The Choice in Egypt. By Charles Krauthammer.
The Choice in Egypt. By Charles Krauthammer. National Review Online, August 22, 2013. Also at the Washington Post.
Egyptians Still Love the Military. By Walter Russell Mead. Via Meadia, August 23, 2013.
Krauthammer:
Egypt
today is a zero-sum game. We’d have preferred there to be a democratic
alternative; unfortunately, there is none. The choice is binary: The country will
be ruled by the Muslim Brotherhood or by the military.
Perhaps
the military should have waited three years for the intensely unpopular Mohamed
Morsi to be voted out of office. But General Abdel Fatah al-Sissi seems to have
calculated that by then there would be no elections — as in Gaza, where the
Palestinian wing of the Brotherhood, Hamas, elected in 2006, established a
one-man-one-vote-one-time dictatorship.
What’s
the U.S. to do? Any response demands two considerations: (a) moral, i.e., which
outcome offers the better future for Egypt, and (b) strategic, i.e., which
outcome offers the better future for U.S. interests and those of the free
world.
As for
Egypt’s future, the Brotherhood offered nothing but incompetent, intolerant,
increasingly dictatorial rule. In one year, Morsi managed to squander 85 years of Brotherhood prestige garnered in opposition — a place from which one can
promise the Moon — by persecuting journalists and activists, granting himself
the unchallenged power to rule by decree, enshrining a sectarian Islamist constitution, and systematically trying to seize the instruments of state
power. As if that weren’t enough, after its overthrow the Brotherhood showed
itself to be the party that, when angry, burns churches.
The
military, brutal and bloody, is not a very appealing alternative. But it does
matter what the Egyptian people think. The anti-Morsi demonstrations were the
largest in recorded Egyptian history. Revolted by Morsi’s betrayal of a
revolution intended as a new opening for individual dignity and democracy, the
protesters explicitly demanded his overthrow. And the vast majority seem to welcome the military repression aimed at abolishing the Islamist threat. It’s
their only hope, however problematic, for an eventual democratic transition.
And
which alternative better helps secure U.S. strategic interests? The list of
considerations is long: (1) a secure Suez Canal, (2) friendly relations with
the U.S., (3) continued alliance with the pro-American Gulf Arabs and
Jordanians, (4) retention of the Israel-Egypt peace treaty, and (5) cooperation
with the U.S. on terrorism, which in part involves (6) isolating
Brotherhood-run Gaza.
Every
one of which is jeopardized by Brotherhood rule.
What,
then, should be our policy? The Obama administration is right to deplore excessive violence and urge reconciliation. But let’s not fool ourselves into
believing this is possible in any near future. Sissi crossed his Rubicon with
the coup. It will either succeed or not. To advocate a middle way is to invite
endless civil strife.
The
best outcome would be a victorious military magnanimously offering, at some
later date, to reintegrate the more moderate elements of what’s left of the
Brotherhood.
But for
now, we should not be cutting off aid, civilian or military, as many in
Congress are demanding. It will have no effect, buy no influence, and win no
friends on either side of the Egyptian divide. We should instead be urging the
quick establishment of a new cabinet of technocrats, rapidly increasing its
authority as the soldiers gradually return to their barracks.
Generals
are very bad at governance. Give the reins to people who actually know
something, and charge them with reviving the economy and preparing the
foundations for a democratic transition — most important, drafting a secular
constitution that protects the rights of women and minorities. The final step
on that long democratic path should be elections.
After
all, we’ve been here before. Through a half-century of Cold War, we repeatedly
faced precisely the same dilemma: choosing the lesser evil between totalitarian
(in that case, Communist) and authoritarian (usually military) rule.
We
generally supported the various militaries in suppressing the Communists. That
was routinely pilloried as a hypocritical and immoral betrayal of our alleged
allegiance to liberty. But in the end, it proved the prudent, if troubled, path
to liberty.
The
authoritarian regimes we supported — in South Korea, Taiwan, the Philippines,
Chile, Brazil, even Spain and Portugal (ruled by fascists until the mid 1970s!)
— in time yielded democratic outcomes. General Augusto Pinochet, after 16 years
of iron rule, bowed to U.S. pressure and allowed a free election — which he
lost, ushering in Chile’s current era of democratic flourishing. How many times
have Communists or Islamists allowed that to happen?
Regarding
Egypt, rather than emoting, we should be thinking about what’s best for Egypt,
for us, and for the possibility of some eventual democratic future.
Under
the Brotherhood, such a possibility is zero. Under the generals, it’s slim.
Slim
trumps zero.