More than 200 people were killed after security forces evicted two protest camps in Cairo [AFP]
Al jazeera -- The
bloodshed unleashed when Egypt's security forces assaulted two protest
camps in Cairo on Wednesday has likely suspended hopes of any imminent
political solution to the six-week standoff over deposed President
Mohamed Morsi. But international mediators who had worked to broker a
compromise believe that a deal was possible - and may have been
overruled by Egypt's security chiefs, in a grim portent for the
country's political future.
Mediators
believe they had won the consent of the Muslim Brotherhood, which led
the pro-Morsi protests, for a deal that would have brought the two sides
back from the brink and reintegrated the Brotherhood into politics.
That deal, according to some familiar with the content of the
negotiations, would have required a series of confidence-building
measures, mostly on the Brotherhood's part. Despite their fiery
rhetoric, some of the movement's leaders who had managed to avoid the
dragnet that saw thousands of their comrades jailed and their protest
camps under siege, had been quietly engaged in talks.
The
political forces that had backed the military's ouster of Morsi on July
3, however, were divided over seeking accommodation with the
Brotherhood. Some officials in the military-backed government, including
the interior minister, had warned they were prepared to disperse the
sit-ins by force, but Vice President Mohamed ElBaradei, a secular
liberal Nobel Peace Prize laureate, warned publicly that he would resign
if the security forces were unleashed. (ElBaradei made good on his word
and announced his resignation amid Wednesday's turmoil.)
"We
had a political plan that was on the table, that had been accepted by
the other side [the Muslim Brotherhood]," EU envoy Bernardino Leon, who
helped lead the mediation effort with US Deputy Secretary of State
William Burns, told Reuters. "They [the authorities] could have taken
this option. So all that has happened today was unnecessary."
No clear endgame
And
in a breakdown that may be telling for Egypt's future, it appears to
have been hard-line security chiefs who scuttled the deal, dismissing
the Brotherhood's apparent willingness to compromise as a ruse to gain
time. But Wednesday's offensive by security forces appears to lack a
clear political endgame.
"Is
Egypt closer to dealing with this very serious political divide and
crisis? The obvious answer to that is no," Al Jazeera was told by
Michael Wahid Hanna, a senior fellow with Washington's Century
Foundation, who had spoken with figures involved in the negotiations.
"This runs the risk of metastasizing the problem, expanding it," he
said, predicting greater militancy among Islamists.
According
to participants in the talks, Hanna said, General Abdul Fattah el-Sisi
had appeared ambivalent about whether to clear the sit-ins at Cairo
University in Giza and at the Rabaa el-Adaweya Mosque in Nasr City,
which had turned into sprawling, full-service camps after six weeks of
protest. The military chief was "not on the hawkish end of internal
deliberations", Hanna said.
US
officials had also clearly pressured Sisi and others to refrain from
attacking the protests. The Pentagon publicised the fact that Defence
Secretary Chuck Hagel had regularly spoken with Sisi by phone following
Morsi's ouster, while Burns spent nearly a week in talks with different
power brokers in Cairo earlier this month. Western diplomats involved in
those talks seemed almost baffled by their failure.
[ElBaradei's resignation] chips away at the civilian character of the
state, and it begins to look much more like a military regime. |
"The hardliners have a remarkable ability to ignore reality," an unnamed diplomat told Reuters.
In
his press conference, Interior Minister Mohamed Ibrahim reinforced
fears among both Brotherhood supporters and many liberals and leftists
that the July 3 coup marks a return of the regime of longtime president
Hosni Mubarak. Ibrahim promised "that as soon as conditions stabilize
and the Egyptian street stabilises, as soon as possible, security will
be restored to this nation as if it was before January 25, and more".
January 25 refers to the day, in 2011, when Mubarak was ousted.
"These
people have a very warped view of what counts as restraint," said Joe
Stork, deputy director of the Middle East and North Africa division at
Human Rights Watch.
Stork
said there was "no question" that some of the demonstrators at the
sit-ins had been armed, and he believed that reports of anti-Morsi
protesters being detained and tortured in the sit-ins were credible.
Still, he said, security forces had far abused their authority.
Even
though some of the protesters were armed, Stork said, most were
unarmed. "So it was a policing situation, it wasn't a military clash,"
he continued, suggesting that the action of the security forces had
violated international standards.
The
political fallout of the security forces' action against the protest
camps remains to be seen. There were many signs that harsh action to
clear the sit-ins had some measure of popular support. But ElBaradei's
resignation may be telling, because, according to Hanna, it "chips away
at the civilian character of the state, and it begins to look much more
like a military regime".
US reaction
That
would pose a problem for the US, which supports the Egyptian military
with an annual stipend of $1.3bn, but whose laws require cutting
military aid in the event of a coup. The Obama administration has
declined to characterise Morsi's ouster as such.
Secretary
of State John Kerry on Wednesday condemned the crackdown, calling it
"deplorable" and a "serious blow to reconciliation". And, he warned,
"The interim government and the military, which together possess the
preponderance of power in this confrontation, have a unique
responsibility to prevent further violence".
An
administration source told CNN that the White House was considering
cancelling this year's Operation Bright Star, a huge, biennial military
exercise between the US and Egypt. The Pentagon declined to comment on
the report.
Marc
Lynch, a George Washington University historian of the Middle East,
called for the administration to "suspend all aid, keep the embassy in
Cairo closed, and refrain from treating the military regime as a
legitimate government" if it "remains on its current path".
But
Sisi and most of those he appointed believe - and perhaps rightly so -
that the majority of Egyptians sympathise with their stated goal of
"stabilising" the country, even if that means pushing the Brotherhood
underground. ElBaradei's stance, in fact, may be a lonely one. Hours
before he tendered his resignation, the National Salvation Front (NSF) -
the country's broadest opposition coalition, founded in November to
counter Morsi's power grabs and led for most of its duration by
ElBaradei - issued a statement applauding the crackdown, saying that
Egypt had "raised its head high in victory over those who traffic in the
name of religion".
Ahmed
Khairy, a member of the liberal Free Egyptians Party - one of the NSF's
primary members - said the Brotherhood had brought the crackdown upon
themselves, and that "the real popular will was to push them out from
the ruling position, because what we have reached now is due to their
stubbornness and denying the facts on the ground".
After
ElBaradei resigned, the NSF expressed its regret, chastising him in a
statement for not consulting beforehand, and stating the body's
"steadfast" support for the military-appointed government.
"As
you know, I saw other alternatives to resolve the crisis peacefully,
and there were ideas on the table for a national consensus, but things
didn't go that way," ElBaradei wrote in his resignation letter to
President Mansour. "Reconciliation will come in the end, but after we
have suffered dearly, which in my opinion, I thought was possible to
avoid."
Follow Evan on Twitter: @evanchill
No comments:
Post a Comment