As a supporter of George Soros and his work, I receive regular email from his various foundations. Earlier today, I received the text of an article by George Soros that appeared in this morning's Washington Post. It is worth sharing here.
The writer is chairman of the Soros Fund Management and the Open Society Foundations, which support democracy and human rights in more than 70 countries.By George Soros
(Thursday, February 3, 2011) Revolutions usually start with enthusiasm and end in tears. In the case of the Middle East, the tears could be avoided if President Obama stands firmly by the values that got him elected. Although American power and influence in the world have declined, our allies and their armies look to us for direction. These armies are strong enough to maintain law and order as long as they stay out of politics; thus the revolutions can remain peaceful. That is what the United States should insist on while encouraging corrupt and repressive rulers who are no longer tolerated by their people to step aside and allow new leaders to be elected in free and fair elections.
That is the course that the revolution in Tunisia is taking. Tunisia has a relatively well-developed middle class, women there enjoy greater rights and opportunities than in most Muslim countries, and the failed regime was secular in character. The prospects for democratic change are favorable.
Egypt is more complex and, ultimately, more influential, which is why it is so important to get it right. The protesters are very diverse, including highly educated and common people, young and old, well-to-do and desperately poor. While the slogans and crowds in Tahrir Square are not advancing a theocratic agenda at all, the best-organized political opposition that managed to survive in that country's repressive environment is the Muslim Brotherhood. In free elections, the Brotherhood is bound to emerge as a major political force, though it is far from assured of a majority.
Some have articulated fears of adverse consequences of free elections, suggesting that the Egyptian military may seek to falsify the results; that Israel may be adamantly opposed to a regime change; that the domino effect of extremist politics spreading to other countries must be avoided; and that the supply of oil from the region could be disrupted. These notions constitute the old conventional wisdom about the Middle East - and need to be changed, lest Washington incorrectly put up resistance to or hesitate in supporting transition in Egypt.
That would be regrettable. President Obama personally and the United States as a country have much to gain by moving out in front and siding with the public demand for dignity and democracy. This would help rebuild America's leadership and remove a lingering structural weakness in our alliances that comes from being associated with unpopular and repressive regimes. Most important, doing so would open the way to peaceful progress in the region. The Muslim Brotherhood's cooperation with Mohamed ElBaradei, the Nobel laureate who is seeking to run for president, is a hopeful sign that it intends to play a constructive role in a democratic political system. As regards contagion, it is more likely to endanger the enemies of the United States - Syria and Iran - than our allies, provided that they are willing to move out ahead of the avalanche.
The main stumbling block is Israel. In reality, Israel has as much to gain from the spread of democracy in the Middle East as the United States has. But Israel is unlikely to recognize its own best interests because the change is too sudden and carries too many risks. And some U.S. supporters of Israel are more rigid and ideological than Israelis themselves. Fortunately, Obama is not beholden to the religious right, which has carried on a veritable vendetta against him. The American Israel Public Affairs Committee is no longer monolithic or the sole representative of the Jewish community. The main danger is that the Obama administration will not adjust its policies quickly enough to the suddenly changed reality.
I am, as a general rule, wary of revolutions. But in the case of Egypt, I see a good chance of success. As a committed advocate of democracy and open society, I cannot help but share in the enthusiasm that is sweeping across the Middle East. I hope President Obama will expeditiously support the people of Egypt. My foundations are prepared to contribute what they can. In practice, that means establishing resource centers for supporting the rule of law, constitutional reform, fighting corruption and strengthening democratic institutions in those countries that request help in establishing them, while staying out of those countries where such efforts are not welcome.
Update: Egyptian journalist Shaheera Amin of the state-run news channel, Nile TV, was on her way to work when she heard the protestors and decided to resign. Full video here.
Update 2: The right-wing response to the turmoil in Egypt is almost as disturbing as Mubarak’s henchmen in the streets of Cairo roughing up news reporters. Right wing fear mongers are playing the Obama-is-a-secret-Muslim card. Here is Frank Gaffney accusing Homeland Security Advisor John Brennan, Director of National Intelligence Jim Clapper, and Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano of acting as “stealth jihadists:”
Octo,
ReplyDeleteYes, I think the momentum is with the crowds gathering in Tahrir Square -- isn't there something like 40% unemployment in parts of Egypt? People just can't live like that, and a lot of Egyptians appear to have a very good idea of how much better their lives could be. I don't think there's anything inevitable about this change taking the form of religious radicalism. From a distance, it certainly doesn't seem like that's the basis of the demands for change.
Bloggingdino,
ReplyDeleteSometimes I am not sure which is worse: A media and communications blackout that enables dictators and their henchmen to do their dirty work under cover of darkness ...
... Or the excessive media noise of this country that buries informed and rational discourse under rubbish and rubble. Dictators may use brute force to achieve their aims; PR henchmen use guile and distractions.
In either case, we lose.
I don't think I have to furnish examples of a fanatic minority using a struggling democracy to worm its way into command. Prosperity is probably the best immune system, but there are so many contradictions.
ReplyDeleteFareed Zacharia keeps stressing that rising expectations are behind this and that expectations are rising because of a rising awareness and rising possibilities but perhaps the Hos is right too, if he simply walks away, those expectations will outgrow the ability of any new government to provide and the Brotherhood will be waiting in the wings, demonizing and polarizing and providing scapegoats for the slaughter.
I'm not sure anything the US can do would be helpful or even acceptable to the Egyptians.
I'm not sure anything the US can do would be helpful or even acceptable to the Egyptians.
ReplyDeleteCaptain,
I share your concerns. Even after 233 years of democracy, we too have our opportunists who try to capitalize on every political wind and whim to turn public opinion to their advantage. Democracy is not about certainty, and if we always demand a certain outcome, then by implication there could never be a true democracy. I am not sure what we can do, but I am very sure what we shouldn’t do.
The U.S. has a regrettable history of propping up dictatorships to advance American interests, and we are all too often considered hypocrites for paying lip service to democracy and human rights while allying ourselves with brutal regimes. Please recall what we did in Iran in 1953 when an American-British inspired coup overthrew Mohammad Mosaddegh resulting in 46 years of brutality and torture that touched virtually every Iranian family. To insult to injury, we played both sides of the Iran-Iraq conflict that left over a million dead, followed our disastrous adventure in Iraq. There is no country with a worse reputation in the Mid East than good ‘ole U.S. of A.
I am somewhat surprised by the Israeli reaction. One would think the only functional democracy in the region would have a stake in promoting democracy and human rights next door. Is loyalty to a friendly dictator next door worth alienating 80 million people? I think Netanyahu is reacting in the very worst possible way.
BTW, all your favorite neo-cons and theo-cons are supporting Mubarak:
ReplyDeleteRalph Reed of the Christian Coalition
John “The Walrus” Bolton
Rush Limbaugh
Pamela Geller
Mike Huckabee
Allen West
Andrew McCarthy, author of How Islam and the Left Sabotage America
... as examples. Nice bunch of gerbils (as bloggingdino might say).
Ralph Reed of the Christian Coalition
ReplyDeleteJohn “The Walrus” Bolton
Rush Limbaugh
Pamela Geller
Mike Huckabee
Allen West
Andrew McCarthy, author of How Islam and the Left Sabotage America
Seriously, those people have ZERO power over anything. They can make noise, but how will their noise in their tiny corner of the commentariat world stand up against how the POTUS will handle this situation?
I'm with you, (O)CT(O)PUS as an admirer of Soros, but I do not believe people like Geller or Beck will decide anything.
PS. I just recently said on some winger blog that I don't take Beck seriously anymore than I take a gerbil seriously. The blog host wanted to know what gerbils had to do with what I said.
These people truly are idiots.
"There is no country with a worse reputation in the Mid East than good ‘ole U.S. of A."
ReplyDeleteOr in parts of Central and South America and Africa. Most of the rest just think we're idiots. We're cool in Antarctica, as far as I know.
Israel may be a good example of how religion and politics don't mix. If nothing else, it's the death of pragmatism. Too much theocratic crap about what God wants and not enough about what's best for humanity.
Promised land, my ass. The old man never kept a promise in his life and besides, Nietzsche says he's dead and I believe it.
Shaw,
ReplyDeleteThey never heard of Paul Joseph Gerbils? Figures!
Captain - " We're cool in Antarctica, as far as I know."
Nope, the penguins hate us too.
I hope President Obama will expeditiously support the people of Egypt.
ReplyDeleteI appreciate Soros' perspective but I don't think that now is the time for the United States to take any action regarding Egypt other than to indicate support for allowing the change process to play out as it will. The negative reputation that we've earned in so many parts of the world has risen from our paternalistic efforts to choose the direction for other countries. Democracy can't be imposed, can't be poured on like syrup on pancakes. Democracy has to develop, to grow, to arise from the people. I don't know if a democratic government will be what arises from the ashes in Egypt but clearly some major people-generated change is occurring. It's not our place to try and choose the direction of that change. Our efforts to shape and change governments have been a colossal failure in Iraq and Afghanistan. Revolution doesn't happen from without but from within.