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Intrigue on the Nile

All of a sudden the White House has remembered the importance of Egypt.

All of a sudden the White House has remembered the importance of Egypt. It took a homicide bomber in Alexandria to shake the Obama administration out of its navel gazing introspection. More importantly, the killing of 21 Christians and wounding of nearly a hundred others leaving a New Year mass in Alexandria has forcefully reminded the regime of Hosni Mubarak — and his friends — of the serious danger posed by radical Islam to his government, and perhaps to Mubarak personally.

It is not that security isn’t always on the collective mind of the Mubarak regime. After all, it was the assassination in 1981 of Anwar Sadat by Islamic radicals that lifted the former air force general, Mubarak, to the presidency. What is most disturbing for the Egyptian leadership is that the murderous attack on the innocent Christian churchgoers was a message that all moderate Arab leaders must contend with from jihadi terrorism; that its real aim is to inject instability into national governance.

According to the governor of Alexandria, the lone bomber responsible for the mass killing was an agent of al Qaeda. How he had decided that is not known, but no disagreement has come from Cairo. Terrorists in Iraq associated with al Qaeda already had brutally attacked Christians in order to destabilize the new Baghdad government and had publicly threatened to do the same in Egypt. If this operational connection indeed was put into effect, as is apparently believed by Egyptian security, the White House is forced to admit, whether it wants to or not, there is a terrorist religious war being waged by international radical Muslim forces and not simply a fringe extremist movement.

From Egypt’s standpoint the last thing it needs is a serious challenge to national security at this moment of generational change as the 82-year-old Hosni Mubarak’s presidential term ends. Washington has been counting on a relatively incident-free transition wherein its ally, Mubarak, would opt out of day-to-day presidential activities yet still remain an éminence grise who for a period of time influences Egypt’s national direction

Such an arrangement would have satisfied Mubarak’s political backers — most particularly the always wary professional military class. The internal security breakdown personified by the Christian churchgoer massacre followed by street riots in Alexandria and elsewhere by Christian youth gangs is exactly what was not needed. Enter Gamal Mubarak, the politically active younger son of Egypt’s president. Originally considered a natural choice to replace his father, Gamal has lost support this last year among the powerful army and air force leadership because of his lack of military credentials. The result is a new political instability.

The top element of the Egyptian armed forces, intelligence, and security have the political ability to “black ball” any presidential candidate with whom they don’t agree. They do not have the same power, however, to control the political process so as to be the sole king makers in the presidential election. It makes for a very tenuous political environment at a time of terrorist outbreak.

This year should bring an acute awareness in Washington that what had been a long-term working relationship with Cairo is, at the very least, also in a transitional period. The United States annually has provided about $1.3 billion in military aid to Egypt. Since 1975, through Republican and Democrat administrations, another $28 billion in civilian development aid has been provided. This is the strongest leverage that the U.S. has in dealing with Egypt. But in competing for influence, that leverage is increasingly vulnerable to assistance now being proffered by China, Russia, and the European Union. Within Egypt all sides seem to be complaining over the internal situation. The Coptic Christians, who make up about 10% of the population, charge that Wahhabism imported from Saudi Arabia has driven the growth of a stricter form of Islam. The Christians complain that this more rigid interpretation has infringed on the nation’s long-standing freedom of religion. Leadership of the Moslem Brotherhood, in turn, has complained it is being shut out of the parliamentary process — which many believe it is. Meanwhile, secular reformists such as those led by the opportunistic former head of the IAEA, Mohamed ElBaradei, press for what they call “democratic change.”

Obviously this pervasive political unease plays into the hands of extremists of all hues and makes the transition into a post-Hosni Mubarak period that much more difficult. This means that the military establishment must settle on a representative from the armed forces or intelligence to ease into the presidency with civilian approval if they can’t accept Gamal Mubarak. Deals will have to be made. At least this appears to be what Washington and London are expecting, and hoping. As in all things Middle Eastern, however, they should be careful for what they wish.

Peaceful transition can be a costly commodity in Egypt affecting the entire region. And this is to say nothing of the broader international implications of an al Qaeda franchise shift to a focused holy war –jihad — against Christianity!

About the Author

George H. Wittman writes a weekly column on international affairs for The American Spectator online. He was the founding chairman of the National Institute for Public Policy.

Letter to the Editor View all comments (17) |

coal carrier| 1.7.11 @ 7:15AM

“$28 billion in civilian development aid”- I have a question. Why can’t Egypt get $28 billion from one of the Muslim oil producing countries?

Brian Mc| 1.7.11 @ 8:06AM

"Civilian Development Aid" Yeah...right. What's the bet that not a single 'civilian' in Egypt saw a single dime?

What a scam, an unstable government, Jihad all over the place, and all the while the finger-pointing at the west will grow ever more violent. Should have set a match to that money in Minnesota, in January...we would have gotten better results from it that way.

Ned| 1.7.11 @ 1:15PM

I'm sure it will come as an enormous surprise to many that the retirement fund established in Zurich for Mr. Mubarak, his friends and his family is roughly... wait for it... $28 Billion...

Richard Baker| 1.7.11 @ 10:51AM

When reading about the Saudi Wahhabist influence toward a "stricter form of Islam" I always wonder how that can be when the Saudi Royal family is one of the most hedonistic bodies on Planet Earth. The answer is that most of the Moslem faith are illiterate or functionally so and get their teachings and guidance from the mullahs and imams. Talk about a closed loop.

RCV| 1.7.11 @ 12:30PM

The Saud family long ago made a devil's bargain with the Wahhabists. They gave them free reign to indoctrinate the masses, in exchange for keeping the royal family in power and letting them do whatever they chose to in their profligate personal lives. But they will someday soon rue the bargain when the Wahhabist clerics take power from them.

Brooklyn Dave| 1.7.11 @ 2:29PM

Even less puritannical forms of Islam are not self criticising, and not able to tolerate criticism (I mean criticism, not ridicule) from the outside. I believe that more educated Moslems (not all) become functional agnostics quietly.

Richard Baker| 1.7.11 @ 1:03PM

RCV:
Agreed.

c. j. acworth| 1.7.11 @ 4:46PM

C'mon, people, the church bombings had nothing to do with missionaries from the Religion of Peace. It was the JOOOS! Or possibly the Klan. If not them, the Tea Partiers. But certainly not Muslims.

Richard Baker| 1.7.11 @ 4:51PM

c.j:
I thought it was the Aryan Nation? Or was it the Girl Scouts?

Sam Vaughn| 1.7.11 @ 5:37PM

Cum catapultae proscriptae erunt tum soli proscript catapultas habebunt!

Oldefarte| 1.9.11 @ 11:18AM

The problem is not with the vetted political candidates by the military, but simply with the Muslim religion [which is the source of the problem]. These middle eastern countries are all composed of predominately Muslim populations, some of whom are radicalized more than others [but all members receive some form of radicalization by their very presence within this religion]. All of these countries have heads of state that are puppets surrounded/protected by its military from their surrounding Muslim radical population. Without their military, all of these leaders would be overrun by their radicalized populations. The problem is/was and forever will be this religion. If and until governments begin the political process of controlling same and weeding out the radical nature contained within, there will be potential/actual destruction. The Muslims themselves have to become more responsible in controlling and changing their religion away from it radical elements if same is to ever be respected and accepted as a societal member [if the Baptist, Catholic, Methodist, etc religions were ever viewed as supportive of violence withing its ranks, or ever preached violent solutions to problems; they would all lose the respect of society]!!!!!!!!

Christian Louboutin | 6.23.11 @ 4:09AM

It is not that security isn't always on the collective mind of the Mubarak regime. After all, it was the assassination in 1981 of Anwar Sadat by Islamic radicals that lifted the former air force general, Mubarak, to the presidency.

weddingdresses | 6.24.11 @ 2:14AM

Cum catapultae proscriptae erunt tum soli proscript catapultas habebunt!

Adidas | 8.11.11 @ 5:56AM

is good

العاب بنات | 4.10.12 @ 12:23PM

thank you for your web sites

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