Wednesday, 16 February 2011

Libya protests: Second city Benghazi hit by violence

Pro-Gaddafi demonstrators in Benghazi. Photo: 16 February 2011 Gaddafi supporters held rallies in Benghazi and other Libyan cities, state TV reported

Hundreds of anti-government protesters have clashed with police and government supporters in Libya's second city, in the latest display of unrest in the Arab world.

Dozens of people are said to have been hurt in the clashes in Benghazi.

The overnight unrest followed the arrest of an outspoken government critic, who was reportedly freed later.

State TV showed demonstrations in several cities said to be in support of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi.

The unrest comes a day before planned anti-government demonstrations on Thursday, dubbed a "Day of Anger", which are being organised via internet social networks.

Pro-democracy protests have recently swept through several Arab nations, with the presidents of Tunisia and Egypt forced to resign amid growing unrest.

But Wednesday's demonstrations were the first display of defiance in Libya, where dissent is rarely tolerated.

Jail massacre

Witnesses say that at one stage up to 2,000 people were involved in the overnight protests in Benghazi, which saw a march on government offices in the city.

Analysis

The violent clashes reported from Benghazi could well be a foretaste of what is to follow.

Opponents of the regime are calling for major protests this Thursday, spreading the word by internet.

Libya has had protests before, successfully quashed by the powerful security forces.

But those were before the leaders of both Libya's neighbours - Tunisia to the west, Egypt to the east - were driven from power.

There has been much speculation amongst young, educated Arabs, that the days of Gaddafi's regime are numbered.

He himself has been in power for 42 years, making him the Arab world's longest serving ruler.

The protesters are said to have thrown stones and petrol bombs, and set vehicles alight. Witnesses said police used rubber bullets and water cannon to disperse them.

The protests reportedly began after the arrest of Fathi Terbil, who represents relatives of more than 1,000 prisoners allegedly massacred by security forces in Tripoli's Abu Salim jail in 1996. He was later said to have been freed.

One witness, who did not want to be named, told the BBC: "A couple of people in the crowd started chanting anti-government slogans and the crowd took that on.

"But then there were clashes with pro-government supporters and then after a bit the pro-government supporters dispersed and then the security services arrived and they dispersed the crowds with hot-water cannons."

Footage purporting to show the unrest, with protesters fleeing gunfire and a man being shot, was later posted on the internet. However, subsequent inquiries suggested this was footage originally uploaded more than a year ago.

In a statement issued after the clashes, a senior Libyan official warned that the authorities "will not allow a group of people to move around at night and play with the security of Libya".

It added: "The clashes last night were between small groups of people - up to 150. Some outsiders infiltrated that group. They were trying to corrupt the local legal process which has long been in place.

"We will not permit that at all, and we call on Libyans to voice their issues through existing channels, even if it is to call for the downfall of the government," said the official, who was not identified.

BENGHAZI

Map
  • Libya's second-largest city with some 670,000 residents
  • History of antagonism with Colonel Gaddafi since 1969 coup
  • Many relatives of inmates allegedly killed at Abu Salim prison in 1996 live in the city
  • Hit world headlines with HIV infection trial involving Bulgarian nurses and Palestinian doctor in 1998

More than 100 members of a banned Islamist militant group were freed from Abu Salim on Wednesday. It is not clear if the Benghazi clashes and the release of the inmates were connected.

The European Union, meanwhile, has urged Libya to allow "free expression".

"We also call for calm and for all violence to be avoided," said a spokeswoman for EU foreign policy chief Baroness Ashton.

'Police state'

Colonel Gaddafi is the Arab world's longest-serving leader, having ruled oil-rich Libya since a coup in 1969.

He has always insisted that the country is run by a series of peoples' committees, though most outside observers believe it is a police state with him firmly in control, the BBC's Jon Leyne reports.

The Middle East has recently seen a wave of protests fuelled by discontent over unemployment, rising living costs, corruption and autocratic leaderships.

This began with the overthrow of Tunisia's leader, Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali, in January. Last week, President Hosni Mubarak of Egypt resigned.

In recent days there have also been anti-government demonstrations in Yemen, Bahrain, and Iran.

Iran protests: Clashes at demonstrator's Tehran funeral

Click to play

BBC's Jon Leyne in Cairo: "The government will be nervous because they really thought they had vanquished this one"

Fresh clashes have erupted in Tehran during the funeral of a student killed in anti-government protests on Monday, Iranian state television says.

Rival groups of pro- and anti-government protesters both claim the dead man as one of their supporters.

Sanea Jaleh, 26, was among two people killed during Monday's protests, when thousands of opposition members rallied for the first time in more than a year.

The protests come amid a wave of unrest in the Middle East and North Africa.

Tight security

Wednesday's clash took place during Mr Jaleh's funeral procession, which started at Tehran University in the centre of the capital, broadcaster Irib reported.

At the scene

There were heavy traffic jams in central Tehran when the funeral ceremony started. Police had blocked the streets to traffic near Tehran University, and only those on foot could get in - but not everyone.

Hundreds of plain-clothes members of the paramilitary Basij force were checking the identity cards of anyone suspicious.

Despite their civilian clothing, the occasional crackle of their walkie-talkies, hidden under overcoats, gave them away.

Thankfully, I wasn't stopped due to my bearded face and greying hair.

Inside, some of the protesters were chanting: "BBC's Mousavi is an English spy".

"Students and the people attending the funeral ceremony... have clashed with a limited number of people apparently linked to the sedition [opposition] movement and forced them out by chanting slogans of death to hypocrites," the report on the state-run channel said.

It gave no details of any injuries.

The BBC's Mohsen Asgari, who attended the ceremony in Tehran, said he did not see any major clashes. But he said police forces had blocked all the roads leading to the university and were only allowing in pro-government supporters.

On Monday, thousands of supporters of opposition leaders Mir Hossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karroubi took to the streets of Tehran to show solidarity with the uprisings in Tunisia and Egypt, which have both succeeded in toppling their unpopular leaders.

Two people were killed and several wounded during Monday's clashes with riot police in Tehran. Some 1,500 people have been detained, opposition groups say, but official figures put the number at 150.

'Pay the price'

Following the deadly clashes, Iranian MPs called for the two opposition leaders to be tried and executed.

Start Quote

As a soldier of this great nation for almost the past 50 years, I am ready to pay any price”

End Quote Mehdi Karroubi Opposition leader

But Mr Karroubi and Mr Mousavi - who are both being held under de facto house arrest - issued defiant statements via their websites on Wednesday.

"I am not afraid of any kind of threat and as a soldier of this great nation for the past almost 50 years, I am ready to pay any price," Mr Karroubi said on his official site Sahamnews.org.

In a separate statement on his own website, Kaleme.com, Mr Mousavi praised the protesters for Monday's rally.

"The glorious rally on 25 Bahman (14 February) is a great achievement for the great people of a great nation and for the Green Movement," he said, referring to the opposition movement and its supporters.

The protests were the first anti-government demonstration since February 2010, when similar agitation was crushed by security forces and militiamen.

Opposition supporters maintain that the re-election of President Ahmadinejad in June 2009 was rigged.

Many of the slogans chanted by protesters on Monday were aimed against the most senior figure in the Iranian regime - Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

He is seen by them as the power behind the opposition crackdown, Mr Ahmadinejad's disputed re-election, and behind many of the president's domestic and foreign polices which have brought hardship to Iranians.

President Ahmadinejad said on Tuesday that the latest opposition protests seen in Iranian cities were "going nowhere" and vowed to punish their organisers.

US President Barack Obama sharply criticised the authorities' response.

Bahrain protests: Anti-government campaign gathers pace

Protesters camped out in main square Many protesters say they will stay until their demands are met

Thousands of protesters are gathering the Bahraini capital Manama after two days of clashes with police in which two people died.

Many of them have been attending the funeral of the second victim, killed at the funeral of the first.

Some say they will stage a sit-in on the main square until their demands for political reform are met.

Meanwhile the interior minister said police allegedly involved in the killings had been arrested.

Bahrain's King Hamad bin Issa Al Khalifa used a TV address on Tuesday to make a promise to investigate the deaths.

The US, which has a big naval base in Bahrain, expressed concern at the killings and called for restraint.

"The United States is very concerned by recent violence surrounding protests in Bahrain," state department spokesman PJ Crowley said in a statement.

"We also call on all parties to exercise restraint and refrain from violence."

The leader of Bahrain's main Shia opposition party, Sheikh Ali Salman, called for the creation of a "civil government" with an elected prime minister.

"The government should be elected by the people who would have the right to hold it accountable," he said. The king currently appoints the country's head of government.

Mr Salman, who heads the Islamic National Accord Association, said his MPs would boycott parliament until their demands were met.

The disturbances in Bahrain - where the Shia majority has been ruled by a Sunni Muslim royal family since the 18th Century - are part of a wave of anti-government unrest that has swept the Middle East.

Internet restricted

The Bahraini demonstrators say they want:

  • political prisoners to be released
  • more jobs and housing
  • the creation of a more representative and empowered parliament
  • a new constitution written by the people
  • a new cabinet that does not include Prime Minister Sheikh Khalifa bin Salman Al Khalifa, who has been in office for 40 years

The funeral is being held for 31-year-old Fadel Salman Matrouk, who was shot dead in clashes at the funeral of a previous victim killed in Monday's clashes in the village of Daih.

King Hamad expressed regret about the deaths

Protesters attending the funeral called for the removal of the government, while pounding their chests in rhythm in a distinctive Shia mourning gesture, Reuters news agency reported.

Many will have had to return to work after Tuesday's public holiday to mark the Prophet Muhammad's birthday, but correspondents say that so far momentum appears to still be with the protests.

In a rare TV appearance on Tuesday, Sheikh Hamad expressed regret at the fatalities and said he would continue reforms begun in 2002 when the emirate became a constitutional monarchy.

Following the address, thousands of protesters gathered in Pearl Square in central Manama. Some said more than 10,000 people were there.

Police were deployed on the other side of a bridge leading to the square, but took no further action.

The Bahrain Youth Society For Human Rights said many of the protesters had brought tents, blankets and carpets.

The group also said the country's internet connections were being restricted to hamper the uploading of videos and pictures from the protests.

Opposition boycott

Since independence from the UK in 1971, tensions between the Sunni elite and the less affluent Shia have frequently caused civil unrest. Shia groups say they are marginalised, subject to unfair laws, and repressed.

Start Quote

What happened in Tunisia and Egypt has encouraged us to move forward to ask peacefully for our demands”

End Quote Anmar, Manama

The conflict lessened in 1999 when Sheikh Hamad became emir. He freed political prisoners, allowed exiles to return, and abolished a law permitting the government to detain individuals without trial for three years.

He also began a cautious process of democratic reform. In 2001, voters approved a National Action Charter that would transform Bahrain into a constitutional monarchy. The next year, Sheikh Hamad proclaimed himself king and decreed that a National Assembly be formed.

There was also greater protection of democracy and human rights. Although political parties were banned, "political societies" could operate.

Landmark elections were held in 2002, but the opposition boycotted them because the appointed upper chamber of parliament, the Shura Council, was given equal powers to the elected lower chamber, the Council of Representatives.

The BBC's Kevin Connolly says Bahrain has a close relationship with the US and the US Fifth Fleet has its home there - a factor which guarantees that Washington will be watching events in the kingdom closely.

Ivory Coast rush to withdraw bank cash

People wait in line on 16 February 2011 in front of a branch of the pan-African bank Ecobank in Abidjan For several weeks it has been almost impossible to cash cheques in the main city of Abidjan

Long queues have formed at banks in Ivory Coast amid fears of a banking collapse as the Standard Chartered bank said it was suspending operations.

It is the fourth bank to close this week because of turmoil following November's disputed presidential polls.

Earlier it was reported that West Africa's BRVM stock exchange, based in Abidjan, had suspended its operations.

BRVM staff told the BBC they were working, but it was not clear if they were actually able to do transactions.

The UN-backed election commission named Alassane Ouattara as the winner of the election, but the result was reversed by a legal body and Mr Gbagbo remains in power despite the threat of international sanctions and military force.

Cash machines empty

The BBC's John James in Abidjan says the BRVM did not function on Monday. It said in a statement this was because of "technical problems".

A Baoule farmer gathers cocoa beans on November 17, 2010 in Zamblekro, a village near the city of Gagnoa Ivory Coast's farmers provide a third of the world's supply of cocoa

Tuesday was a bank holiday and on Wednesday morning there remained armed police outside and inside the premises, our reporter says.

Last week, soldiers loyal to Laurent Gbagbo, who is refusing to step down as Ivory Coast's president, invaded the exchange's offices in Abidjan.

They said they were acting on rumours that BRVM planned to relocate. Firms from eight West African nations trade on the Abidjan stock market.

Our correspondent says the financial crisis has been provoked by uncertainty and sanctions.

Most cash machines in Abidjan are now empty or out of action, and for several weeks it has been almost impossible to cash cheques, he says.

In a statement to the BBC, Standard Chartered said it was suspending operations "until it is safe to reopen".

On Monday, the dispute prompted two leading banks, BICICI - the local branch of the French bank BNP Paribas - and Citibank, to suspend their local operations. Nigeria's Access Bank also closed on Monday.

BNP Paribas and number one Societe Generale between them have about two-thirds of the Ivory Coast banking market.

Citibank is the largest corporate financer of Ivory Coast's oil and gas operations and the third biggest cocoa exporter financer, although it has no retail branches.

Sanctions biting

Western nations have put in place travel bans and sanctions on a range of individuals and organisations backing Mr Gbagbo.

Cocoa exporters are also refusing to co-operate with the regime.

Ivory Coast is the biggest cocoa producer in the world and the price of cocoa has been trading at its highest levels for a year.

Exporters have stopped registering new beans for export as a result of the sanctions, as well as a ban called for by Mr Ouattara.

Mr Gbagbo had previously ordered the seizure of all local branches of the Central Bank of West African States (BCEAO).

Ivory Coast is part of the eight-country West African CFA monetary zone, with a single central bank based in Dakar, Senegal, but with national headquarters in each country.

Without access to government funds, it is unclear whether Mr Gbagbo will be able to continuing paying the country's military and security forces.

Silvio Berlusconi: Ruby sex trial 'does not worry me'

Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi and Karima el Mahroug (file pic) Mr Berlusconi and Karima El Mahroug each deny any sexual relationship

Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi says he is not worried about standing trial charged with paying for sex with an under-age prostitute.

He has also been indicted on a charge of abuse of power related to the same girl, Karima El Mahroug, known as Ruby.

In his first public comment on the issue since a judge ordered him to stand trial on 6 April, the PM said: "I am not worried in the least."

Mr Berlusconi denies paying for sex with Ms Mahroug, when she was aged 17.

Although frequenting prostitutes is not a crime in Italy, having sex with one under the age of 18 is an offence punishable by a prison sentence.

Mr Berlusconi also rejects allegations that he abused his power by seeking Ms Mahroug's release when she was detained in another case.

He has said the accusations are politically motivated.

"For love of country I won't talk about it," Mr Belusconi said at the end of a news conference that mainly addressed economic issues.

"Suffice it to say that I am not worried in the least."

'No early election'

Mr Berlusconi's fast-track trial in front of three female judges will start at a court in Milan at 0930 on Wednesday 6 April, examining judge Cristina Di Censo ordered on Tuesday.

If convicted, the prime minister could face up to 15 years in prison.

Karima El Mahroug

  • Born 1992 in Morocco, say reports
  • Nicknamed Ruby Rubacuori, or "Ruby Heartstealer"
  • Ran away from home in Sicily as a child, growing up in and out of care
  • Her use of the term "bunga bunga" to describe an erotic game allegedly played at Mr Berlusconi's parties was quickly adopted by headline writers
  • But she denies any sexual relationship with him, saying he is just "fighting loneliness, a bit like I do"

These are some of the most serious allegations Mr Berlusconi has faced during his long career, says the BBC's Duncan Kennedy in Rome.

He also faces three other court cases related to financial dealings, but this is the first time he will face trial over his personal conduct.

Ms Mahroug, now aged 18, has denied sleeping with the prime minister but has said she received 7,000 euros (£5,900, $9,400) from him as a gift after one of his parties.

Regarding the abuse of power charge, Mr Berlusconi admits calling the police while Ms Mahroug was being held on suspicion of theft.

But he said he was doing a favour for the then-Egyptian leader, Hosni Mubarak, because Mr Berlusconi had been told the girl was Mr Mubarak's granddaughter; she is not.

Mr Berlusconi's governing coalition has been looking increasingly shaky but on Wednesday he dismissed talk of an early election.

He said he would see out his term until elections scheduled for 2013.

Wednesday's papers: Reforming the constitution and fighting corruption


Wed, 16/02/2011 - 09:08
Coming down from the high of revolutionary euphoria that hit the press over the past few days--including state-run papers, which endorsed the youth uprising in the final moments--more moderate reporting has returned.
The constitutional review committee set up by the Egyptian Armed Forces leads most papers this morning. State-run Al-Akhbar runs a concise story about the membership of the committee and its scope of work, which is to amend all necessary articles of the Constitution as it sees fit, as well as corresponding laws. The story also focused on the pledges Hussein Tantawy, head of the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces, made to the committee to lift the emergency law before the presidential and parliamentary elections, as well as his wish to turn over the country’s presidency to elected leaders and constitutional authorities.
With this coverage style, Al-Akhbar returns to its status as a mouthpiece of the presiding leadership, merely reporting on its activities and views.
Al-Ahram state-owned paper showcases the same editorial policy through the same story, with a touch of glorification. The story is the only one occupying the front page and its author is Osama al-Saraya, the editor-in-chief; the content and the headline--“No return to the situation prior to 25 January”--clearly cheers the army. Al-Saraya reports closely about the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces’ views without getting into the details of the constitutional committee. He writes about the council’s pledge to transfer power as soon as possible and its messages to protesters that they can call for the fall of a regime, but not the state and that this is not the right time for each group to voice demands. Al-Saraya also reports that the military believes people are in dire need of the return of security forces and that citizens should encourage policemen to do their jobs properly. Finally, he writes about the army’s concerns about the way toppled President Hosni Mubarak is mentioned. “The president let go of his authorities to save the country from a catastrophe… Our people would have killed each other, which would have put the Armed Forces in a crisis. The president’s resignation is something he should be thanked for, as well as his decision to stay in Egypt,” al-Saraya quotes army men as saying.
Al-Shorouk, a privately-owned daily, covers the same story, albeit with more insight and not much focus on relaying the discourse of the army. The author interviews a member of the constitutional committee, Hassan Badrawy, deputy head of the Supreme Constitutional Law, who says that their meeting with the Armed Forces showcased the latter’s lack of interest in staying in power for a long time. An unnamed source also tells Al-Shorouk that the committee probably won’t amend Article 2 of the Constitution, which stipulates that Islamic Sharia is a source of legislation, since changing the article would be controversial.
The other story that receives attention from all the papers is corruption cases. The privately-owned Al-Dostour leads with a story about the Public Funds Prosecutor beginning interrogations of former ministers over illegally acquired lands. Al-Akhbar reports the re-opening of the investigation into the Al-Salam 98 ship, which sank, killing tens of pilgrims on their way back from Saudi Arabia. The ship owner managed to flee the country through his ties with the ruling party. Meanwhile partisan paper Al-Wafd reports on investigations into the former Culture Minister over accusations of monument theft.
Al-Shorouk again demonstrates more insight rather than sporadically reporting about the multiple figures who will be interrogated on corruption cases. The headline of its story reads, “Accusations of corruption reach names that have long been far from the scope of suspicion.” The story cites an unnamed “sovereign source” as saying that the next days will reveal surprising names implicated in corruption cases, including members of the current cabinet under Prime Minister Ahmed Shafiq. The same source says investigators are primarily looking at inflated earnings or discrepancies in ministers' finances.
Commenting on both the constitutional committee and the corruption cases, columnist Amro Hamzawy proposes in Al-Shorouk that the army work on reforming the legal framework for forming political parties. He also proposes that the anti-corruption investigation frenzy should be conducted by specialized committees that include both prosecutors and civil society members who have long documented corruption cases and whose knowledge and expertise can be put into use. Hamzawy expresses concern that the conversations about reform have missed the need for clear mechanisms to guide institutions past the previous era of autocratic rule and corruption.

Powerhouse and powerbrokers: A profile of Egypt's military


Wed, 16/02/2011 - 13:03
" title="Egyptian Military Guarding the Pryamids" class="imagecache imagecache-highslide_zoom" width="610" height="396">
Photographed by Reuters
As Egyptians look forward to an alternative political future, the country’s military is repositioning itself as an interim ruler preparing the way through a critical transition.
After besieged President Hosni Mubarak stepped down, the Supreme Council of Egyptian Armed Forces took charge of the country, committing itself to transfer power to a civilian government.
On Monday, military rulers pledged to oversee the amendment of the Constitution. On Tuesday, the military spokesman saluted the martyrs who lost their lives during the uprising.
The imposed curfew has not been rigidly implemented and soldiers have often been seen fraternizing with protesters.
And on Tuesday, army officials told journalists they weren’t interested in extending their rule and would like to see the transition period end within six months.
All of which has given the military unprecedented popular support and helped it reclaim its central role in Egyptian political life, according former Lieutenant General Mohamed Ali Belal, speaking to Al-Masry Al-Youm.
However, the military's position has not always been without challenge, particularly in the recent past.
Regime-army tensions
Since 1999, Mubarak’s son Gamal, 47, who spent 11 years working at Bank of America in Cairo and in London, claimed an increasingly prominent role in the nation’s political life.
Analysts say that Gamal eased the way for business friends to gain senior positions in the NDP and in the cabinet of Ahmed Nazif, the former prime minister sacked by Mubarak following the first four days of massive protests.
“In the last six years, people who were close to the army witnessed a silent uproar within the military over the rise of Gamal and like-minded businessmen, as they were imposing a hegemony over banking, industry and even the media,” Abdullah al-Senawy, a leftist writer and outspoken critic of the toppled Mubarak regime, told Al-Masry Al-Youm in a phone interview.
The military, a key economic actor in Egypt which has utilized its sovereignty over wide areas of land to develop malls, gated cities and holiday resorts, objected to the capitalist practices of Gamal's businessmen associates, who sold off national land, assets and resources to foreign corporations, according to Paul Amar, professor of global and international studies at the University of California.
Al-Senawy once wrote how Defense Minister Field Marshal Mohamed Tantawi, 75, expressed his disagreement with the members of the NDP Policies Secretariat, calling them “a bunch of American boys.”
In an April 2007 US embassy cable, an Egyptian parliamentarian told American diplomats that “Gamal increasingly views Tantawi and [Egyptian General Intelligence Service] EGIS head Omar Suleiman as a threat to his presidential ambitions,” adding that Tantawi's days--as well as Suleiman's--could be numbered.
The MP, according to the diplomatic memo, also “alleged that Tantawi recently told him, in confidence, of his deepening frustration with Gamal."
“Both Tantawi and Suleiman are loyal to Mubarak and the former president couldn’t risk removing them because he simply couldn’t guarantee the loyalty of the generals of the second row in the army,” said al-Senawy.
Another source of dispute was the rising influence of the Ministry of Interior over the internal political landscape, especially with the Interior Ministry’s growing budget, which was competing with that of the military.
“The army perceived [former Interior Minister General Habib] al-Adly as the minister responsible for cracking down on opponents and paving the way for Gamal to succeed his father,” said al-Senawy.
Gamal, who regularly attended military celebrations with his father, sitting among high-ranking military commanders, had allegedly been trying to get closer to some of the army strongmen such as the presidential guards, but the influential presidential guards were more loyal to the traditional commanders of the army, according to al-Senawy.
Now in command of the country, Egypt’s military rulers hope the political system will be reshaped in such a way that they can’t be subject to any attempts to marginalize them, as they perceived happened with Mubarak’ son.
The power of the military
Despite any temporary marginalization, the Egyptian army has remained a consistent powerhouse of the state throughout the years.
All four Egyptian presidents since the overthrow of the monarchy in the early 1950s have come from the military, which has ever since played a pivotal role within domestic politics.
The army quelled bread riots in Egypt in 1977 and halted a rampage by policemen over pay in 1986.
During Mubarak’s reign, former military generals occupied many posts, such as governors or consultants for the government.
Despite a more liberalized media industry with less red lines and taboos, the military remained a sheltered area for coverage. Previously, approval from the military was a must to publish any story about the army.
Egypt’s modern army was built in the early years of the 19th century and has been at the heart of power since mid-ranking army officers seized power following the 1952 coup d'état.
Later, the army fought four wars, all with Israel, in 1948, 1956, 1967, and 1973.
Later, according to the CIA factbook, “Egypt played a key role during the 1990-91 Gulf crisis. President Mubarak helped assemble the international coalition and deployed 35,000 Egyptian troops against Iraq to liberate Kuwait. The Egyptian contingent was the third-largest in the coalition forces, after the US and UK in the aftermath of the Gulf war.”
As of September 2010, Egypt’s army is the fifth main contributor of troops to UN peacekeeping operations. The army contributes with 5458 military personnel in five African countries (in addition to Nepal and the Western Sahara), according to UN figures.
The Egyptian army is the tenth largest in the world, with more than 468,000 personnel (army 340,000, navy 18,500, air 30,000, and air defense command 80,000), in addition to a reserve of 479,000, according to the 2010 Military Balance, issued by the London-based International Institute for Strategic Studies.
With its estimated US$4.56 billion defense budget in 2010, Egypt’s military is the “strongest among its immediate neighbors in Africa, but is substantially lower than the budgets of its two Middle-Eastern neighbors, Israel and Saudi Arabia,” say Jane's Information Group, a military-specialized think tank based in London.
Relationship with the US
Experts argue it’s unlikely the army will change its stance concerning its strategic links with the United States during or following Egypt's transitional period.
“You have to note that the current Egyptian commanders are the architects of this growing strategic relationship. They view Washington as a main supply for weapons that keep Egypt maintaining a balance of power with Israel,” Lieutenant General Belal told Al-Masry Al-Youm.
Army commanders told the nation on Saturday that they would respect all treaties signed by Egypt, a move to reassure Israel and Washington.
“Their [the army's] stance toward Israel is the same. The military is a professional institution. The army knows that those treaties are binding and they were protecting them. It’s not expected that the army will make any change to such agreements,” added Belal.
Since its peace deal with Israel, Egypt’s military has been the biggest recipient of US military aid after Tel Aviv, receiving nearly US$36 billion in military assistance--an annual installment of US$1.3 billion.
In addition to that, Egypt’s army has built closer ties with US through joint training operations such as the bi-annual Operation Bright Star exercises.
At the time of the protests, the Pentagon was hosting Sami Anan, chief of staff of the Egyptian Armed Forces, and other senior Egyptian military personnel for annual bilateral defense talks.
Leaked US diplomatic cables revealed how Washington has viewed with anxiety the role of the Egyptian army.
"The idea that the military remains a key political and economic force is conventional wisdom here," said a US diplomat in an embassy cable from July 2009, released by WikiLeaks.
"However, other observers tell us that the military has grown less influential, more fractured and its leadership weaker in recent years," the cable added.
Diplomatic cables also demonstrate disagreement between the two allies over military assistance and strategy.
The US has sought “to interest the Egyptian military into expanding their mission in ways that reflect new regional and transnational security threats, such as piracy, border security, and counterterrorism," said one memo dated 21 December 2008, also released by WikiLeaks.
"But the aging leadership, however, has resisted our efforts and remained satisfied with continuing to do what they have done for years: Train for force-on-force warfare with a premium on grounds forces and armor."
Future roles
Now, with the army disposing of the threat posed by Mubarak’s son and his likeminded affiliates, questions remain unanswered about what roll it will play in the future.
“This depends on how much success we witness during the transitional period,” said al-Senawy. “If we succeed in building a parliamentary system with reasonable presidential power, the army will find itself faced by a new legitimacy based on democratic choices.
“In such a context, the state will have full supervision over the army and its main duties, such as protecting the nation as well as protecting the Constitution. The whole military institution would be subject to parliamentary oversight, so there is nothing to fear in this regard.”
While Jon Alternman of the Center for Strategic and International Studies warns of a 1952-style military rule, where the army replaces the revolution’s momentum, Steve Negus writes that the current situation is incomparable.
“The military did not depose Mubarak on its own initiative, but because a mass protest movement had made the country ungovernable.”
For Negus, the military can only relinquish power as promised because, unlike the 1952 army initiative, it doesn’t have any other legitimacy to rely on, such as putting an end to the British colonial rule.
For Negus and other experts, the work of democrats becomes crucial in defining the terms according to which the army will relinquish its current position--something military leaders have assured the Egyptian people it intends to do as soon as possible.