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Analysis : Middle
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Laura Bush, Mubarak and Washingtons crusade for
democracy
By Patrick Martin
28 May 2005
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Only a merciless satirist could have choreographed the trip
through the Middle East last week by Laura Bush, wife of the US
president. Mrs. Bush visited Jordan, Israel and the occupied West
Bank, then finished up with two days in Egypt, where she visited
Cairo, the pyramids, and the site of the ancient library at Alexandria.
Mrs. Bush spent much of Monday, May 23 with Suzanne Mubarak,
wife of the Egyptian dictator who has ruled the country with an
iron fist for 23 years. In the course of that day, she made her
only substantive political comments of the trip, effusively endorsing
Mubaraks scheme to rig the upcoming presidential elections
to insure his victory.
Mubarak set a referendum vote for May 25 to ratify his proposed
constitutional changes, which wouldon paperallow opposition
candidates to challenge his reelection later this year. Under
the previous procedure no opposition candidates were permitted,
and the population was compelled to vote yes or no
on a new term for the sole candidate, the incumbent president.
The new procedure has been condemned by opposition parties,
including the Muslim Brotherhood, which remains illegal, liberal
presidential candidate Ayman Nour, and the Kifaya movement, which
has called for Mubarak to step down. Besides continuing the state
of emergency, under which all forms of public protest are illegal,
the new election process only permits candidates who are endorsed
by at least 250 national and provincial legislators, giving the
ruling National Democratic Party, which holds virtually all elected
offices, a veto over potential rivals.
Evidently, the prospect of a sham election rigged to ensure
the victory of the incumbent had a definite appeal to the wife
of the US president. As she toured the pyramids at Giza, she told
accompanying US reporters, I would say that President Mubarak
has taken a very bold step. Echoing Mubaraks own description
of the measure, she added, You know that each step is a
small step, that you cant be quick.
Striking a pose of tolerance and humility, she noted that a
full-fledged democracy did not appear overnight in the United
States eitheras though Mubarak, a blood-soaked military
dictator, was some kindred spirit to the American Founding Fathers.
The Egyptian leader is taking the first step to open up
the elections, and I think thats very, very important,
she said.
On her flight home to the United States, Mrs. Bush responded
to Egyptian oppositionists who criticized her praise of Hosni
Mubarak. It was naïve, she said, to think that
a country like Egypt could make a swift transition from dictatorship
to democracy. And it was unrealistic to think that US pressure
could effect such a change. Especially, I dont want
Americans trying to tell people how youre going to go from
here to there in no time, because we know that its not easy
and we know that its, in many cases, not possible.
The cynicism of these comments is remarkable. After her husband
has seized on democratization as the all-purpose pretext
for US military intervention in Afghanistan, Iraq, and any other
country targeted by American imperialism, Mrs. Bush blithely admits
that such considerations dont apply to US client regimes
like Egypt and Saudi Arabia. By this convenient logic, the United
States is called on to be a force for democracy only in those
countries considered by Washington to be hostile.
It is pointless to spend much time analyzing the half-baked
rationalizations crafted for Laura Bush by the White House speechwriting
pool. Events provided a far more direct and devastating refutation
only a day after she parted from her Egyptian hosts.
Wednesday, May 25 was the day set for the nationwide referendum
on Mubaraks constitutional amendments. Opposition parties
had called for a boycott, declaring both the amendments and the
referendum a sham. They attempted to stage rallies and protests
in Cairo and other cities, supporting a boycott and opposing Mubaraks
reelection maneuvers. The response of the regime was swift and
brutal.
Hundreds of thugs mobilized by Mubaraks National Democratic
Party attacked the few dozens of anti-government demonstrators,
beating them with sticks and clubs while both riot police and
Western journalists looked on. In some cases, the journalists
were also targeted for attack.
The riot police worked in tandem with the pro-government thugs,
clearing corridors for them to attack the demonstrators, while
blocking the protesters path when they attempted to escape
the violence.
The thugs chanted slogans in support of Mubarak, while the
anti-government demonstrators shouted, The Americans have
sold us out, in reference to the Bush administrations
embrace of the Mubarak reelection plan.
Mubaraks toughs went out of their way to assault and
humiliate women among the demonstrators. They pulled at their
clothes, in some cases ripping off blouses and fondling their
victims. One woman activist told the press, They put their
hands in every conceivable place. I was basically sexually abused.
A female Arab reporter for the Associated Press was also assaulted.
Although the Bush administration presented Mrs. Bushs
trip to the Middle East as an effort to promote greater political
participation and social freedoms for women, there was no immediate
White House reaction to the deliberate attacks on women by Mubaraks
goons.
Asked about the attackscarried out in broad daylight
on the streets of the Egyptian capital and widely covered in the
mediaUS Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice blandly told
the French news agency AFP, Ive not seen the reports
that youre talking about today.
See Also:
Egyptian government suppresses
opposition while US turns blind eye
[21 February 2005]
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