Hedges on Egypt, US and the Reckoning re Israel
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The failure of the United States to halt the slow-motion ethnic cleansing of Palestinians by Israel has consequences. The failure to acknowledge the collective humiliation and anger felt by most Arabs because of the presence of U.S. troops on Muslim soil, not only in Iraq and Afghanistan but in the staging bases set up in Kuwait and Saudi Arabia, has consequences. The failure to denounce the repression, including the widespread use of torture, censorship and rigged elections, wielded by our allies against their citizens in the Middle East has consequences. We are soaked with the stench of these regimes. Mubarak, who reportedly is suffering from cancer, is seen as our puppet, a man who betrayed his own people and the Palestinians for money and power.
The Muslim world does not see us as we see ourselves. Muslims are aware, while we are not, that we have murdered tens of thousands of Muslims in Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan. We have terrorized families, villages and nations. We enable and defend the Israeli war crimes carried out against Palestinians and the Lebanese-indeed we give the Israelis the weapons and military aid to carry out the slaughter. We dismiss the thousands of dead as "collateral damage." And when those who are fighting against occupation kill us or Israelis we condemn them, regardless of context, as terrorists. Our hypocrisy is recognized on the Arab street. Most Arabs see bloody and disturbing images every day from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, images that are censored on our television screens. They have grown sick of us. They have grown sick of the Arab regimes that pay lip service to the suffering of Palestinians but do nothing to intervene. They have grown sick of being ruled by tyrants who are funded and supported by Washington. Arabs understand that we, like the Israelis, primarily speak to the Muslim world in the crude language of power and violence. And because of our entrancement with our own power and ability to project force, we are woefully out of touch. Israeli and American intelligence services did not foresee the popular uprising in Tunisia or Egypt. Gen. Aviv Kochavi, Israel's new intelligence chief, told Knesset members last Tuesday that "there is no concern at the moment about the stability of the Egyptian government." Tuesday, it turned out, was the day hundreds of thousands of Egyptians poured into the streets to begin their nationwide protests.
What is happening in Egypt will damage and perhaps unravel the fragile peace treaty between Egypt and Jordan with Israel. It is likely to end Washington's alliance with these Arab intelligence services, including the use of prisons to torture those we have disappeared into our vast network of black sites. The economic ties between Israel and these Arab countries will suffer. The current antagonism between Cairo and the Hamas government in Gaza will be replaced by more overt cooperation. The Egyptian government's collaboration with Israel, which includes demolishing tunnels into Gaza, the sharing of intelligence and the passage of Israeli warship and submarines through the Suez Canal, will be in serious jeopardy. Any government-even a transition government that is headed by a pro-Western secularist such as Mohamed ElBaradei-will have to make these changes in the relationship with Israel and Washington if it wants to have any credibility and support. We are seeing the rise of a new Middle East, one that will not be as pliable to Washington or as cowed by Israel.
The secular Arab regimes, backed by the United States, are discredited and moribund. The lofty promise of a pan-Arab union, championed by the Egyptian leader Gamal Abd-al-Nasser and the original Baathists, has become a farce. Nasser's defiance of Washington and the Western powers has been replaced by client states. The secular Arab regimes from Morocco to Yemen, for all their ties with the West, have not provided freedom, dignity, opportunity or prosperity for their people. They have failed as spectacularly as the secular Palestinian resistance movement led by Yasser Arafat. And Arabs, frustrated and enduring mounting poverty, are ready for something new. Radical Islamist groups such as the Palestinian Hamas, the Shiite Hezbollah in Lebanon and the jihadists fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan are the new heroes, especially for the young who make up most of the Arab world. And many of those who admire these radicals are not observant Muslims. They support the Islamists because they fight back. Communism as an ideological force never took root in the Muslim world because it clashed with the tenets of Islam. The championing of the free market in countries such as Egypt has done nothing to ameliorate crushing poverty. Its only visible result has been to enrich the elite, including Mubarak's son and designated heir, Gamal. Islamic revolutionary movements, because of these failures, are very attractive. And this is why Mubarak forbids the use of the slogan "Islam is the solution" and bans the Muslim Brotherhood. These secular Arab regimes hate and fear Hamas and the Islamic radicals as deeply as the Israelis do. And this hatred only adds to their luster.
The decision to withdraw the police from Egyptian cities and turn security over to the army means that Mubarak and his handlers in Washington face a grim choice. Either the army, as in Tunisia, refuses to interfere with the protests, meaning the removal of Mubarak, or it tries to quell the protests with force, a move that would leave hundreds if not thousands dead and wounded. The fraternization between the soldiers and the crowds, along with the presence of tanks adorned with graffiti such as "Mubarak will fall," does not bode well for Washington, Israel and the Egyptian regime. The army has not been immune to the creeping Islamization of Egypt-where bars, nightclubs and even belly dancing have been banished to the hotels catering to Western tourists. I attended a reception for middle-ranking army officers in Cairo in the 1990s when I was based there for The New York Times and every one of the officers' wives had a head covering. Mubarak will soon become history. So, I expect, will neighboring secular Arab regimes. The rise of powerful Islamic parties appears inevitable. It appears inevitable not because of the Quran or a backward tradition, but because we and Israel believed we could bend the aspirations of the Arab world to our will through corruption and force.
Let's underscore this:
The rise of powerful Islamic parties appears inevitable. It appears inevitable not because of the Quran or a backward tradition, but because we and Israel believed we could bend the aspirations of the Arab world to our will through corruption and force.

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Comments
Hedges is
dead on. I think that's what will happen.
We're entering a time when we may well see preemptive attacks by Israelis, and an increasing danger of nuclear war in the middle east. Let's hope both sides decide that War will be too costly for everyone.
thanks, lets,peace to God's ear ... seems like both US & Israel
leaderships have narcissistic and borderline personalities now. Little capacity for empathy, might makes right justifications for amoral behaviors. with the exponential acceleration of death and destruction the irrationality seems to escalate with far too many not snap them out of it. "Collateral damage" to be shrugged off as if these were not sacred human beings being maimed or killed. Incapable of learning lessons from logical human behavioral reaction to provocation. Gamesmanship and xenophobia and jingoistic or tribal blind loyalty to one's country or religion seems to have infected too many, at least those with power and their authoritarian followers.
First, I don't think any
First, I don't think any successor government will abandon the peace treaty with Israel. It is a cold peace but one that serves Egyptian interests. I would also be wary of relying too much on labels like Muslim or Arab. There are many different groups in the Middle East that fall under these headings and this has not stopped them from killing each other in great numbers. This would be true even if there had been no Cold War and no Israel although both of these have aggravated and/or redirected many underlying conflicts. And while secular regimes may have failed in the region, religious dominated ones, like Iran, have not been shining defenders of human rights either.
As for the rise of religious fundamentalism, that certainly has not been confined to Islam. It has been occurring in all the world's major religions. You have only to look at the religious right in this country for an example. What used to be considered fringe is now mainstream.
the US used to stand for something, how much of that rep was
deserved and genuine, I do not know looking back. But certainly the US has moved ever farther to the wrong side of history, has been there for too long with little but occasional lip service to the concept of peace. Bald-faced hypocrisy. Patriarchal power and control and competition paradigm. And the military industrial security complex, the horrifying patriarchal extrajudicial matrix has committed such profound crimes against humanity and continues to. CIA death squads. Drone incinerations. Little accountability. Graft and racketeering. Torture, Unlimited detentions. Support of anti-human rights regimes world wide. US INTERESTS PREVAIL. And enabling Israeli interests unconditionally no matter what the cost in terms of the security of this country as well as so many others. Pre-emptive war striking a travesty.
The insane over-militarization of US foreign policy. The corporate-opportunism that accompanies the will for military domination. Violence begats violence. Superpowers have a responsibility to use their powers justly and promote harmony and peace, or they should have, not to rape the globe psychopathically ... these two superpowers are arrogant bullies who are addicted to domination and if they are paranoid or now it is a case of being realistic about the threats from other groups or other countries it is most often because they have provoked such malice and hatred from their own grandiose bullying ... and ravaging ... of resources, land and people.
And the US has radicalized other countries, destroying their middle classes and educated and professional classes to expedite conquest. They have "divided and conquered" ... promoted wedge issues between population sectors the same way Karl Rove, as one example, played it here.
And now innocents will suffer more and more from the reaction formations of newer more oppressive over-compensating militarily regimes because of the "unintended consequences" of narrow, egotistical, short-sighted, avaricious, group-think limited power players of the US and Israel.