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Mubarak's Ouster: Good for Egypt, Good for Israel
The inspiring triumph of the Egyptian people in the nonviolent overthrow of the hated dictator Hosni Mubarak is a real triumph of the human spirit. While there will likely be continued struggle in order to insure that the military junta will allow for a real democratic transition, the mobilization of Egypt's civil society and the empowerment of millions of workers, students, intellectuals and others in the cause of freedom will be difficult to contain.
It is disappointing, then, that what should be a near-universal celebration comparable to what greeted the nonviolent overthrows of authoritarian regimes in the Philippines, Czechoslovakia, Chile, Serbia and elsewhere has been tempered by the right-wing Netanyahu government in Israel and its supporters in the United States who oppose Egypt's democratic revolution.
Israel's standing among democrats in Egypt and elsewhere in the Arab world has no doubt suffered as a result of the Israeli government's outspoken support for Mubarak and opposition to the pro-democracy struggle during the Egyptian dictatorship's final weeks. Indeed, the very assumption that the continued suffering of 82 million Egyptians under a corrupt and brutal authoritarian regime was somehow less important than the possible negative ramifications of democratic change for five and half million Israeli Jews smacks of racism.
In reality, Israel has nothing to worry about.
While sympathy for the Palestinian cause runs deep among ordinary Egyptians, it is hardly the principal focus of the Mubarak regime's opponents, who are demanding political freedom and economic justice. Unlike the movement which overthrew the Shah of Iran in 1979, Egypt's movement is overwhelmingly secular, their civil society is much stronger, the country's intellectuals and business class are far more open to the West, and there is no religious hierarchy with control over vast networks of resources.
The overwhelming role played by religious forces in Iran contrasts with the demonstrations, strikes, and other actions in Egypt, which has been led from the outset by secular youth through the Internet and other means of communication. The slogans, communiqués, banners, graffiti, tweets, and Facebook messages have been almost exclusively secular in orientation, pushing nationalistic and liberal democratic themes. And, despite decades of U.S. support for the Mubarak dictatorship, the Egyptian protests have featured virtually no explicit anti-American or anti-Israel overtones, a striking contrast with the Iranian revolution. Indeed, the protests have almost exclusively focused on Mubarak's misrule rather than the U.S. role in enabling it.
Although most of the Egyptian protesters are presumably practicing Muslims, they show no desire to establish an Islamic state, which was an explicit demand of much of the Iranian revolution's leading activists from the beginning of the struggle.
The Muslim Brotherhood - which represents at most about 25% or the population - still embraces a tiresome anti-Israel rhetoric, but the current generation in leadership are also pragmatists who have renounced violence and condemned terrorism. Ayman Al-Zawahiri, who had been a Muslim Brotherhood activist as a teenager and much later went on to co-found Al-Qaeda, has denounced the Brotherhood precisely for its "betrayal" of what he claimed were "Islamic principles" because they - among other things - "acknowledge the existence of the Jews."
In a democratic election, the Muslim Brotherhood would likely win scores of seats in the 454-member lower house and could even conceivably be a junior partner in a coalition government. But its political orientation would not be much different from the legal conservative Muslim-identified parties currently in the Jordanian and Moroccan parliaments or even the ruling Justice and Development Party in Turkey. Indeed, the Muslim Brotherhood would likely be more moderate and more committed to the democratic process than some of the hard-line fundamentalist Jewish parties in the current ruling coalition government of Israel.
More importantly, the Muslim Brotherhood - like virtually all Egyptians, in particular the armed forces - recognizes that Israel cannot be defeated militarily. Egypt fought four wars with Israel between 1948 and 1973 and lost each one badly at considerable costs; the military balance is even more skewed in Israel's favor today. Similarly, support for terrorist groups would invite devastating Israeli military reprisals. Allowing arms, rocketry, or other weapons to Hamas militia could provoke another disastrous military confrontation with Israel which would likely spill over to Egyptian territory.
With so many desperate economic and other domestic problems to deal with in a post-Mubarak era, the last thing Egyptians would support is a war with a powerful neighbor they would surely lose. Military aid and cooperation with the United States, as well as the badly needed economic assistance, would end if Egypt threatened war or supported terrorism.
And, while there has long been popular opposition to the Camp David Accord, the disagreement has generally not been because it made peace with Israel. To most Egyptians, the 1978 peace agreement was problematic for other reasons:
One was that the agreement did not address the plight of the Palestinians or create a comprehensive peace. Just months after Israelis withdrew their troops from a now-demilitarized Sinai Peninsula and no longer having to worry about their southern flank, Israel launched its devastating 1982 war on Lebanon. With the Arab world's largest and most powerful armed forces no longer able to play a deterrent role, Israel has subsequently been emboldened to launch a series of large-scale military incursions into Lebanon, the West Bank, and the Gaza Strip; colonize much of the West Bank to the verge of making the establishment of a viable Palestinian state impossible; and place 1.5 million Palestinians of the Gaza Strip (administered by Egypt between 1948 and 1967) under a draconian siege with devastating humanitarian consequences. As a result, Mubarak was seen as an accomplice to Israeli militarism, unilateralism, and oppression.
A second objection was that the agreement included what was essentially a tripartite military pact. While most peace agreements historically have resulted in demilitarization, the Camp David agreement instead led to dramatically increased U.S. arms transfers to both Israel and Egypt totaling $5 billion a year. This costs the Egyptians greatly, since - while the military hardware came courtesy of U.S. taxpayers - it ended up costing Egyptians billions of dollars in terms of additional personnel, training, and spare parts. Furthermore, this aid included training and equipment in domestic political repression, mostly used against nonviolent pro-democracy advocates.
The agreement also led to large-scale U.S. economic penetration and the privatization of public assets to wealthy well-connected Egyptian elites and multinational corporations, which further resulted in growing inequality and corruption. Contrary to popular belief in the West, Mubarak's predecessor Anwar Sadat was not assassinated for having made peace with Israel. All indications are that his assassins - part of an underground extremist Islamist group - were far more upset about his domestic repression and opening the country up to Western influence than the peace treaty with Israel. Indeed, the assassin's cry, "I have killed Pharaoh" - the same moniker given Mubarak by his critics for his autocratic condescending rule - is hardly indicative of an obsession with Israel.
Ironically, most of the prominent American pundits and politicians claiming that the overthrow of the Mubarak dictatorship would threaten Israel are the very politicians who have encouraged Israel's wars on civilian populations in Lebanon and the Gaza Strip and other policies which have helped create extremist elements that really do threaten Israel. Similarly, those now claiming that Egypt's nonviolent indigenous struggle against Mubarak will result in a repressive Iranian-backed anti-Israel fundamentalist regime are some of the very people who supported the U.S. invasion of Iraq -- which has resulted in a repressive Iranian-backed anti-Israel fundamentalist regime.
Pro-Mubarak politicians - be they Republicans like Senator John McCain, House Foreign Affairs Committee Chair Ilana Ros-Lehtinen, or former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, or Democrats like Senator Dianne Feinstein or Representatives Howard Berman and Gary Ackerman - appear committed to continuing the policies of divide and rule between the Semitic cousins of the Middle East. From providing military aid to rhetorical support, they continue to support the suppression of pro-democracy movements in the Middle East only to then insist the United States has to back the rightist Netanyahu government because Israel is "the sole democracy in the Middle East." As much a protection racket as a self-fulfilling prophecy, their support for the militarization of the region and their backing of tyrannical regimes appears designed to reinforce their insistence that because Israel is surrounded by authoritarian regimes, close cooperation between the rightist expansionist camp in Israel and the United States military is necessary in order for the Jewish state survive. With Israel as its surrogate, it enhances the U.S. military presence in the critical region of the Middle East.
One cost of U.S. support for authoritarian Arab regimes is that it provides yet another rationalization for blaming the Jews. President Barack Obama's delay in coming around to support Egypt's pro-democracy movement - though largely the fault of pressure from Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Secretary of Defense Robert Gates, and other hawks in the foreign policy establishment - was instead widely blamed on the Israeli government and "the Israel Lobby." Meanwhile, the Mubarak regime - supposedly a friend of Israel - was claiming that the protesters and the foreign journalists who were covering them were part of an Israeli plot; pro-democracy demonstrators, human rights monitors and journalists attacked by Mubarak's goons were routinely subjected to anti-Semitic epithets.
For decades, Arab dictators - now joined by the autocratic Iranian regime - have used Israel as an excuse for their militarization and authoritarianism, cynically manipulating the Palestinian cause for their own ends. Democratic systems, however, are usually far less likely to give in to such scapegoating and paranoia.
Virtually all of the largely nonviolent civil insurrections around the world over the past three decades have led to democratic governance and moderate secular leadership. There is little reason to suspect Egypt would be different. Such nonviolent revolutions require the building of broad coalitions that help encourage pluralism and compromise, empower ordinary people, and build civil society. This creates not just political change but fundamental social change of the kind that has the will and the means to resist potential encroachments against newfound democratic institutions and individual liberties and disingenuous efforts to mobilize support for aggressive war.
As a result, there is little chance Egypt would abrogate Egypt's 1978 peace agreement with Israel or threaten armed conflict.
However, a democratic Egyptian government would likely be more outspoken in support of the Palestinian cause and in opposition to the current right-wing Israeli government. A democratic Egypt would likely ease the blockade of food, medicines and other humanitarian goods into the besieged Gaza Strip. Egypt would presumably mobilize its diplomatic clout to try to pressure the Obama administration to go beyond words in blocking Israel's illegal colonization of occupied West Bank, including East Jerusalem.
Taking such positions does not threaten Israel, however. Indeed, these are the very steps that are necessary for making peace.
The emergence of an Arab democratic order that is assertive against the occupation, while not threatening Israel militarily, could help galvanize the Israeli peace movement and other opponents of the Israeli occupation. As Kai Bird, writing in Foreign Policy, noted, "the emergence of an Arab democratic polity should convince Israeli voters that their leaders have become too complacent and too isolationist. After Tahrir, a majority of Israelis may conclude that they can't live in the neighborhood without forging a real peace with their neighbors."
What we have seen between Israel and Egypt for the past 33 years has been a cold peace, based upon a Pax Americana, arms transfers, and dictatorial rule. What the region needs is a real peace, made by the democratic governments representing the peoples of the affected countries, based upon international law, self-determination, and human rights.
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39 Comments so far
Show AllHow could the Muslim Brotherhoods critic of israel be tiresome when it is aimed at israels sixty years of ethnic cleansing, territorial theft and wholesale slaughter of civilians?
Be thinkest 200 israeli nukes weighs on the scale of military balance.
I had the same thought, glenn.
While there is much I tend to agree with in this article, there are two aspects which I think cannot be ignored.
1. The Iranians had a democratic government which the U.S. corporatists loathed and destroyed in the 1950's. That overthrow and the subsequent installation of a vain puppet who brutalized the Iranians for the U.S. corporatists for decades is what created the religious regime. The people turned to the clerics out of desperation. The U.S. hasn't changed its agenda of corporate oppression and the majority of Iranians know it.
2. If anyone is going to start a war in the region, it will be Israel. This is why the Obama administration has been sending mixed signals about the democratic uprisings.
Mubarak was profitable and the agenda of the U.S. has now been paused, but if they can use these developments to make Israel appear to be more vulnerable (a bigger lie), then THAT could very likely be much more profitable.
The more democracy spreads, the more likely Israel will start a war.
The people of Egypt have challenged the corporate interests. They need to be very wary of how they will be used.
egyptian people know exactly what they want, rest asured, unlike the fake left of the west who can't handle the truth.
the rank-and-file employees of many banks in egypt kicked their useless parasitic bosses out and have taken over the banks. remember sharia prohibits the practice of charging interests on loans? definitely anti-capitalist, and no wonder demonized by the global capitalist class.
i bet that banking is not the only sector in which such actions are taking place.
Bingo!
99% of the israelis population and 95% of the jewish american population support the policies of satanyahoo and obomber's and disagree with Mr. Zunes on what's good for israel.
so, can one really blame those who blame the jews
even if that is technically anti-semitic?
"curiousteve"
Where did you get those percentages? I have my doubts as to their accuracy.
The word Semitic originally referred to arabs AND hebrews. It was a regional term.
I do not know how the jewish people came to own it.
I have long believed that Israel was created, at least partially, in order to focus anti-semitism more intensely within the middle east - under the guise of sympathy for the jewish people.
Many, if not most, Christians wanted to get as many jews (and other "semitic" people) as possible out of their proximity and they would love to see all hell break loose because THAT would be heavenly for the Christian schemes.
The word "anti-semitsm" was coined by Wilhelm Marr in 1879 to replace the term "Judenhass" - which means "jew-hatred". Marr was a well known practitioner of judenhass until his later years when he retracted everything and apologized.
So, jews did not want to own the term "anti-semitism" - it was given to them. Has never meant anything other than " judenhass" since 1879, in spite of assyrians, ethiopians, ect al being technically Semites.
And yes, curious steve's made up statistics would place him in the "judenhass" group.
I've always heard that anti-Zionism is racist. Is it anti-Semitic to criticize Israel?
No, I think there are a lot of things to be critical of Israel. Many people go over the line though and issue blanket condemnation of Jews in general. That would be anti Semitic. Unfortunatley not uncommon.
"curious steve's made up statistics would place him in the "judenhass" group."
Don't be silly.
There is nothing judenhass about pointing out that the majority of Israelis are right wing.
The same can be said about the USA.
Whether it is true or not, it doesn't make someone anti-American or anti-Jewish.
Think logically folks.
Exaggeration is regularly used to make a point. It is a normal form of communication.
Clearly those numbers were not meant literally.
That should have been obvious to any reader.
But the point of it is true: most Israelis are hard right wing, and anti-Arab racists.
The word "Semitic" originally referred to a family of languages and not to persons. Ergo "Anti-Semitic" is being against Hebrew and Arabic.
Don't forget that awakening to the state of affairs--i.e, to the burden of capitalism and its need to wage wars--takes place gradually, piece by piece, event by event, in every people. I despise Israel's policies, but not the Israelis themselves. Their policies are generally overseen by a global financial elite anyway (think Bilderberg Group), who conspire in yacht cabins and on putting greens. Blaming individual nation-states has become out-of-date. We're in a global class war now. The number of peace-loving Jews is probably proportionate to the number of peace-loving Americans, peace-loving Brits, French, etc. It takes a while for everybody to wake up and see through the propaganda haze that starts settling around us when we're children. Some never catch the drift. The amount of awakening going on in Egypt now must be overwhelming. It's what people are talking about. As conditions in the US worsen, education will be crucial. It'll be more important than ever to talk to your right-wing neighbors, and convince them that the things that bind us against the neo-capitalist wolves at the door far exceed the often petty issues that divide us.
israel starts all the wars
the are war mad dogs
chomsky has been clear as has norman finklestein
zion has always chosen war and land grabs over peace, which it it will never agree to
the same for amerika - war, death and rape of resources is the only way for the imperium
just ask the first nations
they are the palestinians of north america
or the palestinans are the first nations of the middle east
raw deal either way
Why care whether it's "good for Israel"? The brave people of Egypt rid themselves of Mubarak for their own sake, not for the sake of Israel. We neither need to nor ought to legitimize the worthiness of their actions in terms of "good for Israel."
"Good for Israel" is, in fact, the status quo, which is why the Egyptians still have a long struggle ahead of them, as the Egyptian armed forces -- the breeding ground of Mubaraks and Suleimans -- attempts to keep the dictatorship up and running with new faces and cosmetics.
Corvo, exellent point!! We're all so immersed in the US media's obsessive solicitude for Israel we often, if only subconsciously, begin thinking in those terms ourselves.
Thanks for reminding us that Israel's wellbeing does NOT translate into the rest of the World's best interests.
Mind you, I have no problem with Israel's well-being. But Egypt's revolution is about EGYPT. Not about Israel, not about us.
I'll bet the Israeli ruling class would worry if this democratic revolution came to the US.
This piece is a generally straightforward realpolitik analysis. And in the concluding paragraphs, Zunes does argue that post-Mubarak Egypt will change the status quo in ways that challenge, for the better, Israel's malign posture and policies vis-à-vis the Palestinians and the Arab world.
But, perhaps because he's writing for the "Tikkun" audience, there's a curious avuncular tone-- rather like someone soothing an old mad dog in the yard who's gotten to its feet, and is standing stiff-legged and bristling while growling (and beginning to foam a bit) at a sudden onrush of squirrels leaping and cavorting in the adjacent yard.
"Goo' dog, Israel! Down, boy! Settle down, now! Don't worry yourself over those ol' squrrels! They're not bothering you! Nobody's going to hurt YOU!..."
My guess is that Zunes is trying to contain, or pre-empt, Israel-supporters' abiding paranoia from ratcheting up by presenting the most "win-win" scenario he can construct.
Talking to Israel in the calm voice and turning them toward all the positives of having other Democratic neighbors, is better than all the other alternatives I could think of.
First of all much of the data presented here seems to be innacurate to an extent. Since when does the muslim brotherhood represent 25% ???? have i been living somewhere else but not Egypt..
Secondly Israel by supporting Mubaraks regime against the will and liberty of Egyptians has set the worst example of a discriminative nation and lost much credit towards its credibality as an egyptian partner!!!! how come israel raises sologanms of free will, freedom of speech, human rights and it backed a dictator??
Thirdly its better not to mention of military skew since when it comes to war its not a matter of military superiority but israel has demonstrated a really disabled IDF against hezbollah and were in a big mess with hezbollah melishias ( not even a systmic army) therefore i guess any warwould be a distaster to both sides, more on israels sides specially when it comes to egyptian army spirits and how ready everyone is eager to sacrifice for the sake of Egypt. ( therefore better to not keep mentioning that point in every article any analyst writes)
fourthy egypt didnt lose all the 4 wars against israel otherwise what was camp david for??? youm kippur war was certainly a defeat to israel by army standards..
fourthly yeah i do agree that egyptians are being demonstrating a secular concern and no one is interested in any conflict with ISRAEL whic unfortunately backed mubarak ( i hope they wont pay for that mistake soon)
fifthly you shall never analyse abslutely since all israeli analysts never expected such uprise in egypt and underestimated the will of egyptians ( therefors omething is redundant wihin israel strategists, they seem to be misunderstanding and illusive about what they know)
sixthly instead of such articles try to influence people to cooperate together or socially bring israels and egyptians together instead of the many nonsense articles being fed to the israeli public who seem to have lost confidence in their politicians at the moment...
PLEASE WATCH WHAT YOU ARE WRITING OR ANALYSING...MEDIA HAD BECOME A JOB OF ALL THE JOBLESS
Other consequences:
Don't forget about the potential of Egypt shutting off the gas or restricting the use of the Suez Canal.
"In reality, Israel has nothing to worry about."
Actually, I challenge that assertion. Israel has plenty to worry about and, oh, no! not in the way they've been propagandizing and the corporate media has been parroting. The danger for Israel lies in that, with a democratic Middle East, they are going to have to shed their policies of Apartheid, genocide and occupation. They are going to be forced to make real peace with their neighbors and not the kind that Uncle Sam buys for them vis-a-vis puppet dictators. They will be forced to live as they preach. They will no longer be able to blackmail the rest of the world under the guise of "self defense" and "victimhood." They will no longer be able to arbitrarily violate their neighbor's sovereignty and attack them at will. Israel will be forced to become a normal nation and stop the rampant terrorism they have besieged the Middle East with since the 40s. And that poses an existentialist threat to them.
"The assumption was that the continued suffering of 82 million Egyptians was unimportant compared to the potential negative ramifications for 5.5 million Israelis smacks of racism." I would argue, more generally, that it is an example of group narcissism that is ubiquitous to the human race. When the illegal invasion of Iraq began, a lot of people in my community were happy, because they thought we were going to get a lot of cheap oil. They couldn't have cared less about the smouldering bodies of children over there. It's easy not to care if you see "the other" as less than human.
"With the Arab world's largest and most powerful armed forces no longer able to play a deterrent role, Israel has subsequently been emboldened to launch a series of large-scale military incursions into Lebanon, the West Bank, and the Gaza Strip; colonize much of the West Bank to the verge of making the establishment of a viable Palestinian state impossible; and place 1.5 million Palestinians of the Gaza Strip (administered by Egypt between 1948 and 1967) under a draconian siege with devastating humanitarian consequences.
As a result,...
Mubarak was seen as an accomplice to Israeli militarism, unilateralism, and oppression."
~♦~
well. i'm keepin' my fingers crossed for DEMOCRACY
but, the tough work lies ahead...
for all of us.
"... Israel cannot be defeated militarily"
Why not?
Hizbollah did it twice.
And hoorah for that.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Israeli peace movement?
You mean, all 28 members?
Whoah! That'll make a huge difference. yeah right.
(And yes, hyperbole can be used to get a point across if you understand how language works, which some of the posters above seem not to understand).
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"have used Israel as an excuse for their militarization and authoritarianism, cynically manipulating the Palestinian cause for their own ends. "
What a load of bull. Iran has far lower percentage of its budget allocated for its military than the USA has.
The Iranian leadership are clearly very emotional about the Palestinian issue.
And why shouldn't Iran be authoritarian when the USA is trying to overthrow its government, and while the USA is supporting green colored uprisings, and the USA is supporting the MEK and Jundullah terrorists, etc.
Stephen Zune says nothing useful.
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This Stephen Zunes is a professor of politics and chair of Middle Eastern studies?
No wonder the US people know so little about the real Middle East.
Even their professors know nothing about the subject.
All that it will take is for the Saudis to go to the streets for all Americans with 8-mile per gallon SUV's to abandon Israel for the Saudis!
Mr. Zunes,
One really cannot throw the antisemitic "drap" against Americans who liberated the incarcerated prisoners from the concentration camps. We have paid dearly for the suffering; I'm sure that Germans paid more. Israelis need to stand on their own two feet now, stop stealing Palestinian property, and then, we in the rest of the world can have a little respect for them.
I can fill pages with my criticism of the State of Israel. Allow me therefore to make one positive statement. Correct me if I am wrong but is there one Israeli President, dead or alive, whose assets surpassed one billion dollar?
That we know of...remember that Israeli banks have secrecy laws to protect their depositors...much like Switzerland...otherwise Madoff's transfers to Israel would be common knowledge.
AND if Madoff's clients seek compensation in U.S. courts for money transferred to Israel, are we going to pay again?
If I, a stupid American, can think this, why cannot the FBI think this?
An excellent article.
The Israelis are simply continuing their quest for a "Greater Israel", by any tactic and subterfuge necessary. Bribing Egypt to stand down was a key Israeli foreign policy step (done with other people's money).
But instead of bringing peace, it brought a foothold for further Israeli war and expansion.
What Israelis are really afraid of right now is the full truth coming out in this deluge of new information.
Here's a documentary on how the "settlements" got started, easy to understand, and based on the work of a Jewish historian, Benny Morris.
http://vimeo.com/3714871/
Unfortunately, Israel's quest for a "Greater Israel" required that we Americans reimburse that country for all of its "illegal international settlements". It also required that we Americans pay a huge cost to that country and Egypt to guarantee the safety of Israelis. I want to stop all payments to any country in the Middle East for any reason. There will be no peace until we stop rewarding the war lords there for no peace! If there were peace, they would lose our support and it is sickening that that is the reason that there is no peace in the Middle East!
In sociological terms, when one attributes the sterotypes attributed to a group to the entire group, one is guilty of racism. When that group of people is guilty of living up to the stereotypes 99.99% of the time, what are we supposed to do with the .01% of people who do not fit the mould?
When a group conforms 99.99% of the time to a stereotype, does the stereotype definitively describe the group?
"stereotypes"...I know how to spell. I just do not know how to type.
You are absolutely right, Dr. Zunes, about Egypt. I am sure that their guilt about denying Gazans an access to leave Gaza during the massacre two years ago by Israelis with American white phosphorus bombs bombarding defenseless people in Gaza, probably aided dissidents in Egypt recently. And good for them!