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Tunisia's Spark & Egypt's Flame: The Middle East Is Rising
Is this how empires end, with people flooding the streets, demanding the resignation of their leaders and forcing local dictators out? Maybe not entirely, but the breadth and depth of the spreading protests, the helplessness of the U.S.-backed governments to stop them, and the rapidly diminishing ability of the United States to protect its long-time clients, are certainly resulting in a level of revolutionary fervor not visible in the Middle East in a generation. The legacy of U.S.-dominated governments across the region will never be the same. The U.S. empire's reach in the resource-rich and strategically vital Middle East has been shaken to its core.
There's a domino effect underway in the Arab world. Tunisia was the spark, not only because its uprising came first but because the people of Tunisia won and the dictator fled. Egypt remains for the United States the most important strategic Arab ally.
The fall of Hosni Mubarak, the U.S.-backed dictator in power for more than three decades, would mean an end to Washington's ability to rely on Cairo to stave off Arab nationalism and independence and an end to Egypt's role as a collaborator in the Israeli occupation of Palestine. Whatever happens, what's likely, though not inevitable, is that never again will Tunisia be used as a transit point or Egypt as a "black site" secret prison for U.S. agents engaged in the "extraordinary rendition" of detainees for interrogation and torture.
Stirrings of popular dissent are already underway in Yemen and Jordan too. All the other U.S.-backed monarchies and pseudo-democracies across the region are feeling the heat. The U.S. empire in the region is crumbling.
Tipping Points
The alliances of the last half century are being shattered, the old order is ending. What's next? As is always the case when revolutionary processes erupt, it's still too soon to tell. Things move slowly until a sudden tipping point, and then it's all too quick, too sudden to keep up.
The breadth of public participation is key for understanding the implications of these uprisings. In Tunisia, the protests involved workers and middle class professionals, but were composed at the core by disenfranchised, disempowered, and educated unemployed people. Mohammed Bouazizi, a young man in the impoverished town of Sidi Bouzid, symbolized these demonstrators by setting himself ablaze to protest not only unemployment and poverty, but also the humiliation and degradation he faced.
Among the hundreds of thousands across Tunisia who marched, chanted, demanded, and won the abdication of their longstanding dictator, thousands are the young men and women whose college degrees have provided no security, whose lives were constrained by the lack of jobs, lack of opportunities, and lack of hope.
In Egypt, participation was even broader. The thousands and hundreds of thousands filling the streets, occupying Cairo's famed Tahrir (Liberation) Square, include not only the most impoverished of Egypt's urban slums and rural farmers and peasants. They also include the educated, the middle classes, even many of the wealthy, all finally saying no to the paucity dignity and freedom of their lives. Their demand was clear: not just reform, not just new elections, but an end to the Mubarak regime.
It is also important to recognize what the demands in Tunisia and most essentially in Egypt were not about. They were not about opposition to the United States; we have not seen the U.S. flag burning or crowds attacking the U.S. embassy. They were not even about Egypt's thirty years of collaboration with Israel's occupation, especially its role in maintaining the siege of Gaza – opposition to which is arguably the greatest point of political unity in the country. People have been very clear – and very public in the media – about their awareness of and outrage towards the U.S. history of arming Mubarak with the very weapons killing protesters in the streets; the "Made in USA" tear gas canisters from Jonestown, PA are featured all over the media. But the demands of this mobilization are directed to domestic, internal issues, aimed at changing the very nature of the ruling structures of the country and its impact on the people who live there. Foreign policy will come just a little bit later.
The reach of protest support is crucial too. In Tunisia, the police were divided, and while some, for a while, tried to do the bidding of the government, many refused to fire on protesters who carried flowers and rejected violence. The Tunisian military, which unlike in Egypt and other countries was traditionally apolitical even at the top levels, refused to support the dictatorship, and indeed it was a top-ranking military officer who gave a powerful voice to the protesters' demand that Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali resign.
In Egypt, the much-hated security police agencies backed by Mubarak and the Interior Ministry first attempted to suppress the widening protests, but despite inflicting many casualties, largely failed to retake the streets; in many areas they were simply overpowered. The military, to the contrary, overwhelmingly refused to confront the popular movements. While Egypt's top military brass is a privileged cohort closely linked to the Mubarak regime, the army itself is made up of generally poor conscripts, who were simply not willing to turn their guns on fellow citizens. Just days into the revolt, soldiers, tank drivers, and even officers were proudly proclaiming their unity with the people in the streets, and were being welcomed with flowers and sweets into the arms of the protesters.
Despite the $1.5 or more billion in military aid Washington has provided Egypt every year since 1979, Mubarak's government has been unable to use the military against the popular revolt.
The protesters in Tunisia and Egypt are calling for deep elemental changes in their societies. These are not economic demands alone, though ending corruption and the call for jobs, education, and health care are vital. These are not only about human rights, although the release of political prisoners as well as the rights to assemble and to protest are all on the agenda. The protesters aren't primarily Islamists, although Egypt's powerful but always cautious Muslim Brotherhood joined the street protests on January 28. (They're not explicitly secular either). In Egypt especially, young people, adept at social media and savvy web mobilizers, are playing a leadership role unusual in the region, though reminiscent of the young activists of the first Palestinian uprising, or intifada, of 1987. They have gained significant respect and authority from the older more experienced leaders with whom they've joined in a broad opposition coalition.
These are mobilizations calling for an end to not just decades but generations of dictatorship and for a new era of democracy and popular power. They're calling for participatory democracy, not simply new elections, making the region a whole lot harder to control for the United States.
Parallels
The Egyptian protests so far appear closer to the people-power ouster of Philippine dictator Ferdinand Marcos in 1986 than any other international precedent. There are major differences between Egypt's upheaval and Iran's anti-shah mobilization of 1978-1979. There, mass protests were composed primarily of numerous competing, contending, and sometimes antagonistic social movements all divided along political, sectarian, and organizational lines.
At the Middle East regional level, there is somewhat of a parallel in the shifts of Latin America's southern cone in the late 1980s, as U.S.-backed dictatorships in Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay and others were brought down. The long struggles for democracy were led by experienced political coalitions that cohered around broad progressive social movements, trade union federations, and left parties that made it possible to engage directly with power. Starting in Brazil, with the rise of the Workers Party, these social movements first succeeded in ending military dictatorships, then took up the even harder struggle against ostensibly civilian governments still dependent on the U.S. and still committed to neoliberal economic models that devastated poor and indigenous people across the continent.
Those social forces don't have exact counterparts in the Arab world, where years of greater suppression of social movements (other than in the mosques) left them relatively less organizationally unified. Democracy didn't rise right away when military dictatorships were swept away in Washington's backyard. But in that huge Latin American bloc, where popular struggles continued, the United States lost control of that strategic area where once it reigned supreme. With varieties of center-left, broadly progressive and solidly left governments in power in Brazil, Chile, Argentina, Bolivia, Uruguay, Paraguay, and beyond, the U.S. empire there has been defeated. It is perhaps a model that the social movements of the Arab world, now cohering around the Tunisian/Egyptian model, are looking to emulate.
Organizing and Opposition: Tunisia
The protesters occupying the streets in Tunisia, and the inability/unwillingness of the police and especially the military to reclaim the streets for the dictatorship, forced the downfall of Ben Ali's 23-year-long reign of U.S.-backed brutality and corruption. The opposition that called Tunisians into the streets did not emerge as a unified, disciplined, organized hierarchy but rather a somewhat anarchic, partly spontaneous, and brilliantly coordinated often twitter-driven panoply of politically and geographically disparate forces. Tunisia's Islamist opposition leaders, long ago forced into exile, appear ready to return home to join the protests, but like their Egyptian counterparts they're not taking over. This isn't a religious or sectarian revolution.
It was particularly interesting that as the opposition savored their victory, the only international support they requested wasn't financial or military or even diplomatic, but legal. They asked Interpol to enforce an international arrest warrant for the former dictator and his family, as well as for crimes against the nation.
So Tunisia, against all odds and expectations, started the revolutionary trajectory of today's Middle East. But Tunisia is a relatively small country, and ranks a paltry 69th on the list of world oil producers. Ben Ali was helpful to the United States (as in allowing transit flights for detainee interrogation), but with no U.S. military base its strategic value was secondary. President Barack Obama could claim that "the United States of America stands with the people of Tunisia," in his State of the Union speech with little concern.
Egypt is a whole other story. The next phrase in Obama's speech, that the United States also "supports the democratic aspirations of all people" suddenly became a whole lot trickier.
Organizing and Opposition: Egypt
If the people of Egypt – in their extraordinary unity – succeed in winning their call for structural transformation and not just new elections, for real, participatory democracy and not just electoral reform, Washington's most important ally will suddenly be a whole lot harder to control. Mubarak's appointment of Omar Suleiman as his vice-president certainly elicited cheers in the White House situation room – he's a longstanding friend of the U.S. military and of Israeli officials of all stripes – but rated jeers in the streets of Cairo. He came out of years as Egypt's intelligence chief, though with a primarily international role. He wasn't known for direct involvement in the regime's apparatus of repression and torture, but he's widely disdained as one of Mubarak's closest aides. His appointment won't satisfy anyone calling for an end to the Mubarak regime.
At the moment, Egypt's streets belong to its people. The powerful iconic moments continue to come thick and fast. On Friday, on the huge Sixth of October Bridge across Cairo, an armored personnel carrier moved onto the bridge to force protesters off. It moved into the crowd, slowly, but people turned and gathered in front of it, forcing it to a halt unless the driver was willing to plow right into the crowd. He wasn't, he turned, and the tank-like vehicle raced off the bridge at top speed, with hundreds more protesters filling in the space. Despite the completely different results, it was a moment that visually evoked the 1965 confrontation between state police and non-violent civil rights marchers on the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Alabama.
The protests have been extraordinarily non-violent and inclusive. On Friday, as the muezzins chanted the call from the minarets of Cairo's mosques, thousands of protesters lined up in the street to say their prayers. Thousands more did not; these weren't religious protests, and Islamists were simply present among the throngs of people. They weren't leading or in control. In Suez, the strategic city abutting the Canal, 4,000 additional security police were sent in to confront the Friday demonstrations, but they failed, with some turning to join the protesters. A police station, famous for having been occupied by Israel during the 1967 war, was the only site targeted that day. In Alexandria, police were divided, with so many turning to join the protesters that there too, they failed to regain control of the streets.
There has been looting, and people in many neighborhoods have responded by forming local guard teams with checkpoints and in some cases a rough kind of vigilante justice. Some of the looters have been caught with government-issued weapons and identification; there is certainly fear of a possible campaign by the regime to create lawlessness, sowing fear and chaos as the only and inevitable alternative to Mubarak's security police. But so far, courage has triumphed over fear.
An Uncertain Relationship: Egypt and Israel
One of the big uncertainties is what the impact of the current transformation will be on the 30-plus year-old U.S.-orchestrated ties between Egypt and Israel. The 1979 Camp David peace treaty, the first signed by an Arab state with Israel, remains the centerpiece of Israel's security doctrine and at the core of the U.S.-Egypt relationship. Israeli officials, not surprisingly, are terrified at the prospect of the Mubarak regime collapsing. As Israel's former ambassador to Egypt noted, "The only people in Egypt who are committed to peace are the people in Mubarak's inner circle and if the next president is not one of them, we are going to be in trouble."
Tacitly acknowledging that the Israeli relationship with the Egyptian government is possible only because there's no democratic accountability in Egypt, Deputy Prime Minister Silvan Shalom went further, saying "if regimes neighboring the Israeli state were replaced by democratic systems, Israeli national security might significantly be threatened." And Israel isn't happy about the possibility of shifts in the United States or other nations long uncritically supportive of Mubarak. January 31 headlines in Ha'aretz include, "Israel Urges World to Tone Down Mubarak Criticism Amid Egypt Unrest."
But two things stand out. First, the protesters' demands are overwhelmingly focused on internal Egyptian issues – freedom, human rights, the economy – cohering in the demand to end the Mubarak dictatorship. Although it's certain that the overwhelming majority of the people in the streets aren't happy with Mubarak's decades of collaboration in Israel's occupation of Gaza and beyond, this isn't their top priority. Second, it's unlikely that any new government that comes into power, whether interim or permanent, will move towards a full-scale break with the United States and Israel, such as the "unsigning" the Camp David peace agreement. Aside from everything else, the $1.5 billion in aid the U.S. provides Egypt every year is grounded in the terms of Camp David. No new Egyptian government is likely to give that up, at least right away.
What is a likely possibility for any new transitional or interim government seeking credibility from its own people would be an immediate move to open the Rafah crossing between Egypt and Gaza, allowing the free flow of people and goods. That would not end, but would significantly undermine Israel's occupation and siege of Gaza. It would allow Palestinian students to reach their schools abroad, enable patients to find medical treatment in Egypt or elsewhere, and allow families simply to leave the tiny crowded Strip that has been a prison for the 1.5 million Palestinians there for at least the last five years. It would be a great move, ending Arab state support and sustenance of Israel's occupation policies. There's a danger, of course, that the Israeli response would be a claim that because Israel is now more isolated it needs more military aid and a U.S. commitment to support an even more aggressive posture in the region, such as a new assault against Gaza or Lebanon or even a strike against Iran. Israel would likely reject any further U.S.-backed negotiations.
But given the continuing failure of those talks, since they're not based on the requisites of human rights and international law, the end of the "peace process" illusion might be a good thing. It will require a huge amount of education and mobilization here in the United States to keep our government from a full embrace of an even more militarized Israel. But a new Middle East without at least some of the U.S.-armed and U.S.-backed dictatorships across the Arab world, still means new possibilities for a just peace based on international law and human rights.
The Stakes for Washington
The stakes for the United States in Mubarak's ouster and the rise of — what we all hope will be — a truly democratic, people-based government of a whole new kind in Egypt, couldn't be higher. In the past, aside from the relationship with Israel, the United States needed Egypt, the biggest Arab country, to insure the rest of the Arab world remained a pro-U.S. bastion. In 1991 the United States was desperate for an "Arab coalition" to join its war against Saddam Hussein, so Egypt was key. Despite massive public opposition, Mubarak's approval led the Arab coalition against Iraq. (Washington arranging forgiveness of 50 percent of Egypt's foreign debt just at that time no doubt helped.)
The question now is what has changed? Does Washington still fear that a truly independent Egypt is dangerous now because maintaining Arab allies in thrall is still key to maintaining U.S. hegemony across the Middle East? The United States has military bases in Egypt, it pays off Egypt to guarantee its access to and effective control of the Suez Canal, and it relies on Egypt to carry out interrogation by any means necessary on detainees in the so-called "global war on terror." What might be different now?
During the Cold War, Washington feared that Egypt's non-alignment really meant it was in the Soviet camp; U.S. strategy was to get it out. In 1956, when Israel, Britain, and France attacked Egypt in a campaign to wrest control of the Canal, the United States sided with Egypt to stop it, giving the U.S. new leverage in Cairo. But it wasn't until 1970, when President Gamal Abdel Nasser died and Anwar Sadat came to power, that the United States managed to pull Egypt fully out of the Arab nationalist and non-aligned movements and into its own orbit. When President Jimmy Carter negotiated the 1979 Camp David treaty with Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin, Egypt was isolated throughout the Arab world. Sadat was assassinated in 1981 as a result. Mubarak has been in power ever since.
Other Arab rulers have already weighed in. Saudi King Abdullah and Jordanian King Abdullah II are both on Mubarak's side: Abdullah "condemned" the protests, and Abdullah II was "reassured" in a call with Mubarak. According to al-Jazeera, official Palestinian media reported that Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas telephoned Mubarak and "affirmed his solidarity with Egypt and his commitment to its security and stability." Translation: "Egypt" = its regime, not its people. In fact on January 29th, according to Human Rights Watch, Abbas' police force in Ramallah broke up a Palestinian rally in solidarity with Egypt.
So is the Obama administration starting to understand the limits of Washington's ability to influence, let alone control, events in the Arab country it has long viewed as its closest ally? Or is this like 1978, just months before the Shah of Iran was forced out of power by a massive popular uprising, when Carter toasted the shah as an "island of stability" in the Middle East?
Obama administration officials haven't been quite that tone-deaf. At least rhetorically, there's clearly some recognition that this is already a very new Middle East. On January 26, President Obama expressed support for "a government that is responsive to the aspirations of the Egyptian people." Secretary of State Hillary Clinton acknowledged that Mubarak's naming a vice-president and new prime minister wasn't nearly enough to answer the concerns of his people, and she called for "change that will respond to the legitimate grievances of the Egyptian people which the protests are all about." That's important – defending the Mubarak regime and its version of "stability" is no longer the only issue on the U.S. table. But nonetheless they're not getting it quite right yet. Clinton's spokesman, P.J. Crowley, admitted the government was "looking at" the huge military aid grant given to Egypt every year; he didn't say Washington is deciding whether or how to cut it. Both Obama and Clinton are stressing the need for an "orderly" transition – and given that the current popular uprising in the streets is anything but orderly, that sounds an awful lot like this administration isn't accepting this transition on its own terms.
Clinton explicitly stated the United States would not support "some take-over that would lead not to democracy." And in a clear reference to the Muslim Brotherhood, she said Washington would "not favor any transition to a new government where oppression...would take root." One can only wonder, do President Obama and Secretary Clinton really think the United States still has the power, let alone the right, to decide what's sufficiently "orderly"? Is it really Washington that gets to choose the specific kind oftake-over leading to a U.S., rather than Egyptian, version of democracy, or to choose who might be allowed to join a transitional post-Mubarak government?
The day before Clinton described Mubarak and his wife, Suzanne Mubarak, as "personal friends." Did that hint at a U.S. promise to provide the family with political asylum or some other form of protection, when judges around the world, relying on the Pinochet precedent of universal jurisdiction, begin to issue warrants for their arrest? Could they actually provide such protection any longer?
The Hope
Certainly all of these considerations may change quickly. The emergence of a specific offer of negotiations by the broad opposition front known as the National Coalition for Change, led by former International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) chief and Nobel laureate Mohamed elBaradei, could well mean a shift in Washington's position. If the Obama administration makes clear that it's ending financial support for Mubarak, and that it welcomes internal Egyptian negotiations as the basis for a truly Egyptian solution to the crisis, urgent discussions could take place immediately between Mubarak's regime and the opposition that could lead quickly to Mubarak and his top officials stepping down and a transition to an interim government-in-waiting.
Of course such a move could – and likely will – take place anyway without U.S. approval. But at a moment when there appears to be at least a modicum of recognition in the White House about the depth of this Middle East sea change, perhaps it's not too much to hope that the Obama administration will try to move with history, rather than against it. The pressure is on. The opposition in Egypt has called for a general strike on Monday, January 31, and on Tuesday, February 1, for a "protest of the millions."
The U.S. is facing a strategic challenge in the Middle East beyond even what many White House and Pentagon strategists are likely recognizing. The years of Washington calling the shots in the region based on the exigencies of oil, Israel and a U.S. version of "stability" are definitively over. One possibility is that the U.S. will simply lose, one more piece of the empire crumbling. Like in Latin America, where U.S.-backed military dictatorships gave rise to U.S.-backed civilian versions, Washington continued supporting too-powerful militaries, still got its "free trade" agreements, but then eventually lost to the power of organized social movements demanding far more fundamental changes, the U.S. could simply lose influence in the Middle East.
There is, however, another possibility, through which the U.S. – not Washington but the people of the United States – could actually gain greater influence, greater real security and greater stature in the world. That would require something more than a "new Middle East strategy." It would mean re-tooling the very definition of "strategy" and "strategic interests" that has shaped U.S. foreign policy for generations. If the Obama administration took an entirely different approach, grounded in a real commitment to global equality and internationalism, a serious commitment to international law and respect for other nations, a new understanding of the rights of people, not just governments, to determine their own futures, just imagine what a "new Middle East strategy" could make possible. U.S. empire may be crumbling in the Middle East. The real interests of the people of the United States don't have to.
Already, Washington has lost a huge part of its power and influence in the region. But as my colleague and regional expert Joshua Landis noted, "whereas Bush talked democracy but promoted civil war and dictators, perhaps Obama will be remembered as the U.S. president who allowed dictators in the Middle East to fall and gambled on democracy." That wouldn't be such a bad legacy.
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63 Comments so far
Show AllExcellent article!
Who can Say Bool sh ITE ??
Dear Phyllis and friends. I don't buy it.
It's more likely a cia bump and slide...
didn't want mubarak jr so initiate fake
democratic uprising. Not hard to do when
your society has been repressed as egypt
has been for so long. This was just the
easiest and cheapest way to accomplish the
objective, which is, get Mub out and a newer
easier to manage guy in...it also shows other
local regimes how easily the US CIA can kick
up the price of oil just when all signs pointed
to oil taking a major slip to suit MARKET based
conditions. Saudis say 60-70$ would be a fine
price per barrel; that means they'd be happy
with 35$, jubilant at 70$ and blessing their
imaginary gods @ 100$/bbl.
By the way we own their military its a sub-
sidiary of the pentagram.(egypts, that is...)
.. Democracy, my ASS...
thats just a word they trot out when pols want
to make a speech. We lost any resemblance to demos...
mmmm, maybe 1963. G'night and G'luck.
There's much to learn in the USA, and the hardest lesson of all will be our schooling by the people of the Middle East, whom we have considered our political inferiors for so long. A vital point was made above, that the interests of the US citizenry and the crumbling us empire are not one and the same.
The interests of all people, and the health of the world economy are dependent upon the recognition and promotion of the legitimate aspirations of us all. Here is an opportunity to overcome our most crippling illusions, as warmakers and lords of empire remain unsteady, unsure at every level how to assert their customary control. Such moments of opportunity do not come along often. Yalla Tahrir!
Well said.
The interests of the US empire and the interests of the US citizenry are not one and the same. Yet almost everyone here is talking as though they are, using the pronoun "we" interchangeably for both.
Until the US citizenry fundamentally destroys the USA as it is, the two remain the same thing.
Any other perspective is the same wishy-washy rubbish that has sustained the device we know as the USA for so long.
I don't think we are that important. If the rest of the world turns against the empire, it won't much matter what US citizens are doing.
No, the ruling class and the working class here are not the same thing.
Your point is well taken. Some people have been "talking" about how things need to change for some time now. Myself included. Unorganized talk is not going to get us anywhere. But how can we effect change? I am not for violence (not saying that you are). There needs to be a new movement for change in this country. The Tea Party (and affiliates) have done so successfully. For me however, they are not a "fit" for me. There is much that I do not support about their movement - I see a necessity for a department of education, I am pro choice, and I am for certain entitlements that they do not support. In addition the Tea Party has positioned themselves with the republicans. That does not work for me because I do not vote party, I vote candidate (although I tend to align myself more with the democrats where it pertains to social issues and use to align myself with the republicans when they were more fiscally conservative).
Yes, talk is cheap. I just wish I could find a group that would stand for term limits, disclosure of donations, caps on campaign financing; that people from both sides (for a lack of better words) could organize grow and effect change with. It seems that our country has become a "your on my side or you are the enemy" platform these past years, and I think that is very dangerous.
As an aside, I heard James Baker speak at former President Regan's wreath laying celebration in honor of what would have been his 100th birthday. He basically said that both sides have to find a way to sit down and work together to get things done.I want an organized group that will "call out" those who are on the government payroll doing nothing, or who do not have the ability to work together out of office. In a business if you do not have people who can do their job you fire them because they are not doing their job. That is the kind of group I am talking about.
Phyllis Bennis always offers a thoughtful analysis of the Middle East and this long essay is informative. However, the Landis quote regarding Obama's legacy that she uses to wrap up the discussion is a bit of joke.
Does anyone think that Obama and Clinton would not hesitate to back Mubarak against the Egyptian people if they could figure out a way to manage it? An invasion is out of the question as they are busy with two challenging occupations elsewhere. Using the 5th Fleet to bomb Egypt is hardly going to help Mubarak, and their lovely assassination drones are useless for the moment.
Obama and Clinton are left spouting pompous and mendacious calls for 'calm' and 'reform'. All they can do now is run around to the front of the parade and pretend they have been leading it the whole time.
I was was never a fan of Clinton since he pushed through the free trade policies that moved millions of American jobs overseas. But since the wedding of what sprang forth from their loins, I really can't even hear what the two of them say when they speak now. Their son-in-law is an investment banker, and Chelsea is works with a Hedge fund. When I hear the Secretary of the Status Quo Clinton speak, all I hear is what Im pretty sure she is thinking; "Blah, blah, I love Wall Street, blah, blah, god I hope Mubarak stays in power, blah, blah, blah, I can't believe people buy all the bullshit that I say, blah blah blah..."
That family is marinated in Wall Street money and the status quo, like Bush was marinated in oil money. IMHO they exist to make sure nothing changes to negatively effect the fortunes of the uber rich. Their relationship to democracy is like my relationship to poison Ivy, don't want anything to do with it.
I disagree with your take on Secretary Clinton and President Clinton. We live in a global economy and isolationism is not a remedy for the economic problems that our country is experiencing.
President Clinton's position on free trade was something that I did support then and continue to support now. I believe that the agreement as it stands is harmful to the citizens of the United States. Radical changes are needed to create a level field of competition and that will result in Americans jobs.
Recent political accountability has not been to our citizens. It has been to corporations and special interest groups who reward the “party” with campaign donations. The average “Joe” doesn’t see this and supports these politicians because they buy into the false rhetoric that they sell. The political pun dents and the wealthy benefit. I do not blame the wealthy corporations. They are being responsible to their bottom line. I blame the politicians because they are selling out for the money that will keep them in power. It is all about political power. That is the problem in the nutshell. We must demand transparency and stand up for our citizens. If it quacks like a duck it is a duck.
I will give you an example. Congress just passed a bill to do away with government financing of presidential campaigns. At first glance one might say that is good. The government spends more then it takes in and cuts are necessary. The fallacy is that they are ensuring that the people who are honest and will govern for the people will not have a chance to defeat the grand ponzi scheme that they have created. Citzens buy the lies and fear mongering that is put out. When President Obama tried to address this and make changes they campaigned and called him a socialist. They will discredit anyone who does not play in their field. Recently Speaker Boener refused to take C-Span’s offer to televise their sessions. He knows that what side he needs to protect - and it is not the masses of the United States. It is his political and religious base. Democrats are not necessarily any better. We must radically object to the end of campaign financing. We must insist on limits that can be spend on campaigns and we must insist on term limits. We must stop being pawns is their game of chess. They manipulate us and we allow it.
If we do not become activists and insist on the changes we need then we will deserve what we get, which will be a society comprised of the have and the have nots. President Obama tried to enact change and they neutralized him by calling him a socialist and convincing Americans that he was not born in America.
This is not the America my father fought for and I inherited from. It is not the America that I want to leave to my grandchildren.
This is all backward. Political power is subordinate to economic power.
"While Egypt's top military brass is a privileged cohort closely linked to the Mubarak regime, the army itself is made up of generally poor conscripts, who were simply not willing to turn their guns on fellow citizens. Just days into the revolt, soldiers, tank drivers, and even officers were proudly proclaiming their unity with the people in the streets, and were being welcomed with flowers and sweets into the arms of the protesters."
I bet that US corpo-plutocrats are taking notice of this, and are all for accelerating the development of new fully automated military machines and devices, such as robotic soldiers and self-guided drones, to prevent such a thing from happening on the streets of the USA, when the time comes.
Why not sub it out to foreign mercenaries? They can call them "Freedom police" or something stupid like that.
Actually, the use of foreign mercenaries would work. If our "Special" forces death squads can go to Afghanistan and pump bullets through the bellies of pregnant teenage girls (which they did a few months ago), I'm sure there are plenty of Afghan patriots (just like ours) who would be more than happy to come here in the employ of Wall Street and return the favor.
kivals and bunde -
You are both focusing on the crux of the matter: the impact that drone-style robotics and the privatization of traditional military functions have and likely will increasingly have when widespready populist uprisings like those currently underway in Egypt, Tunisia and elsewhere erupt in the future.
Historically (I would say going back at least to the days of Julius Caesar and the Praetorian guards) the role of having a tight cadre of military elites loyal to the titular head of state and armed to the teeth was critical to the regime's survival when the locals got restless. Would the troops remain in their barracks? Would the troops obey orders to leave their barracks (if given by the elites atop the command heirarchy), and obey orders to turn their weaponry towards the fellow-citizen rabble swarming ominously in the streets? Today in Cairo, as in countless similar grassroots uprisings of the recent and distant past, the dynamics of the drama unfolds.
If those armed and charged with protecting the sovereign turn their backs at crunch time, the tyrant flees or falls to the mob. If the military turns against the tyrant instead, you have a coup. If the soldiers remain loyal and obey their orders to fire, there is a massacre or civil war. If the soldiers' active loyalty aligns with the people, the result is usually hailed as a glorious revolution.
By filling the ranks of the military establishment entirely with volunteers rather than with conscripts, or with mercenaries rather than real soldiers, the bonds between citizen/soldiers and the civilians in the streets tips in favor of the elites huddled in their bunkers. When hi tech machines replace the lethal military functions previously discharged by mortal human warriors, the scales shift even more ominously in favor of those who would see the old regime survive the crisis rather than give way to calls for change.
When you then stir faceless spies with guns into the timeless political mix, the situation becomes even more fraught with potential evil.
Bill from Saginaw
Bill: Thanks for the history lesson, and very chilling scenario (in the form of 4 plausible play-outs).
" If the soldiers remain loyal and obey their orders to fire, there is a massacre"
Kent State
another long one.......
but good one.....
this peice focusses in on the heart of the matter - amerikan domination
as the song goes: ya kill the best and buy the rest
that's been amerrikan foreign policy for 100 years and it was the brits before
i am truly excited about these developments because it is the first time in a long time that i have seen a scintilla of freedom and righteousneous on an otherwise pysop'd and fascist planet
Let the people lead. Let the people decide. Direct online democracy. Fair referendums NOW!:
http://ni4d.us/
This is the best summary and future postulation of the situation I have read. Thank you
Definitely. Thanks CD; "sea change" wraps it up nicely. Time to take a deep breath and enjoy the celebratory ride.
Bet:
The Egyptian people end up with a more oppressive government, care of the USA.
Popular revolutions rarely bring in "better" governments, because it takes "strongmen" to maintain order.
Look at the Russian and Chinese revolutions, and the Iranian revolution.
Anytime a central government is replaced with another Central government little is changed in the outcome accept the leadership.
Both the Russian and Chinese revolutions had notable differences from this one: the use of violence.
Furthermore, why only look at those 3? Why not a whole bunch of revolutionary movements from Latin America, from Eastern Europe, from the Philippines, that ejected autocratic governments?
"whereas Bush talked democracy but promoted civil war and dictators, perhaps Obama will be remembered as the U.S. president who allowed dictators in the Middle East to fall and gambled on democracy."
The U.S. has rarely seen a more establishment presidency than that of Barack Obama. If the Egyptians succeed in their revolution, they will have done so despite of him not because of him. As for his legacy, it is likely he will be remembered more for his inertia than for his boldness.
Newton's First Law = Inertia
8.1 - An object's inertia causes it to continue moving the way it is moving unless it is acted upon by an (unbalanced) force to change its motion. ...
I am sure there have been and will continue to be plenty behind the scene conversations. I think President Obama has handled this situation properly. It is more important that he handle this delicate situation with a careful decorum then attempt to do something that others would more then likely accuse him of doing to gain notoriety and credibility in the polls ....of course if he had been more vocal, as some have said he should be, I suspect that the same people who are now criticizing him would be doing so for the same thing that they are criticizing him for not doing. I feel very comfortable with him at the helm. I cannot remember the last time that I felt so secure with a president. I believe he is a refreshing and comforting change from prior presidents who checked polls before deciding on actions.
Newton's First Law = Inertia
8.1 - An object's inertia causes it to continue moving the way it is moving unless it is acted upon by an (unbalanced) force to change its motion. ...
I am sure there have been and will continue to be plenty behind the scene conversations. I think President Obama has handled this situation properly. It is more important that he handle this delicate situation with a careful decorum then attempt to do something that others would more then likely accuse him of doing to gain notoriety and credibility in the polls ....of course if he had been more vocal, as some have said he should be, I suspect that the same people who are now criticizing him would be doing so for the same thing that they are criticizing him for not doing. I feel very comfortable with him at the helm. I cannot remember the last time that I felt so secure with a president. I believe he is a refreshing and comforting change from prior presidents who checked polls before deciding on actions.
Has it ever occurred to you that others may oppose the goals of the administration, and not be concerned about personally feeling very comfortable?
You support the policies of the administration apparently, assume (or insist) that everyone does, and want to talk about how you feel while making derogatory remarks about those who disgaree with you.
Bush checked polls before deciding on actions? The Bush supporters said the same things, word for word: "I feel very comfortable with him at the helm. I cannot remember the last time that I felt so secure with a president. I believe he is a refreshing and comforting change from prior presidents who checked polls before deciding on actions."
In other words, the difference between Bush and Obama rests in how they make different groups of people feel. Obama makes some people feel comfortable, Bush makes others feel comfortable. I think that is the main difference between the two, as you illustrated for us here.
Also, of which person happens to be occupying the White House determines whether you feel comfortable or uncomfortable, and that is the criteria by which you approach politics, that implies that you are not - as millions of others are - besieged by anything more discomforting than that. That all means that you are happy with what the ruling class is doing, and merely would prefer that they do it with the style of an Obama rather than that of a Bush.
Good piece, great peace, the world is changing...thank the stars.
Yes, exactly, there are huge changes taking place. The Middle East, the People rising/ awakening, to oppose oppression... the spirit Will spread across the planet. We are all One Family, show solidaridad, embrace our brothers and sisters ! The non-violent Revolucion Will be coming to your country !
"Run around to the front of the parade" is exactly what they'll do. It will be another of those moments of national humiliation for those of us who already are embarrassed to be American. Fortunately the real story is more compelling and better documented. I can't imagine anybody in their right senses will accept their pathetic rewrite.
Just a reminder about Suleiman's torture career:
http://www.commondreams.org/view/2011/01/30-2
Good article but unfortunately it reflects more wishful thinking than reality.
Until all US military bases in the Middle East aren't shut down and Washington isn't able to simply replace one dictator with another, there's absolutely no reason to celebrate.
Until Israel doesn't return all the land it stole (including the original land in 1948) there's no reason to celebrate.
Let's face facts and stop jumping up and down like children.
A very good article. May the people of Egypt realize their democratic desires. Saudi Arabia and Jordan next.
SA will be a tough nut to crack. That said, even if the nut remains intact, it increasingly appears that it will become both marginalized and isolated.
"whereas Bush talked democracy but promoted civil war and dictators, perhaps Obama will be remembered as the U.S. president who allowed dictators in the Middle East to fall and gambled on democracy."
what bullcrap by Joshua Landis.
the parasitic massers, who hired bush the village idiot and obomber the snake-oil salesman, for their bidding seem to have simply lost in their shellgame against the people of the world, except in north america and western europe.
life has never been more looking up!
Yeah, right on...deadly liar, mass murderer obomber is just like mass murderers bush/cheney cept, obomber actually got elected! Keep on with the Truth about obomber; even some obomberbots are starting to see through his deadly lies.
Obama hasn't allowed anything. It happened faster than he could react.
In additon, Obama supported the coup government of Honduras. Obama has supported militarily and politically Israel's acceleration of settlements (ethnic cleansing). Obama has expanded the war in Pakistan and Yemen.
As I have been saying for days, the Empire has entered wobble zone.
Anyone trying to read the tea leaves is just wasting time. No one, not even well-meaning experts such as Bennis, has any idea what the short- or long-term consequences will be. All we know is that the winds of change are beginning to blow across the ME.
and NATO has already been moving its chips to the region. there will be an ultimatum given to the egyptian people, and a showdown.
ooops, i speculated again. sorry. just trying to lighten up a bit, in the face of a possible calamity.
http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/index.php?pid=17223
BIDEN SAID HE IS A ZIONIST WHEN VISITING ZION....HE SAID MUBARAK IS NOT A DICTATOR..so its time for joe to go...obama could appoint a vice president that americans demand..and hopefully be a overwhelming influence over obamas..mincing..but its just a fools wish..
GREAT ARTICLE...
joe's mama should be ashamed of herself.
I am looking forward to the West Wall of the Gaza Concentration Camp coming down. I am looking forward to Al Jazeera English on American cable systems where Americans can daily see the bodies of the men, women, and children murdered by our drones in Yemen, Pakistan, and Afghanistan. The end of the Sadat-Mubarak dictatorship offers an opportunity for the US to enter adulthood in the real world.
Long Bennis essay very insightful, but ending overly optimistic.
I think der Febs first wish could possibly come true. The second would take more doing. The third is premature:
The myth of US Exceptionalism embedded in 60 plus years of Military-Industrial-Media-plutocracy Elitism will require a few yet unknown very nasty jolts closer to home ....."to enter adulthood in the real world!"
>>The myth of US Exceptionalism embedded in 60 plus years of Military-Industrial-Media-plutocracy Elitism will require a few yet unknown very nasty jolts closer to home ....."to enter adulthood in the real world!"
60 plus years? Keep going back in time to the exceptionalism embedded in the genocide of the Native American population.
The beginning of the end of American hegemony and Empire. South America - gone. Middle East - going. Iraq , now Afghanistan an evil, bloody and senseless grip on securing energy supplies. Saddam Hussein - no WMD or was it also to do with Iraq about to change from petrodollars to petro euros thus damaging the USA precious Reserve Currency ? Wars have long shadows. Vox Populai Vox Dei.
from the article:
~ Translation: "Egypt" = its regime, not its people. ~
extrapolate, and you have the clearest statement made about the current global situation in some time...
modern 'countries' are regimes, not people...
local 'people' are but resources for regimes...
paraphrasing, "America" = its regime, not its people...
If one has no meaningful governmental representation, has one 'country'?
The so-called "arab" uprisings are very convenient for Israel-U.S.: They distract arab and world attention from the accelerated ethnic cleansing of Jerusalem which was getting lots of world attention and has now disappeared from the news. This may even provide "the" pretext for Israel to attack its neighbors and engage in another rampage in Gaza. By-the-way what F-16 and Apache helicopter crimes against humanity have been inflicted during the Egyptian "uprising"?
"may"? try "will".