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	El-Baradei's Democracy:  
	How Egypt's ‘Revolution’ Betrayed Itself
	 
	By Ramzy Baroud 
	Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, July 11, 2013 
	   “The revolution is dead. Long live the revolution,” wrote Eric 
	Walberg, a Middle East political expert and author, shortly after the 
	Egyptian military overthrew the country’s democratically elected President 
	Mohammed Morsi on July 3.   But more accurately, the revolution was 
	killed in an agonizingly slow death, and the murders were too many to count. 
	  Mohamed El-Baradei, a liberal elitist with a dismal track record in 
	service of western powers during his glamorous career as the head of the 
	International Atomic Energy Agency, is a stark example of the moral and 
	political crisis that has befallen Egypt since the ouster of former 
	President Hosni Mubarak.   El-Baradei played a most detrimental role 
	in this sad saga, from his uneventful return to Egypt during the Jan. 2011 
	revolution – being casted as the sensible, western-educated liberator – to 
	the ousting of the only democratically-elected president this popular Arab 
	country has ever seen. His double-speak was a testament not only to his 
	opportunistic nature as a politician and the head of the Dostour Party, but 
	to the entire political philosophy of the National Salvation Front, the 
	opposition umbrella group for which he served as a coordinator.   The 
	soft-spoken man, who rarely objected to the unfair pressure imposed on Iraq 
	during his services as the head of the UN nuclear watch dog, was 
	miraculously transformed into a fierce politician with persisting demands 
	and expectations. His party, like the rest of Egypt’s opposition, had 
	performed poorly in every democratic election and referendum held since the 
	ouster of Mubarak. Democracy proved him irrelevant. But after every failure 
	he and the opposition managed to emerge even louder thanks to a huge media 
	apparatus that operated around the clock in a collective, undying commitment 
	in rearranging the country’s political scene in their favor, regardless of 
	what the majority of Egyptians thought.   Soon after General 
	Abdul-Fattah El-Sissi announced a military coup on July 04, in what was a 
	clearly well-organized conspiracy involving the army, much of the media, the 
	opposition and disaffected Mubarak-era judges, silencing the Muslim 
	Brotherhood and their own media were paramount. The level of organization in 
	which the coup conspirators operated left no doubt that the military was 
	most insincere when two days earlier they had given the quarreling political 
	parties 48 hours to resolve their disputes or else.   But of course 
	there was no room for compromise as far as ElBaradei’s opposition was 
	concerned, and the army knew that well. On June 30, one year since Morsi had 
	taken office following transparent, albeit protracted elections, the 
	opposition organized with the sinister goal of removing the president at any 
	cost. Some called on the army, which has proven to be extremely devious and 
	untrustworthy, to lead the ‘democratic’ transition. El-Baradei even invited 
	supporters of the former regime to join his crusade to oust the Brotherhood. 
	The idea was simple: to gather as many people in the streets as possible, 
	claiming a second revolution and calling on the military to intervene to 
	save Egypt from Morsi and his supposed disregard of the will of the people. 
	The military, with a repulsive show of orchestrated benevolence, came to the 
	rescue, in the name of the people and democracy. They arrested the 
	president, shut down Islamic TV stations, killed many and rounded up 
	hundreds of people affiliated with the ruling party. Fireworks ensued, El-Baradei 
	and his men gloated, for Egypt had supposedly been saved.   Except it 
	was not.   “Mubarak-era media owners and key members of Egypt’s 
	liberal and secular opposition have teamed up to create arguably one of the 
	most effective propaganda campaigns in recent political history, to demonize 
	Morsi and the Muslim Brotherhood,” wrote Mohamad Elmasry of the American 
	University in Cairo.   Much of the media in Egypt never truly shifted 
	allegiances. It remained as dirty and corrupt as it was during the Mubarak 
	regime. It was there to serve the interest of the powerful business and 
	political elites. But, due to the changing political reality – three 
	democratic elections and two referendums, all won by Islamic party 
	supporters –  it was impossible for them to operate using the same 
	language. They too jumped on the revolution bandwagon using the same frame 
	of references as if they were at the forefront of the fight for freedom, 
	equality and democracy.   Egypt’s reactionary forces, not only in the 
	media, but also the pro-Mubarak judges, the self-serving military, etc, 
	managed to survive the political upheaval not for being particularly clever. 
	They simply had too much room to regroup and maneuver since the desperate 
	opposition, ElBaradie and company, put all of their focus on discounting 
	Morsi, undermining the Muslim Brotherhood, and undercutting the democratic 
	process that brought them to power. In their desperation and search for 
	power, they lost sight of the revolution and its original goals, disowned 
	democracy, but more importantly endangered the future of Egypt itself.   
	What took place in Egypt, starting with the orchestrated ‘revolution’ on 
	June 30, from the army’s ultimatum, to the military coup, to the shameless 
	reinvention of the old order – accompanied with repopulating the prisons and 
	sending tanks to face unarmed civilians - was not only disheartening to the 
	majority of Egyptians, but was a huge shock to many people around the world 
	as well. Egypt, which once inspired the world, is now back to square one. 
	  Since the onset of the so called Arab Spring, an intense debate of 
	numerous dimensions has ensued. One of its aspects was concerned with the 
	role of religion in a healthy democracy. Egypt, of course, was in the heart 
	of that debate, and every time Egyptians went to the ballot box they seemed 
	to concur with the fact that they wished to see some sort of marriage 
	between Islam and democracy. It was hardly an easy question, and until now 
	there have been no convincing answers. But, as in any healthy democracy, it 
	was the people who were to have the final say. The fact that the choice of a 
	poor peasant from a distant Egyptian village didn’t match ElBaradei’s 
	elitist sensibility is of no consequence whatsoever.   It is 
	unfortunate, but hardly surprising, that many of the idealists who took to 
	Tahrir Square in Jan. 2011 and spoke of equal rights for all, couldn’t bear 
	the outcome of that equality. Some complained that decades of 
	marginalization under Mubarak didn't qualify Egypt’s poor, uneducated and 
	illiterate to make decisions pertaining to political representation and 
	democratic constitution. And in a sad turn of events, these very forces were 
	openly involved in toppling the democratically-elected president and his 
	party, as they happily celebrated the return to oppression as a glorious day 
	of freedom. El-Baradie may now return to center stage, lecturing Egypt’s 
	poor on what true democracy is all about – and why, in some way, the 
	majority doesn’t matter at all.   - Ramzy Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net) 
	is an internationally-syndicated columnist and the editor of 
	PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is: My Father was A Freedom Fighter: 
	Gaza's Untold Story (Pluto Press).  
	     
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