Steven A. Cook

From the Potomac to the Euphrates

Cook examines developments in the Middle East and their resonance in Washington.

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Wanting Egypt to Fail

by Steven A. Cook
January 28, 2013

An Egyptian Air Force F-16 fighter jet flies low over thousands of anti-government protesters gathered at Tahrir square in Cairo January 30, 2011. (Yannis Behrakis/Courtesy Reuters). An Egyptian Air Force F-16 fighter jet flies low over thousands of anti-government protesters gathered at Tahrir square in Cairo January 30, 2011. (Yannis Behrakis/Courtesy Reuters).

Egypt is a mess.  Just two short years after the uprising that brought Hosni Mubarak’s long-rule to an end, the country is paralyzed politically, protests have become increasingly violent, sectarian tensions are high, the public health system is in total disarray, and the economy is near collapse.  Nothing has gone right in this country of 84 million people that has traditionally been the most influential in the region—for good or bad—and since the mid-1970s a pillar of U.S.-Middle East policy.  It is not only the peace between Egypt and Israel, but also the U.S. Navy’s access to the Suez Canal, the many daily U.S. military overflights critical to the United States in confronting the Iranian threat, and Egypt’s logistical assistance for U.S. operations in Afghanistan and until not too long ago Iraq that are of paramount importance to Washington.  As a result, an objective observer might come to the reasonable conclusion that Egypt needs help and that the international community should do what it can to help pull Egyptians back from the brink.  That is certainly the view of most analysts from across the political spectrum, yet in one corner of the commentariat, they are actually hoping for Egypt to fail.

I recently came across a piece by David P. Goldman who pretentiously uses the pen name “Spengler” for Oswald Arnold Gottfried Spengler, an important early twentieth century German historian and philosopher, that paints a frightening picture of Egypt, its economy, and the Muslim Brotherhood.  Spengler/Goldman uses the recent revelation of President Mohammed Morsi’s anti-Semitism as his point of departure for a wild ride through his a-historic revisionism ranging from the claim that economic collapse was the reason for the uprising (a point made moot by his own argument that Egypt is now on the verge of economic collapse) to what the West should have done during those critical 18 days in early 2011. Here is a good example:

No nation the size of Egypt has become ungovernable except as a result of war during the whole modern period.  The deterioration of the Arab Spring into societal breakdown constitutes a reproach to the Western foreign policy establishment, which could not envision this outcome before, and refuses to consider its consequences now.

Spengler/Goldman’s reference to the “modern period” is supposed to give this analysis an air of heavy intellectual seriousness, but what we have here is nothing more than a crude lament that the United States did not give Hosni Mubarak a so-called “green light” to crackdown two years ago.  This is revealing for what Spengler/Goldman does not know about Egypt, its history, and the causes of Hosni Mubarak’s fall, but everyone is a Middle East expert these days. Even if President Obama had signaled that there would be no penalty for an Egyptian version of Tiananmen, it would not have been forthcoming.  Egypt’s officer’s would never have risked splitting the army’s loyalty, conscious that the captains, majors, and colonels on duty in Egypt’s streets beginning January 28, 2011 would not have obeyed the order to fire on fellow Egyptians.  Once more, the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces saw in the uprising an opportunity to rid themselves of Gamal Mubarak and his coterie who threatened their political and economic interests. Underlying Spengler/Goldman’s cry is, of course, an assumption that the United States could drive events in Egypt.  Even at moments when Egypt’s main political actors are not engaged in an existential struggle, Washington’s leverage is half-baked at best.

These details do not matter much because Spengler/Goldman is not actually interested in understanding Egypt.  No, this isn’t an intellectual enterprise: Spengler/Goldman is engaged in an ideological contest.  His target?  The Republican Party for not hanging Egypt on President Obama.

The discovery of Morsi’s apes-and-pigs comment might have provided a pretext for America’s Republican Party to wash their hands of the Egyptian president and shift the blame for the entire mess onto the Obama administration.  Such is the loyalty of the Republican mainstream to the so-called freedom agenda of the former Bush administration…

In Spengler/Goldman’s angry binary world, those natives clearly have no agency of their own.  It’s spineless American politicians who are to blame for Egypt’s imminent collapse.  In the end, Spengler/Goldman comes to the conclusion that Egypt will need $20 billion/year to stay afloat and since the United States and the West don’t have it and since Morsi is a crude anti-Semite, the international community should hasten an Egyptian calamity by withholding whatever aid is available.

Lest anyone believe Spengler/Goldman is an outlier, Shoshana Bryen from the Jewish Policy Center assails the Obama administration for not docking Egypt’s generous military aid and economic aid over Morsi’s anti-Semitism. She cites retired Brigadier General Safwat al Zayat—an ostensible interpreter of the politics of the Egyptian military, but who has been wrong so often that one wonders whether he is part of a military intelligence deception and denial campaign—claiming that the delivery of F-16s to Egypt was a signal from the Obama administration that it supports Morsi.  It was a signal, but rather to the military, which continues to work with Washington on its strategic concerns in the region.  The anti-Semitism of the Muslim Brotherhood is a problem and should be denounced as the Obama administration has, but to evoke a bygone era of which Bryen was no doubt a supporter, you have to deal with the Egypt you have, not the one you want.

Post a Comment 7 Comments

  • Posted by kzndr

    If you have the time/fortitude, a wade through Goldman’s oeuvre could make an interesting case study of the confluence of a number of bizarre trends on the right. I’ve read him for a while, mostly out of morbid curiosity, and he’s one part Daniel Pipes, one part Barry Rubin, one part Dinesh D’Souza, one part Allan Bloom, and one part Victor David Hanson. Egypt seems to be a particular pet project of his, and in both his blog and column in the Asia Times he has been predicting economic collapse and mass starvation in Europe (also: massive economic collapse in Turkey) for quite some time.

  • Posted by Peter C. McCall

    The process is messy, particularly when economic reality meets democratic principals, but the potential (with some economic help) is that the new politics can unleash a young and vibrant self governed people. We start where we stand, not where we would wish to stand.
    Peter C. McCall

  • Posted by Ming Tian

    After reading Mr. Cook’s confusing article, I read the Spengler/Goldman article for comparison.

    Comparing the two articles, the only conclusion I could come to is that Mr. Cook was trying to wipe lipstick off of Michelle Obama.

    The above statement makes no sense just like Mr. Cook’s attack on Goldman.

    If one is to be a hatchet man or Middle East analyst, he should at least present a viable argument.

  • Posted by Ge No

    Goldman never wanted Egypt to fail. He stated the collapse of Egyptian economy was inevitable, whether he wanted it or not. This is a big difference. Also, there is no revisionism there, he was making this prediction consistently over the last couple of years.

    Mr. Cook needs to be more attentive to his opponents’ opinions.

  • Posted by Balasticman

    Sadly, it is not only certain foreign commentators wanting Egypt to fail. The central strategy of much of Egypt’s opposition movement is premised on making real, and as quickly as possible, this same negative prophesy. And like with Mr. Goldman’s target, the goal of the NSF too is to serve narrow, short-term political interests, at whatever cost. http://balasticman.blogspot.it/2013/01/nsf-failing-to-save-nation.html

  • Posted by Desi Erasmus

    Yes, do read Goldman’s many columns on Egypt going back a couple of years, so you can see how mendacious a characterization of them Cook’s angry rant really is. Meanwhile, add a foreign policy that sends F-16′s and tanks to an anti-American totalitarian and unstable Egyptian regime and a domestic policy aimed at disarming ordinary citizens to your “Things that make you go hmmm” file.

  • Posted by Bob Van den Broeck

    Mr Goldman is a racist Jew. Unable to deal with the realities in the Middle east. 6.5 million Jews in Israel, surrounded by 1 billion + muslims. Do the math? The US is going even deeper into debt, and is now departing from economic world domination to a more militaristic approach. Threatening your mortgage holder(China), is a new tact that probably will not work for the USA. How many RADs can the messiah deal with?

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