Posted: 29 Aug 2013 10:10 AM PDT
When the dust settles
in Cairo, at least long enough to make out anything through the smoke and
flames, it may turn out that the Muslim Brotherhood has suffered its worst
blow at the hands of none other than Barack Hussein Obama. .
The
blow will not have been intentional. Like the killing of Bin Laden, a useful
intervention carried out by Navy SEALS who were perhaps less than
enthusiastic about Obama's plan to use the civilian trial of the terrorist
leader as a prop for dismantling the military tribunal system, it wasn't
something that he meant to do.
It just happened.
Obama could never have intentionally defeated the Muslim Brotherhood. But he
may have just hugged it to death.
To understand the Middle East is to understand that such petty things as the
deaths of hundreds of protesters or massive street fighting don't really
matter all that much. Not in a region where Saddam Hussein or the butchers of
Sudan could pile up enough corpses to start an entire country and still enjoy
the support of the Muslim world.
The trick is killing the right people. Saddam Hussein killed Shiites and
Kurds with religious and ethnic differences from the region's Arab Sunni baseline.
Sudan killed Christians and Animists who are infidels and rebellious dhimmis
making them even more foreign and more 'killable".
It is that foreignness which is all-important. Muslims are not supposed to
kill Muslims unless they're somehow 'foreign' either by being members of a
heretical sect or a different ethnic group. And if all else fails, they can
be pawns of foreigners. That is why both sides in Egypt keep accusing each
other of being Jews.
Osama bin Laden aimed at America to hit the House of Saud because it allowed
him to charge the Guardians of Mecca and Medina with being American puppets.
It made internal terrorism justifiable.
That is the charge that has been laid against the Muslim Brotherhood. It is
what makes killing them of no more note than a minor change in the weather.
The only charge against the Muslim Brotherhood that matters is the charge of
"foreignness".
Obama's embrace of the Muslim Brotherhood made them into fair game in the
Muslim world.
Despite its Egyptian roots, the Muslim Brotherhood is a transnational
organizational, and like any transnational organization, that makes it both
foreign and suspect. Its ties to Hamas, a foreign group viewed with suspicion
in Egypt, despite the supposed global Muslim affinity for the Palestinian
cause, add another element of foreignness that will come into play during the
trial of Brotherhood leaders.
And there is Qatar, a foreign country, widely despised, with too much money
and power, whose ties to the Brotherhood are blatant and whose dubious
financial deals with the Morsi government should provide more than enough
material for a conviction. But Qatar is still an Arab and Muslim country.
Obama is the real lever for bringing down the Muslim Brotherhood. Linking the
Brotherhood to him along a chain that includes Qatar upstream and Hamas
downstream, that plugs in the hated CIA and Israel, can destroy the
Brotherhood not just organizationally, but politically as a credible
alternative.
Reducing the Muslim Brotherhood to a CIA puppet in the eyes of the Muslim
world will destroy it so thoroughly that it will become forever irrelevant.
The military and the opposition understood immediately that the only way the
overthrow of Morsi could be made palatable to most Egyptians was by
portraying it as a fight not merely against the Brotherhood, but against a
conspiracy between Washington and the Brotherhood. The Egyptian people might
be divided on Morsi, but they could be united against Obama.
Their plan was to hang Obama around the Muslim Brotherhood’s
neck.
The Muslim Brotherhood belatedly scrambled to portray the coup as an
American-Zionist conspiracy, but it was late to the party. Tahrir Square had
already been choked with banners demonizing Kerry, Obama and Anne Patterson
for their support of the Muslim Brotherhood.
The Brotherhood had trouble making the case that its downfall was a plot by
Obama, when Obama kept insisting that the Brotherhood's leaders needed to be
released and returned to power.
Obama played beautifully into the opposition's hands by following the
standard diplomatic playbook, denouncing Morsi's overthrow and urging the
release of Muslim Brotherhood leaders. It was a plan that made sense in
Washington, which reflexively thinks in terms of issuing orders all the time,
but in Cairo it looked like the puppet master demanding the return of his
puppets.
The Egyptian military had stepped in as a response to a national emergency
dealing with foreign intervention in Egypt's political system. The more Obama
denounced the military's actions, the more he was demonstrating that the
Egyptian military had been correct to step in.
Despite his years in the Muslim world and his family connections, Obama had
not really understood how Egypt worked. And his associates understood it even
less. If they had, they would have pulled out Anne Patterson once she became
a target and openly criticized Morsi for not listening to the demands of the
protesters, while privately conveying a message of support.
Instead Obama hugged Morsi to death. And he's still hugging Morsi to death.
The American emissaries who met with Muslim Brotherhood leader Khairat
al-Shater in prison did it with about as much fanfare as they could muster.
The Muslim Brotherhood spokesman frantically tried to deny that the meeting
happened or that Khairat al-Shater had been willing to even talk to Deputy
Secretary of State William Burns, but that just made the Brotherhood seem
like a bigger bunch of liars. And why else would they lie about a meeting
with American diplomats unless they were trying to hide that they were really
puppets of Uncle Sam?
It couldn't have gone any better if Obama had planned it. Sadly Obama would
never have planned it and that made the scene all the more absurdly
delicious. The Muslim Brotherhood wanted Obama to shut up and stop loudly
intervening on their behalf. But Obama couldn't stop following the liberal
playbook and sticking up for his beloved Brotherhood. The nuanced
administration was completely lacking in nuance and didn't even know it.
Obama's entire plan to bring the Muslim Brotherhood to power had laid the
seeds of its destruction. The insistence on having Muslim Brotherhood members
at the Cairo speech, the demand that Mubarak step down, the urging of rushed
elections that benefited the Muslim Brotherhood; the entire process by which
Obama helped the Muslim Brotherhood come to power became its indictment.
The Muslim Brotherhood's violent past was ugly, but terrorism is not the
ultimate offense in the Muslim world. Muslims support terrorism when fighting
foreigners or foreign influences. Treason, the willingness to become a
foreign influence, is the ultimate crime.
If the Egyptian legal system, that the Muslim Brotherhood tried and failed to
destroy, succeeds in convicting the Muslim Brotherhood of serving foreign
interests in the court of public opinion, it will have dealt it a serious
blow that the Brotherhood will spend a long time recovering from.
In Washington, Obama still continues misreading events as a military coup.
The protesters parading around Cairo with Islamic photoshops of his face
picked up from American conservative sites are a minor irritant to be
dismissed with another of his condescending speeches as if they were Tea
Party members. The problem is tackled with arbitrary denials of foreign aid,
pressure phone calls and a touch of diplomatic isolation.
And the generals and liberals are laughing to themselves, the way that the
Muslim Brotherhood leaders used to at their cleverness in tricking Obama. But
the Brothers aren't laughing anymore since Obama became the weight around
their ankles pulling them down. And they can't even let go of him because
they have no other leverage except international pressure.
There's only so much Qatar can do against the united front of Saudi Arabia,
the UAE and most of the rest of the GCC ensemble. Turkey can spit and stomp
its legs, but it doesn't have any other leverage. That leaves Obama, who has
the Muslim Brotherhood's back, but lacks the paranoid subtlety that passes
for local politics, and the European Union, which is more subtle, but also
more greedy.
Egypt's
new government knows that it won't win over Obama or Ashton any time soon.
But it isn't trying to. Instead its goal is to smash the Muslim Brotherhood
leaving it the only game in town. And then Obama and the EU can take it or
leave it.
Osama tried to bring down Saudi Arabia by attacking America. The new Egyptian
government is attacking America, domestically, to bring down the Muslim
Brotherhood. It's the typically indirect politics of a xenophobic region
where not only don't you see the knife coming, you also never find out why
you were stabbed.
While Obama played checkers with the region, its power players had gotten out
their chessboards and deftly checkmated yet another Western regime change
project. With the typical slowness of the obtuse, Obama still doesn't
understand that he lost or what the game even was.
Obama and Kerry believe that they are men of nuance, but they are crude, loud
and obvious compared to the men that they are up against who have outplayed
them in Egypt and are ready to begin burying the rotting corpse of the Arab
Spring beneath the Sinai sands.
Daniel Greenfield is a New York City based writer and blogger
and a Shillman Journalism Fellow of the David Horowitz Freedom Center.
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