Egypt After The Coup: A Primer On the Aftermath
Saeed Naqvi
(Q) Saudi Arabia is the first country to congratulate Egypt’s military rulers. They and their GCC followers have already announced $8 billion to the new regime in Cairo. More will follow. Why are the Saudis pleased with Morsi’s ouster?
(A) Saudi King Abdullah was
livid when he returned from hospital in Europe in February 2011 and saw allies
like Hosni Mubarak in Egypt and Ben Ali in Tunisia toppled. Monarchies and
Sheikhdoms are uncomfortable with Peoples Power. For them military
dictatorships mean stability. Hence Saudi relief.
Also, Saudis hate Muslim
Brotherhood which aims to replace Monarchies and dictatorship with popular
Islamists regimes.
(Q) But Qatar, the second richest
Kingdom in the region, had invested in President Mohammad Morsi and the Brothers.
Does the Egyptian coup d’état
spell the end of the Saudi – Qatari co ordination in the region?
(A) They had come together on
Egypt; they are parting on Egypt. Earlier, there were rivalries between the two
regimes. They came together to thwart the “Arab Spring” which having consumed
Egypt’s Mubarak, began to threaten monarchies in the region – Jordan, Kuwait,
Morocco, Bahrain, GCC, Saud, Qatar.
But they differed on how to
proceed, now that the “Spring” had been stalled.
While the Saudis were weighed down
by their own internal succession stakes, the Qataris were knitting linkages
with the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt, Turkey, Hamas in Gaza. Saudis could not
have been happy with Qatar punching above its weight and according hospitality
to the Brothers who are anathema to Riyadh.
(Q) But the Americans were with
Morsi and the Brothers. During demonstrations leading to Morsi’s ouster, people
burnt effigies of Barack Obama and US ambassador Anne Patterson. Are the Saudis
and the Americans at cross purposes?
(A) Between American and Saudi
diplomatic choreography the “hidden” is often more important than the
“apparent”. American effigies being burnt in Cairo by anti Morsi crowds shows
the American hand is still in the hand of the Brothers. But Defence Secretary
Chuck Hagel talking to coup leader Gen. Abdul Fatah al-Sissi on the phone,
points to exactly the opposite. Heads I win, tails you lose. Don’t forget,
Americans have lived with Egypt’s army for 50 years. That’s the important
equation. So don’t worry, Americans and the Saudis are in bed under the same
sheet.
(Q) The army and the Brothers are
the two organized formations in Egypt. In an extreme situation which one will
the Americans choose?
(A) Obviously the Americans
would not like to alienate the most powerful Arab Army. They would like to keep
the army together. But they would like to scatter the Brothers, divide them.
They have been caught flat
footed, not for the first time in recent past. They placed all their eggs apparently
in the Brotherhood basket. They will now pick out their eggs one by one. They
are already hedging their bets. Washington has applauded the “roadmap” towards
democracy in seven months. They have avoided describing Morsi’s ouster as a
coup, so aid can continue to flow to the army.
(Q) What should India do?
(A) Support the enlightened
Egyptian. Remember, in the latest round Egyptian civilization, its culture has clashed
with political Islam. The army has helped the former. India should strengthen modernist
tendencies. Go now where the Americans will go tomorrow. In fact, they’re
already there, silly. They have to fly under the radar at the moment because
Brothers in Turkey have to be managed.
(Q) But the Saudis are an
obscurantist, Wahabi state. Why would they support modernism and democracy in
Egypt?
(A) They are not supporting
modernism. They are keeping the Muslim Brothers out because they, the Brothers,
are a threat. They want the army to stay as a stabilizing force.
(Q) What are the implications of
Qatar and Saudi Arabia proceeding on separate paths post the Egyptian coup?
(A) First, consider Al Jazeera
TV as a Qatari asset in the Saudi, Western kitty.
When the US occupied
Afghanistan and Iraq after 9/11, Al Jazeera exposed the BBC and CNN propaganda
by reporting independently. Its offices in Kabul and Baghdad were bombed by the
allies who included Saudi Arabia. Its reputation for independence skyrocketed.
But when the Arab Spring
threatened to topple the monarchies, Qataris were persuaded to pool in their Al
Jazeera resource to supplement the bruised credibility of the CNN and BBC. Al
Jazeera came in handy in the Libyan and Syrian expeditions. Now that the
foreign supported civil war in Syria is beginning to sour, the uses of Al
Jazeera are also diminishing. In Cairo, Al Jazeera was running for cover,
booted out of their offices.
When Al Jazeera was riding
high, former US Vice President Al Gore sought to merge his Current TV channel
with Al Jazeera which would have a projected viewership of 50 million in the
US.
(Q) If the Saudis are now opposed
to Qatar. Will they allow Qatar to have such a powerful toehold in the US?
(A) The Saudi-Qatari rivalry
should not be taken as a fight to the finish.
Saudi-US relations are almost
as secure as US-Israel relations. Recently, Qataris have been playing a
regional role, encouraged by the US – in Syria, Turkey, Hamas, Egypt, Libya,
even Afghanistan. They may have over reached themselves with Taliban much to
Saudi annoyance.
It must not be forgotten, that
Qatar is the headquarters of the US operational command in the region –
CENTCOM.
Recently, Qatar’s Emir, at the
age of 60, handed over power to his son Tamim al Thani who is only 33. It is
not a simple transition in the Emir’s palace. The world’s most powerful
military command would have to be involved. Who knows the transition in Qatar
may bring the Sheikhdom in line with Riyadh where the emergence of a new King is
awaited.
Regional realignments do
relieve the pressure on Bashar al Assad. These very re alignments mount the
pressure on Turkey where Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan has burnt his fingers
trying to topple Assad in neighbouring Syria. He has nothing to show for his
efforts, except an unsettled Turkey.
And, for the conservative Arab
regimes, Israel and the West, there is one galling spectacle. While the Arabs
are in a mess, the most successful democratic elections have brought President
Hassan Rouhani to power in Iran.
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