By
Thomas L. Friedman
February
21, 2012
Sadly, the
transitional government in Egypt today appears determined to shoot itself in
both feet.
On Sunday,
it will put on trial 43 people, including at least 16 U.S. citizens, for
allegedly bringing unregistered funds into Egypt to promote democracy without a
license. Egypt has every right to control international organizations operating
within its borders. But the truth is that when these democracy groups filed
their registration papers years ago under the autocracy of Hosni Mubarak, they
were informed that the papers were in order and that approval was pending. The
fact that now — after Mubarak has been deposed by a revolution — these groups
are being threatened with jail terms for promoting democracy without a license
is a very disturbing sign. It tells you how incomplete the “revolution” in
Egypt has been and how vigorously the counter-revolutionary forces are fighting
back.
This sordid
business makes one weep and wonder how Egypt will ever turn the corner. Egypt
is running out of foreign reserves, its currency is falling, inflation is
rising and unemployment is rampant. Yet the priority of a few retrograde
Mubarak holdovers is to put on trial staffers from the National Democratic
Institute and the International Republican Institute, which are allied with the
two main U.S. political parties, as well as from Freedom House and some
European groups. Their crime was trying to teach Egypt’s young democrats how to
monitor elections and start parties to engage in the very democratic processes
that the Egyptian Army set up after Mubarak’s fall. Thousands of Egyptians had
participated in their seminars in recent years.
What is
this really about? This case has been trumped up by Egypt’s minister of
planning and international cooperation, Fayza Abul Naga, an old Mubarak crony.
Abul Naga personifies the worst tendency in Egypt over the last 50 years — the
tendency that helps to explain why Egypt has fallen so far behind its peers:
South Korea, Taiwan, Malaysia, Brazil, India and China. It is the tendency to
look for dignity in all the wrong places — to look for dignity not by building
up the capacity of Egypt’s talented young people so they can thrive in the 21st
century — with better schools, better institutions, export industries and more
accountable government. No, it is the tendency to go for dignity on the cheap
“by standing up to the foreigners.”
That is
Abul Naga’s game. As a former Mubarak adviser put it to me: “Abul Naga is where
she is today because for six years she was resisting the economic and political
reforms” in alliance with the military. “Both she and the military were against
opening up the Egyptian economy.” Both she and the military, having opposed the
revolution, are now looking to save themselves by playing the nationalist card.
Egypt today
has only two predators: poverty and illiteracy. After 30 years of Mubarak rule
and some $50 billion in U.S. aid, 33 percent of men and 56 percent of women in
Egypt still can’t read or write. That is a travesty. But that apparently does
not keep Abul Naga up at night.
What is her
priority? Is it to end illiteracy? Is it to articulate a new vision about how
Egypt can engage with the world and thrive in the 21st century? Is it to create
a positive climate for foreign investors to create jobs desperately needed by
young Egyptians? No, it’s to fall back on that golden oldie — that all of
Egypt’s problems are the fault of outsiders who want to destabilize Egypt. So
let’s jail some Western democracy consultants. That will restore Egypt’s
dignity.
The Times
reported from Cairo that the prosecutor’s dossier assembled against the
democracy workers — bolstered by Abul Naga’s testimony — accused these
democracy groups of working “in coordination with the C.I.A.,” serving “U.S.
and Israeli interests” and inciting “religious tensions between Muslims and
Copts.” Their goal, according to the dossier, was: “Bringing down the ruling
regime in Egypt, no matter what it is,” while “pandering to the U.S. Congress,
Jewish lobbyists and American public opinion.”
Amazing.
What Abul Naga is saying to all those young Egyptians who marched, protested
and died in Tahrir Square in order to gain a voice in their own future is: “You
were just the instruments of the C.I.A., the U.S. Congress, Israel and the
Jewish lobby. They are the real forces behind the Egyptian revolution — not
brave Egyptians with a will of their own.”
Not
surprisingly, some members of the U.S. Congress are talking about cutting off
the $1.3 billion in aid the U.S. gives Egypt’s army if these Americans are
actually thrown in prison. Hold off on that. We have to be patient and see this
for what, one hopes, it really is: Fayza’s last dance. It is elements of the
old regime playing the last cards they have to both undermine the true
democratic forces in Egypt and to save themselves by posing as protectors of
Egypt’s honor.
Egyptians
deserve better than this crowd, which is squandering Egypt’s dwindling
resources at a critical time and diverting attention from the real challenge
facing the country: giving Egypt’s young people what they so clearly hunger for
— a real voice in their own future and the educational tools they need to succeed
in the modern world. That’s where lasting dignity comes from.
Source: The
New York Times
URL:http://www.newageislam.com/islam-and-the-west/egypt’s-step-backward/d/6704