5 July 2013 –
Quiz International
Affairs 101:
Question: In Egypt, when
is authoritarianism better than democracy?
A)
Never
B)
When authoritarianism reestablishes
stability and economic prosperity out of the chaos of failed democracy
C)
When it serves U.S.
interests
Answer A. Some Americans
contend that democracy has the inherent power to build any country and its
people into a vibrant and modern nation.
A cursory read of U.S. history shows that our early republic’s leaders delayed
for decades a horrific civil war before it admitted that constitutional rights
and freedoms extend to all citizens and that the union of the states is
paramount to continued peace and prosperity.
It was a long and bloody process for us, with no assurance that it would
succeed. But, our nation survived this
painful maturation in no small part because we had unique advantages. We were geographically isolated from the
great powers of the world, were able to expand westward across a vast continent
as a means to mitigate economic and population issues, and tolerated each
others’ religions fairly well. We grew
up, protected by oceans and deserts.
Egypt does not have
these advantages. The world carefully watches
Egypt’s recurring episodes of violence, often from military bases within hours
of Egypt’s borders. Egypt cannot close these
borders and sustain itself during such violence because its economy relies
heavily on outside money, e.g., tourism, use of the Suez Canal, and foreign
aid. Tourism in 2013 is down 75% from 2008
levels; political dissidents quickly become rioters when they are broke. Perhaps Egypt’s most important disadvantage is
that being Egyptian is less important to those in Cairo and Alexandria than
being American is to a Houstonian or a New Yorker. Egypt’s population comprises fundamental
religious elements that refuse to subordinate themselves to secular rule of
law, something that the American model shows is necessary for democracy to
thrive. The Moslem Brotherhood exploited
democracy to attain power and to establish a theocratic government, based on
its version of Islam. There is no
democratic model in history that has thrived by using such a strategy. Egypt won’t be the first.
Answer B is correct. Authoritarian rule by the Egyptian army probably
is necessary at this time to reestablish the stability and economic order
required for nascent democracy to take firm root. Democracies, in order to mature and to assume
a premier place in the allegiance of their peoples, need strong economic underpinnings. Immature economic supports usually collapse during
unrest. It is necessary to resolve the
violence, establish order, and allow the people to get back to work. The Egyptian army can best do that. For now, Egypt is better off under army rule
than it was under Moslem Brotherhood rule.
Answer C also is correct. The U.S. should be involved now with Egypt because
it is in our strategic interests to do so.
The Suez Canal, an oil artery to Europe, must stay open. Israel needs to know that its southern border
won’t explode with violence and give reason to start another war. Egypt is the traditional leader in the Arab
Moslem world, academically, religiously, and culturally. Our having a working relationship with Egypt may
influence the rest of the Moslem world to work with the U.S. as well. Finally, keeping Egypt from descending into a
poor, fundamentalist state will help keep Islamic fundamentalist terrorism out
of U.S. streets. Order, stability, and
prosperity in Egypt are in America’s strategic interests. It is worth the couple of billion in yearly
foreign aid to keep the Egyptian army a professional and supportive force.
What about
tomorrow? Next month? Lord Acton best expressed the risk that comes
with authoritarian rule: “Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power
corrupts absolutely in such manner that great men are almost always bad
men."
U.S. and other western nations’ influence with
the Egyptian army can help prevent another dictatorship in Cairo. Our outside influence on the great men of the
Egyptian army to restore order and to build a workable democracy is much
greater than any influence on the great men of the Moslem Brotherhood to do the
same.
I was in Egypt in 1982
for the combined USAF/Egyptian Air Force exercise, PROUD PHANTOM. From the young Egyptian Air Force officers whom
I met, there may still be a few who can rise to the challenge, justly govern,
and then step aside when it is time for the people to govern. It is up to them now to do just that.
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