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Money to Meddle - By Marc Lynch | Foreign Policy

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Money to Meddle
Can the wealthy powerbrokers of the Persian Gulf create the Egypt they want?

BY MARC LYNCH | JULY 11, 2013

Many Egyptians furiously contest whether the overthrow of former President Mohamed Morsy should be considered a revolution or a coup. But the fiercely anti-revolutionary monarchs of the Gulf have no such doubts. Within days of Morsy's fall, three conservative Gulf Cooperation Council states pledged $12 billion in support to the new regime. It's pretty clear what the counter-revolutionary Gulf monarchs expect for their generosity, and it's not democracy. The conservative Gulf states would like to buy a new Mubarakism and a final end to all of this Arab uprising unpleasantness. But they are unlikely to succeed.

The $12 billion in support came from three members of the GCC's conservative axis: Saudi Arabia, the core of the anti-revolutionary monarchical bloc, pledged $5 billion; the fiercely anti-Islamist and anti-democracy United Arab Emirates pledged $3 billion; and Kuwait, traditionally more liberal but now locked in a debilitating political crisis over the powers of its Parliament, promised $4 billion. Those cash infusions come on top of years of political and media support for the anti-Brotherhood forces in Egypt.

This massive financial support follows on, and replaces, billions of dollars given by Qatar to the previous Muslim Brotherhood government. It is likely to prove equally ineffectual in delivering the desired payoffs, though. As Doha discovered to its dismay, money will buy only temporary love and symbolic returns. Whatever Gulf paymasters might hope, the new Egyptian government will be forced to respond to its own intensely turbulent, polarized, and dysfunctional domestic political arena. No outside player -- not Washington, Riyadh, Doha, or Tehran -- can really hope to effectively shape the new Egyptian politics for long.

Many, if not most, of those who demanded Morsy's departure did so to save Egypt from the Muslim Brotherhood and restore a democratic transition, not to bring back the old regime. Nothing in Egypt's recent history suggests that the new government will be able to easily pacify its intensely mobilized public or that any external power will be able to control its politics. General Abdul Fatah al-Sisi's "neo-SCAF" may appear to be much better at the Egyptian political game than his bungling predecessors, but its muddled transitional roadmap looks as poorly conceived as the one the military failed so badly at implementing in 2011. Indeed, as anti-Muslim Brotherhood rage fades as a unifying force, Riyadh and Abu Dhabi may find themselves taking over Qatar's role as the external force blamed for ongoing economic and political failure.

The UAE and Saudi Arabia had multiple reasons for supporting the anti-Morsy mobilization. Their deep antipathy towards and fear of the Muslim Brotherhood was a primary motivation. The UAE has been leading the charge against the Brotherhood at home and across the region, for years. The recently concluded trial of 94 alleged Brotherhood activists is only the tip of the iceberg. Dubai's controversial police chief Dhahi Khalfan Tamim has been sounding the alarm bells for years, while Emirati media have been flooded with anti-Brotherhood reporting and commentary.

Saudi hostility to the Brotherhood is driven not by any devotion to secularism, of course, but by the fierce competition between the Brotherhood and its own Salafi Islamist networks. Riyadh seeks leadership over Islamist political networks for both domestic and regional reasons. The Saudi regime worked for years to co-opt the Brotherhood-inclined "Sahwa" Islamist networks that drove political dissent in the early 1990s -- and it still fears their remobilization (for example, the highly publicized open letter by Sahwa leader Salman al-Odeh warning the government against ignoring public discontent). Saudi support for the jihad in Syria is likely driven in part by the same concerns as its anti-Brotherhood campaign. Just as the Afghan jihad of the 1980s redirected Islamist energies away from home following the traumatic seizure of the Great Mosque of Mecca, the Syrian jihad focuses Islamist energies abroad, working with rather than against Riyadh's leadership. In Egypt, as in Syria, the Saudis don't oppose Islamism, just competing Islamists.

The rivalry with Qatar also clearly drove the calculations of Saudi Arabia and the UAE. The cooperation between these GCC states in the early days of the Arab uprising was always clearly the exception. Their rivalry and mutual disdain runs deep, and Doha's rivals have moved rapidly and aggressively to take advantage of the departure of the Emir Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani and Foreign Minister Hamad bin Jassim. What happened in Doha is clearly not staying in Doha. Morsy's fall represents a serious setback for Qatar's regional policy, but not the only one. Qatar's men in the Syrian opposition have been sidelined, for now. Its leading Islamist figure, Yusuf al-Qaradawi, has capitulated to the Saudi anti-Shiite line, and now rumors are flying that he has been expelled from Doha. Meanwhile, the Saudis are moving to re-establish their traditional domination of the Arab media, with Al-Jazeera floundering and the influential (allegedly Qatari-backed) Arab populist editor Abdel Bari Atwan suddenly departing the pan-Arab daily al-Quds al-Arabi.

Most broadly, Riyadh and Abu Dhabi saw the chance to finally put the nail in the coffin of the detested Arab uprisings by re-establishing the old order in the most important of the transitional states. They were horrified by Mubarak's fall, by the demonstration effect across the region, and by America's seeming embrace of the uprisings. From the start, they worked to divert, prevent, or control the Arab uprisings: helping to crush the uprising in Bahrain, sending massive financial assistance to less wealthy fellow monarchs in Oman, Jordan, and Morocco, and seeking to control the transition process in Yemen. Their media, in contrast to Al-Jazeera's celebratory coverage, tended to emphasize the negative consequences of the Arab uprisings, the perfidy of Islamists, the carnage of Syria and Libya, and Egypt's political chaos.

A successful Egyptian democratic transition, with or without the Muslim Brotherhood, represented the greatest threat to this vision of conservative restoration. Such an Egypt would offer a powerful example of the possibility of democratic change through peaceful uprising, and would likely pursue an independent foreign policy which would challenge the Saudi-backed regional order. Gulf leaders no doubt calculated that Egypt would return to its rightful place in the official Arab order. But their vision of Egypt's political reset is not to 1954, no matter how much they want to see the Brotherhood crushed. They would like to prevent, not encourage, the emergence of a new form of Gamal Abdel Nasser's independent foreign policy that could challenge their own. A reset to the late 2000s, with Egypt playing a subservient supporting role to Saudi diplomacy, will suffice.

What might this look like? The blueprint for the "new Arab Awakening" presented this week in Foreign Policy by UAE Foreign Minister Anwar Gargash suggests a useful outline. This new Awakening for which he urges support contains no mention of democracy, popular mobilization, or media freedoms. The focus instead is entirely on countering Islamic "extremists," economic development, and competent technocratic government (and a token wave toward the Israeli-Palestinian conflict). There is nothing in this which could not describe the agenda of Gamal Mubarak's National Democratic Party circa 2010. Or, to be glib, the new Arab awakening means "go back to sleep or the Muslim Brotherhood will get you."

For now, anti-Muslim Brotherhood rage has allowed the new regime to avoid the contradictions between revolution and counter-revolution. Amazingly, the SCAF has somehow managed to persuade Egypt that Washington's main ally in Egypt has been the Muslim Brotherhood and not, as has always been true, the military. State media along with many of the new "independent" media have eagerly leaped to the task, flooding the zone with denunciations of Brotherhood "terror" and rewriting recent history to glorify the role of the armed forces and police. A Bahrain-style campaign on social media blasts all would-be bridge builders and moderates as Brotherhood sympathizers and traitors. The streets are festooned with posters attacking Al-Jazeera and Tamarod banners declare "Obama supports terrorism." The Brotherhood's defiant response, and the support it has received from international Islamist networks and from Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, feed this polarization.

None of this is likely to work over even the short term, though. Mubarakism failed for a reason, and the new version is unlikely to fare better. Anti-Islamism will have a short-half life as a legitimating formula for the new leadership. While the Gulf states and the old elites may have taken advantage of the uprising against Morsy, they neither created nor controlled popular anger. A significant portion of the June 30 protest wave wants continuing revolution and the building of democracy, not Gulf tutelage or the restoration of the pre-2011 status quo. The mobilized Egyptian public will have little patience when the new leaders again fail to restore order, fix the economy, or find political consensus. The new infusion of cash from the Gulf will stave off disaster for a while, but will no more likely fix the massive underlying problems than did the Qatari support, while subsidy reforms or other needed measures will galvanize public outrage.

Washington is now more trapped than ever between its professed hopes for democratic change in the region and its alliance with the anti-democratic regimes of the Gulf. Washington seems likely to accept the new realities and to try to save face by urging the Gulf to join it in pressuring the SCAF to rapidly restore democratic rule ... as if that were a shared goal. The United States probably should suspend its aid to Egypt, as is legally required, but the Gulf assistance mitigates any influence which such a threat might offer. The administration's intensive consultations in recent days with the Egyptian military and with Gulf leaders suggests that Washington will find it easier to work with the new-old constellation of power.

But it would be a mistake to easily go along. July 3 might have been more coup than revolution, but the massive mobilization was very real. The Arab uprisings are not over, no matter how much the Gulf monarchies might wish that they were. A neo-Mubarakist restoration will no more bring stability to Egypt than did the pre-revolutionary Mubarak regime. There is no solution to Egypt's problems without overcoming the country's polarization and establishing meaningful democracy, neither of which are high on the agenda of Egypt's new Gulf backers.

Marc Lynch is professor of political science and international affairs at George Washington University and an editor of Foreign Policy's Middle East Channel.
 
Another columnist that has same prediction:

David Ignatius: Saudi Arabia stirs the Middle East pot - The Washington Post

Saudi Arabia stirs the Middle East pot

By David Ignatius, Published: August 21

Watching Saudi Arabia and other wealthy Gulf states line up behind the bloody counterrevolution in Egypt, you can’t help suspecting that these conservative monarchies are ready to fight to the last Egyptian against the Muslim Brotherhood — waging what amounts to a proxy war against the regional threat of Islamist extremism.

The events of the past few weeks have been the culmination of a trend building since February 2011, when President Hosni Mubarak was pushed from power in what many influential Saudis saw as U.S. abandonment of a traditional ally. Ever since, the Saudis and other Gulf states have been arguing, publicly and privately, that U.S. power is waning and that they must take more responsibility for their own security.

Leaders in Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain have been disappointed that the United States hasn’t joined them in embracing the military government in Egypt that toppled President Mohamed Morsi. They see this as further evidence of American power in retreat globally, rather than, in simpler (and more accurate) terms, a function of the American public’s wariness, after Iraq and Afghanistan, of intervening in Muslim domestic conflicts.

This we-don’t-need-America tone was especially clear in a comment the other day by Prince Saud al-Faisal, the Saudi foreign minister, during a visit to France: “Concerning those who announced stopping their assistance to Egypt or threatening to stop them, the Arab and Islamic nation is rich with its people and capabilities and will provide a helping hand to Egypt.”

What’s troubling about Gulf support for the Egyptian generals and their crackdown is that it repeats one of the dominant themes of modern Arab political life: the meddling of the Saudis and fellow conservative states in other Arab conflicts partly to keep turmoil outside their borders. It’s what the divide-and-conquer British used to describe as a “forward” strategy.

The list of Saudi interventions is long: With the Kuwaitis and others, they bankrolled the Palestine Liberation Organization in Lebanon to the point of fomenting against the Christian-led government a civil war that raged for 15 years. They financed Saddam Hussein’s eight-year war against Iran; then, when an overconfident Hussein invaded Kuwait in 1990, they pleaded for a U.S. invasion to drive him back. After U.S. forces invaded once more in 2003 to overthrow Hussein, the Saudis backed Sunni groups in Iraq.

Then there were the Saudi-backed proxy wars against the old Soviet Union, most notably in Afghanistan. The Saudis (with strong U.S. support) encouraged Muslim insurgents, including the Afghan mujahideen groups that morphed into al-Qaeda and the Taliban. Washington has been struggling with the consequences of those covert actions since Sept. 11, 2001.

Saudi Arabia today deeply fears Iran, whose Shiite Muslim religion and Persian culture make it a traditional regional rival. The Saudis back Sunni forces in Lebanon against Iran’s proxy, Hezbollah; they back Sunni forces in Iraq who are waging an increasingly violent insurgency against the Shiite Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki.

Then there’s Syria: Saudi Arabia is a leading supporter of Syrian rebels against President Bashar al-Assad. The Saudis dislike Assad for many reasons, but principally because he’s an Iranian proxy. Sometimes the Saudis work with the United States and Jordan to help the moderate rebel leader Gen. Salim Idriss. Other times, they allow money to flow to more extreme jihadist forces.

Complicating this regional, internecine rivalry is Saudi animosity toward Qatar and Turkey, which back the Muslim Brotherhood across the region and provided Morsi with financial and political support. These quarrels may seem at times to be petty and myopic, but they have devastating consequences.

The core problem for Saudi Arabia and the other Gulf regimes is that they have immense wealth resting uneasily on conservative political systems. They resist change, even as their young populations get ever more connected electronically with the outside world — and its online trends of both secularization and radical jihad. The U.A.E. has tried, with some success, to rebrand itself as a “moderate” force for modernization. A similar effort in Bahrain blew up in 2011 when the Saudis backed the conservative monarchy in a violent move against parties representing the Shiite majority.

The Saudis and the Emiratis must decide how best to protect their own security and stability. The United States shouldn’t assume that Gulf countries’ interests and its own coincide. The idea that a Saudi-backed crackdown in Egypt that drives the Muslim Brotherhood underground will protect the conservative monarchies seems short-sighted, to put it mildly. But it’s their money.
 
These countries have a military agreement / defense pact with the US, Saudi Arabia has no reserve military force, the US military is its reserve in case of war, nothing to worry about for them.
 
@Yzd Khalifa @Arabian Legend Dear Brothers, I know you guys will not like this thread, but I reserve the right to disagree and criticize a friends action, if I believe that friend is making a mistake. I think a friend who criticizes out of concern for the well being of a friend is a better friend than a friend who prefers to be more like a servile yes man.

I agree with both of the above articles. I think it was short sighted on the part of Saudi strategists, to support the coup by Sisi, not preventing the killings by Sisi and encouraging the continuing crack down on MB supporters by Sisi to crush MB in Egypt.

I am no fan, supporter or part of Muslim Brotherhood, Salafism or any form of political Islam as they exist now, I believe they are all misguided to some extent. But I am a big believer in democracy to empower the masses and for the evolution of human societies. From that belief, I support allowing any group or political party to freely participate in democracy, even if the groups are based on Islamic ideals, affinity and solidarity, as long as these groups do not threaten democracy itself and become authoritarian, like it happened in Iran.

Sisi toppled Morsi with a promise to Egyptian people that he will hold election and bring a better and more inclusive democracy. I am hoping that KSA and other Gulf govts. who backed Sisi, will remind Sisi to keep his promise to Egyptian people so Sisi does not become the 2nd Mubarak. Even Mubarak allowed MB to participate in elections and hold some positions in parliament, so there should not be any restriction on MB to participate in politics. Lets believe in the good sense and judgement of Egyptian voters themselves who can easily keep MB out of power, if they feel MB is going to subvert democracy and make Egypt into a Sunni version of Iran. Even if the MB wins elections again, which I doubt they will after Morsi's poor performance in last one year, the Army is always there as a rear guard of the Egyptian people to overthrow them, if they try to overreach and destroy democracy.
 
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These countries have a military agreement / defense pact with the US, Saudi Arabia has no reserve military force, the US military is its reserve in case of war, nothing to worry about for them.

True, but how about Iraq? Don't you guys have the same agreement with the US, to balance too much undue influence from Iran?

The US military as the preeminent super power needs to ensure global oil supply, avoid any disruption and thus maintain steady market prices, that benefits all countries of the world who consumes oil. So the US is actually doing the world a favor by protecting these hydro carbon rich states.

But then one could argue that instability leads to higher oil prices and it is better for oil rich states (more revenue) as well as the environment (less consumption and less green house gas).
 
True, but how about Iraq? Don't you guys have the same agreement with the US, to balance too much undue influence from Iran?

The US military as the preeminent super power needs to ensure global oil supply, avoid any disruption and thus maintain steady market prices, that benefits all countries of the world who consumes oil. So the US is actually doing the world a favor by protecting these hydro carbon rich states.

But then one could argue that instability leads to higher oil prices and it is better for oil rich states (more revenue) as well as the environment (less consumption and less green house gas).

Iraq has no allies, no official military alliance or pact with anyone and is neutral, though look in Iraqi military thread latest post they are on the way to sign some possible treaty.

Ofc the US has to protect the oil and keep the gulf open for export otherwise the world will face economic crisis especially Europe, higher oil prices are better for the oil producing countries but why would the US want that, they are the ones responsible for protecting it anyway.
 
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I agree with both of the above articles. I think it was short sighted on the part of Saudi strategists

Actually it was a very smart and calculated move on their behalf. You simply have to come to terms with the fact that Saudi Arabia is THE counter-revolutionary force in the region.

Arab revolts (that results in democratic governments) represent a grave danger to their rule.
I think this time Saudi got little lucky because it seems Muslim Brotherhood is genuinly hated by most Egyptians.
Which is great for Saudi, because they also hate the MB.
 
These countries have a military agreement / defense pact with the US, Saudi Arabia has no reserve military force, the US military is its reserve in case of war, nothing to worry about for them.

Actually, we do have 75k reservists :lol: and the number is expected to go higher to 150k :lol:
 
Iraq has no allies, no official military alliance or pact with anyone and is neutral, though look in Iraqi military thread latest post they are on the way to sign some possible treaty.

Ofc the US has to protect the oil and keep the gulf open for export otherwise the world will face economic crisis especially Europe, higher oil prices are better for the oil producing countries but why would the US want that, they are the ones responsible for protecting it anyway.

Actually I prefer higher oil prices even if it causes economic crisis in current world order, two reasons:

- good for Muslim world even though only a few Muslim countries have oil/gas
- good for the environment, less consumption and less green house gas

But the US, EU, China, Japan, Korea, India and rest of the world, all of them want cheaper oil/gas because their industrial or developing economies and their current world dominant position depends on cheap oil/gas. Even if solar, wind, nuclear produce increasing share of energy, there is no substitute for oil for war making machines, like tanks, fighter planes etc. So the US on behalf of these countries ensures the security of these small states, and in return they provide cheap and abundant oil.
 
Actually I prefer higher oil prices even if it causes economic crisis in current world order, two reasons:

- good for Muslim world even though only a few Muslim countries have oil/gas
- good for the environment, less consumption and less green house gas

But the US, EU, China, Japan, Korea, India and rest of the world, all of them want cheaper oil/gas because their industrial or developing economies and their current world dominant position depends on cheap oil/gas. Even if solar, wind, nuclear produce increasing share of energy, there is no substitute for oil for war making machines, like tanks, fighter planes etc. So the US on behalf of these countries ensures the security of these small states, and in return they provide cheap and abundant oil.

Well it is always better for us if the price rises, not for where I live but for the country, though to I am not a real oil expert to say a lot about this.

No, the RSF. The SANG has another 20k reservists. You may count the MoD Commandos if you wish.

According to a US military veteran the US has 2 mechanized/armoured divisions of tanks pre positioned in Saudi Arabia and 3 pre positioned armoured divisions in the GCC, unmanned though, they can be manned whenever war breaks out by the Americans ( in the rest of GCC, large number in Kuwait & Qatar ) as the Saudi constitution does not allow foreign troops on their soil anymore.

All M1A2s are operated or in storage ? according to him many are in storage pre positioned for the US military if needed.
 
Did Saudi Arabia send millions of its own citizens to protest against the Muslim Brotherhood inability to rule or something ?! Some people are actually complaining that Saudi Arabia is helping Egypt politically and economically in this tough times.. Maybe Saudi Arabia should kick all the Egyptian working in Saudi Arabia out to make some people happy.
 
Actually it was a very smart and calculated move on their behalf. You simply have to come to terms with the fact that Saudi Arabia is THE counter-revolutionary force in the region.

Arab revolts (that results in democratic governments) represent a grave danger to their rule.
I think this time Saudi got little lucky because it seems Muslim Brotherhood is genuinly hated by most Egyptians.
Which is great for Saudi, because they also hate the MB.

With due respect, I disagree with your views and agree more with Marc Lynch and David Ignatius in above articles.

Saudi Arabia is a monarchy, so it is natural for them to dislike democratic movement like the Arab Spring, but they are no where near murderous, treacherous and sectarian as your own theocratic regime in Iran, as demonstrated with their support for Assad in Syria.

The relationship between MB and Saudi's are complex and long and at this moment in history, you are correct that many anti-MB Egyptians and Saudi's found common cause, but the main logic of the OP is that this common cause will be short lived, specially if Sisi tries to become Mubarak 2.0.

Sisi as Mubarak 2.0 will mean death of Arab Spring, a step back for Egypt and the region, something no Egyptian or Arab masses will accept or tolerate, in my opinion.
 
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