Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby vanlose kid » Thu Jun 09, 2011 4:08 am

The Irish Times - Tuesday, June 7, 2011
Poll shows 83% of Egyptians supported spring uprising

Activists who guided the revolt are expressing impatience with the military command, writes MICHAEL JANSEN

EGYPTIANS ARE positive about their political future but are concerned about the country’s economic prospects, a poll released yesterday finds.

An overwhelming 83 per cent supported the uprising that toppled president Hosni Mubarak and produced a sea change in popular attitudes toward political potential. Nine out of 10 plan on voting in coming elections, as compared with 5-10 per cent who cast ballots in last November’s fraudulent parliamentary election.

The poll, by Gallup’s centre in Abu Dhabi, reveals the Muslim Brotherhood could garner the support of 15 per cent and the former ruling National Democratic Party, 10 per cent. Sixty per cent of respondents are undecided.

Egyptians are demonstrating political sophistication: in a new constitution, 92 per cent say they want freedom of speech, 67 per cent freedom of religion, and 55 per cent freedom of assembly.

Most hold the view that religion is important in their society and 69 per cent favour an advisory role for religious leaders. Few, however, want a theocratic form of government.

While the poll results were positive for the populace, activists who launched and guided the uprising are expressing increasing impatience with the military command that assumed presidential powers upon Mubarak’s resignation.

Of primary concern is the continued detention of 7,000 people arrested during and after the uprising, the torture of detainees and military trials for protesters, while former regime figures accused of corruption, abuse of power and murder appear before civilian courts.

Activists and rights advocates were particularly incensed by virginity tests, beatings and electric shocks inflicted on 18 young women arrested on March 9th by troops dismantling a protest encampment in Cairo’s iconic Tahrir Square.

Although abuses have been documented by Amnesty, the country’s media have been accused of keeping silent about torture by the military during and after the uprising. Journalists and bloggers who reported these abuses were questioned by military prosecutors. US secretary of state Hillary Clinton declared: “We’re disturbed by the reports of efforts to crack down on journalists and bloggers . . . which we don’t think is in keeping with the direction the Egyptian people were heading when they started out in Tahrir Square.”

In an attempt to head off criticism, the military invited groups involved in the uprising to send representatives to a “dialogue” betweens generals and activists. Although each group was asked for 10 representatives, 35 key groups boycotted the two-hour event, while the Muslim Brotherhood and other religious groups accused of backing the military sent many more. Among the absentees were the April 6th movement and the Revolution Youth Coalition, and the chief Coptic Christian protest organisation.

Instead of engaging in dialogue at the event, three generals preached on the history of the armed forces. Gen Muhammad el-Assar argued the military council was trying to meet both the political and economic needs of Egyptians but warned against the negative influence of media, which he said were trying to defame the military. “You need to be aware that some people are trying to make us look bad and that is really dangerous,” he said.

Frustrated at the paternalistic approach of the military and the caretaker government, the We are the Nation movement has filed a complaint with the public prosecutor against prime minister Essam Sharaf and senior cabinet members for wasting public funds on “completely useless” attempts at dialogue.

Egyptian activists are also disturbed by the closure of the Rafah crossing between Egypt and Gaza by Hamas in protest against restrictions imposed almost as soon as it opened to a promised free flow of Palestinian women and children, and men aged over 40. In the first three days after the new regime was put in place 600-700 people managed to cross, but on the fourth only 150 were permitted to depart.

Cairo said the number would be limited to 400 a day, 100 more than under the Mubarak regime, names would have to be submitted 24 hours in advance, and 5,000 people on a blacklist would remain trapped.

Palestinians leaving Gaza for medical treatment have to be vetted by Egyptian doctors. Palestinians accuse Cairo of capitulating to Israeli and US pressure.

http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/wor ... 98036.html


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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby vanlose kid » Thu Jun 09, 2011 4:42 am

Panel discusses US aid, Tahrir protests and religion-based parties
By Mai Shams El-Din / Daily News Egypt June 8, 2011, 6:17 pm


CAIRO: US aid to Egypt, licensing religious parties, supporting Tahrir protests and Egyptians voting abroad were the core issues discussed in a forum titled "Egypt from Tahrir to Transition" organized by the faculty of economics and political science at Cairo University Wednesday.

The forum was a reflection on a poll recently conducted by the Abu Dhabi Gallup Center where attendees voted on controversial issues raised by the poll results.

While 66 percent of the audience voted against US financial aid to the Egyptian government, 73 percent voted for licensing religious parties, 78 percent supported the continuation of Tahrir protests as means of pressure, and 90 percent supported the voting of Egyptians living abroad.

Dalia Mogahed, executive director of the Abu Dhabi Gallup Center and Gallup Center for Muslim Studies, said that Egyptians overwhelmingly oppose the US aid to political groups in their country; this is especially the case among those who look to America as a political example.

"The most important question we have to ask is that do we need an aid-dependent economic system? Do we need our economy to be directed according to the prescriptions of IMF and the World Bank?" asked leftist activist Wael Khalil in the panel.

"We need an economy based on human development that is adjusted to the people's needs not to the strategies of the donors," he said.

The Gallup poll showed that 70 percent want Islamic law principles to be implemented but without the interference of religious figures who can have only a "consulting role."

Activist and member of the No to Military Trials Campaign Mona Saif said she is against banning or eliminating any party from practicing politics or from the democratic process even if it has a religious background.

"As long as religion is not used as means of racism and hatred then it is ok, and even if this happened, judiciary will be the final judge against any violations," she said.

Researcher and writer Sarah Khourshid agreed with Saif, citing the experience of the Republican Party in the United States and the Christian Democratic Union in Germany led by the German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

"The answer depends on what we mean by religious parties. If we mean parties controlled by religious figures then that definitely has to be rejected, but parties that use a religious background should have the right to participate in the process." Khourshid said.

The poll results also showed that 83 percent respondents supported the revolution, refuting what has been said that protesters around the country reached only 15 million, while the remaining silent majority did not support it.

"Bottom-up pressure proved to be the most effective way to achieve the demands of the revolution, so supporting Tahrir protests have to continue until all demands are met," said activist and blogger Mahmoud Salem.

Salem added that the continuous labor strikes are increasing due to the government’s reluctance to execute economic policies favorable to lower classes of the society.

"There is no clear economic policy to support poor sectors of the society or small and medium projects, even if the minimum wage set at LE 700 is not enough."

All panelists agreed that the right of Egyptians abroad to vote should be granted as many of them traveled because they had no hope for change before the revolution, which should not deprive them the right to participate in forming their country's future.

"But we have to openly discuss the ways by which they will vote especially in parliamentary elections which seems to be complicated." said Khalil.

http://thedailynewsegypt.com/people/pan ... rties.html


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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby JackRiddler » Thu Jun 09, 2011 7:23 am

elfismiles wrote:Doesn't the new War on a Fourth (or is it Fifth or Sixth now) Front deserve its own thread?


I lean otherwise. It's one set of related uprisings and reactions in a dozen cousin countries, and keeping one scrapbook may have a better chance of preserving the integrity and feel of the history.
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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby hanshan » Thu Jun 09, 2011 7:29 am

JackRiddler wrote:
elfismiles wrote:Doesn't the new War on a Fourth (or is it Fifth or Sixth now) Front deserve its own thread?


I lean otherwise. It's one set of related uprisings and reactions in a dozen cousin countries, and keeping one scrapbook may have a better chance of preserving the integrity and feel of the history.



all for 2nd motion?

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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby stefano » Thu Jun 09, 2011 2:08 pm

I was expecting the EU-MENA revolution thread to be used for collating events outside of Egypt, but it doesn't matter, both are great.

Dunno if this is significant (excerpts, my bold):
___________

Iran sends submarines to Red Sea -Fars news agency

Iran has sent submarines to the Red Sea, the semi-official Fars news agency reported on Tuesday, citing an unidentified source, in a move that could anger Israel.

"Iranian military submarines entered the Red Sea waters with the goal of collecting information and identifying other countries' combat vessels," Fars said.

State-run Press TV said in May the 14th fleet, comprised of two vessels, the Bandar Abbas warship and Shahid Naqdi destroyer, had been sent to combat piracy in the Gulf of Aden.
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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby stefano » Thu Jun 09, 2011 3:10 pm

Egypt's government has dropped plans to levy a capital gains tax, a government spokesman said, after strong opposition from investors.
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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby AlicetheKurious » Thu Jun 09, 2011 5:55 pm

In more counter-revolutionary news: Egypt gas export to Israel resumes

A lot of people are starting to feel like they're in one of those horror movies where the good guys win, but then...

It's getting very hot here, in more ways than one.
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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby JackRiddler » Fri Jun 10, 2011 1:11 pm


http://qifanabki.com/2011/06/08/shadowy ... -in-syria/

June 8, 2011

Shadowy Viral-Media Campaign Shaping Events in Syria?

Posted by Qifa Nabki under Syria | Tags: Amina Abdallah, France24, Gay Girl in Damascus, Lamia Chakkour |

Image
Not the Gay Girl in Damascus.

Got your attention, didn’ t I?

Yes I did, just like the two big stories about Syria that rocketed to the top of the Internet’s “trending” charts over the past few days. No, I’m not talking about the alleged massacre of Syrian security officials in Jisr al-Shughour or the government’s planned response. I’m talking about the fake resignation of Syria’s ambassador to France on live TV, and the strange story of Amina Abdallah Araf al-`Omari’s disappearance.

For those of you who are not on Facebook or Twitter and have not checked a Google News page in the past 48 hours or so, here’s the skinny:
1) France 24 was apparently “the victim of a hoax” yesterday when a woman pretending to be Lamia Chakkour, Syria’s ambassador in Paris, told the channel on live television that she was resigning from her post as an expression of protest against her government’s handling of the crisis in Syria. The odd thing is that the France 24 producer who had arranged the interview had done so in advance by communicating via email with the embassy, so it’s not like someone just called up the station in the middle of a random broadcast. Furthermore, Reuters apparently confirmed the resignation later in the day by calling the embassy and inquiring about its legitimacy. The hoax, then, seems to have been an inside job.

2) The second big story is about the alleged disapparance of Amina Abdallah Araf al-`Omari, the Syrian-American author of a wonderful blog entitled “A Gay Girl in Damascus“. When news that she had been abducted was posted on her blog by her cousin Rania, the internet exploded: a Facebook group generated over 12,000 members in a single day; the US Embassy began searching feverishly for evidence that she did in fact hold an American passport, as a prelude to tracking her down in Damascus; and thousands of new readers flocked to her blog with messages of support from all over the world. Then, later yesterday evening, it became clear that a photo of her published by The Guardian was actually of somebody completely different, and NPR’s Andy Carvin (along with some other folks at The New York Times’s Lede blog) discovered all kinds of other interesting contradictions and puzzles about the story.

[In the spirit of these stories, here begins the shameless rumor-mongering, leading-question section of this post]:

So, what’s going on? Is the Gay Girl in Damascus a real person?! Did the Syrian Ambassador in Paris really call France 24 and resign only to recant the next day?! Is the Gay Girl in Damascus really the Syrian Ambassador in Paris?! Are they both fictitious people concocted by a shadowy viral media campaign that is wagging the Syrian dog? Stay tuned [menacing cackle...]

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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby JackRiddler » Fri Jun 10, 2011 1:18 pm

.

Gene Sharp himself responds to the idea that he was an influence in Egypt, and has some surprising things to say about Libya.


http://www.criticallegalthinking.com/?p=3461

Mass Political Defiance: A Conversation with Gene Sharp

SNIP

“The Egyptian movement was authentic”

JG: In its struggle against Mubarak’s regime, the Egyptian movement seemed to have followed your theory. Did this successful uprising surprise you?

GS: Yes, it did. I would like to say, though, that the actions of this movement are comparable with my theory, but they were not necessarily caused by it. The Egyptian movement was an authentic movement, with no outsiders, that most of the time showed a remarkable degree of non violent self-discipline. People also showed they were not afraid, something which was a very important component of the whole process.

JG: What should people do to continue en route towards democracy in Egypt?

GS: I really don’t give advice to people. It’s up to the people in Egypt to make their own decision. What they have to do is to pay attention to what’s going on and make sure they prevent a return to a dictatorial regime.

JG: What have you learnt from the revolt in Egypt?

GS: That it’s possible that thousands of people, even millions, were able to display a non violent challenge to an oppressive regime and, at the same time, keep a non violent discipline. These events remind us that it’s possible to overthrow a dictatorship without resorting to violence. It has happened now, it happened in the past; therefore, it can happen in the future.

JG: According to Hussein Ibish, if Egypt was the dream, Libya is the nightmare. What do you think of what’s going on in this country?

GS: Ibish’s description is right. A serious mistake was made in Libya, particularly when a very important general, followed by his troops, defected from Gaddafi’s regime and decided to join the opposition. At that moment, many believed that they had the opportunity to resist Gaddafi resorting to violence. That was the beginning of the end of the non violent movement. Had this movement had a clear idea of where Gaddafi’s regime was strong and where it was weak, they would have realized that Gaddafi was strong with military means and that the resistance was weak with military means. Therefore, it was foolish, very foolish, to challenge the regime where it was strong. That challenge only made things worse and fostered an intervention that, otherwise, wouldn’t have taken place.

JG: From your point of view, was there an alternative to the use of violence to protect the civilian population against the violence exerted by Gaddafi’s regime? Before attacking Bengazi, Gaddafi said he would go after each one of those who resisted him.

GS: First of all, it was impossible for Gaddafi to go after each and every one of those who resist against his regime. In non violent struggle, you always have to choose the field in which you fight without violent weapons, without military means, because you have more powerful weapons, those with which you can undermine a dictatorial regime. But in the whole process, you have to keep a non-violent discipline. Look at what’s going on in Syria. The regime has relied on a violent repression. This in turn has caused that many members of the army, after seeing what this regime does to its own people, have ceased being loyal to their regime. The net effect of this process is that the regime has lost the support of many who used to endorse it.

SNIP

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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby American Dream » Sat Jun 11, 2011 8:29 am

The Reactionary Bloc in Egypt

June 11, 2011

By Samir Amin
Source: Mr Zine



Just as in past periods of rising struggle, the democratic social and anti-imperialist movement in Egypt is up against a powerful reactionary bloc. This bloc can perhaps be identified in terms of its social composition (its component classes, of course) but it is just as important to define it in terms of its means of political intervention and the ideological discourse serving its politics.

In social terms, the reactionary bloc is led by the Egyptian bourgeoisie taken as a whole. The forms of dependent accumulation operative over the past forty years brought about the rise of a rich bourgeoisie, the sole beneficiary of the scandalous inequality accompanying that "globalized liberal" model. It is a class of some tens of thousands -- not of "innovating entrepreneurs" as the World Bank likes to call them but of millionaires and billionaires all owing their fortunes to collusion with the political apparatus (corruption being an organic part of their system). This is a comprador bourgeoisie (in the political language current in Egypt the people term them "corrupt parasites"). They make up the active support for the integration of Egypt in contemporary imperialist globalization as an unconditional ally of the United States. Within its ranks this bourgeoisie counts numerous military and police generals, "civilians" with connections to the state and to the dominant National Democratic party created by Sadat and Mubarak, and of religious personalities --- the whole leadership of the Muslim Brotherhood and the leading sheikhs of the Al Azhar University are all of them "billionaires." Certainly there still exists a bourgeoisie of active small-and-medium entrepreneurs. But they are the victims of the racketeering system put in place by the comprador bourgeoisie, usually reduced to the status of subordinate subcontractors for the local monopolists, themselves mere transmission belts for the foreign monopolies. In the construction industry this system is the general rule: the "greats" snap up the state contracts and then subcontract the work to the "smalls." That authentically entrepreneurial bourgeoisie is in sympathy with the democratic movement.

The rural side of the reactionary bloc has no less importance. It is made up of rich peasants who were the main beneficiaries of Nasser's agrarian reform, replacing the former class of wealthy landlords. The agricultural cooperatives set up by the Nasser regime included both rich and poor peasants, so they mainly worked for the benefit of the rich. But the regime also had measures to limit possible abuse of the poor peasants. Once those measures had been abandoned, on the advice of the World Bank, by Sadat and Mubarak, the rural rich went to work to hasten the elimination of the poor peasants. In modern Egypt the rural rich have always constituted a reactionary class, now more so than ever. They are likewise the main sponsors of conservative Islam in the countryside and, through their close (often family) relationships with the officials of the state and religious apparatuses (in Egypt the Al Azhar university has a status equivalent to an organized Muslim Church) they dominate rural social life. What is more, a large part of the urban middle classes (especially the army and police officers but likewise the technocrats and medical/legal professionals) stem directly from the rural rich.

This reactionary bloc has strong political instruments in its service: the military and police forces, the state institutions, the privileged political party (that is a de facto single party -- the National Democratic Party created by Sadat), the religious apparatus (Al Azhar), and the factions of political Islam (the Muslim Brotherhood and the Salafists). The military assistance (amounting to some $1.5 billion annually) extended by the US to the Egyptian Army was never meant to strengthen the country's defensive capacity. On the contrary, the aid was meant to annihilate the threat posed by it through the systematic corruption that, with the greatest cynicism, was not merely known and tolerated but actively promoted. That "aid" allowed the highest ranks to take over for themselves some important parts of the Egyptian comprador economy, to the point that "Army Incorporated" (Sharika al geish) became a commonplace term. The High Command, who made itself responsible for directing the Transition, is thus not at all "neutral" despite its effort to appear so by distancing itself from the acts of repression. The "civilian" government chosen by and obedient to it, made up largely of the less conspicuous men from the former regime, has taken a series of completely reactionary measures aimed at blocking any radicalization of the movement. Among those measures are a vicious anti-strike law (on the pretext of economic revival), and a law placing severe restrictions on the formation of political parties, aimed at confining the electoral game to the tendencies of political Islam (especially the Muslim Brotherhood), which are already well organized thanks to their systematic support by the former regime. Nevertheless, despite all that, the attitude of the army remains, at bottom, unforeseeable. In spite of the corruption of its cadres (the rank and file are conscripts, the officers professionals) nationalist sentiment has still not disappeared entirely. Moreover, the army resents having in practice lost most of its power to the police. In these circumstances, and because the movement has forcefully expressed its will to exclude the army from political leadership of the country, it is very likely that the High Command will seek in the future to remain behind the scenes rather than to present its own candidates in the coming elections.

Though it is clear that the police apparatus has remained intact (their prosecution is not contemplated) like the state apparatus in general (the new rulers all being veteran regime figures), the National Democratic Party vanished in the tempest and its legal dissolution has been ordered. But we can be certain that the Egyptian bourgeoisie will make sure that its party is reborn under a different label or labels.



Samir Amin is director of the Third World Forum in Dakar, Senegal and author of The Liberal Virus (Monthly Review Press, 2004), The World We Wish to See (Monthly Review Press, 2008), and most recently The Law of Worldwide Value (Monthly Review Press, 2010). The text above is an excerpt from Samir Amin, "2011: An Arab Springtime?" (Monthly Review, 2 June 2011).


From: Z Net - The Spirit Of Resistance Lives
URL: http://www.zcommunications.org/the-reac ... samir-amin
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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby vanlose kid » Sat Jun 11, 2011 12:38 pm

*

"If the January 25th revolution results in no more than a retrenchment of neoliberalism, or even its intensification, those millions will have been cheated. The rest of the world could be cheated as well. Egypt and Tunisia are the first nations to carry out successful revolutions against neoliberal regimes. Americans could learn from Egypt.[/color] Indeed, there are signs that they already are doing so. Wisconsin teachers protesting against their governor’s attempts to remove the right to collective bargaining have carried signs equating Mubarak with their governor. Egyptians might well say to America 'uqbalak (may you be the next)."



Arab revolutions mask economic status quo
Despite talk of a "new social contract", financial powers seek to maintain their grip on the poor of the Middle East.
Mark LeVine Last Modified: 10 Jun 2011 15:56

Business and trade were hard hit by the uprisings across much of the Arab world - and now the IMF and World Bank say they want to help economies get back on their feet. But privatisation and enforced 'structural adjustment' will keep many of the poorest on their knees [GALLO/GETTY]

The World Bank and IMF have been restructuring the economies of the Middle East for decades, with largely negative results. Yet they are poised to play a major role in the post-revolutionary efforts to stabilise Egypt, Tunisia and other post-authoritarian states.

The post-1967 era of the Middle East can, in many ways, be defined by the turn towards market liberalisation across the region, although the attempts by Western lending institutions to pressure local governments to initiate structural reforms goes back to the Nasser period. From the start of the 1970s-era infitah, or opening, under Anwar Sadat, there have been over a dozen episodes of mass protest and even revolt against IMF and World Bank-imposed austerity measures. Not just in Egypt, which has had at least four such episodes, but in Algeria, Jordan, Lebanon and Turkey as well.

At times local governments made some effort to resist the imposition of what is today referred to as "Washington Consensus" policies, which advocate trade liberalisation, privatisation, opening economies to foreign goods and investment, stabilising budgets and exchange rates, and cutting government expenditures and presence in the economy. As one left-wing paper headlined a story in 1978: "Egypt puts the IMF on notice, heralding new era of economic development."

But the new era was stillborn; Egypt would soon be far too tightly enmeshed within the US-led order to pursue an independent path towards development, continuing a history of frustrated economic development that stretches from the mid-19th century, when Muhammad Ali's attempt at independent modernisation was met by a joint European-Ottoman front that ultimately forced Egypt - and the Ottoman state - into a European-dominated economic fold that, within three decades, led both states to bankruptcy (and soon thereafter, for Egypt, to more than half a century of British occupation).

Today, some Egyptian observers argue that one of the main reasons the army was willing to sacrifice Mubarak was because of its anger at the increasing power of his son Gamal and his colleagues, such as former - and recently convicted - IMF official Youssef Boutros-Ghali, who were accruing significant power through the financialisation of the economy and other policies that weaken the power of the army and the more traditional national capitalist elite.

In short, resentment against the kind of neoliberal policies championed by the IMF and World Bank runs deep in Egypt and other Arab countries. Today, even senior officials of the Bank and Fund blame the imposition of "Washington Consensus" models of restructuring developing economies for helping create the situation of economic hopelessness that sparked the Tunisian revolution.

While few people are making the link today, such policies also helped torpedo the Oslo peace process. They justified the economic integration through physical separation and isolation of Palestinians within the Occupied Territories that became a defining motif of the so-called peace process, reinforcing Israeli economic dominance over Palestinians in the same manner that its territorial footprint in the West Bank grew wider rather than trimming down, which is what most people assumed would happen on the way to a final status agreement.

Lessons learned?

Despite the less than encouraging history of involvement in the region, the World Bank, IMF and other mainstream institutions have all sought to insert themselves into the economic reform process that most observers believe must accompany political reform in order for the latter to succeed. At least, at the leadership level, officials are saying the right words. Bank head Robert Zoellick argues that "we must act now ... In revolutionary moments, the status quo is not a winning hand".

Zoellick has declared that the Bank understands that "we need a new social contract where governments listen to their people and include them in their development process". Similarly, incoming IMF chief Christine Lagarde admitted that one of the lessons of the region's uprisings is that "if priority is to be accorded to inclusive and sustainable growth, issues of justice, security and employment, particularly in the private sector, can no longer be addressed separately".

Similarly, in a heated exchange with Egyptian pro-democracy activist Wael Ghonim, then IMF head Dominique Strauss Kahn admitted that the Bank had erred in helping to prop up the Mubarak regime and offering analyses which celebrated policies of the government which clearly were harming the interests of most Egyptians.

Both the IMF and the Bank now state loudly that the Arab Spring has taught them the appropriate "lessons" and that they now realise that "we have to listen to people" and help ensure that wealth is now "for everyone" and not just the privileged few.

Such language - of inclusiveness and accountability to the broader population, of focusing on human development rather than merely aggregate economic indicators - is laudable, and reflects the commitment of the Bank specifically to support the millennium development goals. Yet it runs hard into almost insurmountable obstacles.

First, the entrenched institutional ideology and policies of the Fund and Bank. Thus, for example, increasing "productivity" and "efficiency" in the Egyptian or Tunisian economies would demand trimming supposedly bloated workforces, at a time when the institutions' leaders have admitted that joblessness is among the most difficult problems faced by Egypt and its neighbours. Similar problems occur with opening economies too far towards foreign investment and export-oriented growth, when the strengthening of locally based production, consumption and credit would be more beneficial.

Second, the desire to change course runs into the problem that the larger structural imbalances in economies such as Egypt - rampant corruption and concentration of wealth tied to long-term authoritarian rule - are globally systemic in nature. They mirror (in fact amplify) problems that plague the most market-devoted advanced industrial countries, such as the United States. But at the same time they are exacerbated by the fact that US policy has long had little interest in encouraging the kind of autonomous development that the Bank and Fund now say they support.

In the case of Egypt (and the Middle East more broadly), the US supported Mubarak and other dictators because he backed US policies which were antithetical to the desires and interests of most Egyptians. Neither authoritarian governments nor their patrons have any interest in encouraging the development of a robust civil society and autonomous middle-class led economy, now named among the chief goals of the Bank and Fund. Rather, keeping civil societies relatively weak (or at least disempowered) and individual citizens dependent on the state are among the few tools governments have left to maintain some form of control, or at least power, over populations.

Despite this obvious reality, it remains almost impossible to find officials or researchers associated with the Bank or Fund acknowledging that disparities in economic and political power within developing countries and between their nations and more powerful countries impacts the way policies are experienced on the ground.

A more realistic portrayal of the view of Washington Consensus insiders to the Arab Spring comes from a recent report issued by the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Written by two former senior Bank officials, Uri Dadush and Marwan Muasher, it called on the Fund and Bank to step in to ensure that political changes sweeping the region didn't encourage governments to abandon Washington Consensus policies.

Bluntly, the authors warn that "there is a significant possibility that the government that ultimately emerges out of this crisis will renounce previous economic reforms as misguided and argue that they contributed to the region's plight ... It is in the large economies' own interest to insure that economic reforms continue apace with political reforms." Worse, they fear, local governments might "lose faith in liberal economic reform" and "essentially 'buy' peace with domestic handouts and new spending packages".

Roots of de-development

The roots of the neoliberal policies against which not merely "ordinary" Arabs, but even the leaders of the Bank and Fund would seem to be pushing run extremely deep, to the emergence of a global capitalist system in the 16th century that was inextricably tied to the rapid development of European empires and all the violence and exploitation they wrought - through centuries of imperial power, colonial rule, and enforced exploitation and slavery.

Equally important was the rise of nation-state ideologies and institutions that helped manage the increasingly globalised economic order. When colonised peoples finally achieved independence and sought to create autonomous institutions and networks, they were met with concerted efforts to frustrate their drive towards independent development, setting up a showdown between Arab "socialism" and Western capitalism that lasted for the better part of the 1950s and 1960s.

Despite the conflict with the United States and other Western powers, this period was in fact marked by unprecedented levels of both economic growth and relative economic equality within ostensibly socialist-inspired societies such as Egypt, Syria or Iraq. But by the 1970s, and especially in the 1980s, leaders of these countries began to integrate themselves into the Western political-economic fold, and such growth and egalitarian distribution of wealth changed for the worse.

I explored this trend and the experience of globalisation more broadly in the Middle East in my 2005 book Why They Don't Hate Us: Lifting the Veil on the Axis of Evil. What was striking about the data I collected was both how often growth was the result of following policies at odds with the Washington Consensus model, and how following this model produced greater inequality and poverty in countries where there was economic growth. For this and other reasons, it's not surprising that the region was largely left completely out of mainstream analyses of economic globalisation in the 1990s and first half of the 2000s, as if the world did not include the Middle East.

Instead, analyses by the IMF and World Bank "extensively praised this stabilisation success in Tunisia, Egypt and Morocco", ignoring the social costs of policies such as reducing the size of the public sector through privatisation, removing controls over investment, eliminating subsidies and most tariffs on imports and liberalising trade regimes. Nor was there significant analysis of the "conditions" attached to loans granted by the Fund or Bank, which demanded that recipient governments engage in significant "structural adjustments" of their fiscal and monetary policies that could go against the interests of the majority of a population, especially during periods of economic downturn - when people are already living at the margins.

Such policies of "conditionality" made loans into tools of policy by Western governments. Such policies could afford sides being based on very inaccurate modelling of how real life economies function or have no appreciation for political circumstances or economic realities of poor people, because their main function was to help pry open developing economies to foreign control. In the process, across the region, structural adjustment encouraged the destruction of existing industries and even deindustrialisation more broadly.

At best, more critical scholars have observed, IMF and World Bank loans have often been used as if they were remittances, being distributed to the population in "inefficient" ways to maintain social peace while strategic public sector investment was significantly reduced (particularly in Egypt). At the same time, the negative impact of the structural adjustment policies attached to them have forced Western donors, such as Sweden, to redirect aid away from encouraging local development and towards ameliorating the worst negative effects of the adjustments forced upon local economies.

Recutting the pie

In a recent article for al Jazeera, Oxford University Egypt expert Walter Armbrust makes two key points that need to be borne in mind as the World Bank, IMF and other international financial institutions seek to reorder the economies of the region for a supposedly post-revolutionary political economic landscape. First, he points out that the corruption that everyone now laments was, in fact, "a conflation of politics and business under the guise of privatisation" that was "less a violation of the system than business as usual".

Not only that, such practises were not just endemic to Egypt. They are "as American as apple pie" - part of the larger global system I mentioned above. As Armbrust points out, in sheer scale, audacity, and - incredibly - legality, the conflation of business and government in the US makes the same process in Egypt look like amateur hour by comparison.

Ultimately, what this analysis reminds us is that even if IMF or Bank officials might have gone a bit soft, the US under President Obama, as under his predecessors, has as little interest or ability to change a system it has profited from enormously over the past half century. Ultimately, neither the generals of Egypt's Supreme Military Council, nor the barons of Wall Street (and their allies among the generals in the Pentagon) will willingly allow anything more than "cosmetic changes" to the political economy of either country.

And so when Egypt's finance minister, Samir Mohamed Radwan, exclaims to a Chamber of Commerce audience that, "it's very simple, I need cash" to keep the economy functioning - while Egypt struggles with billions in debt and lost revenues from the uprising, it is still quite difficult to imagine the "I" he mentions representing the "we", of all of Egypt, Mr Radwan officially represents. With tens of billions of dollars in loans, aid and investment slotted to enter Egypt in the next few years, a system which has been nourished by industrial scale corruption for decades will find it hard to suddenly function efficiently and for the good of the average Egyptian rather than the economic elite which still controls the country - even if that elite has had to sacrifice a few of its own to maintain power.

The struggle for these billions, far more than inter- or intra-religious conflict, changes in Egypt's foreign policy orientation, or the power of the youth movement that toppled a dictator, will likely decide the future of the country for the next generation.

________
Mark LeVine is a professor of history at UC Irvine and senior visiting researcher at the Centre for Middle Eastern Studies at Lund University in Sweden. He has authored several books including Overthrowing Geography: Jaffa, Tel Aviv and the Struggle for Palestine (University of California Press, 2005) and An Impossible Peace: Israel/Palestine Since 1989 (Zed Books, 2009).

The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera's editorial policy.


http://english.aljazeera.net/indepth/op ... 45689.html


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A revolution against neoliberalism?
If rebellion results in a retrenchment of neoliberalism, millions will feel cheated.
Walter Armbrust Last Modified: 24 Feb 2011 20:27

On February 16th I read a comment that was posted on the wall of the Kullina Khalid Saed's ("We are all Khaled Said") Facebook page administered by the now very famous Wael Ghonim. By that time it had been there for about 21 hours. The comment referred to a news item reporting that European governments were under pressure to freeze bank accounts of recently deposed members of the Mubarak regime. The comment said: "Excellent news … we do not want to take revenge on anyone … it is the right of all of us to hold to account any person who has wronged this nation. By law we want the nation’s money that has been stolen … because this is the money of Egyptians, 40 per cent of whom live below the poverty line."

By the time I unpacked this thread of conversation, 5,999 people had clicked the "like" button, and about 5,500 had left comments. I have not attempted the herculean task of reading all five thousand odd comments (and no doubt more are being added as I write), but a fairly lengthy survey left no doubt that most of the comments were made by people who clicked the "like" icon on the Facebook page. There were also a few by regime supporters, and others by people who dislike the personality cult that has emerged around Mr. Ghoneim.

This Facebook thread is symptomatic of the moment. Now that the Mubarak regime has fallen, an urge to account for its crimes and to identify its accomplices has come to the fore. The chants, songs, and poetry performed in Midan al-Tahrir always contained an element of anger against haramiyya (thieves) who benefited from regime corruption. Now lists of regime supporters are circulating in the press and blogosphere. Mubarak and his closest relatives (sons Gamal and 'Ala’) are always at the head of these lists. Articles on their personal wealth give figures as low as $3 billion to as high as $70 billion (the higher number was repeated on many protesters’ signs). Ahmad Ezz, the General Secretary of the deposed National Democratic Party and the largest steel magnate in the Middle East, is supposed to be worth $18 billion; Zohayr Garana, former Minister of Tourism, $13 billion; Ahmad al-Maghrabi, former Minister of Housing, $11 billion; former Minister of Interior Habib Adli, much hated for his supervision of an incredibly abusive police state, also managed to amass $8 billion — not bad for a lifetime civil servant.

Such figures may prove to be inaccurate. They may be too low, or maybe too high, and we may never know precisely because much of the money is outside of Egypt, and foreign governments will only investigate the financial dealings of Mubarak regime members if the Egyptian government makes a formal request for them to do so. Whatever the true numbers, the corruption of the Mubarak regime is not in doubt. The lowest figure quoted for Mubarak’s personal wealth, of "only" $3 billion, is damning enough for a man who entered the air force in 1950 at the age of twenty two, embarking on a sixty-year career in "public service."

A systemic problem

The hunt for regime cronies’ billions may be a natural inclination of the post-Mubarak era, but it could also lead astray efforts to reconstitute the political system. The generals who now rule Egypt are obviously happy to let the politicians take the heat. Their names were not included in the lists of the most egregiously corrupt individuals of the Mubarak era, though in fact the upper echelons of the military have long been beneficiaries of a system similar to (and sometimes overlapping with) the one that that enriched civilian figures much more prominent in the public eye such as Ahmad Ezz and Habib al-Adly.

To describe blatant exploitation of the political system for personal gain as corruption misses the forest for the trees. Such exploitation is surely an outrage against Egyptian citizens, but calling it corruption suggests that the problem is aberrations from a system that would otherwise function smoothly. If this were the case then the crimes of the Mubarak regime could be attributed simply to bad character: change the people and the problems go away. But the real problem with the regime was not necessarily that high-ranking members of the government were thieves in an ordinary sense. They did not necessarily steal directly from the treasury. Rather they were enriched through a conflation of politics and business under the guise of privatization. This was less a violation of the system than business as usual. Mubarak’s Egypt, in a nutshell, was a quintessential neoliberal state.

What is neoliberalism? In his Brief History of Neoliberalism, the eminent social geographer David Harvey outlined "a theory of political economic practices that proposes that human well-being can best be advanced by liberating individual entrepreneurial freedoms and skills within an institutional framework characterised by strong private property rights, free markets, and free trade." Neoliberal states guarantee, by force if necessary, the "proper functioning" of markets; where markets do not exist (for example, in the use of land, water, education, health care, social security, or environmental pollution), then the state should create them.

Guaranteeing the sanctity of markets is supposed to be the limit of legitimate state functions, and state interventions should always be subordinate to markets. All human behavior, and not just the production of goods and services, can be reduced to market transactions.

And the application of utopian neoliberalism in the real world leads to deformed societies as surely as the application of utopian communism did.

Rhetoric vs. reality

Two observations about Egypt’s history as a neoliberal state are in order. First, Mubarak’s Egypt was considered to be at the forefront of instituting neoliberal policies in the Middle East (not un-coincidentally, so was Ben Ali’s Tunisia). Secondly, the reality of Egypt’s political economy during the Mubarak era was very different than the rhetoric, as was the case in every other neoliberal state from Chile to Indonesia. Political scientist Timothy Mitchell published a revealing essay about Egypt’s brand of neoliberalism in his book Rule of Experts (the chapter titled "Dreamland" — named after a housing development built by Ahmad Bahgat, one of the Mubarak cronies now discredited by the fall of the regime). The gist of Mitchell’s portrait of Egyptian neoliberalism was that while Egypt was lauded by institutions such as the International Monetary Fund as a beacon of free-market success, the standard tools for measuring economies gave a grossly inadequate picture of the Egyptian economy. In reality the unfettering of markets and agenda of privatization were applied unevenly at best.

The only people for whom Egyptian neoliberalism worked "by the book" were the most vulnerable members of society, and their experience with neoliberalism was not a pretty picture. Organised labor was fiercely suppressed. The public education and the health care systems were gutted by a combination of neglect and privatization. Much of the population suffered stagnant or falling wages relative to inflation. Official unemployment was estimated at approximately 9.4% last year (and much higher for the youth who spearheaded the January 25th Revolution), and about 20% of the population is said to live below a poverty line defined as $2 per day per person.

For the wealthy, the rules were very different. Egypt did not so much shrink its public sector, as neoliberal doctrine would have it, as it reallocated public resources for the benefit of a small and already affluent elite. Privatization provided windfalls for politically well-connected individuals who could purchase state-owned assets for much less than their market value, or monopolise rents from such diverse sources as tourism and foreign aid. Huge proportions of the profits made by companies that supplied basic construction materials like steel and cement came from government contracts, a proportion of which in turn were related to aid from foreign governments.

Most importantly, the very limited function for the state recommended by neoliberal doctrine in the abstract was turned on its head in reality. In Mubarak’s Egypt business and government were so tightly intertwined that it was often difficult for an outside observer to tease them apart. Since political connections were the surest route to astronomical profits, businessmen had powerful incentives to buy political office in the phony elections run by the ruling National Democratic Party. Whatever competition there was for seats in the Peoples’ Assembly and Consultative Council took place mainly within the NDP. Non-NDP representation in parliament by opposition parties was strictly a matter of the political calculations made for a given elections: let in a few independent candidates known to be affiliated with the Muslim Brotherhood in 2005 (and set off tremors of fear in Washington); dictate total NDP domination in 2010 (and clear the path for an expected new round of distributing public assets to "private" investors).

Parallels with America

The political economy of the Mubarak regime was shaped by many currents in Egypt’s own history, but its broad outlines were by no means unique. Similar stories can be told throughout the rest of the Middle East, Latin America, Asia, Europe and Africa. Everywhere neoliberalism has been tried, the results are similar: living up to the utopian ideal is impossible; formal measures of economic activity mask huge disparities in the fortunes of the rich and poor; elites become "masters of the universe," using force to defend their prerogatives, and manipulating the economy to their advantage, but never living in anything resembling the heavily marketised worlds that are imposed on the poor.

The story should sound familiar to Americans as well. For example, the vast fortunes of Bush era cabinet members Donald Rumsfeld and Dick Cheney, through their involvement with companies like Halliburton and Gilead Sciences, are the product of a political system that allows them — more or less legally — to have one foot planted in "business" and another in "government" to the point that the distinction between them becomes blurred. Politicians move from the office to the boardroom to the lobbying organization and back again.

As neoliberal dogma disallows any legitimate role for government other than guarding the sanctity of free markets, recent American history has been marked by the steady privatization of services and resources formerly supplied or controlled by the government. But it is inevitably those with closest access to the government who are best positioned to profit from government campaigns to sell off the functions it formerly performed. It is not just Republicans who are implicated in this systemic corruption. Clinton-era Secretary of Treasury Robert Rubin’s involvement with Citigroup does not bear close scrutiny. Lawrence Summers gave crucial support for the deregulation of financial derivatives contracts while Secretary of Treasury under Clinton, and profited handsomely from companies involved in the same practices while working for Obama (and of course deregulated derivatives were a key element in the financial crisis that led to a massive Federal bailout of the entire banking industry).

So in Egyptian terms, when General Secretary of the NDP Ahmad Ezz cornered the market on steel and was given contracts to build public-private construction projects, or when former Minister of Parliament Talaat Mustafa purchased vast tracts of land for the upscale Madinaty housing development without having to engage in a competitive bidding process (but with the benefit of state-provided road and utility infrastructure), they may have been practicing corruption logically and morally. But what they were doing was also as American as apple pie, at least within the scope of the past two decades.

However, in the current climate the most important thing is not the depredations of deposed Mubarak regime cronies. It is rather the role of the military in the political system. It is the army that now rules the country, albeit as a transitional power, or so most Egyptians hope. No representatives of the upper echelons of the Egyptian military appear on the various lists of old-regime allies who need to be called to account. For example, the headline of the February 17th edition of Ahrar, the press organ of the Liberal party, was emblazoned with the headline "Financial Reserves of the Corrupt Total 700 Billion Pounds [about $118 billion] in 18 Countries."

A vast economic powerhouse

But the article did not say a single word about the place of the military in this epic theft. The military were nonetheless part of the crony capitalism of the Mubarak era. After relatively short careers in the military high-ranking officers are rewarded with such perks as highly remunerative positions on the management boards of housing projects and shopping malls. Some of these are essentially public-sector companies transferred to the military sector when IMF-mandated structural adjustment programs required reductions in the civilian public sector.

But the generals also receive plums from the private sector. Military spending itself was also lucrative because it included both a state budget and contracts with American companies that provided hardware and technical expertise. The United States provided much of the financing for this spending under rules that required a great deal of the money to be recycled to American corporations, but all such deals required middlemen. Who better to act as an intermediary for American foreign aid contracts than men from the very same military designated as the recipient of the services paid for by this aid? In this respect the Egyptian military-industrial complex was again stealing a page from the American playbook; indeed, to the extent that the Egyptian military benefited from American foreign aid, Egypt was part of the American military-industrial complex, which is famous for its revolving-door system of recycling retired military men as lobbyists and employees of defense contractors.

Consequently it is almost unthinkable that the generals of the Supreme Military Council will willingly allow more than cosmetic changes in the political economy of Egypt. But they could be compelled to do so unwillingly. The army is a blunt force, not well suited for controlling crowds of demonstrators. The latest statement of the Supreme Military Council reiterated both the legitimacy of the pro-democracy movements demands, and the requirement that demonstrations cease so that the country can get back to work. If demonstrations continue to the point that the Supreme Military Council feels it can no longer tolerate them, then the soldiers who will be ordered to put them down (indeed, in some accounts were already ordered to put them down early in the revolution and refused to do so) with deadly force, are not the generals who were part of the Mubarak-era corruption, but conscripts.

Pro-democracy demonstrators and their sympathisers often repeated the slogans "the army and the people are one hand," and "the army is from us." They had the conscripts in mind, and many were unaware of how stark differences were between the interests of the soldiers and the generals. Between the conscripts and the generals is a middle-level professional officer corps whose loyalties have been the subject of much speculation. The generals, for their part, want to maintain their privileges, but not to rule directly. Protracted direct rule leaves the officers of the Supreme Military Council vulnerable to challenges from other officers who were left on the outside. Also, direct rule would make it impossible to hide that the elite officers are not in fact part of the "single hand" composed of the people and the (conscript) army. They are instead logically in the same camp as Ahmad Ezz, Safwat al-Sharif, Gamal Mubarak, and Habib al-Adly — precisely the names on those lists making the rounds of regime members and cronies who should face judgment.

Ultimately the intense speculation about how much money the Mubarak regime stole, and how much the people can expect to pump back into the nation, is a red herring. If the figure turns out to be $50 billion or $500 billion, it will not matter, if Egypt remains a neoliberal state dedicated (nominally) to free-market fundamentalism for the poor, while creating new privatised assets that can be recycled to political insiders for the rich. If one seeks clues to how deeply the January 25th Revolution will restructure Egypt, it would be better to look at such issues as what sort of advice the interim government of generals solicits in fulfilling its mandate to re-make Egyptian government. The period of military government probably will be as short as advertised, followed, one hopes, by an interim civilian government for some specified period (at least two years) during which political parties are allowed to organise on the ground in preparation for free elections. But interim governments have a way of becoming permanent.

Technocrats or ideologues?

One sometimes hears calls to set up a government of "technocrats" that would assume the practical matters of governance. "Technocrat" sounds neutral — a technical expert who would make decisions on "scientific" principle. The term was often applied to Yusuf Butros Ghali, for example, the former Minister of the Treasury, who was one of the Gamal Mubarak boys brought into the cabinet in 2006 ostensibly to smooth the way for the President’s son to assume power. Ghali is now accused of having appropriated LE 450 million for the use of Ahmad Ezz.

I once sat next to Ghali at a dinner during one of his trips abroad, and had the opportunity to ask him when the Egyptian government would be ready to have free elections. His response was to trot out the now discredited regime line that elections were impossible because actual democracy would result in the Muslim Brotherhood taking power. Conceivably Ghali will beat the charge of specifically funneling the state’s money to Ahmad Ezz. But as a key architect of Egypt’s privatization programs he cannot possibly have been unaware that he was facilitating a system that enabled the Ezz steel empire while simultaneously destroying Egypt’s educational and health care systems.

The last time I encountered the word "technocrat" was in Naomi Klein’s book The Shock Doctrine — a searing indictment of neoliberalism which argues that the free-market fundamentalism promoted by economist Milton Friedman (and immensely influential in the United States) is predicated on restructuring economies in the wake of catastrophic disruptions because normally functioning societies and political systems would never vote for it. Disruptions can be natural or man-made, such as … revolutions.

The chapters in The Shock Doctrine on Poland, Russia, and South Africa make interesting reading in the context of Egypt’s revolution. In each case when governments (communist or apartheid) collapsed, "technocrats" were brought in to help run countries that were suddenly without functional governments, and create the institutional infrastructure for their successors. The technocrats always seemed to have dispensed a form of what Klein calls "shock therapy" — the imposition of sweeping privatization programs before dazed populations could consider their options and potentially vote for less ideologically pure options that are in their own interests.

The last great wave of revolutions occurred in 1989. The governments that were collapsing then were communist, and the replacement in that "shock moment" of one extreme economic system with its opposite seemed predictable and to many even natural.

One of the things that make the Egyptian and Tunisian revolutions potentially important on a global scale is that they took place in states that were already neoliberalised. The complete failure of neoliberalsm to deliver "human well-being" to a large majority of Egyptians was one of the prime causes of the revolution, at least in the sense of helping to prime millions of people who were not connected to social media to enter the streets on the side of the pro-democracy activists.

But the January 25th Revolution is still a "shock moment." We hear calls to bring in the technocrats in order to revive a dazed economy; and we are told every day that the situation is fluid, and that there is a power vacuum in the wake of not just the disgraced NDP, but also the largely discredited legal opposition parties, which played no role whatsoever in the January 25th Revolution. In this context the generals are probably happy with all the talk about reclaiming the money stolen by the regime, because the flip side of that coin is a related current of worry about the state of the economy. The notion that the economy is in ruins — tourists staying away, investor confidence shattered, employment in the construction sector at a standstill, many industries and businesses operating at far less than full capacity — could well be the single most dangerous rationale for imposing cosmetic reforms that leave the incestuous relation between governance and business intact.

Or worse, if the pro-democracy movement lets itself be stampeded by the "economic ruin" narrative, structures could be put in place by "technocrats" under the aegis of the military transitional government that would tie the eventual civilian government into actually quickening the pace of privatization. Ideologues, including those of the neoliberal stripe, are prone to a witchcraft mode of thinking: if the spell does not work, it is not the fault of the magic, but rather the fault of the shaman who performed the spell. In other words, the logic could be that it was not neoliberalism that ruined Mubarak’s Egypt, but the faulty application of neoliberalism.

Trial balloons for this witchcraft narrative are already being floated outside of Egypt. The New York Times ran an article on February 17th casting the military as a regressive force opposed to privatization and seeking a return to Nasserist statism. The article pits the ostensibly "good side" of the Mubarak regime (privatization programs) against bad old Arab socialism, completely ignoring the fact that while the system of military privilege may preserve some public-sector resources transferred from the civilian economy under pressure of IMF structural adjustment programs, the empire of the generals is hardly limited to a ring-fenced quasi-underground public sector.

Officers were also rewarded with private-sector perks; civilian political/business empires mixed public and private roles to the point that what was government and what was private were indistinguishable; both the military and civilians raked in rents from foreign aid. The generals may well prefer a new round of neoliberal witchcraft.
More privatization will simply free up assets and rents that only the politically connected (including the generals) can acquire. Fixing a failed neoliberal state by more stringent applications of neoliberalism could be the surest way for them to preserve their privileges.

A neoliberal fix would, however, be a tragedy for the pro-democracy movement. The demands of the protesters were clear and largely political: remove the regime; end the emergency law; stop state torture; hold free and fair elections. But implicit in these demands from the beginning (and decisive by the end) was an expectation of greater social and economic justice. Social media may have helped organise the kernel of a movement that eventually overthrew Mubarak, but a large element of what got enough people into the streets to finally overwhelm the state security forces was economic grievances that are intrinsic to neoliberalism. These grievances cannot be reduced to grinding poverty, for revolutions are never carried out by the poorest of the poor. It was rather the erosion of a sense that some human spheres should be outside the logic of markets. Mubarak’s Egypt degraded schools and hospitals, and guaranteed grossly inadequate wages, particularly in the ever-expanding private sector. This was what turned hundreds of dedicated activists into millions of determined protestors.

If the January 25th revolution results in no more than a retrenchment of neoliberalism, or even its intensification, those millions will have been cheated. The rest of the world could be cheated as well. Egypt and Tunisia are the first nations to carry out successful revolutions against neoliberal regimes. Americans could learn from Egypt. Indeed, there are signs that they already are doing so. Wisconsin teachers protesting against their governor’s attempts to remove the right to collective bargaining have carried signs equating Mubarak with their governor. Egyptians might well say to America 'uqbalak (may you be the next).

___________
Dr. Walter Armbrust is Hourani Fellow and University Lecturer in Modern Middle East Studies at Oxford University. He is the author of Mass Culture and Modernism in Egypt (Cambridge University Press, 1996).

This article first appeared on Jadaliyya.

The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera's editorial policy.


http://english.aljazeera.net/indepth/op ... 49621.html


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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby JackRiddler » Sat Jun 11, 2011 2:48 pm

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Thanks for the two great articles by Levine and Armbrust, vk. Excellent reading and generally educational about the economics. I see Armbrust's is from February, but remains current (you just need to mentally revise certain details, like adding the Mubarak indictments).

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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby AlicetheKurious » Sun Jun 12, 2011 6:12 am

I had an epiphany yesterday, and am still struggling to absorb the shock. In a (admittedly simplistic) nutshell:

-What is the role of the Muslim Brotherhood and the "Islamists" *? What has their role ALWAYS been under Mubarak (and elsewhere)? Bogeyman. Given the local media's rather obsessive and deliberately alarmist coverage of the MB and of far smaller fringe groups of Islamist kooks, there is clearly a coordinated effort to vastly exaggerate their influence and penetration of Egyptian society, and their political strength. Yet credible experts and long-time analysts who debunk these myths are relegated to "revolutionary" media that is neither owned by the government, nor by Egypt's regime-linked billionaire businessmen. Furthermore, whenever those myths are put to an empirical test, they clearly show that the MB and Islamist influence is far, far less than the media would have us believe. It should be borne in mind that this media, before it did a lightning quick about-face and jumped on the revolution bandwagon and praised the revolution after Mubarak's resignation, was propagating the message that the revolution was a conspiracy by Hamas-Iran-Mossad-Hizbullah-Masons and mysterious Swiss agents.

-So why do these billionaires and others need the MB and Islamist bogeyman now? Well, let's see the most important consequences of this propaganda extravaganza:

Fact: THE central issue of the revolution was, and is, government corruption and the conflation of business and politics, and the consequent diversion of wealth from the overwhelming majority of Egyptians who produce, but who are denied access to the fruits of their labor, to a small class of parasites who happen to be closely linked to predatory foreign interests. In other words, the single most urgent crisis facing Egyptians today is the life-or-death struggle between two classes: the one that legitimately owns and produces most of the nation's wealth, and the one that usurps it.

Fact: As a direct result of the "Islamist bogeyman" media obsession, the starkly unjust system of wealth distribution is hidden behind an illusory "struggle" between Islamists and secularists. In practical terms, as a direct result of this false dichotomy, Leftist and Socialist political parties have been tricked into joining a "secularist front" led by...the so-called "Free Egyptians" Party, which has been set up by US-linked Coptic billionaire Naguib Sawiris, whose business empire grew under the Mubarak regime into the largest in Egypt, but who has managed to position himself at the head of the "revolutionaries", via his media holdings. While Sawiris is spending huge sums of money promoting his party as a bulwark against sectarianism and religious fundamentalism and as a force for "social justice" between rich and poor, he was much more honest in an interview with Bloomberg.

Fact: While the public's attention is diverted by the Islamist birdie, against a background of whipped-up hysteria about the "coming economic collapse" due to the revolution having "frightened off investors" and the government-engineered and also wildly inflated "security collapse", behind the scenes a sinister coalition appears to be quietly forming at the top of Egypt's political pyramid, comprising: the right-wing capitalist military, the right-wing capitalist "revolutionary" government, a right-wing capitalist cabal of Egyptian billionaires linked to Saudi/American/Israeli interests and the right-wing capitalist Islamists, who are joining forces to consolidate control over Egypt's economy under the guise of promoting stability and encouraging investors. Admittedly, this is not a "fact" but it's hard to imagine that their precisely synchronized ballet is spontaneous and random.

Fact: Having hijacked the revolution, the aforesaid sinister coalition is doing everything possible to once again economically and politically disenfranchise the workers who comprise 80-90% of Egypt's population. The Armed Forces Council is using violence, arbitrary arrests and military trials to persecute workers, socialists and leftists under the label of promoting stability. The business class and its media are agitating against workers, socialists and leftists by accusing them of undermining Egypt's economy. The Muslim Brotherhood are attacking them as "enemies of religion" or alternatively "divisive agents" who are trying to destroy the fabric of Egyptian society and sow conflict between the people and army on behalf of a foreign agenda. And the frightened and bewildered middle class is being persuaded that the dregs of society are set to explode out of the shanty-towns to eat them and take their stuff. It's hard to miss that all these forces are focused on one target: the disenfranchised 80-90% who led and carried out the revolution.

These are the outlines of the plan, which are becoming more obvious by the day. The Manifesto of The Plan is the so-called revolutionary government's new budget, which has created a massive backlash at the grassroots level, because it is virtually indistinguishable from those of the Mubarak regime and privileges the richest elements at the expense of the poorest, while being loudly hailed as the opposite. Meanwhile, the genuine grassroots movements and the Leftists who actually led the revolution are being locked out of the decision-making process and being blacked out of the mainstream media. Despite overwhelming public demands for the "former" regime's structures to be dismantled and for corrupt officials to be legally prosecuted and for stolen money to be returned, the "new" regime is stalling and procrastinating and taking no effective action. The end game will be played out with the looming parliamentary elections, when The Plan is to be given a veneer of legitimacy via elections that almost certainly will neither be democratic nor fair. (This is why the Minister of Interior has warned that the security crisis will not be resolved before 3 months from now -- the inability to control "criminal elements" can provide a convenient cover for regime thuggery and intimidation of voters -- and candidates).

Anyway, that's The Plan, as I see it. Thank goodness I'm far from being the only one. I think I mentioned before that Egypt is a boiling pot at the current government is its lid. The revolution is literally at a fateful crossroad, and both sides (the TRUE "both sides", not the false Islamist/Secularist dichotomy) know it and are gearing up for the fight of their lives.

On Edit: The "Islamists" in Egypt comprise the Muslim Brotherhood, which is led by wealthy businessmen and professionals and has a long history of forging pragmatic overt or covert alliances with Egypt's political and economic establishment, and the so-called "Salafists". The Muslim Brotherhood fulfills a dual function, either by safely siphoning off political and economic discontent into a "religious" container that they tightly control and manipulate, or by acting as a threat wielded against political secularists. Since their heyday under Sadat in the 1970s and under Mubarak in the 1980s, their power and influence have steadily declined although neither they nor their regime opponents have been willing to acknowledge this, each for their own purposes.

The "Salafists", on the other hand, bear all the hallmarks of straight-forward agents-provocateurs: they literally exploded out of the blue onto the scene just after the revolution; they have no visible means of support, yet have the huge funds to establish tv stations and political parties; unlike the smooth and sophisticated MB they make no attempt to attract people to their cause but on the contrary, deliberately engage in activities that are guaranteed to provoke widespread revulsion and outrage; over and over, before they commit crimes they loudly announce their intention to do so, yet the authorities do nothing to stop them, nor to arrest and charge them after the crimes have been committed. Experts and analysts specializing in Islamist movements estimate their numbers to be at most in the hundreds, yet they pop up all over the place and receive vastly disproportionate coverage in the mainstream media. Yet this same media displays a telling lack of curiosity about where these people came from or where they get all their money or anything else about them; instead, all we get are screaming headlines and scary coverage of what they do.
Last edited by AlicetheKurious on Sun Jun 12, 2011 7:54 am, edited 2 times in total.
"If you're not careful the newspapers will have you hating the oppressed and loving the people doing the oppressing." - Malcolm X
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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby DrVolin » Sun Jun 12, 2011 7:50 am

I am truly sorry.
all these dreams are swept aside
By bloody hands of the hypnotized
Who carry the cross of homicide
And history bears the scars of our civil wars

--Guns and Roses
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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby AlicetheKurious » Sun Jun 12, 2011 8:19 am

DrVolin wrote:I am truly sorry.


So am I, Dr. Volin, but the fat lady has yet to sing. The fact that the masks are falling off is a good thing: don't forget that in this period of transition neither the Armed Forces Council nor the ministries have any legal standing outside the people's will and derive their legitimacy solely from their commitment to fulfill the goals of the revolution. Egyptians are smart, and they've been there, done that. The current supposedly "revolutionary government's" systematic failure to carry out the mandate it was given is souring more and more people against them and a large, angry backlash is building up. That's why they're in such a desperate hurry to have elections, because they know that their position is precarious and the longer they wait, the more likely it is that they will be thrown off like their predecessors who tried to "ride the wave" and control it.
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