El-Baradei A Bad Guy? Don’t Listen To The American Right | The New York Observer

To his fellow Egyptians and to most observers across the world, Mohammed el-Baradei looks like a hero—an international diplomat who might well have lived out his days in the comforts of Geneva and New York, but returned home to provide leadership despite serious personal peril. But to leading figures on the American right, Mr. El-Baradei is a figure to be mocked, scorned and dismissed as a stooge of darker forces in Egyptian politics and the Mideast.

Winner of the Nobel Peace Prize for his years of stewardship of the International Atomic Energy Agency, he is suddenly the target of insults and attacks from Republicans who deem themselves expert on the politics of the Middle East. Former UN ambassador John Bolton calls Mr. El-Baradei a “dilettante” and former White House press secretary Ari Fleischer goes further, calling him “a bad guy.”

The opinions of these veterans of the Bush White House, perhaps the least successful government in American history since the Hoover years, are not worth much—except as a reminder of the continuing ill wind blowing from that defunct administration and its policies. Their hostility to Mr. El-Baradei and to the mass civic movement in Egypt reveals the hollowness and uselessness of the neoconservative worldview at a moment of intense crisis for American diplomacy.

To everyone else, it is obvious that Hosni Mubarak can not abide much longer as president of Egypt, despite the billions in aid that we have lavished on him these past three decades. And to everyone else, it is also obvious that whenever he goes, the most promising alternative is Mr. El-Baradei, a secular liberal with strong ties to the West.

But to the neoconservatives, the possibility that Mr. El-Baradei might help preserve his country’s 80 million souls from bloody chaos matters much less than the fact that he disagreed with them about the invasion of Iraq and that he still disagrees with them about a pre-emptive  strike against Iran. He committed the unforgiveable sin of being right when they were wrong about Iraq’s mythical nuclear weapons program, and he has insisted on pursuing a peaceful resolution of Iran’s atomic ambitions as well. 

With their peculiar belief that what we always need is more armed conflict in the Mideast, the neoconservatives despise Mr. El-Baradei—although Americans would have saved thousands of lives and trillions of dollars if only we had listened to his truth rather than their lies.

Among those lies, of course, was the notion that “regime change” in Baghdad would spark a democratic renaissance across the Mideast beneficial to America and Israel as well as the people of the region. That didn’t happen, but today a burgeoning movement of youth demanding democracy and human rights has appeared—and the neoconservatives now warn us to fear and reject them.

Let us hope that the Obama administration is sufficiently sensible to ignore such awful advice. Balancing our national security interests against the complexities of places like Egypt and Jordan, with strong Islamic political movements, will be difficult to say the least. But there is no point in nostalgia for the friendly dictators of the past and the arrangements we once made with them. Hysteria over the presence of the Muslim Brotherhood should be assuaged by the example of Turkey, where the ruling Islamist party is seeking even now to restore ties with Israel and join the European Union.

Neglect, arrogance and cynicism have left us with little knowledge and few relationships that will be useful as we cope with momentous changes in the Mideast. If we face that fact, then the last thing we should do is undermine those, like Mr. El Baradei, who might help us negotiate this challenging course.   

 

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Cockeyed Platonist and Egypt II

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/02/06/opinion/06brooks.html?partner=rssnyt&emc=rss

How can an observer not surrender to a specific critical animus toward Cockeyed Platonist (CP), as he opines from his comfortable aerie at The New York Times, on the historic and moving events in Egypt? It is all so manageable in terms of rhetoric, while comfortably ensconced in the verities of an unapologetic American Exceptionalism. And its master frame of the natural superiority of ‘Western Thought’: forgetting that Muslim Scholars were custodians, protectors and commentators on those precious documents, long before ‘The West’ emancipated itself from a manifest authoritarian ‘religious’ regime, of its own making. Not relevant?

CP’s frame is the natural unsuitability, even, inferiority of Egypt as a whole: In education, in politics, in economics for democratic political change to be viable over time. He employs a mass of data in defense of his particularized political fatalism: Mr. Thomas Carothers essay ‘The End of the Transition Paradigm’ is cited, a seventeen page collection of data and analysis of a very interesting kind,  yet somehow not entirely relevant- but certainly buttressing the paternalism, the natural superiority of western thinking as guide and mentor to the lesser peoples of the earth.  Mr. Carothers is respectable academic and not blatant in the expression of paternalism, but it is unmistakable.

CP’s title is revelatory ‘The 40 % Nation’ I quote: ‘The quality of government agencies over all is a tad better. The World Bank Institute puts Egypt at around the 40th percentile when it comes to government effectiveness. It puts Egypt in the 50th percentile when it comes to the quality of regulations and rule of law. Where it really lags is in measures of responsiveness and accountability. Egypt’s government agencies are among the least responsive on earth.’ Is this conscious political self-parody? Is not one of the founding principles of Modern American Conservatism the central idea of ‘starving the beast’? Or is a necessary opportunism leading his argument and philosophical consistency be dammed?

As presented by CP, The World Bank Institute, U.N. Human Development Index, The World Economic Forum provide telling statistical data in reaffirming  the unsuitability of Egyptians to the aspiration of a workable, effective  democracy: to create a vital civic life.  Is this kind of political fatalism, backed with statistics, from a citizen of a country ranked as average, in its international educational achievement assessment, within the bounds of the credible? Are we correct in our reality based skepticism of this highly garnished argument? I am reminded of a quote from the critic John Simon regarding the fiction of Jacqueline Susanne, and I must rely on my recall: How much of this rotten stew must I eat before I know it is bad?   

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Shunya’s Notes: Ramadan and Zizek on Egypt

« Human Planet | Main | Decolonizing My Mind »

February 06, 2011

Ramadan and Zizek on Egypt

Must see. “The revolutionary chants on the streets of Egypt have resonated around the world, but with a popular uprising without a clear direction and an unpopular leader refusing to concede, Egypt’s future hangs in the balance. Riz Khan talks to Muslim scholar Tariq Ramadan and Slovenian philosopher Slavoj Zizek about the power of popular dissent, the limits of peaceful protest and the future of Egyptian politics.”

Comments

Verify your Comment

Previewing your Comment

Posted by:  | 

This is only a preview. Your comment has not yet been posted.

Your comment could not be posted. Error type:
Your comment has been posted. Post another comment

The letters and numbers you entered did not match the image. Please try again.

As a final step before posting your comment, enter the letters and numbers you see in the image below. This prevents automated programs from posting comments.

Having trouble reading this image? View an alternate.

You will not see this on American television!

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Frank Rich on the Egyptian Revolution and the American Press

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/02/06/opinion/06rich.html?ref=opinion

Here is Frank Rich cutting through the crap that is mainstream American Journalism, in this instance the revolution in the revolution.

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

New Statesman – No vindication for neocons

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Deliver us from Leslie Gelb,Policy Expert

http://www.thedailybeast.com/blogs-and-stories/2011-02-04/egypt-protests-obamas-flip-flop-naive-media-on-extremists-and-more-fears/2/

How does one approach the arrogance, the unregenerate paternalism of the self-appointed ‘Policy Expert’ with all the qualifications needed to cow critics: the prestigious emeritus status bestowed by his fellow experts; is that  enough to render ‘serious’ criticism null set? Or are the emerging events of history, played out before our eyes, sufficient demonstration of failed policies and the bankruptcy of the notion of expertise, in the case of our ‘policy’ toward Egypt. Mr. Gelb continues to forcefully remind us of his status as ‘expert’ while we witness minute by minute the unraveling of what ‘expertise’ has wrought. Mr. Gelb manufactures neologisms by the handful to vent his anger at the democrats, who simply state the right of everyone to, at the least, assert their right to self-determination: the right, even the duty to make their own history, freeing themselves from tutelage, in the Kantian sense. But this cannot be tolerated when the Muslim Brotherhood is a part of the political equation: their presence is a threat to the carefully stage-managed ‘stability’ of ‘Middle East Policy’ as a, now, demonstrably failing set of policy imperatives. Mr. Gelb uses the usual fear-mongering, an American Tradition of long standing, to impugn the unmanageable, the seemingly inexplicable human desire for freedom and self-rule within the frame of a vital, energized civic republicanism- this is the point of our own political struggle, our own continuing attempts at achieving that laudable goal. The Egyptian People will struggle as we struggle, that is our common fate as Zoon Politikon.  When do we, as citizens and republicans, free ourselves from the self-serving, destructive notion of our political omniscience: it is too late for Mr. Gelb!           

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Vijay Prashad on The Imperial Bag-man

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

3arabawy – صَحـَـفي مِصـْـري’s Photostream

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

After Tunisia: Don’t forget Palestine | Books | guardian.co.uk

Your 10 Arab writers gave voice to the wave of optimism that is sweeping through their countries in the wake of the peaceful revolution in Tunisia (“After Tunisia”, 29 January). It was melancholy to note, however, that Raja Shehadeh, the Palestinian lawyer and writer, cannot share in this optimism. While the rest of the Arab world is at long last moving towards participatory democracy, a police state is emerging in Palestine with active western support.

Until a few years ago, Palestine was the only democracy in the Arab world. In January 2006, Hamas won a free and fair election but was not allowed to enjoy the fruits of its victory. Israel, the US and the European Union refused to recognise the Hamas-led government and did everything in their power to undermine it. These countries never tire of extolling the virtues of democracy but when the people vote for the wrong party, they condemn the outcome. It was always a mistake to pursue security at the expense of freedom and democracy. And it would be short-sighted to persist in this policy towards any Arab country, including Palestine, for without democracy there can be no lasting peace.

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Ronald Reagan at 100: The Darker Legacy

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment