by Caroline B. Glick
The coverage of recent events in Egypt is further proof that Western elites  cannot see the forest for the trees. Over the past week, leading newspapers have  devoted relatively in-depth coverage to the Egyptian military authorities’  repressive actions in subduing protesters in Tahrir Square in Cairo,  particularly during their large protest last Friday.
That is, they have  provided in-depth coverage of one spent force repressing another spent force.  Neither the military nor the protesters are calling the shots anymore in Egypt,  if they ever were. That is the job of the Muslim Brotherhood.
The  proximate cause of last Friday’s mass demonstration was what the so-called  Twitter and Facebook revolutionaries consider the military’s slowness to respond  to their demand for ousted president Hosni Mubarak’s head on a platter. The  military responded by announcing that Mubarak and his sons will go on trial for  capital crimes on August 3.
Beyond bloodlust, the supposedly liberal  young sweethearts of the Western media are demanding a cancellation of the  results of the referendum held in March on the sequencing of elections and  constitutional reform. Voting in that referendum was widely assessed as the  freest vote in Egyptian history. Seventy-seven percent of the public voted to  hold parliamentary and presidential elections in September and to appoint  members of a constitutional assembly from among the elected members of the next  parliament to prepare Egypt’s new constitution.
The protesters rightly  assert that the early elections will pave the way for the Muslim Brotherhood’s  takeover of Egypt, since the Brotherhood is the only well-organized political  force in Egypt. But then, the liberals said they wanted popular  rule.
The Facebook protesters demanded Mubarak’s immediate removal from  power in January. They would not negotiate Mubarak’s offer to use the remainder  of his final term to shepherd Egypt towards a quasi-democratic process that  might have prevented the Brotherhood from taking over.
In their fantasy  world – which they inhabit with Western intellectuals – the fates of nations are  determined by the number of “likes” on your facebook page. And so, when they had  the power to avert the democratic Islamist takeover of their country in January,  they squandered it.
Now, when it is too late, they are trying to win  through rioting what they failed to win at the ballot box, thus discrediting  their protestations of liberal values.
Their new idea was spelled out  last week at an EU-sponsored conference in Cairo. According to the Egyptian  media, they hope to convince the military they protest against to stack the deck  for the constitutional assembly in a way that prevents the Brotherhood from  controlling the proceedings. As Hishan el-Bastawisy, a former appellate  judge and presidential hopeful explained, “What we can push for now is that the  Supreme Council of the Armed Forces has to put some guarantees of choosing the  constituent assembly in the sense that it does not reflect the parliamentary  majority.”
So much for Egypt’s liberal democrats.
AS FOR the  military, its actions to date make clear that its commanders do not see  themselves as guardians of secular rule in Egypt. Instead, they see themselves  as engines for a transition from Mubarak’s authoritarian secularism to the  Brotherhood’s populist Islamism.
Since forcing Mubarak to resign, the  military junta has embraced Hamas, the Palestinian branch of the Muslim  Brotherhood. They engineered the Palestinian unity government which will pave  the way for Hamas’s victory in the Palestinian Authority’s legislative and  presidential elections scheduled for the fall.
Then there is Sinai. Since  the revolution, the military has allowed Sinai to become a major base not only  for Hamas but for the global jihad. As Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu  warned on Monday, Egyptian authorities are not asserting their sovereignty in  Sinai and jihadists from Hamas, al-Qaida and other groups are inundating the  peninsula.
Last week’s move to open Egypt’s border with Gaza at the Rafah  passage is further proof that the military has made its peace with the Islamic  takeover of Egypt. While the likes of The New York Times make light of the  significance of the move by pointing to the restrictions that Egypt has placed  on Palestinian travel, the fact is that the Egyptians just accepted Hamas’s  sovereignty over an international border.
Many in the West argue that  given Egypt’s increasingly dire economic situation, there is no way the military  will turn its back on the US and Europe. By all accounts, Egypt is facing  economic collapse. By summer’s end it will be unable to feed its population due  to grain shortages. By November, its foreign reserves will have dried  up.
But rather than do everything they can to convince foreign investors  and governments that Egypt’s market is safe, the military junta is taking steps  that destroy the credibility of the Egyptian market. To please both the  Mubarak-obsessed protesters at Tahrir Square and the Muslim Brotherhood, the  military refuses to reinstate natural gas shipments to Israel.
Not only  is Egypt denying itself hundreds of millions of dollars in revenues by cutting  off gas shipments to Israel, (and Jordan, Syria and Lebanon). It is destroying  its reputation as a credible place to do business. And according to the New York  Times, it is also making it impossible for the Obama administration to help the  Egyptian economy. The Times’ reported this week that the US tied President  Barack Obama’s pledge of $1 billion in debt forgiveness and $1b. in loan  guarantees to the Egyptian authorities asserting sovereignty in northern Sinai.  Presumably this means they must renew gas shipments to Israel and fight  terror.
The fact that the military would rather facilitate Egypt’s  economic collapse than take the unpopular step of renewing gas shipments to  Israel ought to end any thought that economic interests trump political  sentiments. This situation will only get worse when the Muslim Brotherhood takes  over Egypt in September.
AND MAKE no mistake. They intend to take over.  As they did in the lead up to March’s constitutional referendum, the Brotherhood  is using its mosques as campaign offices. The message is clear: If you are a  good Muslim you will vote for the Muslim Brotherhood.
When Mubarak was  overthrown in January, the Brotherhood announced it would only contest 30% of  the parliamentary seats. Last month the percentage rose to 50. In all  likelihood, in September the Brotherhood will contest and win the majority of  the seats in the Egyptian parliament.
When Mubarak was overthrown, the  Brotherhood announced it would not run a candidate for president. And when  Brotherhood Shura governing council member and Physicians Union leader Abdel  Moneim Aboul Fotouh announced last month that he is running for president, the  Brotherhood quickly denied that he is the movement’s candidate. But there is no  reason to believe them.
According to a report Thursday in Egypt’s Al-  Masry al-Youm’s English edition, the Brotherhood is playing to win. They are  invoking the strategies of the movement’s founder, Hassan al-Banna, for  establishing an Islamic state. His strategy had three stages: indoctrination,  empowerment and implementation. Al-Masry al-Youm cites Khairat al- Shater, the  Brotherhood’s “organizational architect,” as having recently asserted that the  Brotherhood is currently in the second stage and moving steadily towards the  third stage.
Now that we understand that they are about to implement  their goal of Islamic statehood, we need to ask what it means for Egypt and the  region.
On Sunday, Brotherhood Chairman Mohammed Badie gave an interview  to Egyptian television that was posted on the Muslim Brotherhood’s English  website iquwanweb.com. Badie’s statements indicated that the Brotherhood will  end any thought of democracy in Egypt by taking control over the media. Badie  said that the Brotherhood is about to launch a public news channel, “with  commitment to the ethics of the society and the rules of the Islamic  faith.”
He also demanded that state radio and television begin  broadcasting recordings of Banna’s speeches and sermons. Finally, he complained  about the anti-Brotherhood hostility of most private media organs in  Egypt.
As for Israel, Badie was asked how a Brotherhood- led Egypt would  react if Israel takes military action against Hamas. His response was honest  enough. As he put it, “The situation will change in such a case, and the  Egyptian people will have their voice heard. Any government in power will have  to respect the choice of the people, whatever that is, like in any  democracy.”
In other words, the peace between Israel and Egypt will die  of populist causes.
SO FAR, Israel’s responses to these strategically  disastrous developments have been muted and insufficient. On Wednesday, the  Defense Ministry announced that Israel is speeding up construction of the border  fence between Egypt and Israel. The 210-km.-long fence is scheduled to be  completed by the end of 2012.
While this is an important move given  Gaza’s effective fusion into Sinai with the border opening, it does not address  the looming threat from Egypt itself. It does not address the fact that with  Mubarak’s ouster, a previously all-but unthinkable outbreak of hostilities with  Egypt has now become eminently thinkable.
Facing the prospect of a Muslim  Brotherhoodruled Egypt in September, Israel’s government must begin preparing  both diplomatically and militarily for a new confrontation with  Egypt.
The West’s intoxication with the myth of the Arab Spring means  that currently, the political winds are siding with Egypt. If Egypt were to  start a war with Israel, or simply support Hamas in a war against Israel, at a  minimum, Cairo would enjoy the same treatment from Europe and the US that the  Hezbollah-dominated Lebanese government and army enjoyed in 2006. To block this  possibility, the government must begin educating opinion shapers and political  leaders in the West about the nature of the Muslim Brotherhood It must also call  for a cut-off of US military aid to Egypt.
Militarily, the government  must increase the size of the IDF’s Southern Command. The Egyptian armed forces  have more than a million men under arms. Egypt’s arsenal includes everything  from F-16s to Abrams tanks to first-class naval ships to ballistic missiles to  sophisticated pontoon bridges for crossing the Suez Canal.
The IDF must  expand its draft rolls and increase its force size by at least one division. It  must also begin training in desert warfare and develop and purchase appropriate  conventional platforms.
With the Iranians now apparently moving from  developing nuclear capabilities to developing nuclear warheads, and with the  Palestinians escalating their political war and planning their next terror war  against Israel, it stands to reason that nobody in the government or the IDF wants  to consider the strategic implications of Egypt’s reversion from peace partner  to enemy.
But Israel doesn’t get to decide what our neighbors do. We can  only take the necessary steps to minimize their ability to harm us.
It’s  time to get cracking.
Source:  http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Columnists/Article.aspx?id=223422
Caroline B. Glick
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors. 
 
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