http://www.nytimes.com/2013/07/05/opinion/demoting-democracy-in-egypt.html?nl=todaysheadlines&emc=edit_th_20130705
Op-Ed Contributor
Demoting Democracy in Egypt
By
SHADI HAMID
Published: July 4, 2013 80 Comments
DOHA, Qatar — WHEN Mohamed Morsi became Egypt’s
first democratically elected president last year, it was an especially
sweet victory for the Muslim Brotherhood, the region’s oldest and most
influential Islamist movement. After a long history of repression, the
Brotherhood had finally tasted triumph. But their short-lived rule ended
Wednesday when Egypt’s army deposed Mr. Morsi.
The Brotherhood’s fall will have profound implications for the future of
political Islam, reverberating across the region in potentially
dangerous ways. One of the most important political developments of
recent years was the decision of Islamist parties to make peace with
democracy and commit to playing by the rules of the political game.
Leaders counseled patience to their followers. Their time would come,
they were told.
Now supporters of the Brotherhood will ask, with good reason, whether
democracy still has anything to offer them. Mr. Morsi’s removal will
breathe new life into the ideological claims of radicals. Al Qaeda and
its followers have long argued that change can’t come through the
democracy of “unbelievers”; violence is the only path. As the Qaeda
leader Ayman al-Zawahri once said, “What is truly regrettable is the
rallying of thousands of duped Muslim youth in voter queues before
ballot boxes instead of lining them up to fight in the cause of Allah.”
Al Qaeda’s intellectual forebears emerged in the 1950s and 1960s, and
were shaped by events that bear an eerie similarity to those of this
week. In 1954, a popularly backed Egyptian Army moved against the Muslim
Brotherhood, arresting thousands and dismantling the organization.
Prison had a radicalizing effect on Sayyid Qutb, a leading Brotherhood
ideologue, who experienced torture at the hands of his captors before
being executed in 1966. Many of Mr. Qutb’s followers later left the
Brotherhood’s embrace and went their own way, setting up militant
organizations that would begin perpetrating acts of terrorism.
In 1954, no one could have guessed that the brutal crackdown against the
Brotherhood would set in motion a chain of events that would have
terrible consequences for the region and America.
The events of this week could have similarly profound implications. In
the hours after Mr. Morsi’s ouster, the new military leadership
suspended the Constitution, shut down at least three Islamist television
stations, and, more ominously, issued arrest warrants for at least 300
Brotherhood members. Prominent liberal voices are calling for
“dissolving” the Brotherhood and holding what would amount to dubious
show trials.
America finds itself in a tight spot. After the coup, President Obama
expressed “deep concern,” steering clear of any explicit condemnation.
More troubling, he called for the restoration of “a” — not “the” —
democratically elected government, an important distinction that won’t
be lost on the Brotherhood.
When I spoke to one of Mr. Morsi’s top advisers on the night of June 30,
he was already pre-emptively blaming the United States. If a coup takes
place, he told me, it means that America either supports it or is
willing to look the other way.
This, too, bears the echoes of a not-so-distant past. In 1992, Algeria’s
Islamic Salvation Front was on the verge of a historic victory in free
elections. But the Algerian Army intervened, annulling the results and
rounding up thousands of Islamists, many of whom ended up in desert
prison camps. Days before the crackdown began, one of the Salvation
Front’s leaders, Abdelkader Hachani, warned a crowd of supporters what
might be in store. “Victory is more dangerous than defeat,” he told
them.
In hundreds of interviews that I’ve conducted with Muslim Brotherhood
leaders and activists in Egypt and Jordan over the past decade, many
have brought up Algeria and the so-called American veto — the notion
that the United States and other Western powers would simply not allow
Islamists to assume power through democratic elections.
The subversion of democracy in 1992 in Algeria wasn’t widely reported in
the West, nor was it seen as particularly important.
This time, in
Egypt, it happened while the whole world was watching.
Along with 1954 and 1992, 2013 will stand as a historic moment in
Islamist lore, shaping future generations of Islamist activists and
deepening their already powerful narrative of persecution, repression
and regret. America is blamed for enough as it is. There is no need to
add another grievance to the list.
The Obama administration would be wise to distance itself from the
army’s actions and use its leverage, particularly the promise of
financial assistance, to pressure the military to respect the rights of
Islamists.
To limit the fallout from this week’s events, Egypt’s new government
must ensure that the Brotherhood and its Freedom and Justice Party are
reincorporated into the political process and free to contest — and win —
parliamentary and presidential elections. Otherwise, Islamist parties’
faith in democracy could be irrevocably damaged.
Shadi Hamid is director of research
at the Brookings Doha Center and a fellow in Middle East policy at the
Brookings Institution.
A version of this op-ed appeared in print on July 5, 2013, on page A19 of the New York edition with the headline: Demoting Democracy in Egypt.
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