Egypt: paranoids see neocon conspiracy (again)
A prominent New York Times article of Feb. 13 will doubtless be seized upon as vindicating paranoia about neocon conspiracies behind the Egyptian revolution. It seems that one of the early protest groups, the April 6 Youth Movement—so named for their failed plan for an uprising on that date in 2008—drew inspiration (although not, by any indication, money or training) from the Serbian protest movement Otpor and international non-violence guru Gene Sharp.
Ben Smith blogging on Politico calls Sharp "The most influential American political figure you've never heard of," implying the Egyptian protests are a cookie-cutter affair modeled on the 2000 overthrow of Slobodan Milosevic in Serbia. Committing a howler worthy of a particularly slow high-school student, he refers to Egypt's Otpor link as a "Baltic" connection. (May we suggest that you meant "Balkan," Ben? Please consult an atlas.)
This is too funny. The neocons themselves (against all evidence) tried to take credit for the Egyptian and Tunisian revolutions—and now some lefty pundits seem to be buying their own self-serving propaganda! Meanwhile, the neocons' arch-enemies in the Iranian regime likewise try to take credit for the Egyptian upsurge—even while suppressing similar protests within their own borders. Another one to file under "life's little ironies."
Other sectors of the idiot left, e.g. the ever-reliable Workers World Party, loved Milosevic but have at least got enough savvy to cheer on the Egyptian protesters. Yet they were sickeningly eager to betray the Iranian protest movement in 2009—and will doubtless be equally eager now that protests begin to re-emerge in the Islamic Republic.
One paranoid anarchist blogger writes of the Egyptian upsurge: "US Co-opted 'Revolution' for Neoliberal Designs." Our problem is with use of the past tense—the US, like Tehran, will certainly try to co-opt the Egyptian revolution. Whether either will succeed remains to be seen. For the moment, the Egyptian revolution is under nobody's control. And the very rush to claim it is testament to how dangerous it really is. A genuine secular working-class revolutionary movement is a threat to both the US-backed neoliberal order and fundamentalist states like Iran. If the movement isn't crushed by the military, will it manage to avoid being domesticated by either the mullahs or the neocons? Insh'allah.
See our last posts on Egypt, the new Arab revolutions, and the neocons and the idiot left (a distinct entity from the intelligent left that we hope still exists...).
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Gene Sharp in the NY Times... again
Another New York Times story Feb. 16, "Shy US Intellectual Created Playbook Used in a Revolution," further fleshes out the role of Gene Sharp in the Egyptian and Tunisian revolutions:
The International Center on Nonviolent Conflict has been prompted to add a page to its website entitled "Setting the Record Straight," where it addresses various media distortions (from left and right alike) portraying it as a hidden puppet-master. Our fave is their response to the vile Edward Herman and David Peterson, who portrayed them as a tool of external "destablization" in Iran... (As if destabilization in Iran would be a bad thing.)
A piece that same day in Foreign Policy magazine by Tina Rosenberg, enigmatically entitled "Revolution U," notes that at least one Egyptian activist sought training from the Center for Applied NonViolent Action and Strategies (CANVAS) in Belgrade. Now here's where it gets complicated, so pay close attention.
Rosenberg writes of CANVAS:
Now there is plenty of good reason to revile Lukashenko. But lumping him in with Chávez is an oversimplification at best. As one commenter posted to Rosenberg's piece:
OK, good point. And it is certainly troubling if CANVAS is getting money from USAID. But the commenter overlooks some critical points too. One is that Chávez, disappointingly, has forged an alliance with dictator Lukashenko. Another is that Chávez, if democratically elected, has displayed certain autocratic tendencies. And a look at the CANVAS website indicates that they also support Palestinian protesters on the West Bank—hardly a fave neocon cause.
So things would appear to be a bit more complicated here than the dogmatists of either side would allow...
Gene Sharp in the NY Times... again
A nice little irony. Nicholas Kristof has a New York Times op-ed piece April 16, "The Power of Mockery," again portraying (although this time favorably!) the Egyptian revolution as a mass-produced affair overseen from afar by Gene Sharp:
But Global Voices Online one day earlier noted that Egyptian tweeters have themselves been mocking all the hype about how Gene Sharp masterminded their revolution, sending messages with the hashtag "#GeneSharpTaughtMe." E.g.:
We hope that both Sharp's boosters and critics are listening.
Egyptian protesters refute astroturf canard
From Egypt's al-Ahram, April 20:
Precisely. So why are so many "leftists" in the United States falling for it?