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TAHA ÖZHAN > Transition Pains in Egypt

Rising tensions in Egypt were unavoidable after Morsi’s intervention in the oligarchy of the judiciary. It is hard to say whether it was the Egyptian liberals that caused the tensions to rise, simply because the liberals have nothing to gain in Egypt on the streets. Neither the liberals’ popular base is capable of creating a social movement, nor do their actors have the experience to overcome such a trial. The Egyptian liberals need to understand, Tahrir is a good place for sending messages to Egypt and to Morsi, but it is not a good place to do politics.

They need to understand that there is a big difference between “gaining the support of the streets” and “doing politics from the streets.” Besides, Egypt is not simply a country whose political course can be determined by the early birds of Tahrir. Under current conditions in Egypt, all political actors, including the Brotherhood, who prefer staying on the streets to doing politics on legitimate grounds, must realize they are playing with fire. The fire is the possibility of the military-judiciary tutelage regime blatantly taking over the reins of power. Should the conflict on the streets continue full-fledged on the path to complete chaos, it will only strengthen the hand of the old regime.

What should Morsi do at this point? If Morsi backs away from his decisions, not only will he squirrel away the political capital vested in him by the Egyptian people, but he will also become an honorary president defeated by the Egyptian oligarchy. Morsi said “halt” to the tutelage regime in a language it understands. Every single political actor in Egypt knows this is so. They also know that the courageous decisions made against the establishment by a leader without a Parliament, Constitution, bureaucracy, intelligence, police, military or functioning economy are made out of necessity, not out of choice. In fact, for the liberals, the problem is not so much what Morsi does, but who Morsi is.

The debate in Egypt today is not a debate over content. On the contrary, it is a power struggle between Ikhwan and its supporters, dubbed “ignorant peasants” by some liberals, and the masses surrounding the old regime by a conscious or not so conscious decision. The only way this power struggle can be carried over to a legitimate ground to be fought freely at any time is to dispose of the tutelage regime. What are being experienced are the political tensions Egypt needed to live through during the process of the revolution that was realized by an apolitical discourse. What those who experience these tensions, the Ikhwan and some liberals, have in common is their inexperience. And the most determining characteristic of the old regime pivots are their decades-long political experience. Unless the two inexperienced parties realize that they are playing with fire soon, we may suddenly find Egypt in the middle of a de facto coup.

If Egypt has to choose between “growing pains of democratization” or the “military-judiciary tutelage,” it should not hesitate to pick the first option. It is, in fact, a strong possibility that the first option offers an exit out of what we call “political turbulence.” The second option, on the other hand, which we call “bureaucratic oligarchy,” may clear the path to Mubarakism that Egypt would be sentenced to for years to come.

December/07/2012

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Blue Dotterel

12/7/2012 6:43:37 PM

Morsi represents the "old regime" as much as Mubarek did. There is no democracy in Egypt today, and that is why people must take to the streets. You cannot fight tyranny in parliaments.

Recep Ozel

12/7/2012 6:40:57 PM

Morsi actually only got 25% of the Egyptian 1st round vote in an immature political arena. Most people in Egypt do not want the Muslim Brotherhood... This guy Morsi want to build a super tight dictatorship that will not fall apart like the last guys one..

Deniz Can

12/7/2012 1:25:29 PM

PART1 Mr Özhan after reading your analysis about the current situation. I couldn’t stop asking; if you really have some facts indicating the developments in Egypt, it seems that you suggest Mr Morsi what do to, or you kept yourself in a room read some books telling that there is always a conflict between supporters of old regime and new one. In your conclusion: the fight is between old and new regime supporters. It is a fixed and general conclusion, which could be study in books

Deniz Can

12/7/2012 1:25:00 PM

PART2The developments in Egypt are not one-dimensional conflict, as you have described. It is far beyond it. The country has got different cultural, ethnic, and social divisions. Each of them has different expectations and demands, which are legitimate rights in democratic system. A democracy has to take differences seriously and look for compromise.Possessing the power for serving the expectation of certain section of society in the name of being elected is not enough for democratic legitimacy

MR Somalia

12/7/2012 10:17:06 AM

Egyptians just learned how to protest and now they don't know how to stop. I think someone gave them protest Pringles -- "Once you pop, you can't stop". Protest is like Pringles in Egypt.

Johanna Dew

12/7/2012 4:05:50 AM

No, the first option is that of a Muslim Fascist Brotherhood which stole the revolution of the youngsters, women, the left, liberals, secularists, the 10 million Cots and more groups. Remember, it was the MB which came ONLY in the end in action and told time after time that they weren't after power.
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