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  1. #1
    Council Member davidbfpo's Avatar
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    Default What to read on Egypt

    Shashank Joshi, of RUSI, is always worth reading and he has a list of items to read:http://shashankjoshi.wordpress.com/2...read-on-egypt/

    The penultimate passage from a good Egyptian account:
    Still, there is something utterly inspiring in seeing people rise up once more and show that they will not be taken for granted or intimidated. Of course, one has to wait and keep a vigilant eye before any final conclusions can be made about where Egypt is going.
    Link:http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/orig...pt-bsabry.html
    davidbfpo

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    Default Laura Dean's Dairy

    Laura Dean is a freelance journalist living and working in Egypt and sometimes other parts of the Middle East and North Africa. She grew up in Bahrain and graduated from the University of Chicago. Previously, she worked as an election observer with the Carter Center in Tunisia and Libya and served on the staff of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in Washington, DC.
    Over the last week, she's posted a dairy of events in Egypt:

    Cairo Diary, June 30: An Introduction and the Scene at Tahrir

    Cairo Diary, July 1: The Day After Tamarod

    Cairo Diary, July 2: Brotherhood and Defiance

    Cairo Diary, July 3: Praying We Don’t Get Fooled Again

    Cairo Diary, July 4: The First Day of the Rest of Egypt’s Life

    Cairo Diary, July 5: “Friday of Rejection”—and Violence

    Cairo Diary, July 6: A New Prime Minister, Maybe

    Cairo Diary, July 7: An Outside Perspective

    From the 6 Jul piece, (IMO) an astute observation:

    During the Parliamentary elections in 2011, I worked as an election observer in the Northern governorate of Beheira and Marsa Matrouh on the Libyan border. In both places, I visited many small towns and hamlets. The only political parties I saw with any consistency there were the Freedom and Justice Party (the Muslim Brotherhood’s political arm) and the Salafi Noor Party. They had the numbers, they were on the streets. At the time, those who later came to become the opposition said the Islamists had an unfair advantage: they had been organized for years, these people said; they had existing charity networks; they had money that allowed them to set up cheap markets to sell meat and other staples at cut rates; they had a natural networks in their mosques, many of which encouraged their congregations to vote for Islamic parties.

    The answer, then as now, is suck it up: if the opposition wants to get through to people in a meaningful way, they too must go to the villages and organize.
    Regards

    Mike

  3. #3
    Council Member davidbfpo's Avatar
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    Default Democracy takes a while to stick

    Via FP Blog a CNN interview of General Dempsey, US CJCS, which includes this portion on the situation in Eygpt:
    CROWLEY: When you look at what's going on the streets of Egypt and has been for the past several days, what is the U.S. thinking that?

    DEMPSEY: Well, at one level, our stake is we probably have 60,000 or so dual-American-Egyptian citizens in Egypt. And we have several hundred official American citizens serving in Egypt. But more broadly, look, Egypt is a great country. It's a cornerstone of the Middle East. It's got an incredible history and culture and the world needs Egypt to be stable.

    CROWLEY: But they don't want their government in anymore.

    DEMPSEY: Well, you know, I - again, that's for them to decide. And I really mean that sincerely. And incidentally, I mean, as a student of that part of the world, as someone who lived there for most of the last 10 years, not in Egypt but in the region, I mean, what we're seeing is that democracy takes a while to stick.
    Link:http://cnnpressroom.blogs.cnn.com/20...k-temporarily/
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    Default

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti...red-floor.html


    Islamic lynch mob waving Al Qaeda banners throw terrified teenage boy off 20ft ledge before beating him to death. Teenagers thrown off rooftop ledge by Morsi supporters in Alexandria, were celebrating ousting of Islamist leader when they met pro-Morsi mob. One of the members of the mob were carrying an al-Qaeda flag. Two boys are thrown off the ledge and beaten as they lie motionless. One of them, aged 19, was killed, according to local media.
    http://www.aljazeera.com/news/middle...320932698.html

    Massacre in Cairo deepens Egypt crisis


    At least 51 dead after gunmen open fire at Muslim Brotherhood protest against military coup in Egyptian capital
    .
    Last edited by davidbfpo; 07-19-2013 at 09:38 AM.

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    Default Video clips of Army - MB confrontation

    NYT, Video of Army Shooting Islamists in Cairo Stokes Anger (8 Jul 2013). 16 vid clips; limited editorial comment.

    Regards

    Mike

  6. #6
    Council Member davidbfpo's Avatar
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    Default Who was blind-sided?

    Two very different commentaries. First from Israel's Haaretz, which ends with:
    Israel is mainly concerned right now about the possibility that violence in Sinai − where the Egyptian army has long had trouble coping with radical Islamist groups − will spill over into attacks on its territory. But as usual, it’s also preoccupied with the question of whether its intelligence agencies were blindsided.

    In this regard, sections of Military Intelligence chief Aviv Kochavi’s speech to the Herzliya Conference four months ago have recently been republished. The speech shows the Israel Defense Forces had long thought Morsi’s government was unstable, and that a severe crisis in Egypt could topple it. That certainly wasn’t a precise forecast of what happened, but expecting any intelligence agency to provide such a forecast is unrealistic.

    If the Egyptians themselves didn’t foresee the speed and determination of Morsi’s ouster, it’s hard to expect Israeli or Western intelligence agencies to do so. The question that should be asked, however, is whether Israeli intelligence had any indications about the specific events of last week.
    Link:http://www.haaretz.com/news/middle-e...emium-1.534672
    davidbfpo

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    Council Member davidbfpo's Avatar
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    Default Egypt's new revolution puts democracy in danger

    The second commentary is from Dr Omar Ashour, an Egyptian, who provides a succinct context for the crisis and ends with:
    But if the junta-led political process somehow did roll back from exclusion, political and media repression, we may yet see a transition similar to Turkey post-1997. The scenarios aren't certain, but what is certain is that the future of Egypt's democracy is in great danger.

    What is also certain is that the consequences of ending democratisation in Egypt won't be limited to the country itself. What happens in Egypt never stays in Egypt.
    Link:http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisf...cracy-in-peril
    davidbfpo

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