Neoconservatives like Charles Krauthammer warn that the popular uprising against U.S.-financed Egyptian dictator Hosni Mubarak could easily become a victory for radical Islamists. The neoconservatives scoff at assurances that the Muslim Brotherhood has traded violence for a constructive role in Egyptian society and democratic politics. Indeed, the neocons argue, the Brotherhood, as the best-organized force in Egyptian society (representing up to 30 percent of the population), is in the ideal position to seize the popular movement, betray the people, and install a theocratic state in the post-Mubarak era. With Egypt as a base of operation, goes the narrative, the Islamists would spread their ideology to the rest of the region through terror and subversion, with terrible consequences for the West.
Is there any merit to this analysis? Perhaps. No one can predict such things; revolution is a radically uncertain process. Nevertheless, one should not casually assume that Egypt is like Iran of 1979 or Afghanistan post-Soviet invasion. That sounds more like neoconservative fear-mongering than hard-headed speculation. (The more fevered of that ilk see the Egyptian uprising as the first step toward constructing a global caliphate that would include the United States. See Glenn Beck and Sean Hannity for details. On the Brotherhood, see this and this.)
To be sure, revolution has its risks. Yet the neoconservatives seem oblivious of the risks in the “solution” they would like the Obama administration to impose on the Egyptians. Krauthammer prefers “an interim government led by the military.” He writes in “Toward a Soft [sic] Landing in Egypt”:
The military is the best vehicle for guiding the country to free elections over the coming months. Whether it does so with Mubarak at the top, or with Vice President Omar Suleiman or perhaps with some technocrat who arouses no ire among the demonstrators, matters not to us. If the army calculates that sacrificing Mubarak (through exile) will satisfy the opposition and end the unrest, so be it.
The overriding objective is a period of stability during which secularists and other democratic elements of civil society can organize themselves for the coming elections and prevail.…. The key is the military.
Krauthammer’s confident tone is no comfort. Is there no danger in an army takeover? Has there never been a brutal military dictatorship? The Egyptian military may be respected by the people, but it has also been the source of dictators, including the hated Mubarak. And why should the Egyptians accept Suleiman in the “interim”? He was Mubarak’s chief torturer and a tool of the U.S. government’s criminal “extraordinary rendition” policy. How easy it is for Krauthammer, sitting safely in the United States, to propose that the Egyptians submit themselves to any U.S.-conceived plan. Can he guarantee it will deliver freedom? One can’t help suspecting that freedom for the Egyptians is not his priority. In fact, he knows the risks his proposal entails, but he calculates that they all fall on the Egyptian people. What he seeks to avoid is risk to “U.S. interests,” that is, to the American government’s domination of the Middle East.
In calling on the U.S. government to work behind the scenes to impose such a “resolution,” the neocons display the same big-power presumptuousness that has caused most of the problems that emanate from the Middle East today. The imperialist mentality endures, with each incident of blowback furnishing the excuse for the next oppressive manipulation.
The dangers that admittedly loom in Egypt stem from the moderate nature of the Egyptian people’s aims. They seek merely to change the structure and personnel of the government. The essence of the State – the apparatus of organized violence – would remain intact. As long as the State exists, there is a danger it will be seized by a military strongman, by theocrats, or by some other brand of oppressor.
In other words, the only true revolution is one aimed at abolishing the State – an anarchist revolution. (Peaceful, of course.) That’s the best hope for avoiding a revolution gone wrong.
Of course the Egyptians do not yet have an antistate mindset, so in throwing off the Mubarak dictatorship they indeed run the risk that something worse could follow. Yet they apparently think it’s a risk worth taking. Under the circumstances, that position seems reasonable. The American people can help them by demanding that “their” government keep hands off.
This revolution will have to do until the real thing comes along.
Translations for this article:
Citations to this article:
- Sheldon Richman, This Revolution Will Do Until the Real Thing Comes Along, Carroll County, Maryland Standard, 02/09/11
- Sheldon Richman, This Revolution Will Do, Until the Real Thing Comes Along, Portland, Oregon Skanner, 02/07/11
- Sheldon Richman, This Revolution Will Do Until the Real Thing Comes Along, Antiwar.com, 02/07/11




Basic issue. Just because one group of potential thugs (military) doesn't forceably impose their order, nothing would prevent another violent group of thugs (muslim brotherhood/Iran) from imposing theirs.
Of course, the odds are that they will just have a new bunch taking over the old problematic institutions from the old lot – and assuming they do not quite have the appetite for a stateless society, I happen to have just written a piece advocating they take a look at Cellular Democracy.
My recent post Egypt- Put not your trust in princesin whom there is no help
You dream big, Sheldon, & that's the only way to do it! Great article.
I'm reminded of Venezuela where they were suffering from the devastation that socialism brings. So what did they do? They elected Chavez. While I wish the Egyptians the best it must be pointed out that they're going down the same road as the Venezuelans.
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Excellent argument, though it should be noted that there are in fact a few (a very few, alas) anarchists involved in the Egyptian uprising. There's an interview with one here:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/smygo/message/13886…
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Well of course, I did not mean we could expect true revolution there any time soon. I simply wanted to interject the point and get people thinking. Who knows? Maybe some young intellectuals in Egypt will come across the article and open the discussion. There are reports that with the breakdown of government services, volunteer community groups are picking up the slack, removing up trash, etc. This is a start toward understanding that government is not needed.
clore333, thanks for the link!
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It was rather telling that Al Jazeera were describing such activities in a very positive (if still surprised) way as volunteering, communities taking up the slack, and similar phrases, while western news outlets such as BBC and Sky were using words like "vigilantes".
My recent post Egypt- Put not your trust in princesin whom there is no help
With V in Egypt you never know what might happen: http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?pid=2116284&…
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The question begged: Why does Mr. Krauthammer “seek to avoid [a] risk to U.S. interests, that is, to the American government’s domination of the Middle East” as Mr. Richmond avers? Is the answer simply “the imperialist mentality,” ir in other words, a reductionist explanation? Me thinks it’s much more complex.
There is more than once answer: American hegemony, requiring domination of oil and exclusion of big-power rivals; a prohibition on nonaligned status, which would dilute hegemonic power; and loyalty to Israel, which is more than a material concern.
My recent post The Danger in Egypt
Interesting piece on Al Jazeera on the "community amid the chaos".
My recent post Egypt- Put not your trust in princesin whom there is no help
And even more interesting – it appears these neighbourhood watch groups got a system of accreditation going, whereby if you go through one check point you get a ticket that will be recognised by the other check points in the area. Again, from Al Jazeera.
My recent post Egypt- Put not your trust in princesin whom there is no help
Gives a whole new meaning to "anarchy in the streets."
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