Chủ Nhật, 25 tháng 8, 2013

Egypt"s Military Does No Wrong in Eyes of Weary Citizens

In the last two weeks, Egypt’s

military-backed government has killed almost a thousand

Egyptians, placed Cairo under curfew, and lined roads with

soldiers, bridges with tanks, and some roofs with snipers.


If all that bothered anybody in this crisis-weary city,

they made little fuss about it.


“The Egyptian army works for the interest of the nation,”

said Amany Hassan, a 45-year-old government employee whose

father was in the military. “They got rid of the Muslim

Brotherhood. Egyptians love anyone who protects them.”


Two years ago, Egyptians were clamoring for democracy.

Today, the city’s embrace of the armed forces appears boundless,

secured by assurances of a rapid transition back to democracy.

Streets are lined with posters of Abdelfatah al-Seesi, 58, the

general who leads the current government. Television news

anchors have not just applauded the military’s heavy hand; last

Monday one broke out into song to praise the soldiers.


On the streets of Cairo, dozens of interviews showed, faith

in the military stems from a desire for stability after months

of street protests and the army’s deep presence in civilian life

– from building roads and bridges to running social clubs and

hospitals and providing an income to a significant portion of

the population.


“The military has considerable prestige and is widely seen

as a pillar of independence and pride,” said Benjamin Geer, a

sociologist and research fellow with the Middle East Institute

at the National University of Singapore.


Mechanic’s Workshop


For decades, the armed forces have used school books,

movies and songs to hammer in a sense that it is the nation’s

guardian, he said.


“People who criticize the military now seem very

marginalized, and there’s probably a lot of self-censorship,”

Geer said. “This wouldn’t be possible if the military hadn’t

managed to give itself a starring role in notions of Egyptian

nationalism.”


In Cairo, where the military’s presence is the strongest,

and where the majority of the deaths have taken place, roadside

stalls are festooned with posters of al-Seesi. On the Corniche,

the wide thoroughfare that runs along the Nile, a giant photo of

al-Seesi hangs outside a mechanic’s workshop.


“Al-Seesi is the lion of Egypt, the protector against

groups of blood, terrorism and ignorance,” the poster reads.

“He’s the one we trust.”


Traffic Light


On El Merghany street, near the presidential palace and the

site of major protests against ousted President Mohamed Mursi, a

street vendor runs between cars waiting at a traffic signal,

selling photos of Al-Seesi. He found two willing buyers during

one red light.


“There is a love for the military that I didn’t see

coming,” said Amro Ali, an Egypt-born Middle-East analyst at

the University of Sydney. “A lot of liberals have backed the

military and whitewashed the deaths of the opposition. There is

a national hysteria ripping through Egypt.”


Al-Seesi’s star has risen as that of the Muslim Brotherhood

has fallen. The Brotherhood, an 85-year-old group that backed

Mursi in the first democratic elections in Egypt, has seen its

leadership culled in the last few weeks, either from arrests or

killing, and faced mass rejection by Egyptians. That was aided

by an-all out media campaign waged both by state-run television

channels and independent media dismayed by the violence caused

by a few Brotherhood members.


Riyadh Attaché


Al-Seesi was placed in charge of the ministry of defense

and military production in August, 2012, by Mursi himself. Less

than a year later, he was the man who deposed him. More than 90

percent of people said they had confidence in the army, more

than any other institution, in a poll by Zogby Research Services

released in June. No more recent polling is available.


The general’s promotion came after a storied career that

included prestigious overseas assignments such as military

attaché in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, which now backs his government

with billions of dollars in aid, and a stint at the U.S. Army

War College in Carlisle, Pennsylvania in 2006 as part of an

exchange program, according to his online biography.


“He’s no fool. This is someone who is extremely clever at

hiding his ambition,” said Robert Springborg, a professor at

the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, California who

travels regularly to Egypt. “He’s got the military under

control, he’s got the street behind him, he’s got the brothers

on the run, he’s got the Saudi’s writing the checks.”


Al-Seesi has said he was forced to overthrow Mursi to end

polarization that had intensified during the Islamist’s year in

office and led to mass protests demanding he step down. The army

says it has no intention of running the country and has

announced a “road map” that includes parliamentary and

presidential elections early next year.


Fragile Allegiances


“I have all the respect for al-Seesi, because he supported

the people against Mursi, and he promised he won’t govern,”

said Nesma Mohammed, a veiled 18-year-old.


In “A Man of Destiny,” a video that airs several times

daily on state-run Nile TV, images of the protests that led to

the military’s warning to Mursi to give up power are looped

against an orchestral score. It ends with a speech from al-Seesi.


“The honor of protecting the will of the people is more

valuable to us, and to me personally, than the honor of ruling

Egypt,” al-Seesi says to an applauding audience in the film.


That doesn’t mean the reputation of the armed forces can’t

be tarnished. Egyptians have gone through five different leaders

since protests in Tahrir Square displaced Mubarak, and

allegiances have proven fragile.


Building Bridges


And voices outside the country have been quick to warn of

the government’s anti-democratic ways. Human Rights Watch said

Aug. 19 that security forces used excessive lethal force, under-reported the number of people killed, and used snipers to shoot

anti-government protesters.


“If the last three years have illustrated anything, it is

that Egyptians’ emotional connection to leaders and politicians

is fleeting,” said Hani Sabra, a director at the Eurasia Group,

a political risk consultancy. “Right now, al-Seesi is very

popular, he can do what he wants, but six months, a year from

now, it is a risk.”


For a few outspoken Egyptians, love for the military is

tempered with nagging doubts about its growing power. Ahmed

Salama, a 34-year-old member of a group that called for the 2011

uprising against ex-President Hosni Mubarak, said he respects

the army because “it’s the only institution in the country that

is disciplined and that is capable of achievements” such as

building bridges and roads.


Emotional Connection


As a child, he says he was fascinated by movies about the

army’s victories, and several of his family members are

associated with the military. Nonetheless, he says he’s

uncomfortable with the fact that the armed forces today have

carte-blanche.


“Politics is all about opinions, and when one of the

parties involved in politics has arms, like the army, that’s a

problem,” he said.


For now, though, al-Seesi’s standing in Egypt shows few

signs of slipping. Growing pressure from outside has largely

strengthened him at home, and the government has been careful to

tailor its image as the protector of the country’s sovereignty

despite the bloodshed.


“The way things were presented here after Mursi was

ousted, it wasn’t military versus democracy, but military on

behalf of democracy,” said Nathan Brown, a professor of

political science and international affairs at George Washington

University. “Whether or not that’s accurate, that is how the

events were understood by the non-Islamist majority in Egypt.”


To contact the reporters on this story:

Mehul Srivastava in Cairo at

msrivastava6@bloomberg.net;

Ola Galal in Cairo at

ogalal@bloomberg.net


To contact the editor responsible for this story:

John Fraher at

jfraher@bloomberg.net



Egypt"s Military Does No Wrong in Eyes of Weary Citizens

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