...
...
Next Story

Will Egypt go Pakistan?

A spectre is haunting the West. In 1979, the United States watched a street revolution in the Middle East and saw its stalwart ally, Iranian Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, ousted, only to be replaced by a theocratic Islamic Republic. Fareed Zakaria writes.

Updated on: Sep 01, 2011 10:10 AM IST
Hindustan Times | By , New Delhi
Prefer HTon Google
Advertisement

A spectre is haunting the West. In 1979, the United States watched a street revolution in the Middle East and saw its stalwart ally, Iranian Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, ousted, only to be replaced by a theocratic Islamic Republic. Now, watching another street revolution in another Middle Eastern country, many people seem spooked by this memory. Washington Post's Richard Cohen writes, "The dream of a democratic Egypt is sure to produce a nightmare." Columnist Leon Wieseltier believes the Islamists will attempt a Bolshevik-style takeover.

HT Image
HT Image

All these things may indeed come to pass, but there is little evidence so far to support the scare scenarios. The Egyptian protests have been secular. The Muslim Brotherhood is one of many groups participating, all of whom have demands that are about democracy and human rights. Egypt is not Iran in a dozen important ways. Its Sunni clergy play no hierarchical or political role the way they do in Iran. Perhaps most important, the current Iranian regime is not a popular model in the Arab world. Egyptians have seen Mubarak and the mullahs and want neither — Pew polling in 2010 found that a large majority supports democratic governance.

Fears of this imagined future are drawing American eyes away from the actual problem in Egypt: military dictatorship. Egypt is not a personality-based regime, centered on Mubarak. Since the officers' coup in 1952, Egypt has been a dictatorship of, by and for the military. The few presidents since then have emerged from the officer corps; the armed forces have huge budgets and total independence, and are deeply involved in every aspect of society, including owning vast tracts of land and hundreds of companies.

80% of the powerful governors are drawn from the armed forces. The military seems to have decided to sacrifice Mubarak but is trying to manage the process of change to ensure that it remains all-powerful. Egypt, remember, is still ruled by martial law and military courts.

Many commentators have made parallels to Turkey, where the military played a crucial role in modernising the country. But the military in Turkey has yielded power very reluctantly, and only because the European Union has persistently applied pressure to weaken the military's role in politics. The danger is that Egypt will become not Turkey but Pakistan, a sham democracy with real power held in back rooms by generals.

Fareed Zakaria is a columnist at the Washington Post © 2011.

 
Check India news real-time updates, latest news on Hindustan Times and more across India.
Check India news real-time updates, latest news on Hindustan Times and more across India.
SHARE THIS ARTICLE ON