In Egypt, the big loser is Islamist terrorists, says ex-CIA officer

Bruce Riedel, a former CIA officer and now a senior fellow at Washington-based think tank the Brookings Institution, writes that the revolution in Egypt is a blow to jihadists everywhere:

The jihadist narrative of al Qaeda has suffered a serious blow. If there is a springtime of freedom in the Arab and Islamic worlds, one loser is Osama bin Laden and his gang…This is not al Qaeda’s revolution and its ideology has not been vindicated in Tunis and Cairo. To the contrary, the victory of mass demonstrations and civil disobedience strikes at the very heart of the al Qaeda narrative that proclaims change can only come to the Islamic world through violence and terror, through the global jihad.

Read the full piece.

Reporting on the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt

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My Sun News colleague Ezra Levant this morning chides mainstream media journalists like me for the work we did from Tahrir Square in Cairo (left) over the last two weeks:

“As always, this revolution was about them — just ask them. More media attention was given to the fact that CNN's dreamy anchor, Anderson Cooper, was roughed up by protesters than was given to investigating the anti-women, anti-secular, anti-Semitic, anti-western ideology of the Muslim Brotherhood, though they're the likely victors of any “election” that might be held in coming months. Most of today's journalists are too young to have covered the 1989 fall of the Berlin Wall, so this was their moment. So they are weepy cheerleaders, not reporters. And they are only too happy to say “ditto” to whatever Al Jazeera tells them is happening.”

Jack Kelly, writing in the PIttsburgh Post-Gazette this morning, also gives us reporters the gears in a column that, like Levant's, warns of the danger of the Muslim Brotherhood:

Our news media have been of little help in understanding what's going on. The networks sent their big names to Cairo though none spoke Arabic, knew the culture or knew the players.

“Their being in Cairo was adding zero news value other than making the plight of Western reporters the focal point of the story, which was not the point of their being in Cairo in the first place,” said Rich Galen, who had been press secretary for House Speaker Newt Gingrich.

Few journalists have mentioned the protests were sparked by a doubling of food prices in the last year. But the greatest disservice they have done is to misrepresent the nature of the Muslim Brotherhood.

Actually, I thought Cooper was restrained, if anything, in his coverage of the two assaults he and his crew came under and actually spent much more time on his shows from there and since then exploring the concerns Levant and others have that secular Egypt will be dominated by radical Islamist fundamentalists. (And many CNN's reporters on the ground in Cairo, by the way, spoke Arabic and at least one Al Jazeera reporter was an American-Egyptian and as a result knew both cultures. Most Western agencies there — Reuters, BBC, etc. –  all have Arabic-speaking reporters on the ground in Cairo.)

Levant and Kelly allege that Western reporters have missed the big story, that the Muslim Brotherhood is about to install radical Islamist rule in place of the secular autocracy that is now crumbling. Levant says:

Congratulations to the Muslim Brotherhood. As their name suggests, they're fundamentalists who want the world to live under Sharia law, with the Qur'an as the constitution. In 1981, they assassinated the last Egyptian president, Anwar Sadat. They didn't have to go to the trouble to get rid of Mubarak this time.

I, for one, found it difficult to report conclusions like this while I was in Cairo or since my return for I can find no evidence to back up these statements. During my five days on Tahrir Square,  I could find no visible or other evidence that the Muslim Brotherhood was using these events to foment jihad and radical Islam among the protestors. In fact, that was one of the many remarkable things about the events in Egypt: There were no politicians or “movements”  leading the protest. There was no Martin Luther King or Lech Walesa or anyone who was giving speeches, organizing protests or anything like that. It was just the people, hard as that may be to believe.

Anthony Sadid, reporting in the New York Times today, writes, “Egypt’s was a revolution of diversity, a proliferation of voices — of youth, women and workers, as well as the religious — all of which will struggle for influence. Here, political Islam will most likely face a new kind of challenge: proving its relevance and popularity in a country undergoing seismic change.” Based on what I saw while I was there, I would tend to agree with Sadid.

Like many reporters in Cairo, I saw Muslims and Christians praying together on Tahrir Square. (The country is about 10 per cent Christian). Christians would stand guard on the square around groups of praying Muslims and Muslims would return the favour. This is not to say all is happy and well between Christians and Muslims in Egypt. Indeed, just as with any religious minority in any part of the world, there is great concern in post-Mubarak Egypt that Christians will be under threat from radical Islamists. But the example on Tahrir Square is, one hopes, an encouraging sign for religious pluralism.

But I — again, like many reporters — also reported from Egypt there were many there who were as worried about radical Islamists taking over the country as they were keen to see Mubarak go. Many Egyptians themselves, like Levant, Kelly, and many Western democracies, fear a radical Islamist state. I was accused of filing news stories that supported the oppressive Mubarak regime whenever my copy contained accounts of shop owners, hotel owners, factory employees, and so on who supported Mubarak when he first promised to leave by September. While these people wanted change, they craved the secular stability that was, at the end, the only thing Mubarak had to offer his people.

In the end, though, the people of Egypt were willing to gamble that they could create a stable secular future without Mubarak.

Still, given the fact that the Brotherhood is the single largest opposition movement in Egypt, it seems inevitable at this point that a stable, legitimate democracy in that country will evolve without the Brotherhood participating in some way.

And the Brotherhood knows that it is under intense scrutiny in Egypt to prove that it can be a responsible partner in a democratic coalition. Notably, the Brotherhood issued a statement yesterday saying that it will not run a candidate in the presidential elections and it will not seek a majority in parliamentary elections.

Ok. Fair enough. But there is still a great deal of suspicion about the MB because the group has a long rap sheet when it comes to jihad and violence. “The Brotherhood's original mission [at its creation in the 1920s] was to Islamize society through promotion of Islamic law, values, and morals. An Islamic revivalist movement from its early days, it has combined religion, political activism, and social welfare in its work. It adopted slogans such as “Islam is the solution” and “jihad is our way.”,” writes Jayshree Bajoria, a senior staff writer at the Council on Foreign Relations, in excellent annotated summary of the Muslim Brotherhood's history.

The Brotherhood was believed to be behind a series of bombings in the 1940s and 1950s in its fight against British colonial rule. When Gamal Abdul Nasser became Egypt's first post-colonial president, the Brotherhood initially supported his government, then soured on him and then, in 1954, tried to assassinate him.

It was shortly after this that Sayyid Qutb, a leading member of the Brotherhood at the time, began developing the radical ideas he would set down in his 1964 book “Milestones”. It was this book that, according to experts that study  radical Islam, that contained the seeds of the twisted philosophy that would spawn groups like Al Qaeda. Qutb believed there was justification for jihad and armed insurrection to overthrow the Egypt's secular government and other non-Islamist governments.

It was a member of the Muslim Brotherhood that killed Mubarak's predecessor, Anwar Sadat, in 1981.

But there are a considerable number of experts who believe that, despite a past where violence was at the core of its agenda, the Brotherhood in Egypt, at least, could help bring stability and democracy.  Ed Husain, a senior fellow at the Council of Foreign Relations, was once a member of the Muslim Brotherhood but left the group after being “disillusioned by their conspiracy theories”. He has spent years now warning of the potential dangers of radical Islam and the Muslim Brotherhood. But Husain, writing in the Financial Times, says of the Brotherhood

“we must engage them, initially on the role of Islam itself. Islamists and western observers too often agree that sharia equates to state law, rather than a body of legal opinion. The Brotherhood repeats the absurd doctrine that “the Koran is our constitution”, but the vast majority of Muslims disagree, seeing the Koran as a divine, not political document. With discussion and political incentives the Brotherhood can be persuaded to follow the lead of mainstream opinion. There are other encouraging signs. Mohammed Badie, the Brotherhood's leader, comes from it conservative wing. But he recently scoffed at the notion of an Islamic state, saying his aim was to be part of a civilian administration. Another relative hardliner (and my former teacher) Kamal ElHelbawi, said this weekend: “Islamists would not be able to rule Egypt alone.” He argued for co-operation with secularists. Mr ElHelbawi has been a Brotherhood stalwart for half a century. If he and Mr Badie want to talk, we have cause for optimism.”

The Muslim Brotherhood has evolved into separate branches — there are more than 300,000 members in Egypt, apparently — and there are, among its current leadership, many who we might describe as “moderates”. In Egypt, as recently as last week, the MB was rejecting and denouncing Al-Qaeda and calls for jihad. And as Haroon Moghul, a blogger at Religion Dispatches, points out, there are some important differences between the Shi'a Islam behind Iran's revolution and the Sunni Islam dominant in Egypt. “That difference in dynamics between Egypt and Iran needs to be stressed,” Moghul writes.

All of which is to say: Journalists reporting on the situation in Egypt would be fools to ignore the Muslim Brotherhood. But journalists on the ground in Egypt have no reason, at this point, to come to the conclusions that Levant and Kelly have arrived at, that the Brotherhood should be condemned as violent fundamentalists. The reality, for now at least, is much more complicated.

 

Full text of Prime Minister Harper's statement on Egypt

Just in from the PMO:

“Canada respects President Mubarak’s decision to step down in order to promote peace and stability in the country. The future of Egypt is for Egyptians to decide.

Canada wants to see free and fair elections; we want to see the rule of law and stability; we want to see respect for human rights, including the rights of minorities, including religious minorities; we want to see the transition to a democratic Egypt.

Our Government encourages all parties to move forward with a peaceful, meaningful, credible and orderly democratic reform process towards new leadership, including free and fair elections in order to build a brighter future for the people of Egypt.

Canada will continue to support Egypt in implementing meaningful democratic and economic reforms.  We will also continue to encourage and support Egypt’s efforts to promote regional stability and peace, including with Israel as well as continued respect for peace treaties in the Middle East.”

That's all of 153 words. Meanwhile, U.S. President Barack Obama went on for all of 850 words.

Quebec Conservative seeks to ban the burka at the polling booth

Quebec Conservative MP Steven Blaney today will introduce a private member's bill which he says will “strengthen our democratic system.” He will do this by engaging in what my friend Paul Wells describes as the “ritual humiliation” of women who choose to wear a burka.  There has been much muttering, particularly in Quebec and from Quebec politicians of all stripes, that our democracy is somehow terribly threatened by the handful of women who show up at a polling place with all the proper forms of identification but who cast a ballot without showing a polling officer their face.

To prove that our democracy needs strengthening from this threat, Blaney and supporters of his legislation will have to demonstrate how our democracy was weakened in the last election by the more than 250,000 Canadians who voted by mail using a special ballot — without showing anyone their faces.

In other words: You must be against the burka at polling booths and against voting by mail or you must be in favour Elections Canada applying its very sensible voter identification policy — which does not in all cases require a visual identification. But if you seek to ban the burka but not ban voting by mail, then you look like a xenophobe for believing that “strengthening” a democracy means introducing legislation that is a veiled attack (and you'll forgive the pun) on a religious minority.

 

On the death of a Twitter friend

I never met Penny Lankshear. In fact, until a few hours ago, I did not know that the Twitter friend I knew only as Penlan was, in fact, Penny Lankshear,  a retired librarian living in Stratford, Ont. [As I come back to this post two years later, in Feb. 2013, I see Penlan is now someone else’s Twitter handle. Click through. I wonder if the new user knows about the Penny … – Akin]

I now know her name — and a little bit more than that — because she died.

Some now are blogging about her passing and I’m thankful for that to learn more about Penny. [I refer here to blog posts by James Curran, Liberal Arts and Minds, and Susan Delacourt].

So why am I both touched and saddened to learn of Penlan’s — Penny’s — passing even though our only relationship was through Twitter? To be honest, I don’t exactly know the answer to that.

I suspect though that it has something to do with that fact that our relationship, such as it was, was based on the fact that I believe we took each other seriously. I wanted to read what she had to say and, though I don’t know for sure, she seemed to be interested in what I had to say. She would re-tweet and comment on my stuff and I would do the same to her. She was, as it says in her Twitter profile bio, a “voracious follower” of Canadian politics. I, too, of course, am a “voracious follower” of federal politics. And that common connection – a serious interest in federal politics — was apparently all it took for each of us to take each other seriously when we bleated something out on Twitter.

And really, isn’t that what all of us want when it comes to political discourse? We want to know that others are listening to us. That we will not be insulted, demeaned, or hollered at for what we say about politics in this country but, rather, that our contributions will be considered, debated, and taken seriously.

So, thank you, Penny, wherever you may be now, for taking me seriously. (I should point out, in case it’s not clear that “taking me seriously” does not mean she always agreed with me. Indeed, she often disagreed with me. But she took my reportage seriously enough that she wanted to respond to). You have no idea how how important and meaningful that is for journalists who are always wondering if anyone ever cares about the things we write.  And, similarly, thank you for your contributions to the debate. I and many others, it’s now clear, took your contributions seriously. We wanted to hear what you had to say.

But beyond that, Penny’s death has forced me to think about the relationship, such as it is, that I have with other pseudonymous Twitter followers who, like Penny, contribute in positive ways to online political discusssions and who seem interested in the contribution I have to those discussions. I find myself asking myself this evening: Is everyone else OK? What are your names? Where do you live? What can I do to help?

Twitter and the Internet are strange beasts. I reported on Internet culture for a decade from 1995-2005 and was fascinated by how computer-mediated communications affect human relationships. And now, for reasons, as I said, I’m not quite clear about, I feel saddened to learn of the death of someone for whom the relationship consisted of little more than a frequent “Re-Tweet” or the occasional “modified tweet”.

MIT professor Sherry Turkle, who I have long admired for the her thinking and commentary when it comes to issues about how human relationships are being changed by the impact of always-on, Internet-connected gadgets, has a new book out right now called Alone Together. I have not yet read it but it’s generating a lot of reviews and commentary. She is, if I read the reviews and discussion correctly, down on new technologies, like Twitter, that we are using.New York Times review Jonah Lehrer says Turkle has concluded that the Internet is “a ball and chain that keeps us tethered to the tiny screens of our cellphones, tapping out trite messages to stay in touch. She summarizes her new view of things with typical eloquence: “We expect more from technology and less from each other.”

I’m looking forward to reading Turkle’s apparently bleak assessment of how we have become “Alone Together” but I will read it knowing that, without Twitter, I would never have known that “Penlan” was a woman named Penny Lankshear who may even have been from the town I was born in and who wanted to talk about politics for all the right reasons.

 

New from Pew: Cell phones ubiquitous; tablets now in 1 in 20 homes

Last fall, the Pew Internet and American Life Project wanted to see what kind of gadgets were in American's households. The results are out now and a chart from Pew is below. I would think that these results would be broadly similar for Canada (although I wouldn't be surprised to learn of greater rates of PC ownership.).

The takeaways: Everyone has a cell phone. Tablet PCs, like the iPad, are already in one in 20 households.