It’s not that a
military power grab was not a scenario foretold: back in January 2011, with the
revolution ongoing in Tahrir and Mubarak still in power, the warnings were many:
Be careful what you wish for! You may get a historical first: an authentic
people’s revolution that turns into a coup d’etat, sixty years after a coup
d’etat in 1952, by Colonel Nasser et al, that turned into a socialist
‘revolution.’
Today, the worst case
scenario has come to pass: ahead of this weekend’s presidential election, the
Supreme Council of the Armed Forces- Field Marshall Tantawi and company- mounted
a ‘soft’ coup, in one swift blow re-instating martial law, dissolving
Parliament, ruling for the eligibility of their own candidate, Ahmed Shafiq, and
announcing the formation of a constituent assembly of their choice to set a new
constitution, new parliamentary eligibility rules, and the powers of a new
president.
The military’s
candidate, Ahmed Shafiq, is a former Air Force Commander, just like his role
model Hosni Mubarak; just like Mubarak, he is a strongman whose mantra is ‘I or
the Islamists’. In today’s Egypt, this
slogan resonates with a wide swath of disillusioned, exhausted and intimidated
citizenry, fearful of a Muslim Brotherhood takeover; they breathe a sigh of
relief at the prospect of ‘back to the future’, carried along in a miasma of
willful, collective amnesia about the corruption of the Mubarak elite and the
brutality of his security forces, police and military alike. All over Face
Book, they are giving thanks for sparing Egypt
‘the Iran scenario,’ even if
it ends in a Turkey-style military takeover; over Iran ,
they will take Turkey
any day. So would I.
But what if the
alternative scenario is not Turkey ,
but Algeria ?
What if, by nullifying a parliamentary election in which Islamists won at the
ballot box, the military will be risking a massive wave of protests and
resistance that could lead to the kind of bloodbath Algeria experienced for a decade?
Egyptians are not Algerians, the reassuring counter argument goes, with nothing
like Algeria ’s
violence and tribalism. But then again, the conventional wisdom before January
2011, was that Egyptians did not revolt.
This weekend Egyptians
may or may not go to the polls to elect a President whose powers are yet
undetermined, in a country with no constitution, no Parliament, and under the
heel of a Draconian martial law. A year and a half after a revolution that
inspired the world, this is a bitter day for Egypt : the ideals of a revolution
betrayed, the blood of the best and the brightest of its youth spilled in vain.
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