its people. It has no private sector to speak of. It has no foreign
investment.
Second,
Egypt will be politically unstable.
Mubarak
was able to maintain power for 29 years because he ran a police state that the
people feared. That fear was dissipated in 2011. This absence of fear will
bring Egyptians to the street to topple any government they feel is failing to
deliver on its promises – as they did this week.
Given
Egypt’s dire economic plight, it is impossible to see how any government will
be able to deliver on any promises – large or small – that its politicians will
make during electoral campaigns.
And so
government after government will share the fates of Mubarak and Morsi.
Beyond
economic deprivation, today tens of millions of Egyptians feel they were
unlawfully and unjustly ousted from power on Wednesday.
The
Muslim Brotherhood and the Salafists won big in elections hailed as free by the
West. They have millions of supporters who are just as fanatical today as they
were last week. They will not go gently into that good night.
Finally,
given the utter irrelevance of liberal democratic forces in Egypt today, it is
clear enough that whoever is able to rise to power in the coming years will be
anti-American, anti- Israel and anti-democratic, (in the liberal democratic
sense of the word). They might be nicer to the Copts than the Muslim
Brotherhood has been. But they won’t be more pro-Western.
They
may be more cautious in asserting or implementing their ideology in their
foreign policy than the Muslim Brotherhood. But that won’t necessarily make
them more supportive of American interests or to the endurance of Egypt’s
formal treaty of peace with Israel.
And
this is not the case only in Egypt. It is the case in every Arab state that is
now or will soon be suffering from instability that has caused coups, Islamic
takeovers, civil wars, mass protests and political insecurity in country after
country. Not all of them are broke. But then again, none of them have the same
strong sense of national identity that Egyptians share.
Now
that we understand what we are likely to see in the coming months and years,
and what we are seeing today, we must consider how the West should respond to
these events. To do so, we need to consider how various parties responded to
the events of the past two-and-ahalf years.
Wednesday’s
overthrow of the Muslim Brotherhood government is a total repudiation of the US
strategy of viewing the unrest in Egypt – and throughout the Arab world – as a
struggle between the good guys and the bad guys.
Within
a week of the start of the protests in Tahrir Square on January 25, 2011,
Americans from both sides of the political divide united around the call for
Mubarak’s swift overthrow.
A few
days later, President Barack Obama joined the chorus of Democrats and
Republicans, and called for Mubarak to leave office, immediately. Everyone from
Sen. John McCain to Samantha Power was certain that despite the fact that
Mubarak was a loyal ally of the US, America would be better served by
supporting the rise of the Facebook revolutionaries who used Twitter and held
placards depicting Mubarak as a Jew.
Everyone
was certain that the Muslim Brotherhood would stay true to its word and keep
out of politics.
Two
days after Mubarak was forced from office, Peter Beinart wrote a column titled
“America’s Proud Egypt Moment,” where he congratulated the neo-conservatives
and the liberals and Obama for scorning American interests and siding with the
protesters who opposed all of Mubarak’s pro-American policies.
Beinart
wrote exultantly, “Hosni Mubarak’s regime was the foundation stone – along with
Israel and Saudi Arabia – of American power in the Middle East. It tortured
suspected al- Qaida terrorists for us, pressured the Palestinians for us, and
did its best to contain Iran.
“And it
sat atop a population eager – secular and Islamist alike – not only to reverse
those policies, but to rid the Middle East of American power. And yet we cast
our lot with that population, not their ruler.”
Beinart
also congratulated the neo-conservatives for parting ways with Prime Minister
Binyamin Netanyahu who counseled caution, and so proved they do not suffer from
dual loyalty.
That
hated, reviled Israeli strategy, (which was not Netanyahu’s alone, but shared
by Israelis from across the political spectrum in a rare demonstration of
unanimity), was proven correct by events of the past week and indeed by events
of the past two-and-a-half years.
Israelis
watched in shock and horror as their American friends followed the Pied Piper
of the phony Arab Spring over the policy cliff. Mubarak was a dictator. But his
opponents were no Alexander Dubceks. There was no reason to throw away 30 years
of stability before figuring out a way to ride the tiger that would follow it.
Certainly
there was no reason to actively support Mubarak’s overthrow.
Shortly
after Mubarak was overthrown, the Obama administration began actively
supporting the Muslim Brotherhood.
The
Muslim Brotherhood believed that the way to gain and then consolidate power was
to hold elections as quickly as possible. Others wanted to wait until a
constitutional convention convened and a new blueprint for Egyptian governance
was written. But the Muslim Brotherhood would have none of it. And Obama
supported it.
Five
months after elections of questionable pedigree catapulted Morsi to power,
Obama was silent when in December 2012 Morsi arrogated dictatorial powers and
pushed through a Muslim Brotherhood constitution.
Obama
ignored Congress three times and maintained full funding of Egypt despite the
fact that the Morsi government had abandoned its democratic and pluralistic
protestations.
He was
silent over the past year as the demonstrators assembled to oppose Morsi’s
power grabs. He was unmoved as churches were torched and Christians were massacred.
He was silent as Morsi courted Iran.
US
Ambassador to Egypt Anne Patterson and Obama remained the Muslim Brotherhood’s
greatest champions as the forces began to gather ahead of this week’s mass
protests. Patterson met with the Coptic pope and told him to keep the Coptic
Christians out of the protests.
Obama,
so quick to call for Mubarak to step down, called for the protesters to
exercise restraint this time around and then ignored them during his vacation
in Africa.
The
first time Obama threatened to curtail US funding of the Egyptian military was
Wednesday night, after the military ignored American warnings and entreaties,
and deposed Morsi and his government.
This
week’s events showed how the US’s strategy in Egypt has harmed America.
In
2011, the military acted to force Mubarak from power only after Obama called
for it to do so. This week, the military overthrew Morsi and began rounding up
his supporters in defiance of the White House.
Secretary
of State John Kerry was the personification of the incredible shrinkage of
America this week as he maintained his obsessive focus on getting Israel to
make concessions to the Palestinians.
In a
Middle East engulfed by civil war, revolution and chronic instability, Israel
is the only country at peace. The image of Kerry extolling his success in “narrowing
the gaps” between Israel and the Palestinians before he boarded his airplane at
Ben-Gurion Airport, as millions assembled to bring down the government of
Egypt, is the image of a small, irrelevant America.
And as
the anti-American posters in Tahrir Square this week showed, America’s
self-induced smallness is a tragedy that will harm the region and endanger the
US.
As far
as Israel is concerned, all we can do is continue what we have been doing, and
hope that at some point, the Americans will embrace our sound strategy.