The Egyptian people know they ousted Mubarak in spite of Washington, Brussels, or Tel Aviv.
The entire Arab world knew from the beginning that all those parties, especially the US, were singularly obsessed with one pathetic question throughout: whether the next Egyptian leadership would continue to support the peace agreement with Israel.
The American blinders were far narrower than the masses at Tahrir Square could have possibly appreciated. As they stood outside day and night there was no time for them to watch episodically interested American networks. Spotty internet service probably denied them the ability to peruse the
latest WikiLeaks revelations. If they had, they would have noted, perhaps to no surprise, that their unelected vice-p
resident Omar Suleiman was so eager to do the US-Israeli bidding that in December
2007 he advocated seeing the people of Gaza (fellow Muslims no less) "go hungry but not starve" in response to the election of Hamas. There are much worse anecdotes in our recently released
Palestine Papers. How about that freedom agenda, America?
That logic taken further, it means the same Suleiman would do far worse to suppress the Muslim Brotherhood within Egypt, which is especially what the American Right and the eager-to-prove-their-security-credentials Left would like.
"The Muslim Brotherhood is a mortal enemy of our civilization," says Newt Gingrich, the revered Republican party strategist. Even if they were, and they most clearly are not, Gingrich and any other US political parties will have to come to terms with a reality they have so far
failed to grasp. The Arab and Muslim world are making changes with their feet. They draw their
strength and power from the numbers they bring and the righteousness of their causes. They are
unafraid and unshackled to take on the status quo.
These are the same people who will determine their destiny, arbitrarily chosen for them by
Westerners with last names like Sykes and Picot and by DC-based
lobbies and
think tanks that
once mattered in the scheme of things but don't so much any more.
This is not a time in history to fear, though many would like us to. The devil we have known has
not been good to the world either.
In its place, the Egyptian people step forward to offer this inspiring gift, a moment of change for
the Arab people, and a real opportunity for the West to reflect on its sordid Middle East interventions.
The best lesson of all, of course, is the promise of what the Arabs can accomplish not on the
back of an American tank, but through the coalescing of masses around information and ideas, which
in the New Media age of Facebook and Twitter, is beholden to no dictator, lobby, or monopoly.
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