How Democracy Can Work in the Middle East
Time / Fareed Zakaria
04-Feb-2011 (one comment)

When Frank Wisner, the seasoned U.S. diplomat and envoy of President Obama, met with Hosni Mubarak on Tuesday, Feb. 1, the scene must have been familiar to both men. For 30 years, American diplomats would enter one of the lavish palaces in Heliopolis, the neighborhood in Cairo from which Mubarak ruled Egypt. The Egyptian President would receive the American warmly, and the two would begin to talk about American-Egyptian relations and the fate of Middle East peace. Then the American might gently raise the issue of political reform. The President would tense up and snap back, "If I do what you want, the Islamic fundamentalists will seize power." The conversation would return to the latest twist in the peace process.

It is quite likely that a version of this exchange took place on that Tuesday. Mubarak would surely have warned Wisner that without him, Egypt would fall prey to the radicalism of the Muslim Brotherhood, Egypt's Islamist political movement. He has often reminded visitors of the U.S.'s folly in Iran in 1979, when it withdrew support for a staunch ally, the Shah, only to see the regime replaced by a nasty anti-American theocracy. But this time, the U.S. diplomat had a different response to the Egyptian President's arguments. It was time for the transition to begin. (Watch a TIME video on the revolt in Egypt.)

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LoverOfLiberty

How Democracy Can Work in the Middle East

by LoverOfLiberty on

Although I am aware this is a Iran-related website, I find it hard to imagine that the events in Egypt won't have an effect within Iran.

And, with this in mind, I post this essay that I feel is a rather interesting (and hopeful) take on the current sitution in Egypt.

Enjoy.  :)

 



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