Wednesday, November 28, 2012

#371 (11/28) DANGER! Egypt’s President Moves Toward Dictatorship

NOTE: If you've looked to the right of this blog page, you've notice large gaps of empty space after the first several entries. I don't know why, but  for some reason since recently, I cannot remove those gaps NOR type any new text but one letter at a time. Please PRAY that this might be reseolved soon. In the meantime, please scroll down to almost the very end of that column to find instructions on a) how to post your comments, b) how to contact your Congressional representatives, and c) websites AND THEN books I highly recommend. (You can email me at: yonashiro@bellsouthl.net)

DECLARE YOUR SUPPORT FOR ISRAEL: I encourage you to go to the site below and consider signing the petition to Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declaring your support for Israel especially as it again faces a threat to its very survival. The petition is presented by the Christian group Liberty Counsel.  http://www.libertyaction.org/370/petition.asp?Ref_ID=18588&CID=370&RID=37375064  AND of course, try toPRAY daily for Israel.

PRAYER REQUEST: Turmoil in Egypt Resulting From It's New President's Power Grab (see story below)

As the Lord leads, please pray:  
  • For the end to the violent rioting that continues as result of President's Morsi's actions
  • For political stability in Egypt and the preservation of democracy
  • That the Muslim Brotherhood’s power in Egypt will be limited
  • That the Obama administration will keep a watchful eye on developments in Egypt and not continue to make overtures to the Muslim Brotherhood and consider them ":moderate."
- (article below by James Phillips, November 26)
Egypt remains in turmoil after its president decreed last Thursday that he was no longer subject to the laws of his country—giving himself power over the judiciary and other branches of government. Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi made his lunge for power shortly after helping to broker a fragile ceasefire in Gaza between Israel and Hamas, the extremist offshoot of his own Muslim Brotherhood. The Muslim Brotherhood’s agenda [1] includes imposing Sharia (Islamic law), curbing the rights of women and religious minorities, abandoning Egypt’s 1979 peace treaty with Israel [have always called for its destruction], and advancing Islamist causes around the world.

Reuters reports that about 370 people [2] have been injured in clashes between protesters and police since Morsi issued his decree last Thursday. The president is meeting with judges today, supposedly on an agreement to amend his decree, but protesters say they want to see it reversed completely.

Morsi has set Egypt on a troubling new foreign policy course [3] since coming to power in June. His government has distanced itself from Washington while cozying up to China, improving relations with Iran, and violating its peace treaty with Israel. He has escalated Egypt’s cooperation with Hamas, the Palestinian branch of the Muslim Brotherhood that controls Gaza and remains adamantly committed to Israel’s destruction. Morsi’s Islamist-dominated government has cracked down on Egypt’s media and has announced that Egyptian journalists will be put on trial for “insults” to the president. Morsi’s government is systematically clamping down on Egyptians’ political, social, and cultural freedoms.
Yet the Obama Administration naively continues to court it as a partner.

Morsi may calculate that his help in administering Band-Aids to the festering Israeli-Palestinian conflict will make the United States and others who give aid to Egypt think twice before trying to reverse his power grab.The Obama Administration was working on an aid package [3] to Egypt that includes forgiving approximately $1 billion of Egypt’s debt to the United States. This is in addition to about $1.5 billion in annual U.S. foreign aid.

When protesters tore down the American flag at the U.S. embassy in Cairo on September 11, Morsi’s public reaction was nonchalant. Instead of immediately denouncing the attack and taking action to upgrade security around the embassy—as Libyan and Yemeni leaders have done after similar events—Morsi waited a day before casually issuing a mild rebuke to the rioters via Facebook.

The Obama Administration should leverage U.S. aid to pressure [3] the Egyptian leader to respect the rule of law, abide by the decisions of Egypt’s courts, and abandon his drive for absolute power. Morsi has exploited external crises in the past to advance his own ambitions. In August, he used a Sinai terrorist attack that killed Egyptian soldiers as a pretext [4] to purge the Egyptian army of its top Mubarak-era holdovers. Now he has done the same with the judiciary.

Egypt’s judiciary also has pushed back against Morsi’s power grab. The Supreme Council of the Judiciary denounced Morsi’s unilateral assertion of power over the judiciary as “an unprecedented attack on judicial independence.” The Judges Club, an association of judges made up of many appointees by the Mubarak regime, called for a strike by courts across Egypt. But the judges alone will not be enough to reverse Morsi’s power grab. The key vote will be wielded by the armed forces. Morsi appears confident that he can count on support from key military leaders, whom he hand-picked after purging [4] the top ranks of Mubarak loyalists in August. While the army’s ultimate verdict on Morsi’s power grab is not yet apparent, Egypt’s investors voted with their wallets and withdrew their money from Egypt’s stock market [5], which plunged almost 10 percent on Sunday.

The big losers here are the Egyptian people. Their aspirations for freedom and democracy will likely get lost in the shuffle as Egypt’s “Arab Spring” descends into an Islamist winter. But the United States and its allies—particularly Israel—will also find their national interests undermined by the anti-Western drive of Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood.

[bold and italics are my emphasis and bracketed are my additions]

Quick Hits of other news:
  • This week, the Supreme Court will decide whether to rule on same-sex marriage [7].
  • The U.S. government spends “an average of $1.5 billion in tax dollars per year devoted to getting out the message for various departments and policies,” reports [8] the Washington Guardian.
  • Did you shop on Black Friday? What about today’s Cyber Monday deals? Unfortunately, a lot of these items are still overpriced thanks to tariffs [10].

Article printed from The Foundry: Conservative Policy News Blog from The Heritage Foundation: http://blog.heritage.org; URL
to article: http://blog.heritage.org/2012/11/26/morning-bell-egypts-president-moves-toward-dictatorship/
URLs in this post:
[1] agenda: http://www.heritage.org/research/commentary/2012/10/egypts-arab-spring-descends-into-an-islamist-winter
[2] 370 people: http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/11/26/egypt-idUSL5E8MQ0MF20121126
[3] troubling new foreign policy course: http://www.heritage.org/research/reports/2012/09/us-aid-to-egypt-and-libya-tight-strings-needed
[4] a pretext: http://blog.heritage.org/2012/08/14/muslim-brotherhood-consolidates-control-over-egypt/
[5] stock market: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2012-11-25-Egypt/id-76868a90e055404c8d4f1d50fcc0a54c
[7] rule on same-sex marriage: http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-court-gay-marriage-20121125,0,511659.story
[8] reports: http://www.washingtonguardian.com/usa-uncle-sams-advertising
-life-of-pi-overperforms-red-dawn-as-expected-breaking-dawn-2-still-1-bond-skyfall-2/

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