Monday, May 2, 2011

I told you so ...

obama : 1 osama : done editorial cartoon comic strip panel by laughzilla for thedailydose.com


On 9/11, I told a few friends I spoke with that day, that Osama bin-Laden had just declared that his brand of terror is going out of business. Mr. bin Laden had just hit America's two nerve centers: The Twin Towers in New York City, and the Pentagon in Washington, DC. The home of two of America's most important assets: Treasure, and blood. In that September attack, al-Qaida had become the top priority revenge act by the men and women who were going to go get Osama Dead or Alive, and they would be financed in no small part by Wall Street.

Today, America has dealt a swift blow to al-Qaida. Taking out the world's most wanted terrorist is a huge accomplishment for the Americans.

All the same, wouldn't it have been best to capture him alive, and humiliate him by treating him as a common prisoner in an American court of law?

So America has proven it could kill him. Big whoop. Now he's dead. Totally useless in any information war. America and the Coalition still have oodles of Taliban and al-Qaida to smoke out and hunt down.

What I find laughable is how so many in the media are reporting that bin-Laden was long suspected of living in a cave in the mountainous regions of Pakistan near the Afghan border. It was obvious to me and various friends and colleagues that Mr. bin-Laden was living in comfort, most likely in a nice sized house or mansion, surrounded by pricey security systems, in a place where no one would much notice -- or mind -- his presence.

That it was not obvious to those supposed 'experts' working on it, or covering it, is telling of the general misunderstanding which Westerners have about such idiosyncratic
infamous iconoclasts.

And now, after his body has been shot up, shaken down, washed, and tossed out at sea, come the questions.

1) Where's the proof?
Until Osama's dead body is displayed in photo and/or video and/or other means, there will only be growing noises, rumors and conspiracy theories. No doubt the wackiest crackpots will always believe insane myths, but at least convincing evidence will quell the rumor mills for the majority of people.

2) Why is America barely responding except through lowly bureaucrats to the threats and anti-American statements coming not only from al-Qaida remnants, but from the likes of both the Palestinian Hamas and Fatah?
The United States and its allies should be launching a PR offensive, to remind the world just exactly what al-Qaida is and what their aims are.

3) Now that Osama is dead, is Obama going to keep up the fight and the hunt for the remaining al-Qaida and Taliban?

4) How will long term strategy and prosecution of the War on Terror (or as Obama likes to call it, the Fight against al-Qaida) evolve, now that the iconic head of the snake is dead?

5) How will American foreign policy evolve now that its most wanted terrorist for the past decade, is gone?
With the great distraction of Osama's death, will Obama remain vigilant in the face of the regional revolution sweeping Araby? Will Gaddafi and Sallah be forced out? What will happen when Syria gets much bloodier? What will happen when Bahrain and Saudi Arabia are sick of their leaders and pulling off their own revolutions one way or another? How will America pick and choose which people to support, when those who want freedom are fighting the dictators who oppress them -- often with the help of American money and arms?

6) And finally, how will America remain focused on the remaining most wanted terrorists, as well as a host of developing realities in nations across the Middle East, and Europe, while at the same time it has to combat home-grown terror threats in the United States?
America's Modus Operandi over the next days, weeks and months will be very indicative of the kinds of procedure and routine we can expect to see over time.

When will Obama admit that Israel's policy is the bleeding edge of the War on Terror, and that Israel's fight is America's fight? America should end the facade of neutrality in its stance on Israel, and make clear that there will be no more tolerance for the kind of forked-tongue politics that dominate so much of Arab and Muslim power systems; saying that they are against terror, yet at the same time carrying it out.

Finally, much credit deserves to go to those who made Osama's death happen, from the President to the former President, to the SEALs, the overall military, intelligence, and other communities involved. Without their ongoing willpower to succeed in this hunt, they did prove that America can achieve its aims -- even if sometimes that aim is to hit an aging weakling hiding behind ideology, religion and women.

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

The Thing No One Wants To Say: Why the War in Libya May Not Be Enough

The evidence is clear. The Libyan Army, under control of Gaddafi, is a professional military, with some form of discipline and professionalism. The rebel armed forces, are an ill-equipped, largely untrained, undisciplined, volunteer army, whose only hope for victory is in Allah and enhanced NATO participation against the Gadafi regime.

At every turn, whenever the NATO bombs do not strike Gadafi's loyalists on the battlefield, those Libyans easily force a retreat out of the rebels.




If the Arab League, the West, the UN and NATO truly wish for the rebels to topple Khadafi, the option to just sustain a mealy-mouthed alliance and not delivering much needed arms, defenses and humanitarian supplies to the rebels is non-existent. Further, they must establish official lines of communication, just as France did first, with the rebel government. Finally, they must offer some form of training and coordinate with the rebels, to make sure that their efforts are not in vain. No matter how much NATO bombs from the air, that is unlikely to give the rebels a victory, if they are incapable of mounting any real battles against the regular Libyan army.





Short of these steps, the coalition's efforts may end up merely creating two Libyas, and the need to police both for an undetermined amount of time, at a period when NATO could be much better used in other critical tasks, for example: liberating the people of, say, Syria.

It would be a giant setback to the rebels of Libya if they don't win. It would be an even greater loss for NATO and the UN and all those who back this action against the Ghadafi regime. And it would be a huge victory for all the remaining tyrants and despots who use brutal savagery against their own People.

The truth is that this great Arab Spring revolution has potential to go extremely well or extremely badly. If Gadaffi is not dislodged from power, it will signal to other dictators that they may keep their power, if only by hunkering down and being extremely mad and violent.

One other such dictator is Bashar al-Assad of Syria. If Bashar Assad manages to keep his PR image in the US Congress as that of a "reformer" while he remains a terrorism sponsor who answers to Iran and rules Lebanon by proxy, and uses brute violent lethal force to repress the human rights of his own Syrian People, then he may well keep power and avoid a no-fly zone, destruction of his air, sea, and land defenses, along with untold human carnage of his military.

This could also make it easier for Yemen's President Sallah to keep his grip on power, by demonstrating any form of political reform and urging his friends in Washington to lend a hand to quash that civil unrest.

The ironic thing is that President Obama campaigned against this exact sort of double-standards geopolitics. Obama beat McCain in the 2008 U.S. Presidential Elections by promising not to maintain the Bush doctrine of making the United States of America a selective world police. That doctrine was driven by capabilities and limits of power, not by popularity. Yet Obama is executing the Bush doctrine, only on a much larger scale than Bush ever did, and he is pretending not to be doing it. President Obama is allowing his global policies, and his moral compass, to be guided by public opinion polls.

President Bush led two wars. All out wars. Not international police actions, along the lines of President Clinton's efforts in Serbia and Kosovo. Wars. President Obama is leading an international police action. Like Kosovo. Like Vietnam. Like Korea. All of these were long, drawn-out conflicts, which did not have to be so long, so ugly, or so costly in terms of blood and treasure.

With all due respect and recognition of the man's intellect, and his capabilities and achievements, President Obama is clearly out of his league, in terms of his grasp of the multi-faceted situation facing the United States, its allies, its interests, and how to handle it all. I am not saying that President Obama is incapable of getting out of this situation with a good mark. I am just saying that so far, he is doing poorly.

If President Obama were indeed a great leader, then he should have been able to go do his little South America trip without having to lose much sleep at night, knowing his political alliance was rock solid, and that the military was doing its job based on a clear policy with clear objectives, and with the full weight of and support of the American government. He should not have to send Hillary Clinton to do the grunt work of any other senior diplomat. There should not have to be a conference requiring so many heads of state, every week or two, just to deal with Gadafi. Libya, in the context of the world, should not have taken so much effort to resolve.

This was a clear cut case. Evil dictator using force against democracy-seeking protesters and rebels. It's America's own history, told in another place and time. This was a perfect opportunity for President Obama to show that his multi-nation alliance and sophisticated diplomacy could do the job quickly, efficiently, and without costing America its reputation abroad, which is what he accused President Bush of damaging by being a unilateralist.

President Obama blew it. Now it's messy, and yes, it's his fault.

If President Obama had wanted to enjoy his visit to Brazil and Chile, he should have admitted that he has adopted the Bush doctrine and done whatever it takes to win, quickly and decisively. He would have formed a Coalition of the Willing, damn the naysayers and routed Gadafi from power within days. Instead, he just kept attacking the Bush doctrine in his rhetoric, while not mounting the all-out assault on Gadafi which is required to win.

Instead, President Obama has promised to be a multilateralist, and has now proven himself to be one in this case. The result of such diplomatic hemming and hawing is the unnecessary lengthening of the war, which now hangs in the balance, with a fractioned alliance, unclear policy, unclear enforcement rules, unclear leadership, unclear milestones going forward, and an unclear end game. Add that all up, and it doesn't sound good.

President Obama, of course, is already campaigning for the 2012 U.S. Presidential Elections. So his interest in being decisive without strong backing in the polls, is very limited. President Obama, a master of How To Win The Presidency Without Really Trying, knows that he doesn't have to worry about those people in Araby fighting tooth and nail for their freedom. He needs to worry about jobs and the U.S. economy for all those electorate votes. Otherwise, he would already be a lame duck.

Yet all hope is not lost for these Pan-Arab protestors and rebels. Despite losses, those who seek peace, freedom and democracy, must remember that there is always a high price to pay for freedom, especially at the outset. Often in history, those who were right suffered for a long time at the hands of those who had might, until eventually those who were right, won.

There may be a great loss in Libya. It may cost thousands of lives. It would be a defeat of morale for pro-democracy supporters, There may be many great losses in the Arab Spring, across many countries. We may yet be just at the start of a long struggle before the Middle East is more settled, and many more people will undoubtedly die as a consequence along the way. Yet for all those losses, it will be necessary for those who yearn for freedom to stand up and take their freedom back from the clutches of those who oppress them.

They did it in Tunisia. They did it in Egypt. They can do it anywhere the hunger for freedom is greater than the fear in their hearts.

As long as there are oppressed people who are willing to stand up and fight against dictators for their freedom and human rights, it is the responsibility of the UN Security Council, and namely the West and NATO forces, to do whatever they can, to see that these freedoms reach all people, all around the world, as soon as possible.


Sunday, March 27, 2011

Women in the Public Eye


Geraldine Ferraro passed away over the weekend. She will be remembered not only as the first woman to break the Men's Club of America's National Politics. She will also be remembered as a lifelong fighter for social justice, women's rights, children's rights, and an advocate of Human Rights around the world. Sadly, after a 12 year bout with multiple myeloma - a terrible form of blood cancer, Mrs. Ferraro died on March 26, 2011.

Even President Obama, whom she opposed in favor of Hillary Clinton for the 2008 Democratic National Convention Nomination, praised Mrs. Ferraro as a "trailblazer" whose life of civic duty and breaking through glass ceilings would make the lives of his own daughters, Sasha and Malia, a more equal one in the United States of America.

Meanwhile, in the Middle East, mistreatment, harassment, abuse, and even rape all remain part of the reality of politics, protest, civic unrest, and war.

On Saturday, March 26, 2011, in Tripoli, Libya, a woman who said her name is Eman al-Obeidy from the rebel-held town of Benghazi, burst into the international hotel where journalists and other world wide media representatives are being hosted by the government of Muamar Gaddafi, to tell her story of abuse, beatings, and rape at the hands of Gadafi loyalists. She figured that it was the only place she could tell her story where anyone of consequence might hear it. As she yelled and screamed of her horrible mistreatment, Gadhafi minders rushed her, in full sight of the onlooking media, using brute force (by both men and women) to silence her, break the CNN videographer's camera, put a bag over her head, and forcefully lead her out of the hotel and into a car, whereafter she was driven to jail. When pressed for information by reporters on the scene, the Libyan government spokesman (the Deputy Foreign Minister) said she was insane and was taken into custody and was safe. Later when the reporters asked to be taken to her to see that she was indeed safe, the Libyan government spokesman said she is actually not insane and was jailed and that she may be seen again in a few days. Following that, the government spokesman said she was being offered legal aid, and would even be able to bring charges against her accused attackers. All the same, the fact that she was the first person to speak out against Gaddafi's forces in the heart of Tripoli since the anti-Gaddafi protests were quashed in Tripoli some weeks ago, says a great deal about the Libyan propaganda's machine and the ends to which it will go to silence any voice that dares speak against Ghaddafi. Furthermore, the fact that an alleged rape victim was so brutally manhandled by men and women loyal to Khadafi, says a great deal more about how women are treated - or mistreated - in that North African desert fiefdom.

In Egypt, where relatively peaceful protests in Tahrir Square led to the resignation of President Hosni Mubarak after 18 days of protests in the heart of Cairo, a story has broken about the mistreatment and abuse of women who joined the sea of protestors. Reports that dozens of women -- local Egyptians as well as foreign journalists like CBS correspondent Lara Logan, were harassed, sexually assaulted, and in many cases taken away to police detention centers in the Egypt Museum complex, where they were questioned, beaten, electrocuted, tortured, threatened with charges of prostitution, stripped, probed, photographed, and all in plain sight of strange men, continues to raise questions about gender inequality in the heart of Araby. The detained women were subject to "virgin tests" to determine whether or not they had had sex. At least one woman who was "tested" by a male physician was determined to have had sex even though she said she had not. She was then charged with prostitution. Other detained women protestors were charged with public disturbance, destroying public property, and other trumped up charges, all in an obvious attempt to silence their outrage at the Mubarak regime and its political corruptness.

The Middle East may indeed be in the middle of an historic revolution. However, until all people in Araby are treated with equal respect, men, women and children living in those countries will not be able to live in peace, because their own leaders are tormenting them with unabashed barbarism.

This leads me to the point of this post, which is really a question: Who will be the Geraldine Ferraro of Araby?

I for one hope she will come to light as soon as possible, and that women's rights are fully established and respected across the Arab nations.

To quote John Lennon, "You may say I'm a dreamer, but I'm not the only one. I hope some day you'll join us, and the world will be as one."

Friday, February 11, 2011

Top Ten Reasons Why Egypt will not be the next Iran

Pictured: Anti-Mubarak protesters in Tahrir Square, Friday, February 12, 2011.


10) Egypt does not want to lose its $1.5 Billion per year in foreign aid from the United States.
9) Egypt does not want to endanger the wellbeing of its own people, risking the recovery of $3.6 Billion from Mubarak assets held in Swiss coffers (or the $40 - $70 Billion suspected total of Mubarak's family assets).
8) Egypt wants to feed its own people. They will get the assistance they seek from allies, notably the United States, as long as they remain peaceful and on a path to institutionalized democracy.
7) Egypt can not afford to risk a conflict with its neighbors, especially Israel.
6) Egypt's revolutionaries used mostly peaceful tactics to remove Mubarak from power.
5) Egypt's people did not fight the army.
4) Egypt's army did not fight against the Egyptian people.
3) The revolutionaries did not march a religious leader to power by force. Aside from the religious factions, the only veils Egyptians like to see are the ones worn by belly dancers.
2) Egyptians are all demanding what everyone wants: Greater freedom, respect for human rights, peace and democracy. That, of course, includes uninterrupted Internet and Telecom services.

... and the number 1 reason why Egypt will not be the next Iran:

1) Egypt wishes to remain a Tourist hot spot. ($11 Billion in annual revenues can't be bad).

When the Man Comes Around



Mubarak stepped down. After appearing thick and not cognizant of reality following his last speech on Thursday night, Egypt's President Hosni Mubarak has left office. Power to the People.

Egypt is enjoying their Berlin Wall moment. Theirs, Tahrir Square, Liberation Square, is emblematic of the peaceful nature of this historical, peaceful, democratic revolution.

Let it be remembered that when the arms went up in Cairo, they did so without charging the halls of power. They promised peace as the path to democracy, and they delivered a revolution peacefully. They are the proud people of Egypt.

Yes, there were scuffles, fights, even some shootings. All of this does not change the fact that most of the violence was orchestrated or stirred up by the powers that be. The people who stood up for freedom and democracy drove their efforts without active malice. For that, they are to be commended.

Let their peaceful, democratic path lead them to a brighter, freer tomorrow.


# # #



Video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k9IfHDi-2EA&feature=fvsr - When the Man Comes Around (Johnny Cash)

Monday, January 31, 2011

Unhelpful fools making Egypt situation worse

Muslims against Mubarak use Anti-Semitic propaganda to advance Islamist cause
pictured: Malaysian protester outside the Egyptian embassy in Kuala Lumpur

Israel's government has wisely stated that the peace accords between Egypt and Israel are in the interests of both countries, and that the 30+ years of the peace have benefited both nations.

Unfortunately, Israel also spoke too strongly in defense of the Mubarak regime, which, like it or not, is an authoritarian government, which has maintained power through unjust practices.

Yes, Hosni Mubarak has helped to maintain the status quo in the region, and even gone after terrorists who wish to destabilize the Middle East, and fundamentalist Islamists who wish to impose Sharia Law over Egypt. All the same, he is an unpopular ruler who has prevented any real democracy from taking hold in his own nation. On top of that, the World Bank has reported that 40% of Egyptians live in poverty ($2 a day or less) and are uneducated, and Mubarak has done little to help improve that situation.

Now the protests are gaining international support in places like Malaysia and in other Muslim communities around the world. The problem with that is the supporters of the protests will start to become more fundamentalist as the popular revolt grows, and they will support more fanatic opposition groups like the Muslim Brotherhood to replace the Mubarak regime, leaving moderate opponents like Mohamad El-Baradei dangling by the wayside, and ultimately politically incapable of taking charge to establish a better Egypt.

If the Egyptians wish to attain a better situation, it would be in their interest to:
a) Recognize and support the more moderate voices of opposition, and
b) Maintain the peace with Israel, and
c) Keep the region stable with a strong and peaceful political platform.

As for Israel, the government in Jerusalem should voice support for any peaceful government the people of Egypt choose, and especially one that maintains the Camp David Peace Accords of 1978. Aside from that, Israel should stay out of the way, diplomatically, and not interfere with the crisis in Cairo. Any public position that prefers one side over the other will ultimately hurt Israel, as Islamists will use it to criticize the peace accords.


Saturday, January 29, 2011

Hosni Mubarak - Hoisted by his own petard

Egypt's President Hosni Mubarak has gone on the air to announce reforms, a shuffling of puppets in his government, and to declare that he will not resign.

pictured: Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak

He did so in response to the sea of Egyptians who took to the streets of Cairo, Alexandria, and scores of other cities across the nation of the Nile, over their discontent with his 30+ years of nearly dictatorial rule over the most populous Arab nation.

Mubarak's reign, the third longest in Egyptian history, might not have faced this popular revolution, were it not for his horrible mismanagement as head of state.

From the moment he stepped in to fill Anwar Sadat's shoes, his presidency was guided by fear of Muslim extremists, financial difficulty, and a population who sought to improve their relatively poor standards of living.

Of course, one can not blame all of Egypt's problems on Hosni Mubarak. After all, presidents -- even those who sit in power unfairly and for far too long -- are not the whole of a country. On the other hand, he is responsible for increasing the nepotism, corruption, and dishonest ways of his government's rule over the people of Egypt, during the last three decades.

Had Mubarak invested in political evolution, national infrastructure, education, healthcare, and increasing the standard of living of average Egyptians, he could have remained in office, without any such mass discontent and riots in the streets of Cairo. Instead, Hosni Mubarak invested in his army, his dictatorship, his way of maintaining the status quo.

To be sure, he has held a strong line against the Islamic extremists. However, he has done so at the expense of his nation's well-being. By making them the bogeyman, Mubarak has kept the middle class impotent, and has firmly resisted any real, legitimate political opposition, by even the most moderate of political actors in Egypt.

To his credit, President Mubarak has also maintained the peace with Israel, and at times even been helpful in trying to advance the Palestinian-Israeli peace process. Yet, he has always done so in a most calculating way, playing up the part of diplomat to the Western world, while playing up anti-Israel propaganda on state run Egyptian television and media, in an effort to demonstrate his sympathy for the Palestinians and giving the air of being a man of the people. In other words, he has used the unique position which Egypt enjoys to bolster his presidency, rather than to actually achieve further gains for peace in the Middle East.

If Mubarak wishes to survive politically, he must enact sweeping reforms, starting with human rights, democracy, freedom of expression, and investing in Egypt's infrastructure; roads, tunnels, bridges, hospitals, universities, high schools, elementary schools, agriculture, hi-tech, and other needs of a modern country. He must also open up elections and have them be free, open, accountable and fair.

Naturally, it goes against his massive ego to do any such thing. Mubarak will likely cling to power as long as he can, making gestures and speeches and trying to quell the protests using the Army and all forces at his disposal. That is the nature of despots -- even those who call themselves President.

Mubarak really should have read the tea-leaves in Tunisia better. His obtuseness and love of self so distorted his perception of his own people's anger towards his unjust rule, that he is now the popular symbol of the ills which plague Egypt, and nothing he does (including his fondness for dyeing his hair jet black) is likely to save him from a dishonorable exit. Nothing, that is, except resigning.

I'll bet a big pita that he won't resign. Rather, he will be forced out.

The situation will then leave a political vacuum. Who will take over once the current regime is out? Will it be the Muslim Brotherhood? Former IAEA Head Mohamad El-Baradei? I'm sure even George W. Bush would prefer that annoying bureaucrat to run the government in Cairo over the Islamist movement.

Time will let all the poisons slip out. Until then, and until the next ruler of the Nile ascends the political pyramids of Egypt, it's an interesting time in the history of the cradle of civilization.

Freedom is worth revolution

It is high time for the free world to stand in solidarity with the people of Tunisia, Egypt, Yemen and all other nations who seek peaceful prosperity and just freedom.



Those brave enough to march and protest against the inequities of a dictatorial regime at the risk of their own safety, and have the courage to advance the rights of mankind, should be supported by free people everywhere.

As the world watches, leaders, opinion-makers, media and pundits are all pontificating on the possible outcomes of the current popular revolution sweeping across the Arab world. Meanwhile, the players who should be standing in support of the people of Araby, are once again failing to do so, resorting to classic strategies of supporting the status quo, fearful of the unknown and change.

America, which failed in 1979 to support the Iranians when they revolted against the Shah, ended up creating an enemy state ruled by religious dictates, and who continue to seek nuclear power, despite decades of embargoes, realpolitik, and a rhetorical war of attrition, through proxy states Afghanistan and Iraq.

Israel, which failed to support Palestinian freedom in Gaza after the Egypt-Israel peace accords, have since helped to create the Hamas, which now rules Gaza and stands as the main obstacle to peace between Palestinians and Israelis.

France, which has long enjoyed a special relationship with Egypt, is failing to stand up for the freedom and prosperity of Egypt's people, despite evidence that the Egyptians wish to enjoy the same Rights of Man which Napoleon granted to the French in the 19th Century CE.

Jordan, which is ruled by a Monarch who claims he is opening up his own government to more democracy, has failed to express open support for the people of Egypt, to enjoy the very freedoms which have been promised (and not delivered) to the people of the Hashemite Kingdom.

The reason scholars, academics, politicians, and MidEast analysts cling to for refusing to support the Arab Revolution of 2011 is: The Muslim Brotherhood. The Brotherhood, founded in the 1920s in Egypt, has fomented such groups as Al-Qaida, which in turn have led to the Causus Belli of the current global War on Terror, whose catalyst was the infamous attacks of 9/11, led by Osama bin-Laden (UBL) and his gang of Islamist terrorists, including none other than Aiman al-Zawahari, who was a leader of the Muslim Brotherhood until he became UBL's deputy in al-Qaida.

If the free world desires to see a peaceful democracy established in Egypt, Tunisia, Yemen, and other Arab nations, they should embrace the current wave of popular protests.

America should enable satellites to transmit information to and from the nations in turmoil, send medical aid, food aid, and economic aid to trusted institutions which are accountable.

Israel should send a team of IDF medical experts to assist the wounded of the protests, as well as teams of Arab-speaking experts in the fields of education, economics and government, to help the people establish advanced methods of peaceful self-rule. They should also send power generators with wireless internet routers, capable of re-establishing Egypt's information link to the outside world. And this should all be done in support of the Egyptian People, with whom Israel has enjoyed a peace treaty since 1979.

France should send cultural advisors and Euros to assist existing NGOs and socially important institutions which will remain in place after the tear gas and fires have been put out, and the heavy lifting begins.

Jordan should declare that it recognizes these sweeping changes as a sign of the times; that the Arab nations are at a threshold in history, and that fear will not be their guide.

At Davos, Switzerland, the world's super-elite sit around on twist their thumbs and windbag their way through another exclusive meeting which will help the rich get richer, and do little or nothing for the impoverished and oppressed. What they ought to do is to interrupt their regularly scheduled chatterbox nonsense and bring global attention to the plight of those whose rights to freedom, human rights, economic opportunity and prosperity must be sustained by those who control the levers of financial, political and social power.

After all, the best way to move forward and strengthen the hand of peace, freedom and prosperity, is also the best way to defeat Islamist extremism, which in present day Araby is the most feared nemesis of these values.

Should the free and freer nations of the world fail to support the people of Egypt, Tunisia and Yemen at this crucial time, the repercussions will surely be damaging to international relations between those nations, and it will surely cause unhelpful drama in business, oil, and politics, quite possibly for many years to come.