By the
end of the Second World War, Egypt was under the brilliant
governance of Abdel Nasser, who together with Jawaharlal Nehru,
heir of Mahatma Gandhi; Kwame Nkrumah; and Ahmed Sékou Touré
—African leaders who together with Sukarno, then president of
the recently liberated Indonesia— created the Non-Aligned
Movement of Countries and advanced the struggle for independence
in the former colonies. At the time, the peoples of Southeast
Asia, the Middle East and Africa, such as Egypt, Algeria, Syria,
Lebanon, Palestine, Western Sahara, the Congo, Angola,
Mozambique and other countries immersed in the struggle against
French, English, Belgian and Portuguese colonialism backed by
the United States were fighting for independence with the
support of the USSR and China.
After the triumph of our revolution, Cuba joined this movement
in motion.
In 1956 Great Britain, France and Israel launched a surprise
attack against Egypt which had nationalized the Suez Canal. The
brave and supportive action by the USSR, which included a threat
to use its strategic missiles, stopped the aggressors dead in
their tracks.
The death of Abdel Nasser on September 28, 1970 was an
irreversible setback for Egypt.
United States never stopped conspiring against the Arab world,
which holds the largest oil reserves on the planet.
There is no need to profoundly debate this matter; it is enough
to read recent news dispatches on what inevitably is
transpiring.
Let’s take a look at the news:
January 28:
“(DPA) - More than 100,000 Egyptians took to the streets today
to protest against the government of President Hosni Mubarak,
despite a prohibition of demonstrations issued by authorities…”
“Demonstrators set fire to the offices of Mubarak’s National
Democratic Party (NDP) and police surveillance points, while in
downtown Cairo they threw rocks at police who tried to disperse
the crowd with tear gas and rubber bullets.”
“US President Barack Obama met today with a group of experts to
become better informed on the situation. Meanwhile, White House
spokesman Robert Gibbs said that the United States would
reassess the multimillion dollar aid it provides to Egypt as
events transpire.
“UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon also sent a strong message
from Davos.”
“(Reuters).- President Mubarak ordered a curfew in Egypt and the
deployment of army troops backed by armoured vehicles in Cairo
and other cities.
Violent clashes between demonstrators and the
police have been reported.
“Egyptian forces, supported by armoured vehicles, deployed
throughout Cairo and other major Egyptian cities on Friday to
put an end to large-scale protests demanding the resignation of
President Hosni Mubarak.
“Medical sources reported that so far 410 people have been
injured in the protests, while state television announced a
curfew for all cities.”
“The situation represents a dilemma for the United States, which
has expressed its desire for democracy to spread throughout the
region.
Mubarak, however, has been a close ally of
Washington for several years and the beneficiary of extensive
military aid.”
“(DPA)”.- Thousands of Jordanians protested today across the
country after Friday prayers, demanding the resignation of Prime
Minister Samir Rifai, and political and economic reforms.”
In the midst of the political disaster assailing the Arab world,
leaders, who were gathered in Switzerland, discussed the cause
of the phenomenon which they described as global suicide.
“(EFE).- Several political leaders at the Davos Economic Forum
called for a change of the growth model.”
“The current model of economic growth, based on consumerism and
a disregard of environmental consequences, can no longer be
sustained because the planet’s survival is at risk, several
political leaders warned today in Davos.”
“‘The current model is global suicide. We need a revolution.
Revolutionary thinking.
Revolutionary action,’ warned Ban Ki-moon.
‘Natural resources are becoming more and more scarce,” he added,
during a debate on how to redefine sustainable growth at the
World Economic Forum.”
“‘Climate change is also showing us that the old model is more
than obsolete,’ said the head of the UN.
“The UN secretary general added that in addition to basic
survival resources such as food and water, ‘one resource is the
scarcest of all:
Time, We
are running out of time. Time to tackle climate change.’”
January 29:
“Washington (AP).- President Barack Obama tried the impossible:
winning the hearts and minds of Egyptians furious with their
autocratic ruler while assuring a vital ally that the United
States has his back.
The four-minute speech Friday evening represented a careful
balancing act for Obama. He had a lot to lose by choosing
between protesters demanding that Egyptian President Hosni
Mubarak step down from a government violently clinging to its
three-decade grip on the country.
“Obama...didn't endorse regime change. Nor did he say that
Mubarak's announcement was insufficient.
“Obama’s address was the most forceful of the day, but it stuck
largely to the script already set by Secretary of State Hillary
Rodham Clinton and White House spokesman Robert Gibbs.”
“(NTX).- The Washington Post called on the Obama administration
to use its political and economic influence to convince
President Mubarak to step down in Egypt.”
“‘The United States should use all its influence, including the
more than 1 billion dollars in aid it provides each year to the
Egyptian army to assure its ultimate outcome (the surrender of
power by Mubarak),’ the paper states in its editorial.”
“…in his message delivered on Friday night Obama said that he
would continue working with President Mubarak and regretted that
he had not mentioned eventual elections.”
“The newspaper described Obama’s position as ‘unrealistic’ along
with that of Vice President Joe Biden, who told a radio station
that he would not call the Egyptian president a dictator, and
that he did not think that he should resign.”
“(AFP).- US-Arab organizations demanded that the government of
President Barack Obama stop supporting the Mubarak dictatorship
in Egypt.”
“(ANSA).- The United States once again expressed its ‘concern’
over violence in Egypt and warned the government of Mubarak that
it could not act as if nothing had happened.
Fox News reported that Obama only had two poor options with
respect to Egypt.
“…warned the Cairo government that it could not ‘reshuffle the
deck’ and act as if nothing had happened in the country.
“The White House and the State Department are closely following
the situation in Egypt, one of Washington’s main allies in the
world, and the recipient of some 1.5 billion dollars annually in
civilian and military aid.”
“United States news agencies are giving extensive coverage to
the disturbances in Egypt and have been indicating that the
situation, no mater how it is resolved, could result in a
headache for Washington.”
“If Mubarak falls, reports Fox, the United States and its other
principal ally in the Middle East, Israel, could have to face a
government of the Muslim Brothers in Cairo, and a turn towards
anti-western sentiment in the North African country.”
“‘We were betting on the wrong horse for 50 years,’ former CIA
agent Michael Scheuer told Fox. ‘To think that the Egyptian
people are going to forget that for half a century we supported
dictators is a dream,’ he concluded.”
“(AFP).- The international community increased its pressure on
Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak to implement political reforms
and to stop the repression of demonstrators who that have been
carrying out protests against his government over the last five
days.”
“Nicolas Sarkozy, Angela Merkel and David Cameron asked the
president ‘to initiate a process of change’ in response to the
‘legitimate demands’ of his people and ‘to avoid, at all costs,
the use of violence against civilians,’ in a joint declaration
published on Saturday.”
“Iran also called on Egyptian authorities to heed the demands
being made on the streets.”
“King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia said that the protests represent
‘an attack against the security and stability’ of Egypt and were
being carried out by ‘infiltrators’ in the name of ‘freedom of
speech.’
“The king called Mubarak by telephone to express his solidarity,
reported the official Saudi press agency SPA.”
January 31:
“(EFE) Netanyahu fears that the chaos in Egypt could favor
Islam’s access to power.
“Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said today that he
fears that the situation in Egypt could favor Islam’s access to
power, a concern he said he shares with leaders who have spoken
to him over the past few days.”
“…the prime minister refused to discuss news reports by local
media outlets that state that Israel has authorized Egypt to
deploy troops in the Sinai Peninsula for the first time in three
decades, considered a violation of the 1979 peace treaty between
the two nations.
“In response to criticism against Western powers such as the
United States and Germany that have maintained close ties with
totalitarian Arab regimes, the German Foreign minister said, ‘We
have not abandoned Egypt.’’
“The peace process between Israelis and Palestinians has been at
a standstill since last September, mainly because of Israel’s
refusal to stop building Jewish settlements in occupied
Palestinian territories.”
“Jerusalem, (EFE).─ Israel favors the continuation in power of
Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak. The Israeli head of State,
Simon Peres, supported Mubarak today by stating that ‘a fanatic
religious oligarchy is not better than a lack of democracy.”
“The declarations made by the head of State are consistent with
reports by local media outlets that state that Israel is
pressuring its Western partners to tone down their criticisms of
Mubarak’s regime, which the Egyptian people and the opposition
are trying to overthrow.
“Anonymous official sources quoted by the Haaretz newspaper said
that on Saturday the Israeli Foreign Ministry sent a communiqué
to its embassies in the United States, Canada, China, Russia and
several European countries to request that ambassadors emphasize
to local authorities the importance of stability in Egypt for
Israel.”
“Israeli analysts said that the fall of Mubarak could endanger
the Camp David Agreements that Egypt signed with Israel in 1978
and the subsequent signing of the 1979 bilateral peace treaty,
especially if it brings about the ascent to power of the Islamic
Muslim Brothers, which have widespread popular support.”
“Israel views Mubarak as a guarantor of peace along its southern
border, as well as a key supporter in maintaining the blockade
against the Gaza Strip and isolating the Palestinian Islamic
movement Hamas.”
“One of Israel’s greatest fears is that the Egyptian riots,
which follow in the wake of uprisings in Tunisia, will also
reach Jordan, weakening the regime of King Abdullah II, whose
country along with Egypt is the only Arab country that
acknowledges Israel.”
“The recent appointment of General Omar Suleiman as Egypt’s vice
president and, therefore, possible presidential successor, has
been welcomed in Israel, which has closely cooperated in Defense
matters with the general.”
“However, the Egyptian protests show that the continuity of the
regime is not necessarily guaranteed nor that Israel will
continue to have Cairo as its main ally in the region.”
As you
can see, for the first time the world is simultaneously facing
three problems:
Climate crises, food crises and political crises.
And we can add other serious dangers to them.
The risk of increasingly destructive war is very real.
Will the political leaders have sufficient serenity and
equanimity to successfully face them?
Our species’ fate depends on it.
Fidel Castro Ruz
February 1, 2011
7:15 p.m.