Originally posted by C0ckney
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the army appears to want to hand over control to a civilian government
No, not in the way we understand it. The army controls 20% of the Egyptian economy. They deal in cars, for goodness sake. They want to keep that slice of the pie. They want the power to go with it. And they're not going to take orders from some civilian government if and when those orders are in conflict with their interests.
perhaps because they are afraid of the public reaction to a permanent military government
Yes they are. More accurately, to a government openly run by the military.
or perhaps more likely, because they know that egypt faces serious problems and don't want to carry the can for a failure to solve them.
Both this and the above are true. These are not mutually exclusive motivations.
primarily they want to preserve their status as a respected institution in egyptian society.
Also true--but they do not deserve that status by any means.
in fact what is happening at the moment is that some people, who we in the west might call liberals, are calling for the army to remain in power for longer, to give them time to form parties and build a political base to fight the elections.
Also true.
personally, i think that elections should be held sooner rather than later.
Well, given that the only large, organised mass movement and political party in existence a the moment is the Muslim Brotherhood, I'm not surprised. Better that the quasi-democrats get some time to get their act together (if such a thing is even possible, frankly).
clearly however, it's not a case of the army clinging on to power, but rather being asked (begged might be a better word) to stay on until other political forces can organise themselves.
The army is looking to hand off power to a stable, 'we can work with this person' party, and all the while preserve its own interests.
the second half of your post is just guff, a mixture of 'no **** sherlock' obviousness, irrelevancies, and falsehoods.
You've pointed to no falsehoods at all. And I can link to credible sources for each of these statements. In fact, all you probably need do is google the words "egyptian army imprisons blogger", or "egyptian army imprisons israeli on charges of espionage." The point of these 'irrelevancies' is to demonstrate that the army, this 'widely respected' institution, is quite happy to imprison people for insulting it, or even so much as attack its status in Egyptian politics; and it is quite happy, also, to imprison people on plainly false charges. The point is to say that the army is not a democratic institution. It does not support democracy, and nor should we expect it to. It acts in the interests of its officers.
it's especially laughable to suggest that egyptians aren't aware that their last three leaders have come from the military.
I never suggested that they weren't. That's not what I was suggesting at all.
I do suggest that it is a plain fact that they are unaware of the how strong the army's undue and undeserved influence in Egyptian society is. "The army and the people are one" was a common chant during the protests. Well, the "army and Mubarak" were "one" for the past few decades. Mubarak was ditched because the army was getting unhappy with him (he wanted his son the civilian Gamal to take charge after he left rather than an army guy).
That Egyptians chant this slogan is one of the many, many reasons that indicate their ignorance of the army's true role in their country's affairs.
this is either paranoia or a laughable ignorance of the situation in egypt.
War is the worst case scenario. However, it is unlikely to happen until Egypt's economy gets much, much worse. Yes, that economic worsening will probably happen, as every economic analyst attests. Egyptian simply doesn't have the money to buy food for its people any more and that will hit it hard over the next year. That's not to say that a coup is in the works, or that it will ever come about, or, indeed, that Egypt will make war with Israel. It's a plausible scenario, not a fixed outcome.
In this respect, note that it is the army that has
--ceased enforcing Egyptian borders and permitted Hamas to smuggle arms;
--permitted terrorists to attack the Egypt-Israel gas pipeline without repercussion, effectively allowing Egypt to engage in a national "two minutes of hate" against a symbol of cooperation with the Israeli enemy;
- permitted Gazans to enter Egypt, albeit on strict conditions.
The revolution has dictated a change of course in the foreign policy of the Egyptian military--the military currently in charge of government (hint---it was in charge of the government before, too).
This change is designed to ensure that Egyptian policy remains in line with Egyptian popular opinion, even if that means pursuing policies it once opposed and (in as much as there ever was one) undermining the rule of law in Egypt. Populism is not a new development for Egypt, but it is a change for the Egyptian military, which backed a peace treaty with Israel for the last few decades, and directed its interests and activities against Hamas and the Muslim Brotherhood as well.
That change of course was pursued by the military, and it was dictated by concerns about the military's domestic standing. The same military that was quite happy to pursue the opposite policies under Mubarak. It is doing so to maintain its status as a "respected institution." It will do more--much more, if necessary--to maintain its status as a "respected institution", if it must. If it means maintaining their seats of power the Egyptian military will do anything. Is this getting through to you?
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