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A Revolting Middle East Policy 

Wednesday, 06 April 2011 04:39 Daniel Greenfield 

 
<http://www.rightsidenews.com/component/option,com_mailto/link,aHR0cDovL3d3d
y5yaWdodHNpZGVuZXdzLmNvbS8yMDExMDQwNjEzMjEwL2VkaXRvcmlhbC9yc24tcGljay1vZi10a
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<http://www.rightsidenews.com/2011040613210/editorial/rsn-pick-of-the-day/a-
revolting-middle-east-policy/print.html> Print

In the last three months we played a role in overthrowing nearly every
Middle Eastern government we were allied with-- that wasn't supporting
terrorism.

We pushed out Ben Ali in Tunisia, but let the Saudis move tanks into
Bahrain. Egypt's Mubarak was a monster who had to go, but Syria's Assad is a
reformer. Now Yemen's Saleh who let us hunt terrorists in his country is on
our hit list <http://www.nysun.com/editorials/so-long-saleh/87289/> , but
the Qatari royal family which is linked to Al-Qaeda
<http://abcnews.go.com/WNT/story?id=129838&page=1>  and finances Al-Jazeera
are our best friends. Gaddafi who cut a deal to give up his nukes got
bombed, Iran which is pushing hard for a nuclear bomb has clear skies.

Middle Eastern leaders who support and finance terrorists got a pass, but
our own allies in the War on Terror got creamed. Iran, Syria and the Gulf
Arab states who are responsible for most of the terrorism against us have
nothing to worry about. Saleh and Mubarak who aided the War on Terror got
shown the door.

Want good relations with the US? Start funding terrorists and building
nukes. That's the only lesson any Middle-Eastern leader can take away from
this disaster. The message we have put out there is that the worse they
treat us, the better we will treat them. We will tolerate enemies and allies
abusing us and plotting to kill us. But allies who actually go out on a limb
to support us and act as if they have common interests with us. That we
won't put up with. They have to go.

The tally of stupidity in what fanciful pundits called the 'Arab Spring' is
almost endless. Not only did we mistake factional protests for democratic
change and the will of the people, but we got behind groups and
organizations overtly hostile to us and took their side against governments
that had actually been friendly to us.

Obama intervened politically in Egypt on behalf of Islamists and
Anti-American leftists, bringing down the government of the only major
Muslim country in the region that was not actively funding terrorists. A
government that not only offered significant help during the War on Terror,
but was the only non-Islamist bulwark against Iran. All that is almost
certainly gone now.

Bush's bloodless deal with Gaddafi got him out of the nukes and terror
business. That too is gone now. The rebels are losing and Gaddafi isn't
going to be intimidated by us ever again. The US went in like a lion and out
like a lamb. Bush's invasion of Iraq intimidated Gaddafi into giving in.
Obama's botched assault on Libya has reassured every thug from Syria to Iran
that they have nothing to fear from us.

On any threat level map, North Africa which was reasonably quiet under Bush
has just gone dark red. And it won't take much for it to go bright red now.
>From Tunisia to Libya to Egypt-- the Islamists have gotten a major shot in
the arm on the other side of the Mediterranean. Al-Qaeda fighters are
swarming within sight of Italy. In a day, Libyan fighters can travel by boat
to Italy's Pelagie islands. When Eisenhower wanted to invade Italy from
North Africa, he began with the islands as a jumping off point. Muslim
'refugees' have been doing their own version of 'Operation Corkscrew' by
using the islands to invade Italy. And once inside Italy they have access to
the entire European Union.

The 'revolutions' have targeted North Africa. Half of North Africa has
either has either been wholly or partly overthrown. Morocco and Algeria are
the sole holdouts. If the Brotherhood takes Egypt then they won't be holding
out for long. And then there will be a Caliphate within striking distance of
Southern Europe.

But Europe supported all this in the name of democracy and human rights. And
European leaders organized a bombing campaign against Gaddafi when he was
the only thing keeping half of North Africa from moving to Europe. America,
which could have saved Mubarak with a word, instead called for his removal
in the name of a protest movement organized by the Muslim Brotherhood and
the leftist Kefaya group which had gotten its start protesting against the
American overthrow of Saddam.

What country in its right mind backs the overthrow of any ally by an enemy?
We do. When Egyptian socialist thug Nasser nationalized the Suez Canal, and
England and France sent in the troops, we threatened to destroy the British
economy unless they withdrew. Our reward for that was that Nasser's Egypt
became the chief Soviet spearhead in the region. For the last two decades,
our number one foreign policy priority in the Middle East is to force Israel
to hand over territory to PA leader Mahmoud Abbas, a graduate of the KGB's
Patrice Lumumba University, whose other famous alumnus was Carlos the
Jackal.

Carter backed the leftists and Islamists over the Shah of Iran. Then he
backed the Islamists over the leftists. That's what turned Iran into the
paradise it is today. This time around we backed the leftists and Islamists
over Mubarak. Now the leftists are being swallowed up by the Islamists who
have been waiting 80 years for this moment.

>From the halls of power to the front page, no Egyptian was a bigger
enthusiast of the January 25 protests than our own political and cultural
leaders. The press was full of posed photographs, glowing descriptions of a
people's revolution and denunciations of Mubarak. Activists whose chief
political experiencing was retweeting memes got full page interviews.
Governments and Soros' pet NGO's got behind Kefaya and Iranian puppet El
Baradei
<http://israelmatzav.blogspot.com/2009/10/elbaradei-israel-biggest-threat-to
.html> . Columnists glowingly portrayed the pathetic El Baradei
<http://sultanknish.blogspot.com/2011/01/friday-afternoon-roundup-challenge-
of.html?m=0>  as the democratic future of Egypt.

Then Mubarak stepped down and the 'heroes' of Tahrir Square got stomped flat
by the military and the brotherhood. The Muslim Brotherhood's successful
referendum campaign was an explicit mandate for Islamism over secularism.
Protests have been banned, curfews imposed and the army is arresting and
humiliating the remaining pro-democracy activists. And El Baradei and Kefaya
are playing the only card left in their empty deck. Israel.

El Baradei is vowing war with Israel
<http://newzeal.blogspot.com/2011/04/elbaradeis-agenda-war-with-israel.html>
. Mahmoud Salem, aka Sandmonkey, the favorite Egyptian activist of so many
neo-conservative bloggers, is encouraging Egyptians to support El Baradei
over Amr Moussa, by tweeting that Amr Moussa is a Yankee-Zionist puppet
<http://www.rightsidenews.com/2011040613210/editorial/rsn-pick-of-the-day/a-
revolting-middle-east-policy.html#%21/Sandmonkey/status/52102846426001408>
and El Baradei is the only man Israel
<http://www.rightsidenews.com/2011040613210/editorial/rsn-pick-of-the-day/a-
revolting-middle-east-policy.html#%21/Sandmonkey/status/51407139893280768>
is afraid of. There's your liberal Democratic Egypt
<http://pajamasmedia.com/tatler/2011/04/04/israeli-sick-egyptians-need-dr-ph
il/> trotting out xenophobia and warmongering
<http://pajamasmedia.com/tatler/2011/04/04/elbaradei-if-israel-attacks-gaza-
its-war/>  in a futile bid to get ahead of the Muslim Brotherhood. And its
campaign slogan sounds a lot like the cries of "Jew, Jew" by the men who
beat and raped Lara Logan.

Baradei is the darling of the same pundits and politicians who denounce
nationalist Israeli candidates as extremists. Yet no Israeli party runs on a
platform of war with Egypt. And there's your fundamental difference, not
just between Egypt and Israel, but between the Muslim and non-Muslim world.
A clash of civilizations between cultures with radically different moral
codes and understanding of the value of human life. Much as Western pundits
would like to believe that El Baradei is on their side of this moral
equation, he isn't. 

Egypt's problem was never Mubarak. It isn't Israel or America or globalism.
It was always Egypt. And the problem will go on being Egypt no matter who is
at the wheel six months or six years from now. The fundamental problem of
the Muslim world is not a lack of democracy. That is only the symptom. Just
as our fundamental problem is not Obama. He too is only the symptom.

Changing governments may improve matters, but without altering the
underlying dynamic, the big picture will not change. And that dynamic is
rooted in the culture. It cannot be changed by elections. Leaders reflect
the culture, and even the occasional ruthless leader who imposes change is a
product of historic forces at work. Egypt does not have a political problem,
it has a cultural problem. And the US does not have a political problem, it
has a cultural problem. Problems are reflected in destructive behavior.

Imagine if the Soviet Union had aided in the overthrow of Cuba, East Germany
and the rest of the Warsaw Pact. That might have happened if Reagan had been
put in charge of the USSR. And putting Obama in charge of America was like
putting Reagan in charge of the USSR. But who put Obama in charge of
America? For all the Soros money, fraud and the maneuvering behind the
scenes-- it took a major cultural shift for that to be possible. The crisis
of America can be found in that shift. And that of our revolting Middle East
policy.

 



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