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Spengler: Dismiss the Egyptian People and Elect a New One
Pajamas Media ^ | 07/05/2013 | Spengler

Posted on 07/05/2013 8:58:48 AM PDT by SeekAndFind

As Communist writer Bertolt Brecht offered after East German workers rose against their Moscow-backed masters in 1953, perhaps the Egyptian government should dismiss the people and elect a new one.

Don’t laugh. Mexico did this after the debt crisis of the early 1980s: it dismissed the fifth of its population that moved to the United States. China has dismissed its rural population and recreated a new urban population, by 2020 shifting the equivalent of twice the American population from countryside to city.

Egypt’s problem is that it has no practical way of acting on Brecht’s advice. The Egyptian people are dying; the question is whether they will die slower or faster. I prefer slower, so I am pleased by this turn of events.

Starvation is the unstated subject of this week’s military coup. For the past several months, the bottom half of Egypt’s population has had little to eat besides government-subsidized bread, and now the bread supply is threatened by a shortage of imported wheat. Despite $8 billion of aid from Qatar and smidgens from Libya, Turkey, and others, Egypt is struggling to meet a financing gap of perhaps $20 billion a year, made worse by the collapse of its major cash earner — the tourist industry. Malnutrition is epidemic in the form of extreme protein deficiency in a country where 40% of the adult population is already “stunted” by poor diet, according to the World Food Program. It is not that hard to get 14 million people into the streets if there is nothing to eat at home.

Nearly half of Egyptians are illiterate. Seventy percent of them live on the land, yet the country imports half its food. Its only cash-earning industry, namely tourism, is in ruins. Sixty years of military dictatorship have left it with college graduates unfit for the world market, and a few t-shirt factories turning Asian polyester into cut-rate exports. It cannot feed itself and it cannot earn enough to feed itself, as I have explained in a series of recent articles. Someone has to subsidize them, or a lot of them will starve. Unlike Mexico, Egypt can’t ship its rural poor to industrial nations in the north.

Egypt’s people embraced the military because they remember that the military used to feed them. In fact, the military probably can alleviate the food crisis, because — unlike the Muslim Brotherhood– Egypt’s generals should be able to count on the support of Saudi Arabia. Saudi King Abdullah Bin Abdul Aziz congratulated Egypt’s military-appointed interim president on Wednesday night, while the United Arab Emirates expressed “satisfaction” at the course of events. Only the crazy emir of Qatar, the patron of al-Jazeera television and an assortment of Islamist ideologues, had backed the Brotherhood — and his son replaced him last week. The Saudi monarchy hates the Brotherhood the way Captain Hook hated the crocodile: it is the only political force capable of overthrowing the monarchy and replacing it.

Former President Morsi seized power from the military in August 2012, the day that the visiting emir of Qatar appeared in Cairo with a $2 billion pledge to the regime. At the time I warned (in a note for the Gatestone Institute) that “Qatar’s check to the Muslim Brotherhood makes Egyptian stability less likely.” I argued at the time:

Qatar’s $2 billion is a drop in the bucket; it just replaces the reserves that Egypt lost last month. So is a $3.5 billion IMF loan, under discussion for a year. The Obama administration has been telling people quietly that the Saudis will step in to bail out Egypt, but the Qatari intervention makes this less likely. The eccentric and labile Emir is the Muslim Brotherhood’s biggest supporter; its spiritual leader, Sheikh Yusuf al-Qaradawi (who supports suicide bombings against Israel) lived in exile during the Mubarak regime. Qatar funds al-Jazeera television, the modern face of Islamism. The Saudis hate and fear the Brotherhood, which wants to overthrow the Saudi Monarchy and replace it with a modern Islamist totalitarian political party. Qatar has only about $30 billion in reserves and can’t sustain Egypt for long.

Qatar is something of a wild card: it is ruled by an Emir without even the checks and balances that arise from having a large family behind a monarchy, as in Saudi Arabia. The whimsical Emir just bought the Italian firm of Valentino as a gift for his fashion-conscious second wife — not a dress, but the entire company. His support evidently emboldened the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt to take on the military in the aftermath of the Sinai crisis. But that makes stability in Egypt less rather than more likely, because it gives the Saudis, the only funder capable of bailing out Egypt, reason to stand aside.

Qatar has spent nearly a third of its foreign exchange reserves in a Quixotic effort to project power in Egypt, which might explain why the old emir abdicated in favor of his son. With the Muslim Brotherhood out of the way in Egypt, the Saudis have uncontested influence with the military. Presumably the military will suppress the Brotherhood unless it chooses to dissolve spontaneously. No one should mourn the Brotherhood, a totalitarian organization with a Nazi past and an extreme anti-Semitic ideology.

The notion that this band of Jew-hating jihadi thugs might become the vehicle for a transition to a functioning Muslim democracy was perhaps the stupidest notion to circulate in Washington in living memory.

The Saudis have another reason to get involved in Egypt, and that is the situation in Syria. Saudi Arabia’s intervention in the Syrian civil war, now guided by Prince Bandar, the new chief of Saudi Intelligence, has a double problem. The KSA wants to prevent Iran from turning Syria into a satrapy and fire base, but fears that the Sunni jihadists to whom it is sending anti-aircraft missiles eventually might turn against the monarchy. The same sort of blowback afflicted the kingdom after the 1980s Afghan war, in the person of Osama bin Laden. Saudi Arabia and Qatar have been fighting for influence among Syria’s Sunni rebels (as David Ottaway reported earlier this week at National Interest). Cutting off the Muslim Brotherhood at the knees in Egypt will help the KSA limit potential blowback in Syria.

Egypt probably can be kept on life support for about $10 billion a year in foreign subsidies, especially if the military regime can restore calm and bring the tourists back (although that is a big “if” — one of President Morsi’s last acts was to appoint as governor of Luxor province an associate of the Islamist terrorists who massacred 62 tourists in Luxor in 1997). With about $630 billion in foreign exchange reserves, Saudi Arabia can carry Egypt for a couple of years while the Syrian crisis plays out. Saudi Arabia also has covered a good part of Turkey’s huge payments deficit during the past couple of years, which means that Ankara will dance to Riyadh’s tune.

This is the background to the Saudi monarch’s enthusiastic statement of congratulations to the Egyptian military, released almost immediately after the takeover was announced:

In my own name and on behalf of the people of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, I congratulate you on assuming the leadership of Egypt at this critical point of its history,” said the king in a cable carried by the Saudi Press Agency (SPA). “By doing so, I appeal to Allah Almighty to help you to shoulder the responsibility laid on your shoulder to achieve the hopes of our sisterly people of the Arab Republic of Egypt.

At the same time, we strongly shake hands with the men of all the armed forces, represented by General Abdel Fattah al-Sissi, who managed to save Egypt at this critical moment from a dark tunnel God only could apprehend its dimensions and repercussions, but the wisdom and moderation came out of those men to preserve the rights of all parties in the political process.

Please accept our greetings to you and deep respect to our brothers in Egypt and its people, wishing Egypt steady stability and security.

I expect Saudi Arabia to offer Egypt subsidized oil as well as cash for urgent food purchases, allowing the military to appear as national saviors — at least for the time being. It is not clear what the Muslim Brotherhood will do, but apart from seeking martyrdom, there is not much that it can do.

In the Beltway, to be sure, the same folk on left and right who thought the “Arab Spring” would usher in a golden era of Muslim democracy are wringing their hands over the tragic fate of Egypt’s first democratically elected government. These include Republicans as well as Democrats, whom I qualified as “Dumb and Dumber” in a May 20 essay for Tablet.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Israel; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: abdelfattahalsissi; afghanistan; aljazeera; bertoltbrecht; china; egypt; germany; godsgravesglyphs; iran; israel; italy; libya; mexico; morsi; muslimbrotherhood; qatar; russia; saudiarabia; sinai; syria; turkey; unitedarabemirates; ussr; waronterror; yusufalqaradawi
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To: SunkenCiv

Thanks, You.

I learn so much from the stuff you provide. Keep it up!


21 posted on 07/05/2013 12:23:46 PM PDT by Monkey Face (No guns, no freedom. Know guns, know freedom!)
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To: lonevoice

And the pics of all the placards are not going to be seen on Lame Stream Media.


22 posted on 07/05/2013 12:25:07 PM PDT by Monkey Face (No guns, no freedom. Know guns, know freedom!)
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To: Monkey Face

Thanks!

I give all credit here to “Spengler”, and that’s not something I usually find plausible, believe me. MUCH more in the original that’s worth reading:

http://pjmedia.com/spengler/2013/07/04/dismiss-the-egyptian-people-and-elect-a-new-one/


23 posted on 07/05/2013 12:40:09 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (McCain or Romney would have been worse, if you're a dumb ass.)
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To: DannyTN

I’d guess their idea is posited upon something resembling property rights and rule of law, two concepts notably lacking in much of the Middle East, and especially Egypt.


24 posted on 07/05/2013 12:41:44 PM PDT by FreedomPoster (Islam delenda est)
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To: DannyTN

There.


25 posted on 07/05/2013 12:49:01 PM PDT by ThanhPhero (Khach hanh huong den La Vang)
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To: cripplecreek

No good will come of anything Moslem. Our own choices over there run from Really Bad to Awful.


26 posted on 07/05/2013 12:51:03 PM PDT by arthurus (Read Hazlitt's Economics In One Lesson ONLINE http://steshaw.org/econohttp://www.fee.org/library/det)
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To: ThanhPhero
"There"

Grew up in Louisiana and reserve the right to spell things any way I want to.

Besides Homophones are evil.

27 posted on 07/05/2013 1:01:32 PM PDT by DannyTN
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To: arthurus

When this round started the “good” muslims immediately began raping any female dumb enough to get caught on the streets.


28 posted on 07/05/2013 1:03:14 PM PDT by cripplecreek (REMEMBER THE RIVER RAISIN!)
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To: SunkenCiv

I read it. I would not have, had it not been for you. So thanks again!


29 posted on 07/05/2013 1:06:07 PM PDT by Monkey Face (No guns, no freedom. Know guns, know freedom!)
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To: SeekAndFind

Which means the US $1.4 billion is trivial compared to the largess of others.

The western flank of the Arab league is now nailed down.

There is no distraction from the most important crrent effort, the death of the Assad regime.

The power of money and business is continuing to gain the pper hand over the wacko zealots

I hope FReepers read this piece. It correctly separates the goats from the sheep most don’t even realize exist


30 posted on 07/05/2013 1:45:13 PM PDT by bert ((K.E. N.P. N.C. +12 ..... Who will shoot Liberty Valence?)
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To: SeekAndFind

“Spengler”’s always a great read.

One of his key points: Turkey, and presumably now Egypt, are essentially kept on financial life support by Saudi subsidies. Which in effect means that the West is keeping these basket-cases afloat, since it’s our failure to develop our own petroleum reserves (ANWR, off-shore coastal fields, the US equivalent of the Canadian tar sands) that helps keep the cartel’s prices at a level that allows the House of Saud to prop up those losers.


31 posted on 07/05/2013 4:05:29 PM PDT by Stosh
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To: Monkey Face

:’)


32 posted on 07/05/2013 5:41:09 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (McCain or Romney would have been worse, if you're a dumb ass.)
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To: DannyTN
Given CATO's theory that trade deficits are linked to low unemployment, Egypt should have a severe worker shortage by now.

I wish I had a link to that. I can't, off the top of my head, understand the connection between employment and trade balances. I'm tempted to call it a crock, but, of course, will not till I've read more.

33 posted on 07/06/2013 4:14:03 PM PDT by BfloGuy (The imposition of a duty on the importation of a commodity burdens the consumers. --Ludwig Von Mises)
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To: BfloGuy
For the record, I think CATO's theory that trade deficits cause low unemployment is indeed a crock. I think CATO will say anything in support of free trades. Promoting Free trade is the reason they were formed in the first place.

Trade deficits by themselves are not strongly linked to unemployment. There is evidence that countries that run long term trade deficits have higher unemployment.

But to run a trade deficit when your own people are unemployed and you are sinking in debt is non-sensical. It's like being unemployed, racking up the debts and yet still hiring someone to mow your grass.

To have import tariffs lower than the taxes on domestic producers is actually an incentive to drive your companies overseas.

34 posted on 07/06/2013 5:39:43 PM PDT by DannyTN
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To: BfloGuy
For the record, I think CATO's theory that trade deficits cause low unemployment is indeed a crock. I think CATO will say anything in support of free trades. Promoting Free trade is the reason they were formed in the first place.

Trade deficits by themselves are not strongly linked to unemployment. There is evidence that countries that run long term trade deficits have higher unemployment.

But to run a trade deficit when your own people are unemployed and you are sinking in debt is non-sensical. It's like being unemployed, racking up the debts and yet still hiring someone to mow your grass.

To have import tariffs lower than the taxes on domestic producers is actually an incentive to drive your companies overseas.

35 posted on 07/06/2013 5:39:44 PM PDT by DannyTN
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