Nuclear Vs Oil: The Devil We Know - The US Goal To Keep Monopoly Control Of The Technology
13 March 2011
By Eric Walberg
Comparisons between Egypt's
revolution and others during the past abound and are
instructive. They suggest two scenarios for the
post-revolutionary period, says Eric Walberg
Egypt's revolution is considered
to be a startling new development, the result of the
Internet age. But it is actually more like the
traditional revolutionary scenario predicted by
Karl Marx
in the mid-19th century, a desperate protest against
mass poverty resulting from rampant capitalism. Its
association with the overthrow of authoritarian
regimes in Eastern Europe and
Russia
in the 1990s, as epitomised by the adoption of the
Serbian Otpor's clenched fist masthead, is thus
superficial. A more apt comparison in economic terms
is with the Philippines, also a poor country with a
large peasant population.
The Filipino dictator
Ferdinand
Marcos (1965-86), like
Egyptian
president Hosni Mubarak, was a
close ally of the US, and the Philippines hosted a
large US base vital to its control of the south
Pacific. Marcos justified his authoritarian rule and
martial law to his US patrons as vital to keeping the
Muslim and communist opposition at bay.
But grinding poverty, corruption
and a restless elite created the conditions for his
overthrow, and one last rigged election and the murder
of the leading liberal opposition leader Benigno
Aquino finally led the US to shift its support to the
opposition. This prompted the army to switch sides,
and Aquino's widow Corazon became the new president in
1986. Popular anger with the US military presence
forced Aquino to close the US base in 1992 in a
symbolic gesture to the people. But Aquino was well
schooled in Reaganomics,
the new neo-liberal policy of unbridled capitalism,
and she carried out the US economic agenda of
unbridled capitalism.
This was perfectly logical, given
her (and the military elite's) credentials, all
trained in the US and pro-American. Less than a year
into her presidency, 15,000 peasants held a peaceful
protest calling on Aquino to grant them land reform.
Riot police opened fired on the crowd killing 17.
Writes Alfred McCoy in Policing America's Empire
"When communist negotiators walked out of ongoing
peace talks to protest what they called the ‘Mendiola
massacre,' the president
‘unsheathed the sword of war'", leaving the communist
and Muslim insurgencies intact and further
impoverishing the people.
The chance of a genuinely popular
leader emerging after the overthrow of Marcos was
still there: the populist
Joseph Estrada,
a movie star with little education, won a
landslide
victory in 1998 promising to help
the poor, but was pushed aside, impeached over his
personal finances, and his US-educated
vice president
Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo took
over, to the relief of the business elite and the US.
Since then the political spectrum has narrowed to
allow at best a choice between representatives of the
elite, the current president being ex-president
Aquino's son Benigno III.
Acquiescence to the US "war on
terror" has made real change an impossibility, and the
US military presence is once again strong. The
revolution was compromised and the Philippines
continues on its path of hopeless, violence-ridden
poverty, though with electoral democracy acting as a
legimitising factor. This is one scenario that could
play out in Egypt if the US has its way.
During this period, Egypt under
Hosni Mubarak
was also carrying out the neoliberal agenda, much like
the democratic Corazon Aquino
was. In policy terms, it seems that democrat or
authoritarian makes little difference given the
powerful role the US plays in such countries as the
Philippines and Egypt. As the Philippines experience
shows, it is preferable to have an electoral democracy
where the US effectively controls both the ruling
party and the opposition. That appears to be the
explanation for the US increasing its "democracy
promotion" funding of Egyptian
dissidents in recent years and then finally abandoning
Mubarak with no qualms.
What are the prospects of another
scenario unfolding, involving a radical rejection of
the underlying economic system?
The first political party to be
recognised since the revolution was Al-Wasat (Centre),
a reformist Islamist party, but the second looks to be
the Egyptian
Peasants' Party, and independent
trade unions are springing up everywhere with their
own Labour
Democratic Party in the works.
The immediate aftermath of the revolution witnessed
angry protests by workers in the public sector
demanding tenure in their jobs. Under Mubarak, this
socialistic policy of secure work was largely
abandoned, applied only for those with contacts within
the ruling National Democratic Party, leaving millions
worrying if they would have a job the next day.
Workers continue to demand a
tripling of the minimum wage to bring it into line
with galloping inflation that has pushed millions
under the poverty line. The military regime slashed
elite government salaries, putting a cap on public
servants' pay. There is even talk of a minimum/
maximum income and demands for progressive taxation to
tackle the extremes of wealth that developed under
Mubarak (Egypt has a flat 20 per cent tax on income).
But there is no visible
socialist
movement with the stature of the
conservative Muslim
Brotherhood, which endorsed
president Anwar El-Sadat's infitah and
Mubarak's 1997 reforms allowing unlimited landholding
and returning land confiscated under Gamal Abdel-Nasser.
Ultimately, writes Abu Atris at
aljazeera.net, "the intense speculation about
how much money the Mubarak regime stole... is a red
herring" so long as Egypt remains a neoliberal state
recycling privatised assets among the wealthy elite.
There must be a clear rejection of the neoliberal
philosophy that everything is up for grabs, that the
market is the sole economic regulator. Education,
health, the environment — these are social facts of
life and must be protected by a strong independent
government which is not subservient to the market (or
to US diktat). "Mubarak's Egypt degraded
schools and hospitals, and guaranteed grossly
inadequate wages, particularly in the ever-expanding
private sector. This was what turned hundreds of
dedicated activists into millions of determined
protesters."
With the resignation of Mubarak's
last prime minister
Ahmed Shafik
and his cabinet last Friday and the appointment of
former transport minister and Mubarak critique
Essam Sharaf
as the new prime
minister, the burning question
today is: will the US-imposed neoliberal order survive
in Egypt? The military is now struggling to bring
about some political order by appointing the usual
crisis government of supposedly neutral "technocrats".
But there is nothing neutral about "trickle
down economics" and there are no
Egyptian "technocrats" experienced in dismantling a
neoliberal order intimately tied to the US imperial.
Could Egyptians look to countries
which have clearly rejected such a path in recent
years, Latin American countries such as
Venezuela,
Argentina, Ecuador or Brazil, which have instituted
radical reforms and successfully resisted US hegemony?
This is the other scenario for Egypt's
revolutionaries, though Egypt's more sensitive
geopolitical location makes any attempt to defy the US
fraught with peril. Leading contender for the
presidency, Arab League Chairman Amr Moussa
insists loudly that relations with America must be
"excellent and strong".
The attitude of the military,
while it controls about 10 per cent of the economy and
was the prime beneficiary of US aid under Mubarak, is
key to which scenario will prevail. It is seen by US
officials as a regressive force opposed to
privatisation. Georgetown University's Paul Sullivan
says, "There is a witch hunt for corruption, and there
is a risk that the economy might go back to the days
of Nasser." Sounds good to me.
Nostalgia for the (dictatorial)
regime of Nasser remains strong in Egypt, even among
those born decades after Nasser died. Sometimes,
dictators are necessary — to confront entrenched
elites who refuse to share their wealth. There is
little likelihood of another Nasser, however. Whatever
scenario unfolds in Egypt will involve messy political
squabbles and unstable coalitions as Egyptians taste
the forbidden fruits of electoral democracy.
Perhaps the supporters of
socialism will coalesce around some version of the
Nasser legacy, one that can form a working coalition
with the Brotherhood (MB). Though the MB is capitalist
in orientation, its main planks are to end corruption
and improve social services. MB support of the
revolution was key to its success and it is now
preparing to launch a party modelled on the Turkish
Justice and Development Party — the
Justice and
Freedom Party.
There is no question that, as in
the Philippines, the only answer to Egypt's economic
woes — high unemployment, extreme poverty, crumbling
social services and a gaping chasm between rich and
poor — is a strong dose of socialism.
Egypt and Tunisia are the first
nations to successfully overthrow their neoliberal
regimes. Ironically, their lack of democracy proved to
be an advantage, forcing the impoverished masses to
unite against their oppressors. Misguided US
commentators ask: "Will Venezuela be the next Egypt?"
The answer is: "Will Egypt be the next Venezuela?"