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Egypt: Social Movements, The CIA And Mossad - The Limits of Social Movements
20 February 2011 By James Petras
The mass movements which forced the removal of Mubarak
reveal both the strength and weaknesses of spontaneous
uprisings. On the one hand, the social movements
demonstrated their capacity to mobilize hundreds of
thousands, if not millions, in a successful sustained
struggle culminating in the overthrow of the dictator
in a way that pre-existent opposition parties and
personalities were unable or unwilling to do.
On the other hand, lacking any national political
leadership, the movements were not able to take
political power and realize their demands, allowing
the Mubarak military high command to seize power and
define the "post-Mubarak" process, ensuring the
continuation of Egypt's subordination to the US, the
protection of the illicit wealth of the Mubarak clan
($70 billion), and the military elite's numerous
corporations and the protection of the upper class.
The millions mobilized by the social movements to
overthrow the dictatorship were effectively excluded
by the new self-styled "revolutionary" military junta
in defining the political institutions and policies,
let along the socio-economic reforms needed to address
their basic needs of the population (40% live on less
than $2 USD a day, youth unemployment runs over 30%).
Egypt, as in the case of the student and popular
social movements against the dictatorships of South
Korea, Taiwan, Philippines and Indonesia, demonstrate
that the lack of a national political organization
allows neo-liberal and conservative "opposition"
personalities and parties to replace the regime .They
proceed to set up an electoral regime which continues
to serve imperial interests and to depend on and
defend the existing state apparatus .In some cases
they replace old crony capitalists with new ones. It
is no accident that the mass media praise the
`spontaneous' nature of the struggles (not the
socio-economic demands) and put a favorable spin on
the role of military (slighting its 30 years as a
bulwark of the dictatorship). The masses are praised
for their "heroism", the youth for their "idealism",
but are never proposed as central political actors in
the new regime. Once the dictatorship fell, the
military and the opposition electoralists "celebrated"
the success of the revolution and moved swiftly to
demobilize and dismantle the spontaneous movement, in
order to make way for negotiations between the liberal
electoral politicians, Washington and the ruling
military elite.
While the White House may tolerate or even promote
social movements in ousting ("sacrificing")
dictatorships, they have every intention in preserving
the state .In the case of Egypt the main strategic
ally of US imperialism was not Mubarak, it is the
military, with whom Washington was in constant
collaboration before, during and after the ouster of
Mubarak, ensuring that the "transition" to democracy
(sic) guarantees the continued subordination of Egypt
to US and Israeli Middle East policy and interests.
The Revolt of the People: The Failures of the CIA and
MOSSAD
The Arab revolt demonstrates once again several
strategic failures in the much vaunted secret police,
special forces and intelligence agencies of the US and
Israeli state apparatus none of which anticipated, let
along intervened, to preclude successful mobilization
and influence their government's policy toward the
client rulers under attack.
The image which most writers, academics and
journalists project of the invincibility of the
Israeli Mossad and of the omnipotent CIA have been
severely tested by their admitted failure to recognize
the scope, depth and intensity of the multi-million
member movement to oust the Mubarak dictatorship. The
Mossad, pride and joy of Hollywood producers,
presented as a `model of efficiency' by their
organized Zionist colleagues, were not able to detect
the growth of a mass movement in a country right next
door. The Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu was shocked
(and dismayed) by the precarious situation of Mubarak
and the collapse of his most prominent Arab client –
because of Mossad's faulty intelligence. Likewise,
Washington was totally unprepared by the 27 US
intelligence agencies and the Pentagon, with their
hundreds of thousands of paid operatives and
multi-billion dollar budgets, of the forthcoming
massive popular uprisings and emerging movements.
Several theoretical observations are in order. The
notion that highly repressive rulers receiving
billions of dollars of US military aid and with close
to a million police, military and paramilitary forces
are the best guarantors of imperial hegemony has been
demonstrated to be false. The assumption that large
scale, long term links with such dictatorial rulers,
safeguards US imperial interests has been disproven.
Israeli arrogance and presumption of Jewish
organizational, strategic and political superiority
over "the Arabs", has been severely deflated. The
Israeli state, its experts, undercover operatives and
Ivy League academics were blind to the unfolding
realities, ignorant of the depth of disaffection and
impotent to prevent the mass opposition to their most
valued client. Israel's publicists in the US, who
scarcely resist the opportunity to promote the
"brilliance" of Israel's security forces, whether it's
assassinating an Arab leader in Lebanon or Dubai, or
bombing a military facility in Syria, were temporarily
speechless.
The fall of Mubarak and the possible emergence of an
independent and democratic government would mean that
Israel could lose its major `cop on the beat'. A
democratic public will not cooperate with Israel in
maintaining the blockade of Gaza – starving
Palestinians to break their will to resist. Israel
will not be able to count on a democratic government,
to back its violent land seizures in the West Bank and
its stooge Palestinian regime. Nor can the US count on
a democratic Egypt to back its intrigues in Lebanon,
its wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, its sanctions
against Iran. Moreover, the Egyptian uprising has
served as an example for popular movements against
other US client dictatorships in Jordan, Yemen and
Saudi Arabia.For all these reasons,Washington backed
the military takeover in order to shape a political
transition according to its liking and imperial
interests.
The weakening of the principle pillar of US imperial
and Israeli colonial power in North Africa and the
Middle East reveals the essential role of imperial
collaborator regimes. The dictatorial character of
these regimes is a direct result of the role they play
in upholding imperial interests. And the major
military aid packages which corrupt and enrich the
ruling elites are the rewards for being willing
collaborators of imperial and colonial states. Given
the strategic importance of the Egyptian dictatorship,
how do we explain the failure of the US and Israeli
intelligence agencies to anticipate the uprisings?
Both the CIA and the Mossad worked closely with the
Egyptian intelligence agencies and relied on them for
their information, confiding in their self-serving
reports that "everything was under control": the
opposition parties were weak, decimated by repression
ad infiltration, their militants languishing in jail,
or suffering fatal "heart attacks" because of harsh
"interrogation techniques". The elections were rigged
to elect US and Israeli clients – no democratic
surprises in the immediate or medium term horizon.
Egyptian intelligence agencies are trained and
financed by Israeli and US operatives and are amenable
to pursuing their masters will. They were so compliant
in turning in reports which pleased their mentors,
that they ignored any accounts of growing popular
unrest or of internet agitation. The CIA and Mossad
were so embedded in Mubarak's vast security apparatus
that they were incapable of securing any other
information from the grassroots, decentralized,
burgeoning movements which were independent of the
"controlled" traditional electoral opposition.
When the extra-parliamentary mass movements burst
forward, the Mossad and the CIA counted on the Mubarak
state apparatus to take control via the typical carrot
and stick operation: transient token concessions and
calling out the army, police and death squads. As the
movement grew from tens of thousands to hundreds of
thousands, to millions, the Mossad and leading US
Congressional backers of Israel urged Mubarak to "hold
on". The CIA was reduced to presenting the White House
with political profiles of reliable military officials
and pliable "transitional" political personages,
willing to follow in Mubarak's footsteps. Once again
the CIA and Mossad demonstrated their dependence on
the Mubarak apparatus for intelligence of who might be
a "viable" (pro-US/Israel) alternative, ignoring the
elementary demands of the masses. The attempt to
co-opt the old guard electoralist Muslim Brotherhood
via negotiations with Vice-President Suleiman failed,
in part because the Brotherhood was not in control of
the movement and because Israel and their US backers
objected. Moreover, the youth wing of the Brotherhood
pressured them to withdraw from the negotiations.
The intelligence failure complicated Washington and
Tel Aviv's efforts to sacrifice the dictatorial regime
to save the state: the CIA ad MOSSAD did not develop
ties to any of the new emerging leaders. The Israeli's
could not find any `new face' with a popular following
willing to serve as a crass collaborator to colonial
oppression. The CIA had been entirely engaged in using
the Egyptian secret police for torturing terror
suspects ("exceptional rendition") and in policing
neighboring Arab countries. As a result both
Washington and Israel looked to and promoted the
military takeover to preempt further radicalization.
Ultimately the failure of the CIA and MOSSAD to detect
and prevent the rise of the popular democratic
movement reveals the precarious bases of imperial and
colonial power. Over the long-run it is not arms,
billions of dollars, secret police and torture
chambers that decide history. Democratic revolutions
occur when the vast majority of a people arise and say
"enough", take the streets, paralyze the economy,
dismantle the authoritarian state and demand freedom
and democratic institutions without imperial tutelage
and colonial subservience.
©
EsinIslam.Com
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