Defending the Coup
By DAVID BROOKS | The New York Times | 4 July 2013
The debate on Egypt has been between those who emphasize process and those who emphasize substance.
Those who emphasize process have said that the government of President
Mohamed Morsi was freely elected and that its democratic support has
been confirmed over and over. The most important thing, they say, is to
protect the fragile democratic institutions and to oppose those who
would destroy them through armed coup.
Democracy, the argument goes, will eventually calm extremism. Members of
the Muslim Brotherhood may come into office with radical beliefs, but
then they have to fix potholes and worry about credit ratings and
popular opinion. Governing will make them more moderate.
Those who emphasize substance, on the other hand, argue that members of
the Muslim Brotherhood are defined by certain beliefs. They reject
pluralism, secular democracy and, to some degree, modernity. When you
elect fanatics, they continue, you have not advanced democracy. You have
empowered people who are going to wind up subverting democracy. The
important thing is to get people like that out of power, even if it
takes a coup. The goal is to weaken political Islam, by nearly any
means.
World events of the past few months have vindicated those who take the
substance side of the argument. It has become clear — in Egypt, Turkey,
Iran, Gaza and elsewhere — that radical Islamists are incapable of
running a modern government. Many have absolutist, apocalyptic
mind-sets. They have a strange fascination with a culture of death.
“Dying for the sake of God is more sublime than anything,” declared one speaker at a pro-Morsi rally in Cairo on Tuesday.
As Adam Garfinkle, the editor of The American Interest, put it in an essay recently,
for this sort of person “there is no need for causality, since that
would imply a diminution of God’s power.” This sort of person “does not
accept the existence of an objective fact separate from how he feels
about it.”
Islamists might be determined enough to run effective opposition
movements and committed enough to provide street-level social services.
But they lack the mental equipment to govern. Once in office, they are
always going to centralize power and undermine the democracy that
elevated them.
Nathan Brown made that point about the Muslim Brotherhood recently in The New Republic:
“The tight-knit organization built for resilience under
authoritarianism made for an inward-looking, even paranoid movement when
it tried to refashion itself as a governing party.”
Once elected, the Brotherhood subverted judicial review, cracked down on
civil society, arrested opposition activists, perverted the
constitution-writing process, concentrated power and made democratic
deliberations impossible. [sounds like the CPP commies]
It’s no use lamenting Morsi’s bungling because incompetence is built
into the intellectual DNA of radical Islam. We’ve seen that in Algeria,
Iran, Palestine and Egypt: real-world, practical ineptitude that leads
to the implosion of the governing apparatus.
The substance people are right. Promoting elections is generally a good
thing even when they produce victories for democratic forces we disagree
with. But elections are not a good thing when they lead to the
elevation of people whose substantive beliefs fall outside the
democratic orbit. It’s necessary to investigate the core of a party’s
beliefs, not just accept anybody who happens to emerge from a democratic
process.
This week’s military coup may merely bring Egypt back to where it was: a
bloated and dysfunctional superstate controlled by a self-serving
military elite. But at least radical Islam, the main threat to global
peace, has been partially discredited and removed from office.
The Obama administration has not handled this situation particularly
well. It has shown undue deference to a self-negating democratic
process. The American ambassador to Cairo, Anne Patterson, has done what
ambassadors tend to do: She tried to build relationships with whoever
is in power. This created the appearance
that she is subservient to the Brotherhood. It alienated the Egyptian
masses. It meant that the United States looked unprepared for and
hostile to the popular movement that has now arisen.
In reality, the U.S. has no ability to influence political events in
Egypt in any important way. The only real leverage point is at the level
of ideas. Right now, as Walter Russell Mead of Bard College put it,
there are large populations across the Middle East who feel intense
rage and comprehensive dissatisfaction with the status quo but who have
no practical idea how to make things better. The modern thinkers who
might be able to tell them have been put in jail or forced into exile.
The most important thing outsiders can do is promote those people and
defend those people, decade after decade.
It’s not that Egypt doesn’t have a recipe for a democratic transition.
It seems to lack even the basic mental ingredients.
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