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October 9 update
9 October, 2013
Article 1.
The Weekly Standard
Standing Alone
William Kristol and Michael Makovsky
The Wall Street Journal
How Not to Negotiate With Iran
Bret Stephens
Article 3
Foreign Policy
Does the U.S. stand a chance against Tehran,
the nimble, canny free agent of nuclear
negotiations?
Aaron David Miller, Mitchel Hochberg
Article 4
Time
There Are Two Egypts and They Hate Each
Other
Ashraf Khalil
Article 5
Bloomberg
Asia's Crisis of Leadership
William Pesek
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Bloomberg
Remembering Ovadia Yosef, the Israeli
Ayatollah
Jeffrey Goldberg
\tilde I.
The Weekly Standard
Standing Alone
William Kristol and Michael Makovsky
October 8 - In the midst of media coverage of the government
shutdown (it's the Republicans' fault!) and the glitch-filled
rollout of Obamacare (it's not Obama's fault!), Americans may
not have noticed the October 1 speech by Israeli prime minister
Benjamin Netanyahu to the United Nations General Assembly.
But Netanyahu's declaration that Israel was prepared to act
alone to prevent the Iranian regime from acquiring nuclear
weapons may well prove of more lasting significance than the
developments in Washington that overshadowed it. Netanyahu
tried to puncture the wishful thinking that has made the Obama
administration so eager to succumb to the charm offensive of
Hassan Rouhani, the new Iranian president. Netanyahu pointed
out that Rouhani has done nothing, and almost certainly will do
nothing, that warrants trusting that the Iranian regime will yield
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in its pursuit of nuclear weapons (a pursuit Rouhani still denies
in the face of mountains of incontrovertible evidence).
Netanyahu warned against a relaxation of pressure on that
regime and against being dragged into endless negotiations or,
even worse, a bad deal with it. As Netanyahu said, Rouhani
"definitely wants to get the sanctions lifted; I guarantee you that.
But he doesn't want to give up Iran's nuclear weapons program
in return." Netanyahu laid out the terms for an acceptable
agreement: "The only diplomatic solution that would work is the
one that fully dismantles Iran's nuclear weapons program and
prevents it from having one in the future." And he explained the
dangers of a "partial deal" that would permit Iran "a residual
capability to enrich uranium" in exchange for lifting
international sanctions that took years to put in place and likely
wouldn't be reestablished. But this is, unfortunately, the kind of
deal toward which the Obama administration is heading — that,
or endless negotiations while the Iranian nuclear program moves
toward a successful conclusion.
The most dramatic part of his speech was Netanyahu's
declaration: "I want there to be no confusion on this point. Israel
will not allow Iran to get nuclear weapons. If Israel is forced to
stand alone, Israel will stand alone." Netanyahu, who has a
photo of Winston Churchill on his office wall behind his desk,
was echoing Churchill's remark on July 14, 1940, during the
Battle of Britain: "And now it has come to us to stand alone in
the breach."
Will Israel in fact be forced to stand alone? Many informed
Israelis, including those who are by no means supporters of
Netanyahu or on the right side of the political spectrum, are now
convinced he will have to, after witnessing last month's
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appalling spectacle of President Obama squirming out of his
pledge to retaliate against the regime of Syrian president Bashar
al-Assad if Assad crossed a "red line" by using chemical
weapons. We were each in Israel recently, and it's clear that the
confidence of some current and former senior security officials
that Obama would strike Iran has evaporated. We've also
spoken with Arab government officials, and none believes any
longer in the credibility of a U.S. military threat. In fact, it's
hard to find any serious person in allied capitals — or in enemy
capitals — who takes Obama at his word when he talks about
keeping "all options on the table" to prevent a nuclear Iran.
Everyone assumes that President Obama will find any excuse
the Iranians give him to leave the military option right there, on
the table — and that if the Iranian regime doesn't give him a
plausible excuse, President Obama will find one anyway.
No one likes the truth-telling skunk at the appeasement party.
The New York Times clucked editorially that Netanyahu was
"sabotaging diplomacy" before "Iran is tested" by angering the
Iranians, making the use of force more likely — which "would
be the worst result of all." But he knows that an Iran with
nuclear weapons is the worst result of all — that bombing Iran is
better than Iran with a bomb. He sees that behind the Obama
administration's facade of hard-headed diplomacy is a soft-
headed, even desperate, desire for some sort of deal, any deal,
and that such a deal will be rationalized by foreign policy elites
who know it's a bad deal but who have talked themselves into
accepting the case for containment rather than prevention of a
nuclear Iran. And Netanyahu understands that behind all of this
lies a failure of nerve and a collapse of will in much of the West
that deserves to be compared to what Churchill faced in the
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1930s.
There are those who believe Netanyahu was being overly
dramatic and indeed was blustering when he made his
unequivocal statements at the United Nations about the Iranian
regime and nuclear weapons. It's true that the U.N. is a place of
much drama and bluster. But we believe Netanyahu meant what
he said.
Of course, an Israeli prime minister can't decide to launch a
strike alone. Netanyahu will require the approval of his security
cabinet, and he will also likely need the support of the top ranks
of the Israeli military establishment. The Israeli national security
apparatus has been cautious about a strike against Iran, believing
there was time and hoping that sanctions or the United States
would take care of this issue. The Syrian fiasco has virtually
eliminated the last option in the minds of many military leaders.
And now there's a consensus that time is growing short. Almost
no Israeli security expert believes Israel should resign itself to
live with a nuclear-armed Iranian regime dedicated to the
destruction of Israel. Furthermore, current and former senior
military officials consistently claim they have a viable military
option, even though they have less military capacity than the
United States. So an Israeli strike is likely.
Netanyahu said at the U.N. that "in standing alone, Israel will
know that we will be defending many, many others." This too
echoes Churchill in his July 1940 speech: "We are fighting by
ourselves alone; but we are not fighting for ourselves alone."
Churchill asserted that London, "which enshrines the title deeds
of human progress," was defending civilization itself. So today,
if Israel — an outpost of human progress in the Middle East -
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decides that she has no choice but to attack Iran's nuclear
facilities, Israel will not be fighting for herself alone.
William Kristol is editor of The Weekly Standard, as well as
chairman and co-founder of the Project for the New American
Century. Michael Makovsky is A U.S. national security expert,
he has worked extensively on Iran's nuclear program, the
Middle East, and the intersection of international energy
markets and politics with US. national security.
Article 2
The Wall Street Journal
How Not to Negotiate With Iran
Bret Stephens
October 7 - 'We know that deception is part of [Iran's] DNA."
So said Undersecretary of State Wendy Sherman last week,
testifying to Congress about the next round of negotiations with
Tehran over its nuclear programs. So why is Ms. Sherman
pleading with Congress to delay imposing additional sanctions
for the sake of what she called "confidence building"? How
depressingly predictable: Iran lies and prevaricates—about the
breadth of its nuclear programs; about their purpose; about the
quality of its cooperation with U.N. nuclear watchdogs; about its
record of sponsoring terrorism from Argentina to Bulgaria to
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Washington, D.C.; about its efforts to topple Arab governments
(Bahrain) or colonize them (Lebanon); about its role in the
butchery of Syria; about its official attitude toward the
Holocaust—and the administration thinks priority No. 1 is
proving its own good faith. Last month, the administration
returned to Iran a 2,700-year-old silver cup shaped like a
mythological griffin, which had been stolen from a cave in Iran a
decade ago before it was seized by U.S. customs. Supreme
Leader Ali Khamenei must have been moved to tears. At least
the griffin beat the key-shaped cake National Security Adviser
Robert McFarlane brought with him in the 1980s in what would
become the Iran-Contra debacle. That episode provides a useful
lesson in how not to negotiate with Iran, and from the most
unexpected source: Hasan Rouhani, now Iran's president, then
deputy chairman of the Majlis, the Islamic Republic's
parliament. In August 1986, an Israeli agent named Amiram Nir,
posing as a U.S. official, met Mr. Rouhani in Paris at a meeting
orchestrated by an Iranian-born arms dealer named Manucher
Ghorbanifar. Nir wore a recording device, and details of the talk
eventually came into the possession of Israeli military reporter
Ron Ben-Yishai. The episode has since been reprised in the
Israeli press, most recently by reporter Mitch Ginsburg for the
Times of Israel. Iran was then trying to obtain missiles from the
U.S. (with Israel acting as an intermediary) in exchange for the
release of Americans held hostage by Iranian-backed proxies in
Lebanon. The missiles were provided but the hostages were
not—a victim, by some accounts, of hard-line opposition within
Iran to the more pliable course advocated by Mr. Rouhani. So it
goes with Western outreach to Iranian moderates: It always fails,
though whether it's on account of the moderates being
duplicitous or powerless is a matter of debate. Maybe Mr.
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Rouhani isn't "a wolf in sheep's clothing," as Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says. Maybe he's a sheep among
wolves. If so, he's a very canny sheep. "If you don't bare sharp
teeth before [Ayatollah] Khomeini," he advised Nir, "you're
going to have troubles all over the world. If you threaten him
with military force, he'll kiss your hand and run."
Elsewhere in the conversation, Mr. Rouhani suggested a strategy
for getting the hostages released. "If for instance, you said to
[Khomeini], 'You must release all of the hostages in Lebanon
within five days. If not—we'll deal you a military blow and you
will be responsible for the results,' do it, show that you are
strong, and you will see results." And there was this: "If we
analyze Khomeini's character, we will see that if someone strong
stands opposite him, he will retreat 100 steps; and if he is strong
and someone weak faces him, he will advance 100 steps.
Unfortunately, you have taken a mistaken approach. You have
been soft to him. Had you been tougher, your hand would be on
top." Mr. Rouhani's analysis of Khomeini's mind-set would
soon find tragic confirmation. On July 3, 1988, the USS
Vincennes mistook an Iranian jetliner for a fighter jet and shot it
down, killing nearly 300 people. Khomeini, who was sure the
incident was no accident, thought Washington intended to enter
the Iran-Iraq war on Saddam Hussein's side. Just 17 days later,
on July 20, Khomeini accepted a humiliating cease-fire with
Iraq: "Unhappy am I that I still survive and have drunk the
poisoned chalice," he said in a radio address.
Khomeini is long dead, but the regime's mentality of yielding
only to intense pressure and credible threats of force remains the
same. So how should the U.S. negotiate? Mark Dubowitz, who
helped design some of the most effective sanctions against Iran
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from his perch at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies,
offered this:
"Effective on October 16, any financial institution providing
Iran with access to, or use of, its overseas financial reserves for
any purpose with the exception of permissible humanitarian
trade will be cut off from the U.S. financial system." The idea is
to push forward what Mr. Dubowitz calls Iran's "economic
cripple date"—the moment when it runs out of foreign
reserves—ahead of its "undetectable breakout date"—the
moment when the regime can build a bomb in secret before the
West can stop it.
I have my doubts about the use of sanctions as the main tool to
change Iran's behavior. But if the administration means to use
them as the weapon of choice, they should at least use them
aggressively. Negotiations with Iran resume Oct. 15. Mr.
Dubowitz's Oct. 16 deadline will do more to get their attention
than griffins, cakes or other pathetic diplomatic sweeteners.
Mr. Stephens is the deputy editorial page editor responsible for
the international opinion pages of The Wall Street Journal.
Foreign Policy
Does the U.S. stand a chance against
Tehran, the nimble, canny free agent
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of nuclear negotiations?
Aaron David Miller, Mitchel Hochberg
October 8, 2013 -- Nobody knows how the Iranian nuclear
dilemma is going to end. A good deal, a bad deal, no deal, a
U.S. or Israeli military strike -- or none of the above? But amid
all the uncertainty, at least one thing seems pretty certain: The
mullahs are playing three-dimensional chess while the United
States is playing checkers.
This is not to say that the Iranians are diplomatic and strategic
geniuses. After all, if they were that clever, they wouldn't be
reeling under the impact of nation-crushing sanctions that are
destroying their economy. Nor would everyone's favorite mullah --
President Hasan Rouhani -- be sending Rosh Hashanah tweets to
all his would-be Jewish friends.
The checkers reference is also not meant to suggest that the
Obama administration is clueless about how to deal with Iran.
While the president's handling of the Syrian chemical weapons
issue did at times resemble a Marx Brothers movie, the
administration knows the stakes on Iran are higher -- and that,
precisely because of Syria, it must be more disciplined, focused,
and deliberate.
Yet Iran has certain natural advantages that the United States
lacks. This doesn't invariably mean the United States will lose
and Iran will win at nuclear roulette. But it does mean that
Tehran can be far more agile, devious, and strategic in its quest
for a nuclear weapons capacity than Washington can be in its
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effort to stop it.
Here are brief explanations of these important advantages.
Great Powers Versus Small Tribes
Big doesn't always translate into smart and effective, and small
doesn't necessarily mean weak. The Middle East is littered with
the remains of great powers that wrongly believed they could
impose their will on small tribes.
Compelling and coercing nations not to do something they deem
vital is no easy matter. The record, as my Foreign Policy
colleague Micah Zenko points out, isn't all that great. Big global
powers like the United States have many things to do, and they
are distracted and tire easily. Smaller ones like Iran that live in a
dangerous neighborhood can't afford to do the same. They're
focused intensely on just a few things: physical security, survival
of the regime, maintaining religious and national identity,
historical grievances, wounding and trauma, and fear of bigger
powers. They become quite adept at manipulating and
maneuvering around these larger powers to achieve their goals,
both because of their will and because of their knowledge of the
real estate: They know their region's back alleys, sand traps, and
complicated ways.
In recent years, the United States has come to Iran's
neighborhood all too often and with too little knowledge of the
landscape. With our overwhelming military power and
technological superiority, we can remove leaders and weaken
groups hostile to our interests. But the locals can and do make
us pay big time. (See: Lebanon, Somalia, Afghanistan, Iraq.) A
decade after we've left, all our schemes and dreams won't have
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changed much on the ground. Two decades later, if locals
remember we were there, it usually isn't fondly.
Iran has been particularly deft in capitalizing on these sorts of
U.S. mistakes. The invasion of Iraq and Afghanistan weakened
the Taliban and eliminated Saddam Hussein -- two of Iran's
adversaries -- and bolstered its regional standing. Iran has also
maneuvered deftly, and thus played well, in regional
developments like the Syrian crisis. It has backed President
Bashar al-Assad, exploited his regime's Hezbollah connection,
and managed along with the Russians to keep the regime afloat.
The U.S.-Russian agreement on chemical weapons has also
furthered the Iranian goal of legitimizing the Syrian leader and
has raised questions in the minds of the mullahs about whether
we are prepared to use military force in the Middle East.
Finally, thanks largely to its smaller, nimbler status, Iran has
withstood sanctions, political isolation, cyberwar, and the efforts
of three successive U.S. administrations to prevent it from
acquiring a nuclear weapon. Indeed, in 2013, Tehran is closer
than ever to attaining the capacity to weaponize within a
relatively short period of time. And who knows? They may be
even nearer than we and the Israelis realize to crossing that
threshold.
Iran Knows Its Own Mind. Do We Know Ours?
We really don't know what the Iranian game is. Are we on the
cusp of a new era in the U.S.-Iranian relationship with a deal on
the nuclear issue that will lead to a broader regional modus
vivendi? Or is the Rouhani diplomatic offensive designed to buy
time, probe for weakness and division in allied ranks, neutralize
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the Israeli military option, and reinforce through charm and
sweet talk an American president's already strong preference for
diplomacy over war?
Nor does the United States fully grasp its own game. There is
tremendous uncertainty about what, in the end, to do about
Iran's quest for a nuclear weapon. Do we bomb if diplomacy
fails? Do we contain? What do we do if/when Israel decides it
must use force? Our policy oozes indecision. And it shows.
The mullahs are indeed smart and canny, and unlike U.S.
leaders, they probably know their own mind on the nuclear
issue. No matter how real Rouhani may be as a reformer and as a
legitimate expression of a popular Iranian desire for change, he's
still not the guy in charge. And the guy who is fashions himself
the supreme leader of a truly great and historic nation
confronted by an America and an Israel that seek to keep Iran
down and to deny the country its rightful place in the region and
the world. Iran is a country driven by a profound sense of
insecurity and entitlement -- a very bad combination of
personality traits in an individual, let alone in a nation.
Indeed, Ali Khamenei and his conservative-cum-revolutionary,
security-minded cronies may well regard the quest for a nuclear
weapons capacity as a basic right, part of their country's identity
as a power, designed to bolster Iran's status -- and as a hedge
against regime change and as cover to wield regional influence.
The pursuit of Iran's nuclear ambitions has been a national goal
for quite some time. Indeed, had the Shah not been overthrown,
Iran might already have been a nuclear state. For Iran to
completely abandon that goal or to allow the United States to
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impose restrictions that would make it impossible to pursue it
again in the future seems hard to imagine.
The Rouhani Phenomenon
The emergence of Rouhani is the perfect play against the United
States, because his election as president really does reflect
reformist tendencies within the Iranian public and polity.
Sanctions are ruining the economy and hold the potential to
create serious popular discontent. Why not send abroad a
smiling, attractive, and forthcoming president who can tone
down the anti-Israeli rhetoric, accept the Holocaust, and deny
Iran has a nuclear weapons program, even while Tehran
continues to pursue said program?
The Iranian leadership can lie, dissemble, and pursue this two-
track strategy without blinking an eye and without fear of any
domestic backlash, all in an effort to see what kind of sanctions
relief it can achieve and what it has to pay for it. If the price isn't
right, it can recalibrate, turn on a dime, and effortlessly return to
the hard-line rhetoric of Rouhani's predecessor.
For Obama, investing in Rouhani thus means risking being
made to look the fool should the process reach the point where
the mullahs determine that what we're offering isn't sufficient to
meet their needs. And, while this budding relationship congeals,
the U.S. president is in the uncomfortable position of having to
explain every negative Iranian statement or action. Yet Iran has
positioned Rouhani as a risk the United States feels it must take.
Negotiating for Whom?
Iran is a free agent in negotiating with the United States. We
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aren't in as enviable position. Whatever political constraints
Khamenei faces, they aren't nearly as narrowing as ours.
Between Congress and U.S. allies -- Israel but also Saudi Arabia --
the U.S. position must take into account an array of suspicions
and fears, some of them at times competing with each other.
Congress is critical for sanctions relief and for the domestic
consensus required for any foreign-policy initiative, particularly
one as big as this. And the notion that the Obama administration
will somehow have a free hand to ignore Israeli needs strains the
bounds of credulity to the breaking point. As Undersecretary of
State Wendy Sherman conceded the other day, no deal is better
than a bad deal. A bad deal would be one that leaves Israel
angry, suspicious, and aggrieved and Iran able to quickly re-
create a nuclear breakout option should Tehran suspend or
abrogate the agreement.
These realities will not only reduce U.S. flexibility; they also
afford Iran a powerful political and propaganda point to argue
that the United States isn't negotiating on the merits of the
nuclear issue but is allowing politics to shape its positions. It
also takes Iran off the hook for responding seriously to what the
United States offers. Indeed, the Iranians have undoubtedly
figured out that Obama will be quite risk-averse when it comes
to offering major concessions. That frees the mullahs from their
need to be forthcoming as well.
Let's hope that the mullahs haven't concluded, too, that Obama
will be risk-averse when it comes to a military option, should
diplomacy fail.
Time: Ally or Adversary?
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U.S. presidents and government negotiators measure their lives
in four- and eight-year increments -- that is, the terms of
administrations. Iran, by contrast, plays the long game, the
generational game. Sure, Iran wants sanctions relief. But it can
wait if it doesn't get exactly what it wants.
In addition to the limited time frame of his second term, Obama
is up against two clocks that are ticking down to a place he'd
rather not be: a military option. First, there's the clock showing
that Iran is nearing the point of no return -- the much-feared
breakout capacity. That, in turn, influences the second clock:
Israel's own timeline for making the agonizing decision about its
military options.
In a way, too, the Rouhani charm offensive may have
accelerated matters for Washington. By elevating the level of
negotiations -- opening new channels to both the U.S. president
and the secretary of state -- it will be harder, not easier, for the
United States to drag things out. Before, in the P5+1 talks in
Almaty, Istanbul, and Moscow, we were on mullah time; now,
we're on fast-tracked Washington time. After all, once the
president at the U.N. General Assembly, in front of the whole
world, directs his secretary of state to manage negotiations, it's
hard to go back to business as usual.
Maybe the moment of decision is coming. Maybe not. If
negotiations really are serious and a deal, however imperfect, is
in sight, time will be less of a U.S. concern going forward than it
is now. If things don't go well at the table, however, then at
some point it will be time to stop pretending that negotiations
can answer the mail -- and to acknowledge how Iran's
generational game could play out.
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Iran doesn't want an Israeli strike, let alone a U.S. one. But it
may well calculate that, if it doesn't stick a nuclear weapons
program in President Obama's eye, the United States won't
strike. As for the Israelis, the mullahs may well take their
chances and wager that the temporary setback to their nuclear
program would be outweighed by the political benefits they
might gain from an Israeli strike.
It's a roll of the dice. But Iran, with all its advantages over the
United States and its allies, just might take the risk. Indeed, the
message from Tehran might be: Come and get us. And, by the
way, welcome to the neighborhood.
Aaron David Miller is vice president for new initiatives and a
distinguished scholar at the Woodrow Wilson International
Center for Scholars. His forthcoming book is titled Can America
Have Another Great President?. "Reality Check," his column
for ForeignPolicy.com, runs weekly. Mitchel Hochberg, a
research intern for the Woodrow Wilson International Center
for Scholars, contributed to this article.
I
Time
There Are Two Egypts and They Hate
Each Other
Ashraf Khalil
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October 8 - Egypt's latest spasm of violence over the
weekend—which led to at least 57 deaths and 400
injured—confirmed the troubled nation's new reality: The
emergence of two distinct, opposed Egypts that hate each other.
One Egypt is in the ascendant—that of a nationalist, pro-military
populace that has nothing but contempt for the country's
Islamists, represented chiefly by the Muslim Brotherhood. The
Egypt of the Brotherhood is reeling and embittered: it has seen
its democratically-elected President ousted by the military this
July and its supporters gunned down in the streets. But it's
showing no sign of backing down.
The enmity existed well before senior Muslim Brotherhood
official Mohamed Morsi won the presidency in June 2012. But
the chasm between these two sides widened dramatically over
the course of Morsi's chaotic and divisive year in power, which
culminated in Morsi's July 3 ousting, cheered on by millions of
citizens.
Both sides covet the deeply symbolic real estate that is Tahrir
Square—epicenter of the original February 2011 revolution that
ousted long-ruling President Hosni Mubarak and the launchpad
for Egypt's faltering revolutionary moment. Tahrir's fortunes,
and who controls it, have shifted multiple times since the initial
uprising. But an unprecedented spectacle of division took place
on Oct. 6: one side celebrated inside of Tahrir Square, while the
other side desperately fought—and died—to reach it and
confront its rivals. Inside of Tahrir Square, supporters of the
military rallied in the thousands with flags, fireworks, patriotic
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songs and vuvuzelas. Oct. 6 is a national holiday—a militaristic
one that celebrates the launching of a successful surprise attack
on Israel in the 1973 war. So the current national mood,
characterized by nationalist and anti-Islamist fervor, dovetailed
neatly with the holiday. Posters of Defense Minister Abdel Fatah
Al-Sisi (notably not civilian Interim President Adly Mansour)
dominated the day—many of them directly comparing Al-Sisi
with Col. Gamal Abdel Nasser, the beloved and iconic force
behind the 1952 coup that ended the monarchy and ushered in
almost 60 years of military rule.
Outside of Tahrir Square, the losers of the country's political
shakeup continued their Sisyphaean campaign for their voices to
be heard and heeded. "Our target is to go back to Tahrir to bring
the revolution back to the square," said Diaa El-Sawy,
spokesman of the Youth Against the Coup group, ahead of their
protest. But the Brotherhood—which marched in the thousands
from multiple directions on Sunday—never managed to get near
Tahrir Square. The entire downtown area was heavily secured
with riot police, Army APCs, barbed wire and ID checkpoints at
the entrances to Tahrir. The subway station underneath Tahrir
had already been closed for months to prevent unauthorized
infiltration.
Three separate Brotherhood marches were violently repelled. In
Ramses Square, about a 20 minute walk from Tahrir, the two
sides battled into the night with the Brotherhood marchers
confronting a combined force of army soldiers, riot police and
local youth gangs hurling rocks, Molotovs and fireworks and
apparently working in coordination with the security forces. The
final death toll from the day reached 57—the vast majority of
the dead from the Brotherhood side.
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In the aftermath, there is no sign of either side backing away
from the chasm that threatens to swallow post-revolutionary
Egypt. The Brotherhood—which has managed to retain a high
level of coordination and planning despite most of its senior
decision-makers being arrested—has announced plans to launch
a fresh push to occupy Tahrir Square this coming Friday, Oct.
11. The Square, according to a statement released late Sunday
night, "belongs to all Egyptians and no one will prevent us from
demonstrating in it, no matter the sacrifices." In apparent
retaliation for Sunday's crackdown, militants—whose direct
links to the Brotherhood are unproven, but who interpreted
Morsi's ouster as a disguised war on Islam—launched a trio of
brazen strikes on Monday. The attacks killed nine people,
including six soldiers in a single ambush in the Sinai Peninsula;
other assailants launched a failed RPG attack on a satellite
transmission facility in Cairo.
Meanwhile the government continues its purge of the
Brotherhood and its affiliated organizations. On Tuesday, the
government annulled the Muslim Brotherhood's status as a
registered non-governmental organization and the cabinet
ordered the seizure of the organization's funds and assets. A
court ruling last month ordered a similar asset seizure, but the
ruling has yet to be properly implemented. Tuesday's cabinet
ruling now tightens the squeeze.
As the death toll mounts, the prospects for any sort of short-term
reconciliation in Egypt seem bleak—largely because neither side
seems particularly interested in forging a peace.
Many trying to resist the current polarization or find some sort
of middle ground are punished by both sides. One of the clearest
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examples of this dynamic came in mid-September when senior
Brotherhood official Salah Soltan published a unilateral apology
to the nation on behalf of the Brotherhood. Soltan's US-citizen
son Mohamed was shot in the Aug. 14 siege on a Brotherhood
sit-in site and later arrested after two weeks on the run.
Nevertheless, Salah Soltan wrote a month later that the
Brotherhood should "apologize to the nation for our political
mistakes...we are not against Egypt. We are part of Egypt."
Among the mistakes he mentioned was a failure to better include
the non-Islamist and revolutionary youth into their decision-
making processes-spawning divisions and a national paranoia
over the Islamist agenda that eventually turned much of the
country against the Brotherhood.
But rather than becoming some sort of rallying point for the start
of a push for reconciliation, Salah Soltan immediately became a
man without a country. The Brotherhood distanced itself from
his comments, saying Soltan did not speak for the organization.
And, within days Soltan was arrested at Cairo airport by the very
government with whom he was trying to reconcile.
Khalil is a Cairo-based journalist and author of Liberation
Square: Inside the Egyptian Revolution and the Rebirth of a
Nation.
Article 5.
Bloomberg
Asia's Crisis of Leadership
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William Pesek
Oct 7, 2013 -- The day Asian leaders have long dreaded is here:
The era of rapid growth is over.
It has taken five years, but the fallout from what Asians call the
"Lehman shock" is finally hitting gross domestic product and
living standards. These risks are the talk of Bali, where Asia-
Pacific Economic Cooperation nations are mulling what to do
about a world where "risks remain tilted to the downside."
There, Michael Taylor, chief credit officer for Asia at Moody's
Investors Service, said chaotic markets and a slow recovery in
advanced nations is driving a "change in the economic cycle"
that makes sustaining growth in the region "more challenging."
But a messy international scene isn't the biggest problem facing
Asia. The problem is weak leadership in a region that
desperately needs bold and visionary solutions to a fast-growing
list of challenges.
Asia failed to use 5 percent, 7 percent or even 10 percent growth
rates to recalibrate economies away from a hyperdependence on
exports and toward domestic-demand-led growth. After Asia's
meltdown in 1997, policy makers strengthened financial
systems, built more transparent and international business
environments, and attacked cronyism. Then, at the first sight of
recovery, reform efforts were shelved. Until recently, Asian
leaders even thought they had decoupled from the West as U.S.
and European recessions failed to damp local growth rates.
Coming Storm
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The costs of that complacency are now rising: The Asian
Development Bank estimates 2013 growth will be the slowest in
four years, at best. As Asia's export machine sputters and
markets brace for an end to the Federal Reserve's stimulus,
governments need to act nimbly and creatively to protect
growth. They also must prepare for the next financial storm (a
default in the U.S., perhaps?). Yet considering the state of Asian
leadership, it's hard not to be gloomy about the region's
chances. Here's a quick rundown.
INDONESIA: For all his success in bringing stability to a nation
that 15 years ago seemed destined for failed statehood, President
Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono looks like a spent force. His team
needs to act forcefully to erase a current-account deficit that's
turning off investors and has pushed the rupiah down 14 percent
this year. Yudhoyono should be intensifying his anti-corruption
drive, accelerating infrastructure-project plans, and restraining
the nationalistic vibe that now permeates the resource sector.
Most important, he needs to institutionalize the reforms that
reduced poverty ahead of next year's election, which term limits
preclude him from contesting.
INDIA: There was a certain irony to Manmohan Singh visiting
the White House last week as the U.S. government was shutting
down: The Indian prime minister's own government stopped
working some time ago. His team faces the possibility of a full-
blown debt crisis and the prospect of becoming the first BRIC --
Brazil, Russia, India and China -- nation downgraded to junk.
When Congress Party heir Rahul Gandhi's criticism of
something as obvious as letting criminals serve in Parliament
passes for bold leadership, you know India's economy is in
trouble.
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MALAYSIA: Hopes that Prime Minister Najib Razak would
scrap 42-year-old race-based policies that favor ethnic Malays
and irk foreign investors were all for naught. Instead, Najib is
doubling down on economic apartheid, expanding perks at the
expense of Chinese and Indian minorities. Rating companies are
calling Malaysia out for its rising debt, generous subsidies and a
lack of budgetary reform. It's not clear Najib can stop a public
backlash from derailing Malaysia's entry into a Trans-Pacific
Partnership, which would make the economy more vibrant.
THAILAND: Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra is also
failing the subsidies test, displaying a lack of political will to
stand up to rice and rubber farmers and to gasoline consumers.
She's been too distracted with tweaking the constitution to
implement a $64 billion infrastructure plan to boost growth.
After two years in office, Yingluck must work harder to put to
rest speculation she's a mere placeholder for her fugitive
brother, former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra.
Leadership Deficits
And then there are the smaller, less globalized nations.
Vietnam's leaders, for example, are making little headway
reducing the role of state-owned enterprises, which are holding
back the economic opening many seek. Cambodia's recent
election raised so many charges of fraud that it's hard to
envision Prime Minister Hun Sen having any spare time to
modernize his financial system. Ethnic conflicts and worries
about a restive military reasserting itself are darkening
Myanmar's coming-out party.
Even Asia's bright spots face worrisome leadership deficits.
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China's new bosses are too preoccupied with consolidating
power to restructure their rickety economy and limit fresh debt
bubbles. In Japan, Shinzo Abe's pledges to deregulate the
economy are running afoul of his own party. In South Korea,
Park Geun Hye is watering down plans to craft a "creative
economy" for fear of alienating the country's giant, oxygen-
sucking conglomerates. In the Philippines, Benigno Aquino has
gotten high marks on the economy but low ones for his handling
of a separatist movement that is costing his economy investment
and tourism dollars.
Asia avoided the worst of recent crises, but its luck may be
running out. Unless the region's leaders are harboring some
latent plan to rise to the occasion, Asia's next five years could
be quite turbulent indeed.
William Pesek is a Bloomberg View columnist.
Article 6.
Bloomberg
Remembering Ovadia Yosef, the
Israeli Ayatollah
Jeffrey Goldberg
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October 8 - More than 700,000 people gathered in Jerusalem
yesterday to mourn the death of a great sage, Ovadia Yosef, a
former chief rabbi of Israel and the supreme guide of the Shas
political party.
The country had never before seen a funeral of this size. The
mass of mourners was a testament to Yosefs magnetism and
scholarship, as well as to the work he did to lift up his
community, the once-aggrieved (and still occasionally put-upon)
Mizrachim, or Jews from Arab countries. (Yosef was himself
born in Baghdad and served as a rabbi in Cairo.) The party
Yosef created made him a kingmaker in Israeli politics (read
Noah Feldman's incisive look at Yosefs revolutionary role in
transforming Israeli political culture), and he was perhaps best
known, beyond the walls of ultra-Orthodoxy, for his ruling that
it would be permissible under Jewish law to cede biblical land to
Palestinians if lives would be saved by doing so.
Much of the coverage of Yosefs death has focused on the
transformative role he played in the lives of Mizrachim. But
much of it has neglected to mention the unfortunate fact that
Yosef was a mean-spirited fundamentalist who created a corrupt
party that coarsened Israeli politics, held a medieval belief in a
vindictive God, and made abominable pronouncements on the
moral and personal qualities of those of different races, religions
and political views.
I spend a lot of time in this space highlighting the corrosive anti-
Semitism of such figures as Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the Iranian
leader, and Yusuf al-Qaradawi, the extremist Al Jazeera
televangelist. It's unpleasant but necessary to note that Israel,
too, has its share of religious fanatics. Yosef was his country's
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most eminent. It's true that he endorsed (as a theoretical matter)
the idea of Israeli withdrawal from territories captured in the
1967 Six-Day War. But when former Prime Minister Ariel
Sharon argued for a withdrawal from the Gaza Strip, Yosef said,
"God will strike him with one blow and he will die. He will
sleep and not awake." (Some of Yosefs followers were ecstatic --
I saw their ecstasy with my own eyes -- when Sharon later
suffered a stroke.)
In the manner of the crudest fundamentalists everywhere, Yosef
blamed misfortune and death on apostasy, irreligiosity and
homosexuality (gay people, in his eyes, were "completely evil").
About Israeli soldiers who fell in battle, Yosef once said, "Is it
any wonder if, heaven forbid, soldiers are killed in a war? They
don't observe the Sabbath, they don't observe the Torah, they
don't pray, they don't put on phylacteries every day. Is it any
wonder that they're killed? It's no wonder." Even more famously,
he blamed the deaths of Jews during the Holocaust on the
spiritual deficiencies of their ancestors.
In 2005, he argued that Hurricane Katrina was God's
punishment for the Gaza withdrawal and for the alleged
godlessness of the black residents of New Orleans. "There was a
tsunami and there are terrible natural disasters, because there
isn't enough Torah study," he said. "Tens of thousands have
been killed. All of this because they have no God." He went on
to argue -- if that's the word for it -- that the deaths were also
punishment directed at President George W. Bush for pressuring
Sharon to remove Jewish settlers from the Gaza Strip. "It was
God's retribution," he said. "God does not short-change anyone."
Yosefs excoriations of Israeli politicians were legendary. In the
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last election, Yosef said this about the leadership of the right-
wing Jewish Home party: "Those are religious people? They
come to uproot the Torah. Those who elect them deny the
Torah, this is the Jewish Home? This is the Jewish Home of the
gentiles."
The most devastating insult Yosef could muster against a Jew
was to label him a gentile. He held gentiles in general contempt.
"Goyim were born only to serve us," he said in a 2010 sermon.
"Without that, they have no place in the world -- only to serve
the people of Israel."
Of Muslims, he said, "They're stupid. Their religion is as ugly as
they are." His hatred of Palestinians was obvious. Speaking of
Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and his aides,
Yosef said, "All these evil people should perish from this world.
God should strike them with a plague, them and these
Palestinians."
Yosefs defenders will note that Abbas was one of the many
dignitaries who expressed his condolences on learning of
Yosefs death. Abbas did so for the same reason Israeli President
Shimon Peres and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu did:
because Yosef represented a vast and powerful political
constituency.
Defenders of Yosef will also argue that his outbursts and
prejudices came late in life (though not all of them did) or that
they were the product of his upbringing, as a Jew who was both
discriminated against by Muslims and who led an ethnic group
that suffered at their hands. Yosefs apologists also argue that the
good work he did -- on behalf of war widows, for instance --
mitigates the damage of his egregious words.
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Sorry, no: Prejudice is prejudice, whether it comes from an
imam in Qatar or from the man whose Jewish critics labeled
him, correctly, the "Israeli ayatollah."
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