Mordechai Kedar
During the years of Mubarak's rule, he had only three true supporters: his wife
Suzanne and his sons Gamal and Alaa. All of the other figures that surrounded
Mubarak were politicians and sycophants who took advantage of their proximity
to the president to extract favors as long as he was able to grant them. The
moment that they felt that he was weak, they abandoned him to the fate of dismissal
and the defendant's cage. In contrast, in Mursi's case there were, and still
are, tens of millions of supporters who are ready at a moment's notice to fight
to the end, in order to return him to power. This is the reason for the contrast between
the ease with which Mubarak was taken down and the difficulties that the army
has been experiencing in its attempts to stabilize the state since Mursi was
thrown out of office about three months ago, at the beginning of July of this
year (2013).
The most important and sensitive indicator of the current state of political
stability is what is happening in the educational system: If the schools open
on schedule, students go to school as usual and studies in all of the institutions
are conducted normally, it is a sign of a stable state, and a functional government, based on legitimacy and wide public
acceptance. When life is disrupted, the first thing to be harmed is the
educational system because parents don't send their children out into the
streets in a situation that they consider to be dangerous.
The Egyptian school year was supposed to begin these days. But despite the
fact that many of its leaders are behind bars, the Muslim Brotherhood came out
with the rhyming slogan: "La Dirasa wala tadris hata yarga al-Rais" -
"No school and no instruction until the president's return".
The universities are more than just institutions of higher learning, because they
also serve
as a meeting place, a place to express solidarity and a field of
activity for the young guard, the energetic ones of the Muslim
Brotherhood, who are quite aware that after they successfully finish
their academic studies, there
will be several years of searching for work in their field, and many
frustrations and disappointments stemming from the widespread
protectionism
that exists within the Egyptian job market, and certainly within the
governmental job market.
Today, when the average age of marriage has risen to over thirty years
of age because of economic difficulties, the young men and women channel
their
energies, their frustrations and their aggression into the
political channel, in the absence of any other legitimate channel in a
conservative society such as Egypt's. Because of their age and family
status, the pupils and students do not yet need to submit to the need
for bribery and flattery that family heads have to, in order to maintain
their livelihood,
and this allows them to say, and even to shout, truth to power and its
henchmen.
In high schools, colleges and universities throughout Egypt, and
especially
those in indigent and traditional areas, there are many demonstrations
these days. Although these demonstrations are mostly peaceful in
character, they express the emotions of the masses, who are enraged that
the
revolution has led to the downfall of the Muslim Brotherhood. Some of
the
youths are armed, mainly with knives and handguns, and there is high
potential
for violence to break out.
In parallel with the teachers' strike there have been attempts to organize
commercial strikes, but these attempts have failed because many of the
unemployed in Egypt are street vendors who are not unionized, so it is
difficult to get them to cooperate, since their income will suffer.
As of this writing, the UN Economic Council in New York is currently
conducting activities, where Egypt is represented by Nabil Fahmi, the army-appointed Foreign
Minister
in the current military government. This is another reason for ferment
among the supporters of the deposed president, Mursi, and they have
been organizing protest demonstrations in front of UN representatives in
Egypt.
These demonstrations, should they become habitual, might bring about a
violent
response from the army, similar to the violent evacuation of Rabia al-Adawiya Square last month (August, 2013), which cost the lives of dozens of people.
A Third Intifada?
These days, the Hamas movement has been trying to reignite the
Palestinian arena by using social networking sites and the active
support of the
al-Jazeera channel. It has already been decided that Friday, the 27th of
September, will be called "Al-Aqsa Friday". The end of September will
mark thirteen years since the second intifada broke out, which was
called the
"Al-Aqsa" Intifada. The current use of this motif is intended to give
the
intifada a religious dimension and the weight of an Islamic obligation
to go to
jihad to free al-Aqsa from the Zionists' grip.
Three factors are currently fanning the flames of the call for intifada:
one is
the competition between the PLO and the government in Ramallah on one
hand, and
Hamas and the government of Gaza on the other. The more one side
progresses in
making peaceful contacts with Israel, the more the other one attempts to
set
the area afire in order to pull the rug out from under the negotiators,
and to negate any possibility of arriving at an agreement that would
leave Israel even
one square centimeter of "Palestine". So paradoxically, it is the
peace negotiations themselves that are actually fueling terrorism and
causing
deaths and injuries, for example the deaths of the two soldiers in
recent days.
Here, we must note that one of them - Tomer Hazan - was killed by an imprisoned
terrorist's brother in order to serve as a bargaining chip to free the imprisoned brother.
Hazan was a victim of the twisted practice of freeing murderers, which is
something that only Israel engages in, of all the countries in the world. If
Israel behaved like the United States, Britain, France or the rest of the
democratic countries and did not negotiate with terrorists about the freeing of
murderers, Israeli soldiers would not be kidnapped to be used as bargaining chips, and Tomer
Hazan would still be among the living.
The dead end that the Hamas government in Gaza finds itself in, also adds to
the desire to shake up the stable system that has consolidated around the Gaza
Strip. Hamas leaders hate the name that the jihadists have given them,
"Mishamer haGaful" ("Border Patrol"), as if they are the
guarding Israel's borders against the jihadists' operations. Hamas' motivation,
at least in the third intifada also comes from their desire to shake off this name.
The second factor leading toward a third intifada is the situation in the Arab
world, especially in Syria. Potential jihadists see that by waging a stubborn
and determined battle, they can turn a functional state into a torn and splintered country, and can threaten even a strong regime and send a tyrant to the
edge of the abyss, where he must defend himself by the use of chemical weapons. The involvement of jihadists, who came from all parts of the world to take part
in jihad against Asad the infidel, emphasizes the specifically Islamic aspect
of the battle for Syria. The situation in Syria encourages organizations like
Hamas and Islamic Jihad to try to copy the model of the battle in Syria to
Israel as well, not only to get rid of the "Occupation of 1967" but
also to bring to an end to the "Occupation of 1948".
The rage over what has happened in Egypt also worries the
"Palestinian" jihadists, and they are especially angry about the
"act of mass murder" that was carried out - according to them - by
the infidel Egyptian army against their Muslim brothers in the Sinai
Peninsula. The operation in Sinai also has a negative influence on the
state of
Hamas in Gaza, and this is another reason for the increasing rage among
the
"Palestinian" Islamists. The fact that Israel supports the military
regime in Egypt and helps it in its fight against the jihadists of
Sinai, increases the motivation to direct their rage specifically toward
Israel, and
also because that's what exists in the PA as well.
The Third factor that is encouraging people to begin a third intifada is
the wave of violence driven by Islamist motivations in many places the
world over: the takeover by
"Shabab al-Mujahidin" militias - a branch of al-Qaeda in Somalia - on
the mall in Nairobi, Kenya, which attracted world-wide media attention;
the
slaughter that Boko Haram ("the West is Forbidden") carried out in
Nigeria
in which about 150 Christians were murdered; the daily massacres in
Iraq; the
slaughter in the church in Peshawar, Pakistan; the American failure to
depose
Asad, the infidel, despite his use of chemical weapons; the increasing
influence on events in the Middle East exerted by the Russians, which itself has
murdered Chechen Muslims, and supports Asad the murderer of Muslims.
In the
midst of such an unstable environment, both near and far, the fact that
Israel enjoys
peace
and quiet is especially aggravating to the Palestinian Islamists and
motivates them to use the same methods that Islamic fighters use, who
currently dictate the agenda of many countries in the world.
Israel must keep its finger on the pulse, and must not sink into the
euphoria
of a "house in the jungle" [a peaceful, civilized haven in the midst of a
barbaric environment] or of being the "only democracy in
the Middle East". Specifically because it is a democratic, peaceful,
secure country, scrupulous about human rights and political freedoms,
these
specific qualities raise the envy and ire of its enemies, and they long
very
much to undermine its stability, even if the outcome will leave them in a
worse
situation.
Islam raises the flag of the "tzabar" (native Israeli) quality - "patience and the
ability to tolerate difficulties and hardships" - and promises the
suffering Muslim "al-Farj b'ad al-shida" - redemption after the
difficulties. Therefore, even if the third intifada causes a deterioration of
the quality of life, the price is still worth it, because for them, the freeing
of all of Palestine - in the future, in sha Allah - justifies the suffering and the
hardships.
Israelis tend to assess the likelihood for an intifada to break out according to cost and benefit considerations, characteristic of Western societies. These
considerations, as worthy and important as they are, are not always the
considerations of Muslims who live among us and near us.
Media Involvement
Al-Jazeera again appears to be
promoting Islamic violence these days, in Egypt and in Israel. Only for comparison:
Egypt occupies only a marginal amount of space in the news of the Arab world
today, and Syria is front and center of media interest. On al-Jazeera - in
contrast - Egypt still occupies a central position, with many reports and
details about the actions of the masses - especially those of the Muslim Brotherhood -
against the military rule. Al-Jazeera gives intensive coverage to the school and
commercial strikes that are currently occurring in some of the cities of Egypt.
This is the reason that the Egyptian regime has closed the offices of
al-Jazeera in that country, and the channel has been forced to base its reports
on rebel videos from video sharing sites such as YouTube. Israel must
consider whether it should do as the Egyptians have, because al-Jazeera's media
jihad is not limited to Egypt, and Israel is a permanent target of jihad.
If
there is any medium that can ignite the spirit of a third intifada, it
is al-Jazeera. Israel must remove jihadist media from its territory
before the entire country is set afire.
Also posted at: http://israelagainstterror.blogspot.com/2013/09/mordechai-kedar-egypt-is-boiling.html
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Dr. Mordechai Kedar (Mordechai.Kedar@biu.ac.il) is an Israeli scholar of Arabic and
Islam, a lecturer at Bar-Ilan University and the director of the Center for the
Study of the Middle East and Islam (under formation), Bar Ilan University,
Israel. He specializes in Islamic ideology and movements, the political
discourse of Arab countries, the Arabic mass media, and the Syrian domestic
arena.
Translated from Hebrew by Sally Zahav with permission from the author.
Translated from Hebrew by Sally Zahav with permission from the author.
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