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Turmoil in the Middle East – My Take

Instead of bombarding you with daily hand-wringing over the situation in the Middle East, I decided to wait it out so as not to imitate certain journalists and world leaders (who shall remain nameless) who were taking sides before even knowing what that meant. I think now, with Mubarak apparently gone, that there are certain things that are possible to say:

The people of Egypt, like all the peoples of the Middle East save for Israel, were mired in a political system that was corrupt and which did not allow them to pursue life, liberty or the pursuit of happiness. There is no way for an Egyptian to start a business or get the financial means to marry without bribes and years of horrifying bureaucratic nightmares. That was and has always been the reason for instability in the Middle East. This, not Israel, is probably the leading cause for the rise of Muslim fanatics and terror organizations that are destroying the peace of the whole world. Unfortunately, this fact is something the democracies have long ignored. This is a wake-up call for them. Let’s see if they sleep through it.

Mubarak has always kept Egypt’s treaties with Israel. For that, the people of Israel are grateful. We are also grateful that he did what needed to be done to control the threat of the Muslim Brotherhood. Founded in Egypt in 1928 to promote sharia law, it created a military wing which had close links to the Nazis during the 1930s, when the Brotherhood was involved in spying, sabotage and support for the terrorist activities of Haj Amin el-Hussaini in British Mandate Palestine. The Brotherhood disseminated Hitler’s Mein Kampf and The Protocols of the Elders of Zion widely in Arab translations.

The White House, in this terrible time of uncertainty and change in the Middle East, has been confused to say the least, and dangerously wrong-headed. Encouraging the protesters, then siding with Mubarak, then welcoming Mubarak’s ouster just before Mubarak declared he wasn’t leaving has left us in Israel shaking our heads. With this kind of instability in Washington, where is the strong ally we pretend we have?

Douglas E. Schoen, adviser to four former Israeli Prime Ministers over the last 30 years, wrote in a Fox News editorial that if elections were held in Egypt now, there is a fifty percent chance of the Muslim Brotherhood taking over the country. For Israel, that would be a nightmare. We can only hope against hope that the true will of the people who started this revolt to make better lives for themselves and their families will not allow one dictatorship to replace another, leading to a war that will no doubt prove disastrous for everyone.

Read Caroline Glick’s excellent article on the subject here.

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2 comments on “Turmoil in the Middle East – My Take”

  1. Reverend Wright

    “50% chance of the Muslim Brotherhood taking over Egypt”? What Islamophobic nonsnense! Doesn’t this so-called expert from FOX News understand anything? It’s a 100% chance.

  2. E. Orenstein

    You’ve been on point so many times. I love reading your articles, opinions, etc… Best wishes always, EO

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