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The fog of Egypt — 12 Comments

  1. The MB want violent street theater.

    It’s their style of agitprop warfare.

    Their timing stinks: August has everyone who really counts on vacation.

    The MB has so many weapons (ex-Libyan, ex-Egyptian) that an all around shoot out may be right around the corner.

    In which case, we’re going to see the Egyptian version of the regular army versus the brown shirts.

    If it gets serious, expect a media/ Internet blackout.

    In the meantime, their economy will be in total free fall.

    ====

    Somewhat related:

    Israel is now choking on her natural gas bounty. There is talk of using it to stimulate recoveries of her shale oil deposits. The buzz is that Israel has such extensive deposits that, if economic, she could export crude in size.

    America is now ramping up refined petroleum exports. These are approaching 3 mbpd. (!) This is more than double that of six years ago.

    America is also fading crude oil imports. These are down about 3mbpd over the last six years.

    As this trend continues, it may be said that we’ve passed peak Islam.

    KSA has lost pricing power. The kingdom’s (political stability) need to import food has taken away its toleration for lower production, lower prices.

    The thought of dumping its sovereign investments/ ‘opiprop’ control positions in the West is abhorrent.

    [ Opiprop = opiate propaganda = anesthetic rhetorical balm ]

    [ Not unrelated to double speak and hypocrisy; it is the anti-thesis of agitprop. ]

  2. ““With our blood and with our soul we will sacrifice for Islam and bring Sisi down,” protesters screamed and clapped on the street, referring to the leader of the armed forces who orchestrated the coup against Mr. Morsi and his Brotherhood-dominated government following a massive popular uprising.”
    versus
    “Civilians battling the Brotherhood supporters responded by chanting ‘the army and the people [are] one hand!'”

    It would appear that this is militant, fundamentalist Islam against moderate Islam. It could become a full blown civil war, although I doubt it. I think the MB will back down when it becomes plain they can’t win in the streets or militarily. Then it’s back to a military regime (Possibly somewhat kinder and gentler than Mubarak) trying to keep the economy afloat (With help from the Saudis) while the MB goes back to trying to regain power through internal subterfuge.

    If I believed that there was a case for Muslims morphing into freedom-loving liberals, I would be rooting for the army and their supporters. But in this fight, I have no favorite dog.

    It matters little what the U.S. does (Except keep the Suez open) or doesn’t do, they will still hate us.

  3. For years liberals blamed Bush for the near-civil war which engulfed Iraq post-invasion. Looking at Syria and Egypt, one wonders if “the insurgency” was inevitable. (As far as I know there is no significant Shiite element in Egypt, so the comparison may not be apt).

  4. This violence, the chaos, and the soon-to-come nightmare rests at Obama’s feet. For it is Obama who has made the US influence around the world, and especially in the middle-East irrelevant.

    Carter allowed the terror-regime to come to power in Tehran; is Obama allowing the same in Cairo?

  5. Charles,

    The Muslims are free-willed people, responsible for their actions. One can only lay so much at the feet of Western intervention or the lack thereof. I’m not saying Obama’s moves aren’t boneheaded or evil (the former when the latter backfires), but this view from the glasses of “Western hegemony” is like the Leftists thinking we’re still in the Jim Crow era and blaming all societal troubles on right-wing whitey (or just whitey).

    The consequences of the events of the recent years in the Muslim world may well be serious, but I’m done assuming active external hands making it all happen. Did anyone make the Europeans fight their Wars of the Reformation in the 16th and 17th centuries? Neither can the Muslims blame their troubles and strife on the West anymore, in this day and age where the West has decolonized and is in fact by them (Muslim invader-immigrants) being colonized. I mean they can throw the blame, but it’s high time outside observers stopped giving their words respect.

    Globalvillagism is an old and tired view. It would be better for the nations of the world to realize each of them isn’t owed a thing by any of the others.

  6. The M. Bros. only path seems to be to shame the military into relenting. But the military must know what will follow if they restore the M. Bros. to power, or if they risk a real election.

  7. As with Syria, when anti-Semites kill each other, what to do?
    One person not to ask is John McCain. In this situation, an Obama dither is preferable.

  8. Here’s a link to an interview with Niall Ferguson on 2/14/11:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9slquoIuPC8

    In it he pretty much predicts what has happened. Ferguson also opines that Obama has never been on top of the ME situation because he is an amateur being advised by amateurs. Methinks he’s right.

  9. “One thing is fairly clear, which is that many of the Morsi supporters are ready and willing (perhaps even eager?) to die for the cause: “With our blood and with our soul we will sacrifice for Islam and bring Sisi down.” And so it is not difficult to imagine the instigation of violence could be on that side.”
    That being what Islamists do.

  10. Carter loved those Iranian fundamentalists.

    It is the nature of the Left to like their allies more than their enemies.

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