by Dan Margalit
It's official: Egypt's 
Defense Minister Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi has deposed President Mohammed 
Morsi. Another revolution made it to the history books. July, with its 
high temperatures, has a tendency to produce revolutions and regime 
changes in the land of the Nile. 
Sixty-one years ago to 
the month, Muhammad Naguib and Gamal Abdel Nasser spearheaded the Free 
Officers' coup that ousted King Farouk and sent him into exile. In July 
2012, Morsi appointed Hesham Kandil as prime minister. His government 
imploded within the year. Once again, in July. 
The United States is 
celebrating 237 years of independence on Thursday. That the downfall of 
the Muslim Brotherhood took place on this day is charged with symbolism.
 U.S. President Barack Obama has actively contributed to the mirage of 
Egyptian democracy under the Muslim Brotherhood that has developed in 
the wake of his Cairo Address in 2009, after which he abandoned his 
ally, former President Hosni Mubarak. 
Obama threw his support
 behind Morsi, dismissing reports that his election was rigged, because 
he believed the Muslim Brotherhood's voice was the voice of the Egyptian
 street. 
Obama was convinced 
that there were moderates in the Muslim Brotherhood. He envisioned a 
Turkish-style democracy emerging in Egypt, only to discover that 
Turkey's Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan was constantly obstructing 
the American bandwagon's path. 
Obama's phone call to 
Morsi reflects a sense of disappointment in Washington over the Muslim 
Brotherhood's conduct and their supposed promise of democracy. During 
the call, Obama hinted that Morsi, only a year into his first term as 
president, should start packing. Sissi's announcement late Wednesday 
night made that suggestion a reality, and Morsi is no longer in charge.
The Muslim 
Brotherhood's failure was inevitable; it had nothing meaningful to offer
 to the tens of millions of starved, unemployed Egyptians or those who, 
despite their academic backgrounds, are now aimlessly wandering the 
streets. 
Morsi's departure dashed the romantic hope that there was someone inside the Muslim Brotherhood you could do business with.
For now though, the 
turmoil continues. Some form of military council will be in charge, but 
Israel should not shed a tear. Morsi alienated everyone, but because of 
the geo-political situation, he felt compelled to maintain 
Israeli-Egyptian cooperation on defense matters. This was evident in the
 coordinated redeployment of forces in Sinai that was meant to counter 
the global jihad elements in the peninsula. 
There is good reason to
 believe that these professional ties will continue, perhaps even 
improve. Although the protesters in Tahrir held on to tradition by 
chanting anti-Israeli slogans, such chants have more to do with what 
they were taught to believe than with any core conviction. Their rage is
 directed at Hamas in the Gaza Strip more than at the Jewish state, 
because the former represents the Muslim Brotherhood. 
From a regional viewpoint, the Muslim Brotherhood has made enormous strides over the past several years. 
One state after another fell by the wayside, and the Brotherhood filled in the vacuum. Each victory propelled them to the next. 
Among the affected 
countries, Egypt is the most important; if the Muslim Brotherhood's 
gains could be undone in Cairo, perhaps too in other Arab states, one 
after another. 
As they say in Arabic, in sha Allah (God willing).
Dan Margalit
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_opinion.php?id=4871
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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