The
International Crisis Group has a new "Egypt Crisis Alert," dealing with the current standoff. It's not terribly optimistic. Excerpts:
It is difficult to know which is most dangerous: the serious uptick in
street violence; President Morsi’s and the Muslim Brotherhood’s serial
inability to reach out to the rest of the political class inclusively;
or the opposition clinging to the hope of some extraneous event
(demonstrations, foreign pressure, judicial rulings or military
intervention) allowing it to gain power while bypassing arduous
compromise and politics. They are tied of course: the president’s
cavalier treatment of the constitution-writing process and the judiciary
and the opposition’s lethargic approach to politics and rejection of
Islamist legitimacy alike have eroded the authority of state
institutions. This encourages in turn unrest and contributes to the
economic slide. Together, these heighten risks of a complete breakdown
of law and order. For two years, political factions repeatedly have
failed to reach consensus on basic rules of the game, producing a
transition persistently threatening to veer off the road. It is past
time for the president and opposition to reach an accommodation to
restore and preserve the state’s integrity . . .
Overshadowing this is a broader political context: a persistent,
perilous standoff between on one side the president and his Islamist
backers for whom elections appear to mean everything, and, on the other,
opposition forces for whom they seem to mean nothing; between those in
power who deny adversaries respect and those not in power who deny
Islamists legitimacy. The constitution-writing process was a sad
microcosm: Islamist contempt in forcing through what ought to have been a
carefully constructed, consensual document; opposition recklessness in
seeking to exploit the moment to topple the Brotherhood; one celebrating
a narrow conception of majority rule, the other holding to a
counter-productive notion of street politics.
In the absence of a shared view of the foundations of a future
political system, Islamists are pressing their vision, while their
opponents play spoilers. This has the makings of a self-fulfilling
prophecy: the more the opposition obstructs and calls for Morsi's
ouster, the more it validates the Islamists' conviction it will never
recognise their right to govern; the more the Brotherhood charges ahead,
the more it confirms the others' belief of its monopolistic designs
over power. Even if leaders back away from the brink, this could quickly
get out of hand, as their ability to control the rank and file — and,
in the case of the opposition, ability to represent the rank and file — dwindles.
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