Egypt´s looming showdown / The banning of Islamist presidential candidates could bring violence back into the streets (LA TIMES OP-ED) Rajan Menon is a professor of international relations at Lehigh University 04/18/12)
Source: http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-oe-menon-egypt-election-chaos-20120418,0,7518192.story
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Like savvy boxers with knockout punches, Egypt´s Supreme Council of
the Armed Forces, or SCAF, and the Muslim Brotherhood have circled
each other warily since the Arab Spring toppled President Hosni
Mubarak in February 2011. But after the SCAF-appointed election
commission´s banning last week of 10 candidates for the May
presidential elections, including the Brotherhood´s nominee, Khairat
Shater, the phase of circumspection may be ending. Egyptians could be
in for rougher times.
The SCAF abandoned Mubarak only after it realized that Egyptian
protesters would not succumb to intimidation and force. But it feared
the popular uprising and believes that its main consequence has been
to empower the Brotherhood. Despite the Brotherhood´s reassurances
about democracy and religious tolerance, the generals remain
convinced that its goal is an Islamic state. The military high
command and the intelligence services no doubt worry that their
record of repression during Mubarak´s long reign would inevitably be
investigated in a Brotherhood-governed Egypt, and that there would be
score-settling, not least because the group´s leaders were hounded,
imprisoned and tortured.
The military-intelligence complex has reacted by trying to engineer a
post-Mubarak polity that protects its vast economic empire and
guarantees the army a political role. So it was shaken when the
parliamentary election results were announced in January: The
Brotherhood´s Freedom and Justice Party and its allies won more than
45% of the 508 seats, the Salafists´ Al Nour and its partners, 25%.
The Brotherhood´s strategy has been to avoid giving the SCAF an
excuse for a crackdown. Thus it hung back during some of the
demonstrations that continued after Mubarak´s fall, even at the risk
of fanning fears that it was colluding with the generals. And despite
its success in the parliamentary elections, it declined to field a
candidate for president and prohibited its members from running. When
senior party official Abdel Moneim Aboul Fotouh disobeyed and entered
the contest last summer, he was summarily expelled. Not until March
31 did the Brotherhood, frustrated by the SCAF´s political
machinations and worried about the appeal of the ultraconservative
Salafists´ presidential nominee, Hazem Salah abu Ismail, change
course and nominate Shater.
The election commission´s move has raised the political temperature,
even though it also banned Omar Suleiman, a longtime Mubarak
confidant, vice president in the last days of Mubarak´s rule and head
of intelligence for 18 years before that. Suleiman is reviled because
of his past, and he´s widely considered a SCAF ally. Rumors of fraud
were rife after he managed to gather more than the mandatory 30,000
signatures from 15 provinces within a few days of entering the
presidential race.
But the Brotherhood won´t be mollified by his disqualification, nor
will many Egyptians. They understand that the SCAF knew that Suleiman
could never win and that the generals encouraged his run and then
stopped it so that they could appear evenhanded while pursuing their
true goal: shutting out Shater, as well as Ismail, both charismatic
figures capable of mobilizing voters. Other candidates have been
banned, including the liberal Ayman Nour — who, like Shater, was
imprisoned under Mubarak — but the Islamists are the SCAF´s true
targets, and few Egyptians buy the tortured legal rationales for the
bans against them.
The election commission Tuesday rejected the appeals of the banned
candidates, including those of the three main contenders — Shater,
Ismail and Suleiman. We will now see whether the Brotherhood-SCAF
detente is dead. If it is, the Brotherhood can bring thousands of
supporters into the streets. The Salafists would also mobilize their
followers. But because of the widespread belief that the generals are
hijacking the political process, the crowds will also contain
Egyptians of other political persuasions.
The SCAF´s calculation may be that the remaining 13 candidates will
divide the vote, denying anyone a decisive win. Then a non-Islamist,
perhaps Amr Moussa, Mubarak´s foreign minister and a former head of
the Arab League, could win the second round. That would be a far
better outcome for the military-intelligence complex than a
Brotherhood president, particularly now that the Islamists control
parliament.
If this is indeed the SCAF´s gambit, it amounts to a big, dicey
gamble. Should the streets overflow with protesters and the generals
eventually unleash the army and police, massive violence could
follow, and the SCAF and the Brotherhood could decide to go for
broke. Egypt´s uncertain move toward democracy could then be derailed
and the country left in turmoil for a long time. If Washington really
wants democracy in Egypt, given its long-standing ties to the
Egyptian military and intelligence services, now would be a good time
to speak up. (Copyright © 2012 Los Angeles Times 04/18/12)
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