http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-oe-meisler-prodemocracy-20
120306,0,4106995.story

Why Egypt doesn't trust us


Private pro-democracy groups funded by the U.S. have a troubling history

By Stanley Meisler 

LA Times Op-Ed: March 7, 2012

Now that seven American pro-democracy workers have been allowed to post bail
and return to the United States, perhaps we can examine what the U.S. was up
to in  <http://www.latimes.com/topic/intl/egypt-PLGEO00000078.topic> Egypt
using reason instead of patriotic emotion. The Egyptian furor over such
seemingly idealistic work may strike us as wild and idiotic, but in fact,
the Egyptians have a right to be suspicious. America's attempt to promote
democracy around the world through private organizations has unsavory
beginnings and a sometimes troubling history.

The program stems from a discredited
<http://www.latimes.com/topic/politics/espionage-intelligence/central-intell
igence-agency-ORGOV000009.topic> CIA operation. In the 1950s and '60s,
during the Cold War, the CIA set up a group of phony foundations to funnel
CIA money to private groups that were either anti-communist or, at least,
non-communist. Among the recipients were the
<http://www.latimes.com/topic/career-workplace/unions/afl-cio-ORCIG0000037.t
opic> AFL-CIO, the National Student Assn. and the magazines Encounter in
London and Transition in Africa. Some did not even realize they were
operating with CIA subsidies. When the secret operation was exposed in
Ramparts magazine and other U.S. publications, there was great
embarrassment, and President Lyndon
<http://www.latimes.com/topic/politics/government/presidents-of-the-united-s
tates/lyndon-b.-johnson-PEHST000117.topic> Johnson put a stop to such CIA
funding.

But many in Congress felt that the program's problem lay only in its ties to
the CIA. Cut those ties and make everything aboveboard, they argued, and the
attempt to win hearts and minds to the American way would be useful and
benign. In the 1980s, during the Reagan administration, Congress created the
National Endowment for Democracy to take the place of the defunct CIA
program.

Under the law, the endowment divided its money among four new institutes
created to sponsor programs encouraging democracy throughout the world. The
four institutes were run by the
<http://www.latimes.com/topic/politics/parties-movements/republican-party-OR
GOV0000004.topic> Republican Party, the
<http://www.latimes.com/topic/politics/parties-movements/democratic-party-OR
GOV0000005.topic> Democratic Party, the AFL-CIO and the U.S. Chamber of
Commerce, supposedly ensuring the participation of the major American
ideologies and interests.

It was obvious that spreading democracy in foreign lands was a delicate
matter that needed to be handled with great care and tact, but the endowment
fumbled this right away. It allocated $1.5 million to the AFL-CIO's
institute for a program in
<http://www.latimes.com/topic/intl/france/paris-%28france%29-PLGEO1001006020
11390.topic> France. Because France was both democratic and a U.S. ally, the
endowment did not announce that the funds were going there.

The AFL-CIO official handling the grant in Paris was 74-year-old Irving
Brown, credited with using CIA money after
<http://www.latimes.com/topic/unrest-conflicts-war/wars-interventions/world-
war-ii-%281939-1945%29-EVHST00000110.topic> World War II to help prevent the
communists from taking over the major French labor unions. Brown gave most
of the endowment grant to Force Ouvriere, an anti-communist labor
federation. He also gave $575,000 to a right-wing student group that
plastered Paris with posters attacking Francois Mitterrand, the Socialist
president of France.

In Brown's mind, France was in danger because the
<http://www.latimes.com/topic/politics/government/communist-party-ORGOV00001
17.topic> Communist Party, which had a following of less than 10% of the
electorate, supported Mitterrand.

"We're defending democracy in France," he told the Los Angeles Times. When a
Paris newspaper exposed Brown's role in the campaign, an embarrassedU.S.
Embassy denied it was a government program. But the funds, of course, did
come from the U.S. government.

Since then, there have been accusations of interference in elections or
plebiscites by the National Endowment for Democracy in Panama, Nicaragua,
Chile, Costa Rica and Czechoslovakia. Despite this, the endowment has been
able to withstand all embarrassments and accusations and still enjoy vast
bipartisan support. Congress appropriated $118 million for the endowment's
2012 budget.

In Egypt, the four U.S. organizations under attack for fomenting unrest with
illegal foreign funding were all connected to the endowment. Two - the GOP's
International Republican Institute and the Democratic Party's National
Democratic Institute - are among the groups that make up the endowment's
core constituents. The two other indicted groups, Freedom House and the
International Center for Journalists, receive funds from the endowment.

The history of the National Endowment for Democracy would not be unknown to
Fayza Aboul Naga, the minister of planning and international cooperation who
has been leading the attack against the American organizations. Aboul Naga,
a career diplomat, spent five years in New York in the 1990s as an advisor
to a fellow Egyptian, U.N. Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali. It was
not a good time and place for her to watch American democracy in action.

The Clinton administration, worried about public opinion, used Boutros-Ghali
as a scapegoat whenever American policy went awry at the U.N. When 18 U.S.
troops were killed in Somalia in 1993, for example, the administration
blamed the secretary-general even though the soldiers had been under
American, not U.N., command. During the presidential election campaign of
1996, the Republican candidate, Bob Dole, even mocked the
secretary-general's name and belittled the U.N., regaling crowds by calling
him, "Booootros Booootros-Ghali."

After Clinton's reelection,
<http://www.latimes.com/topic/arts-culture/madeleine-albright-PEHST000025.to
pic> Madeleine Albright, then U.S. ambassador to the U.N. and future
secretary of State, vetoed Boutros-Ghali's bid for a second term;the rest of
the Security Council voted for him. The National Democratic Institute
probably gains no favor with Aboul Naga now by featuring Albright as board
chairman.

We don't know exactly what American activities in Egypt upset Aboul Naga and
other Egyptians. The charges have not been dropped. The groups say they were
registered legally and were engaged in legitimate civil society work. But a
thorough evaluation is needed.

More important, the motives underlying the U.S. funding should be evaluated
as well. There is an American smugness that assumes everyone else must
benefit from emulating our political system. In fact, advising our friends
about their politics demands great sensitivity. Not everyone appreciates our
interference. These private though U.S.-government-funded institutes should
not be in a country where, as seems to be the case in Egypt, they are not
wanted.

Stanley Meisler, a former foreign and diplomatic correspondent for The
Times, is the author most recently of "
<http://www.latimes.com/topic/crime-law-justice/international-law/united-nat
ions-ORCUL000009.topic> United Nations: A History."

Copyright C 2012,  <http://www.latimes.com/> Los Angeles Times



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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