Saviors in Uniform?
by
William Norman Grigg
Recently by William Norman Grigg: About
That 'War on Cops'
"The army is
all good men but the police, every policeman is bad," explained
Egyptian demonstrator Mustafa Abdel Wahab to Time magazine.
Mr. Wahab is as tragically mistaken in the first assessment as he
is correct in the second.
In Egypt
as is the case nearly everywhere else the police and army are
what Alexander
Hamilton called "correspondent appendages of military establishments."
Not every individual soldier or policeman is exceptionally depraved,
of course. But the institutional purpose of such establishments
is to serve the depraved interests of those who control the State.
This is why, as Hamilton pointed out, military bodies (which include
police agencies) "have a tendency to destroy ... civil and political
rights." Decades of "emergency" rule in Egypt have destroyed whatever
trivial substantive differences may once have separated the police
from the military.
In the late
summer of 1994 I spent a couple of weeks in Cairo covering a United
Nations conference on population control. That event attracted thousands
of people politicians, delegates, lobbyists, activists, and journalists
from around the world. In anticipation of media scrutiny the Mubarak
regime made a considerable effort to prettify itself. The cosmetic
changes included issuing brand new white uniforms to the heavily-armed
police officers who were deployed in small groups everywhere in
downtown Cairo.
I remained
in Cairo for a few days after the conference ended. It was my expectation
that the departure of the Important People would bring about a change
in the security situation. In a sense, I was correct: The white
uniforms were put away, and the heavily-armed police who prowled
the streets reverted to their standard military attire. Like other
visitors, I had assumed that the high-profile police presence was
the exception, rather than the rule. We were wrong.
The ongoing
upheaval in Egypt offers a potent illustration of the fact that
government police agencies are instruments of plunder, rather than
protection and that protection of person and property is best
handled privately. This was made painfully clear after a government-organized
mob was unleashed on the peaceful protesters in an effort to create
the "chaos" necessary to justify the imposition of "order."
"`Why don't
you protect us?' some protesters shouted at the soldiers, who replied
they did not have orders to do so and told people to go home."
This
on-scene account from Tahrir Square described a coordinated
attack by a mob of "pro-government
protesters," some of whom were mounted on horses or camels.
The assailants criminal subcontractors in the employ of the regime
used
clubs, whips, straight razors, and machetes. They acted with complete
impunity, beating and killing at whim. Among their targets were
journalists attempting to document the pogrom: Anderson
Cooper discovered that international celebrity conferred no protection.
Graeme
Wood of The Atlantic, who was present in Tahrir Square
during the last mass protest the 2003 demonstrations against Washington's
assault on Iraq explains how Mubaraks police state has handled
such events:
"During those
protests, the police encircled the protesters and let them scream
for a couple days, Wood recalls. "Late at night, I stood among the
police, asking them about their hometowns in Upper Egypt. Then,
around midnight, they were called to attention, told to harden their
lines, and finally to march toward the remaining protesters, letting
none escape. Truncheons came down, and within a few minutes they
had rounded everyone up into paddy wagons, and the square resumed
its light evening traffic."
While blood
was shed in Tahrir Square, the police actively protected the thugs
and robbers, and the "good men" in the Army did nothing to protect
those who had trusted them.
When they weren't
beating people in the streets or hauling them off to be murdered,
plainclothes thugs from Egypt's Central Security Service (or Mukhabarat)
brazenly looted
private businesses or provided protection to those who did deputized
criminals referred
to by one protester on the scene as "prisoners who have been
released by that bastard Mubarak in return for their services to
beat up civilians." Egyptians not employed in the coercive sector
responded by creating private anti-looting patrols.
Public loathing
of the government's police force is widespread in Egypt, which is
a healthy development in any society. However, as Mr. Wahab's comments
illustrate, the growing disrepute of Egypt's police organs has actually
enhanced the stature of the military.
Writes
Steve Coll of The New Yorker: "There have been reports
that protesters are relieved to see the Army in the streets; no
doubt, as in many other like countries, the Army has more credibility
than the corrupt and often torture-prone police."
For 31 years,
Hosni Mubarak has been a CIA sock puppet ruling through decree while
maintaining a pretense of "legitimacy." Mubarak avoided naming a
successor, most likely because Washington didn't give him permission
to do so. In the terminal crisis of his reign, he has tapped Omar
Suleiman, the head of the Mukhabarat secret police, to serve
as vice president. Since Suleiman has been running Egypt's apparatus
of imprisonment, torture, and murder for decades, this appointment
wasn't really a promotion. And in his current position Suleiman
would be in charge, even if somebody
else is cast in the role of figurehead.
Ian Black,
Middle East editor for the London Guardian, points out that
Suleiman "is the keeper of Egypt's and the president's secrets,
a behind-the-scenes operator who has been intimately involved in
the most sensitive issues of national security and foreign policy
for nearly 20 years."
Not only was
he was the dungeon master and chief persecutor of Egypt's political
dissidents, but he also coordinated
rendition and torture operations with the CIA. He's
also been a dutiful asset of the Pentagon, according to WikiLeaks.
A
Foreign Policy profile of Suleiman published two years ago
points out that Suleiman was a rent boy for both sides during the
Cold War circle-jerk: He attended "the Soviet Union's Frunze Military
Academy" while Cairo was a Soviet client, and then "received training
at the John
F. Kennedy Special Warfare School and Center" at Ft. Bragg in
the 1980s. As head of the Mukhabarat, Suleiman was "one of a rare
group of Egyptian officials who hold both a military rank ... and
a civilian office...." His most important assignment was to monitor
"Egypt's security apparatus for signs of internal coups."
Unlike those
who had previously held his position, Suleiman became a public figure
several years ago as Mubarak who reportedly suffers from cancer
became enfeebled. He and his handlers spent several years building
internal coalitions and developing diplomatic contacts abroad. As
Cairo-based journalist Issandr Amrani points out, "most Suleiman
supporters recognize that to gain the presidency he would most likely
have to carry out a coup perhaps a soft, constitutional one
but a coup nonetheless."
Well, how about
a "People Power" coup, orchestrated with the help of the kind folks
in Washington? That appears to be what was arranged in Egypt, and
we could conceivably see something similar here in the United States
before the decade is over.
The convulsion
in Cairo brings to mind Brig.
Gen. Charles J. Dunlap's essay "The
Origins of the American Military Coup of 2012," which was published
in the Winter 1992 93 issue of the U.S. Army War College journal
Parameters a
subject I have discussed before.
Dunlap used
the literary device of a smuggled prison letter composed by "Prisoner
222305759," condemned to death for "treason" by the American military
junta of Gen. E.T. Brutus. Following a series of military disasters
overseas and domestic crises at home, Brutus staged a coup in the
name of protecting "public order" from the corruption of the political
class.
In the decades
leading up to the putsch, the "Prisoner" recalled, "The
one institution of government in which people retained faith was
the military." Even as the public lamented the corruption and
profligacy of Big Government, they had nothing but bottomless respect
for the Regime's chief instrument of death and property destruction.
The military retained its prestige in spite of the fact that its
structural defects made painfully visible by a long, bloody, and
futile war in the Gulf left it "unfit to engage an authentic military
opponent."
While the military
was no longer well-suited to fight and win wars, its subtle integration
into every element of domestic life made it perfectly suited to
carry out a coup:
"Eventually,
people became acclimated to seeing uniformed military personnel
patrolling their neighborhood. Now troops are an adjunct to almost
all police forces in the country. In many of the areas where much
of our burgeoning population of elderly Americans live [military
dictator] Brutus calls them 'National Security Zones' the military
is often the only law enforcement agency. Consequently, the military
was ideally positioned in thousands of communities to support the
coup."
During
Egypt's long "state of emergency," its army managed to lose two
wars abroad, while fine-tuning its skills as an instrument of domestic
suppression. Granted, it
has announced that it will not fire on Egyptian citizens, which
is always a welcome development. But why should the Egyptian
Army fire on protesters, given that the citizen uprising is helping
to entrench military rule, rather than end it?
With our own
economy unraveling and our political class becoming shamelessly
predatory and unbearably impudent, it's not difficult to imagine
a similar scenario
playing out in America, with Tea Party Republicans
for whom the military (which in our system includes our own "torture-prone"
police) is sacrosanct
eagerly
welcoming a
military coup as "liberation" from Big Government. Perhaps Field
Marshal Stanley McChrystal formerly military proconsul in Afghanistan,
most recently seen flogging
Soviet-style "national service" in the pages of Newsweek
could be tapped to play the role of America's Omar Suleiman.
February
4, 2011
William
Norman Grigg [send him mail]
publishes the Pro
Libertate blog and hosts the Pro
Libertate radio program.
Copyright
© 2011 William Norman Grigg
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