What's new

Message to the Muslim world?

Leader

ELITE MEMBER
Joined
Sep 7, 2010
Messages
29,159
Reaction score
9
Country
Pakistan
Location
Pakistan
Message to the Muslim world?

The real story behind the military coup in Cairo led by General Abdul Fatah al-Sisi is much more complex than the Western media is reporting. Far from a spontaneous uprising by Egyptians, - aka “a people’s revolution” - what really happened was a putsch orchestrated by Egypt’s “deep government” and outside powers - the latest phase of the counter-revolution against the so-called Arab Spring.A year ago, the Egyptians elected Mohamed Morsi as President in their first fair democratic election. He came from the ranks of the Muslim Brotherhood, an eight-decade old conservative movement of professionals dedicated to bringing Islamic principles of public welfare, politics, education, justice, piety and fighting corruption. But the deck was stacked against Morsi and the Brotherhood from day one.

The brutal US-backed Mubarak had fallen, but the organs of his 30-year dictatorship, Egypt’s pampered 440,000-man military, judiciary, academia, media, police, intelligence services and bureaucrats, remained in place. Even Morsi’s presidential guard remained under control of the Mubarak forces. The dictatorship’s old guard - better known as the “deep government” – sought to thwart every move of the Brotherhood. In fact, the stolid, plodding Morsi only became President after more capable colleagues were vetoed by the hard-line Mubarakist courts. He should have purged the “deep government,” notably the police, secret police, judges, and media who were sabotaging the democratic government. But Morsi was too soft, and the entrenched powers arrayed against him too strong.

He never managed to grasp the levers of state. Ironically, after all the media hysteria in North America over the alleged dangers of the Muslim Brotherhood, it turned out to be a dud. The Brotherhood stumbled from one crisis to the next as Egypt’s economy, already in terrible shape before the 2011 revolution, sank like a rock. Tourism, that provided 17 percent of national income, evaporated. Unemployment soared over 13 percent, and over 50 percent among angry urban young. We have recently seen this same phenomenon in Turkey, Tunisia, Algeria, Pakistan and Western Europe. Severe shortages of fuel and electricity sparked outrage. Egypt’s curse is that it cannot feed its surging population of over 90 million.

So Cairo imports huge quantities of wheat and subsidises retail prices for bread. The US sustained the Sadat and Mubarak regimes with boatloads of wheat discounted 50 percent. This vital aid tapered off when Morsi took power. Food prices in Egypt rose 10 percent.Equally important, ever since Anwar Sadat invited in the US to rearm his outdated military, Egypt’s armed forces have become joined at the hip with the Pentagon. Just as Turkey’s 500,000-man armed forces were, until 11 years ago, and Pakistan’s so remain today. Armies of many Muslim states are designed to control their populations, not defeat foreign enemies. The only Arab military force in recent memory to beat an invader has been the guerrilla forces of Lebanon’s Hezbollah. Having said that, Washington has supplied Egypt with just enough arms to control its population and intimidate small neighbours, but not enough to wage war against Israel.

Further, the Pentagon sharply limits Egypt supplies of munitions, missiles and vital spare parts. Many of Egypt’s generals have been trained in US military colleges, where they formed close links with US intelligence and the Pentagon. CIA, DIA, and NSA have large stations in Egypt that watch its military and population. Under Mubarak, the US controlled Egypt’s military and key parts of its economy. When Morsi and the Brotherhood came to power, Washington backed off for a while, but in recent months apparently decided to back the overthrow of Egypt’s first democratic government. This fact became perfectly clear when the White House refused to call the military coup in Cairo a coup. Had it done so, US law would have mandated the cut off of American aid to Egypt. Its politicians and media, with shameless hypocrisy, are hailing the overthrow of Morsi as a democratic achievement.

In North America, anything labelled “Muslim” has become ipso facto menacing. The counter-revolution of Egypt’s “deep government” was financed and aided by the US and Saudi Arabia, cheered on by Israel, the UAE, Britain and France. Tiny Qatar, that backed Morsi with $8 billion, lost its influence in Cairo. The Saudis will now call many shots in Egypt.In recent weeks, mass street demonstrations in major Egyptian cities against Morsi were organised by the police, secret police and the Mubarakist structure. Fears of the Brotherhood were whipped up among Egypt’s nervous Coptic Christians, 10 percent of the population, who form much of the urban elite. Then there were tens of thousands of unemployed, highly volatile young street people, as we recently saw in Istanbul, ready to explode at any excuse. Large numbers of Egyptians were fed up with stumbles of Morsi’s government - even some of his former Salafist allies - and the threat of economic collapse. Liberals, Nasserites, Marxists joined them.

There may be some armed resistance against the coup, but it will likely be crushed by Egypt’s military and attack-dog security forces. Senior Brotherhood officials are already being arrested, and pro-Brotherhood media gagged, while Washington turns a blind eye. As of now, the threat of a real civil war such as Algeria suffered in the 1990s after a US and French-backed military coup seems unlikely, but not impossible. Meanwhile, the military has installed a puppet President for the time being.

The old US “asset” Mohamed el-Baradei may take over as civilian front man for the generals, who prefer civilian sock puppets get blamed for Egypt’s economic and social crises.So much for democracy in the Mideast. The overthrow of a moderate Islamist government will send a message to the Muslim world that compromise with the Western powers is impossible and only violent resistance can shake the status quo.The writer is an award-winning, internationally syndicated columnist. His articles appear in the New York Times, International Herald Tribune, Los Angeles Times, Times of London, Gulf Times, Khaleej Times and other news sites in Asia. He is a regular contributor to The Huffington Post, Lew Rockwell and Big Eye. He appears as an expert on foreign affairs on CNN, BBC, France 2, France 24, Fox News, CTV and CBC.

Message to the Muslim world?
 
The brutal US-backed Mubarak had fallen, but the organs of his 30-year dictatorship, Egypt’s pampered 440,000-man military, judiciary, academia, media, police, intelligence services and bureaucrats, remained in place.

That's what we have been saying.

This coup was engineered by all these traitors who have been sucking on the US tit, and who will do anything -- destroy their own country -- to get back to that status quo.

This nonsense about "the people's will" is a fiction exaggerated by these traitors dominating the media and internet.
 
crossing with Palestine border has been closed by Egyptian army.
 
The overthrow of a moderate Islamist government will send a message to the Muslim world that compromise with the Western powers is impossible and only violent resistance can shake the status quo.
So now we can expect more violence and bloodshed in the Muslim world, where Muslims are fighting Muslims, like what's happening in Syria and other parts of the Islamic world!

Whose next? No prizes for guessing!
 
That's what we have been saying.

This coup was engineered by all these traitors who have been sucking on the US tit, and who will do anything -- destroy their own country -- to get back to that status quo.

This nonsense about "the people's will" is a fiction exaggerated by these traitors dominating the media and internet.

exactly. and ironically they are not calling coup a coup, just because its to what amreeki likes.

So now we can expect more violence and bloodshed in the Muslim world, where Muslims are fighting Muslims, like what's happening in Syria and other parts of the Islamic world!

Whose next? No prizes for guessing!

I think yes, the new colonialism is on its way; destabilize middle east is their policy.
 
So now we can expect more violence and bloodshed in the Muslim world

Violence is definitely NOT the way, but this military coup sends exactly the wrong message: that playing by the rules of democracy doesn't work and, at the end of the day, might is right.
 
Violence is definitely NOT the way, but this military coup sends exactly the wrong message: that playing by the rules of democracy doesn't work and, at the end of the day, might is right.

america supports a coup over democracy in egypt, hence what has happened in Egypt is not a coup :lol:
 
I think yes, the new colonialism is on its way; destabilize middle east is their policy.
It all started with the neo-cons led by Bush and his cronies to invade Iraq for not only its oil but for gaining a foothold in the Middle East to impose Western style 'democracy' there notwithstanding the fact that the way of life in the Islamic world is not the same as what the Americans see it.

So with the Middle East in their pockets their next goal was to be Africa and then South America. They've come a cropper in Asia but they'll continue their policy of 'color revolutions' like they did in the CAR. After all it's no secret that the great American dream is to establish a New World Order (NWO) controlled by the Bilderbergs.

I can see that the next target is going to be Balochistan where the yanks are apprehensive of a future Sino-Pak domination of the Gulf and the Arabian Sea, seeing that China has already gained a foothold there. With elements of the Chinese navy soon to be based at Gwadar, breathing down the neck of American interests, the yanks will do all they can to neutralize the threat to their shipping lanes across the Strait of Hormuz and the Arabian Sea.

For that they would provide massive but tacit support to the BLA and other anti-Pakistan militant organizations to stir up trouble and destabilize the region. China would certainly not want to be caught up in an insurgency in Balochistan which may mean the Chinese thinking twice before establishing a naval base at Gwadar seeing that they've two insurgencies on their hands already - in Xinjiang and Tibet. That's perhaps what the Americans think.

Let's see how this great game plays out. Interesting times are ahead!
 
I am frusteted after watching people propagating conspiracy theories without solid evidence.:hitwall:

P.S. Who nourishing arm violence in Syria only west
 
It all started with the neo-cons led by Bush and his cronies to invade Iraq for not only its oil but for gaining a foothold in the Middle East to impose Western style 'democracy' there notwithstanding the fact that the way of life in the Islamic world is not the same as what the Americans see it.

So with the Middle East in their pockets their next goal was to be Africa and then South America. They've come a cropper in Asia but they'll continue their policy of 'color revolutions' like they did in the CAR. After all it's no secret that the great American dream is to establish a New World Order (NWO) controlled by the Bilderbergs.

I can see that the next target is going to be Balochistan where the yanks are apprehensive of a future Sino-Pak domination of the Gulf and the Arabian Sea, seeing that China has already gained a foothold there. With elements of the Chinese navy soon to be based at Gwadar, breathing down the neck of American interests, the yanks will do all they can to neutralize the threat to their shipping lanes across the Strait of Hormuz and the Arabian Sea.


For that they would provide massive but tacit support to the BLA and other anti-Pakistan militant organizations to stir up trouble and destabilize the region. China would certainly not want to be caught up in an insurgency in Balochistan which may mean the Chinese thinking twice before establishing a naval base at Gwadar seeing that they've two insurgencies on their hands already - in Xinjiang and Tibet. That's perhaps what the Americans think.

Let's see how this great game plays out. Interesting times are ahead!

this is what I see coming too..
 
It's time to supply arms to the Muslim Brotherhood so the Egyptian people can fight back the USA puppets!
 
It all started with the neo-cons led by Bush and his cronies to invade Iraq for not only its oil but for gaining a foothold in the Middle East to impose Western style 'democracy' there notwithstanding the fact that the way of life in the Islamic world is not the same as what the Americans see it.

So with the Middle East in their pockets their next goal was to be Africa and then South America. They've come a cropper in Asia but they'll continue their policy of 'color revolutions' like they did in the CAR. After all it's no secret that the great American dream is to establish a New World Order (NWO) controlled by the Bilderbergs.

I can see that the next target is going to be Balochistan where the yanks are apprehensive of a future Sino-Pak domination of the Gulf and the Arabian Sea, seeing that China has already gained a foothold there. With elements of the Chinese navy soon to be based at Gwadar, breathing down the neck of American interests, the yanks will do all they can to neutralize the threat to their shipping lanes across the Strait of Hormuz and the Arabian Sea.

For that they would provide massive but tacit support to the BLA and other anti-Pakistan militant organizations to stir up trouble and destabilize the region. China would certainly not want to be caught up in an insurgency in Balochistan which may mean the Chinese thinking twice before establishing a naval base at Gwadar seeing that they've two insurgencies on their hands already - in Xinjiang and Tibet. That's perhaps what the Americans think.

Let's see how this great game plays out. Interesting times are ahead!

not true about the oil my relative an American works is oil and gas worked in iraq he won't disclose the nature of work but he worked at an oil facility protected by fortress of walls (thickness of the wall was unbelievable) and reinforced with containers (even had a team of personal guards and armored jeeps) i have seen the pics unfortunately won't post them....i asked him that we did follow the oil tenders and they all went to chinese companies he said nonsense every major EU/American company was there
 

Latest posts

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom