The mood in Tahrir Square may be gloomy, but Egypt is right where
it should be.
By Steven A. Cook
Egypt seems sapped now
It
may be hard to believe -- with the weekly Friday protests, last week's teachers
strike, student sit-ins, and the Sept. 9 storming of the Israeli embassy -- but
there is something languid about Cairo these days. Perhaps it was the long,
hot, and very tense summer, but the creativity and positive energy that marked
Egypt between January and June seems sapped. Whatever is going on in the
streets, and recently at the campus of the American University in Cairo, seems
forced -- a strained effort to do something, anything, to once again capture
the lightning in a bottle that was those 18 days in Tahrir Square. It is not
working, though. Last Friday's protest (dubbed, "No to Emergency
Law") only drew only hundreds to the square.
It
is not so much that one group is ascendant at the expense of others. Everyone
seems to be struggling with the complexities of the present moment. Egyptian
liberals are despondent over what they fear will be a Muslim Brotherhood rout
in the November elections; revolutionary groups are having trouble gaining
traction with a fatigued population; Islamists are confident, but have flailed
tactically in an unfamiliar political environment; Prime Minister Essam
Sharaf's government is a non-factor; and the Supreme Council of the Armed
Forces seems to be staggering under the pressure of a political role for which
they were never trained. This bleak atmosphere is a stunning turnaround from
the post-uprising mantra of "Anything has got to be better than the Mubarak
regime."
So,
is the revolution over? It is tempting to throw one's hands up and declare that
the combined weight of a persistent counter-revolution, economic realities,
revolutionary narcissism, and incompetence thwarted the chance to build a new
Egypt. Beyond the "hopes dashed" narrative, however, Egypt's
seemingly tortured present actually reveals something relatively healthy -- the
normalization of politics.
Egyptians
have long conducted an intense national debate about what Egypt is, what it
stands for, and its place in the world. However, this conversation was always
conducted within the circumscribed contours of an authoritarian political
system. Former Presidents Gamal Abdel Nasser, Anwar Sadat, and Hosni Mubarak
plugged narratives that they hoped would elicit the loyalties of large numbers
of Egyptians. Egypt has thus lurched from a vaguely socialist standard-bearer
of the Third World, to late Cold War strategic partner of the United States, to
emerging market darling of Wall Street -- all in the pursuit of national power,
prosperity, and peace.
None
of these narratives, however, managed to bridge the gap between what Egyptians
were being told about their lives and how they actually experienced them. How
many Egyptians actually internalized Mubarak's "stability for the sake of
development," because they personally felt wealthier, healthier, and more
eductated as a result of his neo-liberal reforms? Not too many.
But
for over a half century, those who publicly objected to Nasser's vaguely
socialist drift, questioned Sadat's embrace of the United States on nationalist
grounds, and decried the economic reforms of the late Mubarak period did so at
great personal risk. It was not until the Jan. 25 protests, when demonstrators
declared that they were no longer afraid, were these critiques potent enough to
bring down the regime.
Now,
for all the problems and complexities of the new political order, Egyptians are
getting an opportunity to debate the central questions of their national life
in a free and unfettered manner. There has been an explosion of new magazines,
newspapers, and television channels devoted almost exclusively to exploring the
important political issues of the day. The intense discussion of a bill of
rights, supra-constitutional principles, and the meaning of a "civil
state" are positive developments.
To be sure, there are excesses. The student strike at the American University
in Cairo (AUC), with its contradictory demands and calls to "storm Lisa's
[Anderson, the president of AUC] palace" seemed like a vainglorious effort
to remain relevant seven months after Tahrir, rather than a genuine effort to
address whatever concerns the strikers believe exist at the university.
Even
with the self-indulgence of some revolutionary groups, the cacophony of the
press, half-developed party platforms, the preening of certain politicians, and
the emergence of dozens of new political parties and coalitions, the ferocious
debates of the last months will be critical in helping shape Egypt's political
trajectory. These fundamental "identity" questions are, in fact, more
important than the execution and outcome of the country's upcoming election to
the People's Assembly, which are now scheduled for November.
Unless
the antecedent questions about Egypt's identity are answered in a way that
makes sense to the vast majority of Egyptians, the quality of the upcoming poll
matters less than many believe. The eye-rolling clichés of American expert
analysis during those heady days in January and February -- "now the hard
work begins," "we are only in the first inning," and "the
situation is fluid" -- are no less annoying today, but they happen to have
a ring of truth.
There
is no doubt that the next People's Assembly, which will be responsible for
choosing a committee of 100 to draft a new constitution, will have an important
influence on Egyptian politics. But there seem to be two misconceptions about
the process: First, that the assembly will take place in a vacuum, free of the
conflict and debates that are currently roiling the Egyptian political arena.
Second, that this group will come up with an acceptable document in a few
months. These exepectations defy both historical precedent and the political
realities of present-day Egypt. The danger is not so much that the constitution
writing will take a long time or that the Muslim Brotherhood may dominate the
process, but rather that the new constitution will be rushed and, as a result,
will not adequately address what Egypt is, what it stands for, and its place in
the world.
Egyptians
and outside observers have been preaching patience, but they are are not
exhibiting any. Without the development of a set of positive myths about
Egypt's future, any group, party, or leader will be politically vulnerable,
heralding instability and the potential return of authoritarian politics.
Uncertainty and contestation are precisely what political transitions are all
about. They may be hard to accept, given all the challenges Egypt now
confronts, but Egyptians are exactly where they should be.
-This commentary was published in The Foreign Policy on 19/09/2011- Steven A. Cook is the Hasib J. Sabbagh Senior Fellow for Middle
Eastern Studies at the Council on Foreign Relations. He is the author of The
Struggle for Egypt: From Nasser to Tahrir Square
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