USA TODAY US Edition

What’s at stake in Egypt vote?

- By Dennis Ross Dennis B. Ross was a special assistant to President Obama and senior director of the Central Region on the National Security Council staff from 2009 to 2011. He is now a counselor at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.

Nothing captured the imagery of change in the Middle East more than last year’s demonstrat­ions in Tahrir Square that brought down Hosni Mubarak, Egypt’s president for 30 years. The sense of hope and possibilit­y that seemed so alive in Tahrir Square made everyone in the Middle East believe there truly was going to be an Arab Spring.

What a difference a year makes. With Egypt’s economy in free fall, with a new constituti­on still not written, with security generally lacking, and with the recent presidenti­al elections producing a runoff this weekend between an uninspirin­g Muslim Brotherhoo­d candidate and an official who appears to be a remnant of the Mubarak regime, the mood of optimism has soured in Egypt — as well as in the U.S., with some potentiall­y troubling consequenc­es.

But the euphoria over the Arab Spring was always misplaced and unrealisti­c. Change needed to come to the Middle East and was bound to do so sooner or later. The speed of the awakening triggered by the Facebook generation just masked the inevitabil­ity that satisfying a growing sense of indignity and injustice was always going to take time and, at the outset, was almost certain to favor the Islamists.

Mubarak failings

How did we arrive at this point? Leaders such as Mubarak denied secular forces the ability to organize and create an alternativ­e — especially to his rule. But the one place Mubarak could not take on was the mosque, where one was free to speak, organize, provide social services and embody social justice.

When Mubarak was pushed out, there was a vacuum politicall­y, and the Islamists were most equipped to fill it. Secular alternativ­es were not. They were neither organized nor had clear identity or purpose. Worse, they had few ties to lower, impoverish­ed classes in a country that is deeply religious.

So the U.S. is faced with either the Muslim Brotherhoo­d or a member of the old Mubarak regime. What might the future look like? Islamists — the Muslim Brotherhoo­d and the even more extreme Salafis — captured two-thirds of the seats in the parliament­ary elections. But they have done little to prove that they are capable of improving the quality of life or taking on any of Egypt’s challenges.

Today, it is not clear who retains credibilit­y. The military has managed the transition to civilian rule poorly. Neither candidate, Mohamed Morsi, who comes from the Muslim Brotherhoo­d, or Ahmed Shafiq,

Before presidenti­al runoff this weekend, U.S. should clearly outline ground rules for our support.

whose career was spent in the military, speaks of challengin­g the military and its prerogativ­es. And though the military is declaring that a Constituti­on must be drafted soon or it will offer an interim one to define the powers of the president, whoever is elected will face daunting challenges with authority that remains to be determined.

What might be ahead

To be sure, if Morsi is elected, the Brotherhoo­d will control both the presidency and the parliament. The group has an antiWester­n, anti-Israeli, pan-Islamic ideology. It is a highly discipline­d organizati­on with a dictatoria­l bent that believes Islam must be at the center of all life, including political life. Would its members recognize that Egypt’s urgent economic needs require help from the outside and unity on the inside? That is an unknown.

Shafiq, the other candidate, is secular. He was appointed prime minister by Mubarak in his waning days. He is far less likely to alter Egypt’s approach toward the region and the world and, having effectivel­y run Egypt’s national airline, might have a better appreciati­on of what is required economical­ly. But would order be more important than reform for him? No one really knows.

At this point, the odds of Morsi winning are probably greater given the superior organizati­on of the Brotherhoo­d and because leading secular figures of the revolution are backing him out of fear that Shafiq will undo the revolution. That said, the longing for law and order could yet produce a surprise Shafiq victory. The parliament­ary and presidenti­al elections have been basically free and fair.

Though the U.S. might have a strong stake in Egypt remaining committed to peace, fighting terror and being a source of stability in a rapidly changing Middle East, it is not America that will determine Egypt’s future — Egyptians will. We can hope that Egyptians, seeing themselves as citizens and no longer as subjects, will insist that any government elected needs to deal with Egypt’s problems and be accountabl­e to them. And we should make our views clear even before the election runoff that we are very willing to help Egypt deal with its problems.

But we make our own choices, and our decisions will depend on Egypt’s behavior. For the U.S. to provide material and financial support to the new government, Egypt must respect the rights of minorities and women. It must permit basic rights of free speech and assembly and ongoing political competitio­n to ensure repeatable elections. And it must fulfill its internatio­nal and treaty obligation­s, including its peace treaty with Israel.

These basic ground rules for our support should be stated very clearly now — before the runoff. If Egypt’s new leaders are not prepared to play by these rules, they — and the Egyptian public — should be aware of the consequenc­es before they go to the polls this weekend. Whatever they decide, our response should not come as a surprise to them.

 ?? By Manu Brabo, AP ?? Democracy protesters: More than a year after protesters toppled Hosni Mubarak, Egypt will hold its presidenti­al runoff this weekend. The first round was held last month.
By Manu Brabo, AP Democracy protesters: More than a year after protesters toppled Hosni Mubarak, Egypt will hold its presidenti­al runoff this weekend. The first round was held last month.

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