The Revolt in Egypt is Coming Home
The uprising in Egypt is our theater of the possible. It is what people across the world have struggled for and their thought controllers have feared. Western commentators invariably misuse the words "we" and "us" to speak on behalf of those with power who see the rest of humanity as useful or expendable. The "we" and "us" are universal now. Tunisia came first, but the spectacle always promised to be Egyptian.
As a reporter, I have felt this over the years. In Cairo’s Tahrir (Liberation) Square in 1970, the coffin of the great nationalist Gamal Abdul Nasser coffin bobbed on an ocean of people who, under him, had glimpsed freedom. One of them, a teacher, described the disgraced past as "grown men chasing cricket balls for the British at the Cairo Club." The parable was for all Arabs and much of the world. Three years later, the Egyptian Third Army crossed the Suez Canal and overran Israel’s fortresses in Sinai. Returning from this battlefield to Cairo, I joined a million others in Liberation Square. Their restored respect was like a presence – until the United States rearmed the Israelis and beckoned an Egyptian defeat.
Thereafter, President Anwar Sadat became America’s man through the usual billion-dollar bribery and, for this, he was assassinated in 1980. Under his successor, Hosni Mubarak, dissenters came to Liberation Square at their peril. Enriched by Washington’s bag men, Mubarak’s latest American-Israeli project is the building of an underground wall behind which the Palestinians of Gaza are to be imprisoned forever.
Today, the problem for the people in Liberation Square lies not in Egypt. On 6 February, the New York Times reported: "The Obama administration formally threw its weight behind a gradual transition in Egypt, backing attempts by the country’s vice president, General Omar Suleiman, to broker a compromise with opposition groups … Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said it was important to support Mr. Suleiman as he seeks to defuse street protests…"
Having rescued him from would be assassins, Suleiman is, in effect, Mubarak’s bodyguard,. His other distinction, documented in Jane Mayer’s investigative book, The Dark Side, is as supervisor of American "rendition flights" to Egypt where people are tortured on demand of the CIA. He is also, as WikiLeaks reveals, a favorite in Tel Aviv. When President Obama was asked in 2009 if he regarded Mubarak as authoritarian, his swift reply was "no." He called him a peacemaker, echoing that other great liberal tribune, Tony Blair, to whom Mubarak is "a force for good."
The grisly Suleiman is now the peacemaker and the force for good, the man of "compromise" who will oversee the "gradual transition" and "defuse the protests." This attempt to suffocate the Egyptian revolt will call on the fact that a substantial proportion of the population, from businessmen to journalists to petty officials, have provided its apparatus. In one sense, they reflect those in the Western liberal class who backed Obama’s "hope and change" and Blair’s equally bogus "political Cinemascope" (Henry Porter in the Guardian, 1995). No matter how different they appear and postulate, both groups are the domesticated backers and beneficiaries of the status quo.
In Britain, the BBC’s Today program is their voice. Here, serious diversions from the status quo are known as "Lord knows what." On 28 January the Washington correspondent Paul Adams declared, "The Americans are in a very difficult situation. They do want to see some kind of democratic reform but they are also conscious that they need strong leaders capable of making decisions. They regard President Mubarak as an absolute bulwark, a key strategic ally in the region. Egypt is the country along with Israel on which American Middle East diplomacy absolutely hinges. They don’t want to see anything that smacks of a chaotic handover to frankly Lord knows what."
Fear of Lord Knows What requires that the historical truth of American and British "diplomacy" as largely responsible for the suffering in the Middle East is suppressed or reversed. Forget the Balfour Declaration that led to the imposition of expansionist Israel. Forget secret Anglo-American sponsorship of Islamic jihadists as a "bulwark" against the democratic control of oil. Forget the overthrow of democracy in Iran and the installation of the tyrant Shah, and the slaughter and destruction in Iraq. Forget the American fighter jets, cluster bombs, white phosphorous, and depleted uranium that are performance-tested on children in Gaza. And now, in the cause of preventing "chaos," forget the denial of almost every basic civil liberty in Omar Suleiman’s contrite "new" regime in Cairo.
The uprising in Egypt has discredited every Western media stereotype about the Arabs. The courage, determination, eloquence, and grace of those in Liberation Square contrast with "our" specious fear-mongering with its al-Qaeda and Iran bogeys and iron-clad assumptions, bereft of irony, of the "moral leadership of the West." It is not surprising that the recent source of truth about the imperial abuse of the Middle East, WikiLeaks, is itself subjected to craven, petty abuse in those self-congratulating newspapers that set the limits of elite liberal debate on both sides of the Atlantic. Perhaps they are worried. Across the world, public awareness is rising and bypassing them. In Washington and London, the regimes are fragile and barely democratic. Having long burned down societies abroad, they are now doing something similar at home, with lies and without a mandate. To their victims, the resistance in Cairo’s Liberation Square must seem an inspiration. "We won’t stop," said the young Egyptian woman on TV, "we won’t go home." Try kettling a million people in the center of London, bent on civil disobedience, and try imagining it could not happen.
Read more by John Pilger
- The New Propaganda Is Liberal – March 14th, 2013
- WikiLeaks is a rare truth-teller. Smearing Julian Assange is shameful – February 17th, 2013
- The Real Invasion of Africa Is Not News, and a License To Lie Is Hollywood’s Gift – January 31st, 2013
- As Sanctions Hit Iran’s Most Vulnerable, the Man Who Dared to Feed Sanction-Starved Iraq Remains in Prison – November 9th, 2012
- The Life and Death of an Australian Hero, Whose Skin Was the Wrong Colour – October 4th, 2012





Vojkan Milosavljevic
February 9th, 2011 at 11:28 pm
Unfortunately, stereotypes are not shred that easily.
You are a good man Mr Pilger. We are both heart and soul with Egyptian protesters.
But, with all due respect to your experience, you are a wishful thinker.
And I do pray God to prove me wrong.
theothercanada
February 10th, 2011 at 2:29 am
Thanks to Egyptians and other Arabs brave enough to rise up and stand up for dignity, freedom and liberty, Liberation square is the Shining City on the Hill. Defend dignity, Resist humiliation!
mickperry
February 10th, 2011 at 3:19 am
A thought provoking article from Mr Pilger, suggesting the inevitable. The only time we ever saw a million people gathered in Central London was on February 15 2003, when we voiced our demands that the campaign to conquer Iraq be halted. Today, the Con Dems “Shock and Awe” attack on the very fabric of our society here in Britain has no popular mandate, and is being met with incredulity by an increasingly vocal electorate. As elsewhere, the mood is likely to change to one of outright defiance as the consequences of this social shredding become ever more apparent. We have therefore learned some valuable lessons from our brothers and sisters in Tahrir Sq over the past couple of weeks, in particular the one about not going home until your demands are met. To those who say 'It couldn't happen here, people are too apathetic', remember that this is probably what Mubarak himself was saying three weeks ago.
Emilyrose
February 10th, 2011 at 3:43 am
One million in London Mr Pilger.
Just give the word I'm in.
The English have been 'tolerant' to the point of bovine stupidity.
jojo
February 10th, 2011 at 5:23 am
Ejipped :^(
liveload
February 10th, 2011 at 8:48 am
The so called "West", which is a puzzling appellation considering we live on a sphere, is just now beginning to realize how incredibly brutal and barbarous our governments have been? Whoopdeedoo…here's a Scooby Snack for your trouble.
There's always some sort of spin-meister practicing their demagoguery, soothing the minds of those who cannot see anything past the end of their own nose. There's always "another angle", "other viewpoints", or some such bullcrap aimed at keeping the status quo. In the meantime, the bloody hands of tyranny go on subjecting millions around the world to torture, deprivation, starvation, repression, and death all because they are getting paid princely sums to do it. Welcome to the rest of the world America. I liken it to finally lifting the toilet lid after years and years of never looking and discovering, "Wow, my sh*t really does stink!?!".
*golf clap*
charley caruso
February 10th, 2011 at 10:39 am
Let's see how the protesters stand up to a 'whiff of grape' (Napoleon's phrase).
They seem to be without a leader or any ideology, except some vague nonsense about 'democracy'.
No leader, no ideology means el foldo, unless the U.S. hastily jerry-builds some new regime palatable to the mainstream – or arms them as we did in Tiananmen.
Terrance&Philip
February 10th, 2011 at 10:47 am
Amen…that all this caught so many by surprise helps to underscore the near helplessness of America's "best" and "brightest" and the near uselessness of her dead tree media.
theothercanada
February 10th, 2011 at 1:11 pm
I hope they don't fall for Messiah's con job and offers of "help", he is expanding powers of the Police State Act and giving more power to the Department of Homeland Oppression.
They should thank him but stay as clear and as far away as possible, Messiah represents and works for Zionist Masters only..
John_Mohammad
February 10th, 2011 at 4:13 pm
The question on everyone's mind now, though, is: if not Suleiman, then who will lead Egypt? The West seems to be comfy with him in power, and it's not hard to imagine he'll be around for a while when push comes to shove. Why? Why indeed- who else is prepared to take over the reins of government?
That would be the Muslim Brotherhood. The MB is the most organized outfit and is probably pretty much sitting on alert status to step in and run at least an interim government until real elections can be held. The street doesn't want Suleiman; would they accept a coalition government headed up by the MB? Maybe.
The fly in the ointment is that the West (read: Israel) has a fit every time the MB is mentioned as a potential player; they're so afraid of the establishment of an Islamic state next door to Israel and OH THAT JUST WON'T DO, will it? So Washington dutifully falls into lockstep with Tel Aviv and parrots the 'threat from radical Islam' mantra to get everyone scared.
End result? I predict a very interesting weekend. May Allah(swt) bless the protesters and guide the peacemakers and keep everyone safe from harm.
John_Mohammad
February 10th, 2011 at 4:27 pm
I still have to wonder what the real purpose is for the Marines to be sent to Egypt, even in such a small force. A few platoons aren't going to 'ensure Americans get to safety'- those who wanted out have had plenty of time to get out already.
Or are they there to effect 'regime change' in some way? Such a small force wouldn't be able to do much on its own, but if that force happened to be in danger it might- just might- give someone cause to send in a much larger military contingent.
Brodajo
February 10th, 2011 at 5:55 pm
I am beginning to believe that the anti-Gentiles are not completely responsible for America's sorryness.
Publius
February 10th, 2011 at 6:17 pm
http://www.zerohedge.com/article/former-director-…
The U.S. brought Egyptian activists to the U.S. to attend a 2008 event in NYC put on by a group called the "Alliance for Youth Movements". What is AYM? It's a joint corporate/State Department initiative to push for youth political movements globally (yeah right) using social networking tools — Twitter, Facebook, Google, etc. Corporate America is paying big bucks to participate in AYM.
It was started by by a State Department wunderkind named Jared Cohen, a Bush appointee and Obama holdover who is also an adjunct fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations. The other founders were three ex-Google employees. Remember that Google has very close relationships with the U.S. intelligence-industrial complex — they purchased Google Earth from In-Q-Tel, the CIA's venture capital arm; they are investing jointly with In-Q-Tel in new web search functionality that builds public dossiers on people; and they just got a huge secret government contract with the National Geospatial Intelligence Agency to do who knows what.
Ron Tocknell
February 14th, 2011 at 4:31 am
We have a natural inclination to submit to authority. Maybe this was a necessary trait back in the early stages of our evolution as social primates. But, God knows, it's time to move on! Our leaders are no longer protecting us from predators… they ARE our predators! Our leaders are no longer leading us… they are herding us. Maybe it takes the kind of regime the Egyptians endured to rise us from our knees or maybe it takes the kind of spirit the Egyptians showed.
Or maybe… just maybe the time has come. Governments, whether a dictatorship or the ludicrous "musical chairs" charade that passes for 'democracy' in the West, are primarily predatory… and we are all prey. The police and the military have no real 'power' as such. They are just the expendable teeth and claws of the beast and stand to have no share in the spoils.
I hope we wake up soon before the infrastructure is in place to effectively subdue and control the masses to the point that spin is no longer necessary because it no longer matters a toss what we think.